Anti-Piracy Outfit Supports Creators – When it Suits Them

Anti-piracy outfits such as the U.S. based Copyright Alliance claim to champion the rights of creators, which includes giving credit to those contributing content to the web. However, it appears that despite putting in endless hours of work to create original content, news resources such as this one deserve no such protection.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Since this piece is about TorrentFreak content, we need to make it clear that any reader is free to do what they like with our material within the bounds of our Creative Commons license. Were not only happy for you to do that, we’re very proud that you’re sharing us with others.

However, some of our readers – those in the copyright lobby – like to make use of our content while doing their best not to give us credit. While hat-tips from them aren’t what we’re striving for here, it should be a concern to everyone when they’re prepared to throw the standards they impose on others out of the window.

In this instance i’m talking about the powerful Copyright Alliance, the US-based anti-piracy organization which counts the MPAA, RIAA and a who’s-who of industry companies among its members.

For weeks now the group’s Twitter account has been the cause of wry smiles behind this keyboard since despite the spending of the endless hours that go into producing TorrentFreak, the Copyright Alliance has gone out of its way to avoid crediting the site for its work.

At the very thin end of the scale, on several occasions TF has been the first to break news only to see the Copyright Alliance Twitter account promoting other sites reporting on the same stories much later. But all that really shows is that they’re slow to respond – big deal.

No, the major irritant is when the Copyright Alliance promotes our original content to its readers but then gives others the credit, which by their own standards is taking things too far.

As you can see, despite IBTimes clearly citing us as the source for their short summary of our exclusive on how the UK’s most prolific pirates were caught, the Copyright Alliance deliberately credited them, not us.

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Nevertheless, that wasn’t the instance that caused the most eye-rolling.

While trying to ensure TF had fresh content every day over Christmas, we came up with a post debunking some of the most persistent piracy myths. Within hours another website took the piece, plagiarized it, and presented it as their own work.

But so what? If they can make a couple of bucks from it, good for them. It doesn’t hurt us and might even get file-sharing news out to a fresh audience somewhere. Perhaps more importantly, that site doesn’t claim to be “championing artists’ and creators’ rights.”

No, what actually lit the touch paper was the creators’ champions at the Copyright Alliance using their Twitter account to promote the plagiarized version over ours.

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To be extremely clear, we aren’t looking for a pat on the back from the Copyright Alliance. But when they publish articles titled Giving Credit (and Hat Tips) Where Credit is Due containing the words “It’s a positive sign that people are recognizing the importance of crediting creative content and it’s origins…”, someone needs to hold them to their own standards.

And amazingly they’re standards they simply can’t maintain.

Just as this article was nearing completion on Friday, the Copyright Alliance did it again by deliberately linking to a piece in Metro covering our report from earlier in the week, despite that piece clearly citing us as the source.

Again, we aren’t getting any traffic from them and don’t want or need their support, but the Copyright Alliance are showing time and again that they do not practice what they preach. And this is only what we see in public.

Love them or loathe them, anti-piracy outfits have a right to exist and a right to go about their business. And, as annoying as it might be to some, governments across the world accept their legitimacy in a way that pirates can only dream of. As a result they tend to occupy the moral high-ground almost everywhere they tread.

But what this little episode shows is that unlike a site like this, which promotes both positive and negative news about copyright and piracy issues, organizations like the Copyright Alliance are only interested in pushing their own agenda in the way they see fit.

And if that means trampling on the rights of creators whom they don’t like (or don’t get paid by), so be it.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Enough of this console nonsense: It’s time to put a gaming PC in my living room

My living room setup was in need of a complete overhaul—a new gaming PC and a killer NAS.

Way back at the beginning of 2015 I tasked myself with building a gaming PC for the living room. 12 months later and finally—after coming to work for Ars, travelling halfway around the world a few times over, and patiently waiting for someone to release a console-like case that didn't suck—it is done.

As is usually the case when embarking on some half-baked idea to use technology to improve your life—or in my case, provide a prettier way to procrastinate—there's a tendency to over-complicate things. Case in point: I already had a PC in my living room; a very old, very loud, but still perfectly functional HP Microserver that I used as a NAS and media player. The gaming PC could replace the media player part, but what about the storage?

So I needed a gaming PC, and some sort of network-attached storage (NAS)—either one built out of old parts, or something shiny and new from Amazon. Then I remembered that thanks to my recent acquisition of various bits of IoT gear, adding two new devices instead of one would leave me short an Ethernet socket—and no, even with a router capable of 802.11ac, Wi-Fi still doesn't trump good ol' fashioned cables for speed and reliability.

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Juniper drops NSA-developed code following new backdoor revelations

Researchers contradict Juniper claim that Dual_EC_DRBG weakness couldn’t be exploited.

(credit: Juniper)

Juniper Networks, which last month made the startling announcement its NetScreen line of firewalls contained unauthorized code that can surreptitiously decrypt traffic sent through virtual private networks, said it will remove a National Security Agency-developed function widely suspected of also containing a backdoor for eavesdropping.

The networking company said in a blog post published Friday that it will ship product releases in the next six months that remove the Dual_EC_DRBG random number generator from NetScreen firewalls. Security researchers have known since 2007 that it contains a weakness that gives knowledgeable adversaries the ability to decrypt encrypted communications that rely on the function. Documents provided by former NSA subcontractor Edward Snowden showed the weakness could be exploited by the US spy agency, The New York Times reported in 2013.

A month after the NYT report was published, Juniper officials wrote in a knowledge base article that NetScreen encryption couldn't be subverted by the weakness because Dual_EC_DRBG wasn't the sole source for generating the random numbers needed to ensure strong cryptography. The Juniper post said NetScreen also relied on a separate random number generator known as ANSI X.9.31 that made it infeasible to exploit the Dual_EC_DRBG weaknesses. Random number generators are a crucial ingredient in strong cryptography. Their role is similar to the shaking of dice at a craps table and ensure that keys contain enough entropy to make them infeasible to guess or predict.

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Two months after FBI debacle, Tor Project still can’t get an answer from CMU

Ars Q&A: We sit down with Tor Project’s new executive director, Shari Steele.

Proof of connection: the site check.torproject.org will show you if you're connected via Tor. (credit: Tor)

It's been quite a few months for the Tor Project. Last November, project co-founder and director Roger Dingledine accused the FBI of paying Carnegie Mellon computer security researchers at least $1 million to de-anonymize Tor users and reveal their IP addresses as part of a large criminal investigation.

The FBI dismissed things, but the investigation in question is a very high-profile matter focused on members of the Silk Road online-drug marketplace. One of the IP addresses revealed belonged to Brian Farrell, an alleged Silk Road 2 lieutenant. An early filing in Farrell's case, first reported by Vice Motherboard, said that a "university-based research institute" aided government efforts to unmask Farrell.

That document fit with Ars reporting from January 2015, when a Homeland Security search warrant affidavit stated that from January to July 2014, a “source of information” provided law enforcement “with particular IP addresses” that accessed the vendor-side of Silk Road 2. By July 2015, the Tor Project managed to discover and shut down this sustained attack. But the Tor Project further concluded that the attack resembled a technique described by a team of Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) researchers who a few weeks earlier had canceled a security conference presentation on a low-cost way to deanonymize Tor users. The Tor officials went on to warn that an intelligence agency from a global adversary also might have been able to capitalize on the vulnerability.

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Rückschlag für Half-Life 3?: Marc Laidlaw verlässt Valve

Kommt Half-Life 3 noch? Seit Jahren warten Fans der Serie auf eine verlässliche Antwort von Valve. Die Kündigung eines langjährigen Mitarbeiters löst jetzt neue Spekulationen über die Zukunft des Half-Life-Universums aus. (Half-Life 3, Half-Life)

Kommt Half-Life 3 noch? Seit Jahren warten Fans der Serie auf eine verlässliche Antwort von Valve. Die Kündigung eines langjährigen Mitarbeiters löst jetzt neue Spekulationen über die Zukunft des Half-Life-Universums aus. (Half-Life 3, Half-Life)

NSA und BND in Bad Aibling: Geheimdienstkooperation läuft wieder reibungslos

Die Operation Eikonal geht offenbar in die Verlängerung: NSA und BND arbeiten Medienberichten zufolge wieder gemeinsam an der Überwachung des Internets. Die NSA gibt jetzt Begründungen für die von ihnen übermittelten Selektoren. (BND, Internet)

Die Operation Eikonal geht offenbar in die Verlängerung: NSA und BND arbeiten Medienberichten zufolge wieder gemeinsam an der Überwachung des Internets. Die NSA gibt jetzt Begründungen für die von ihnen übermittelten Selektoren. (BND, Internet)

Lenovo-Chef kritisiert Microsoft: “Das kostenfreie Windows-10-Update war ein Fehler”

Lenovos Chef ist kein Fan von Microsofts kostenfreiem Windows-10-Update. Dem Softwareunternehmen sei es damit nicht gelungen, den PC-Markt wiederzubeleben. Um dennoch auf diesem Markt aktiv zu bleiben, will Lenovo auf Convertibles setzen – und sichere …

Lenovos Chef ist kein Fan von Microsofts kostenfreiem Windows-10-Update. Dem Softwareunternehmen sei es damit nicht gelungen, den PC-Markt wiederzubeleben. Um dennoch auf diesem Markt aktiv zu bleiben, will Lenovo auf Convertibles setzen - und sichere Software programmieren. (Lenovo, Microsoft)

Iranian State TV Broadcasts Movie From Pirate Site

Piracy is rampant in many countries around the world, but an example that reached us from Iran recently is one of the most blatant displays we’ve seen recently. Iranian state TV showed a movie to its viewers that clearly originated from a pirate website, which ironically is blocked by the Iranian Government.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

iribIn Iran IRIB TV3 is one of the channels operated by the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting.

It’s often dubbed the youth channel as a lot of its programming attracts a younger audience, including sports events and foreign movies and TV-shows.

Perhaps in line with this philosophy, the television channel broadcasted the 2013 Hong Kong film “Saving General Yang” a few days ago. Not a regular copy though, but a pirated one.

Several Iranian viewers noticed that aside from the IRIB TV3 logo in the top right corner, there was another ‘watermark’ at the bottom. This read Tinymoviez.co, which is a popular site in Iran where people can download pirated copies of movies and TV-shows.

This oddity was picked up in the local media, which shared screenshots of the unusual sight.

Tinymoviez on Iranian national TV (credit)

iribpirate

Ironically, the Tinymoviez website and other Persian pirate sites such as Ganool are censored by the Iranian Government because they contain nudity. However, just like many citizens, Iran’s state TV appears to have found a backdoor.

IRIB TV3 is not the only channel to show pirated movies. According to the Iranian Student News Agency this is quite common as pirate watermarks also appeared elsewhere on movies such as Django Unchained, Tower Heist, and Jack the Giant Slayer.

In addition, TV broadcasters often use music from popular TV-shows such as Game of Thrones and Dexter on their own footage, reportedly without authorization.

Ganool.com mark on The Tower Heist broadcast (credit)

heist

But there’s more.

Apparently Iranian State TV isn’t limiting its pirate broadcasts to movies and TV-shows. They also broadcasted a soccer match, recorded from Al Jazeera, which prompted FIFA to threaten them with legal action.

While this blatant unauthorized use is quite a shocker in the west, in Iran it’s less of a problem. The country’s copyright law is set up to protect all copyrighted works produced by Iranians, but not necessarily those by creators from other countries.

Since 2001 Iran has been a member of the WIPO, and has acceded to several WIPO treaties. However, the Iranian Government never signed the WIPO copyright treaty and other international copyright agreements that would make copying of foreign products unlawful.

As a result, broadcasting unlicensed media has become quite common.

While ‘piracy’ appears to be rampant in Iran, there have been similar incidents elsewhere too. A few years ago Netflix accidentally used ‘pirate’ fansubs on the Canadian-American science fiction series Andromeda, for example.

Similarly, Saudi Airlines previously listed a pirated movie in its in-flight entertainment system, where passengers had the option to watch “Killers 2010 BDRiP AC3 XViD-ILOVE.”

Pirates all around.

Source: TorrentFreak, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Tesla’s new firmware improves Autosteer, adds remote parking—of a sort

Version 7.1 will drive into or out of your garage by itself.

An empty driver's seat is no impediment to this Model S driving into or out of your garage now.

It's been a big week for electric vehicles, thanks to CES. Faraday Future made waves, Chevrolet debuted the Bolt, Volkswagen gave us the Budd-e electric camper van, and Arcimoto's SRK turned out to be our surprise of the show. Tesla doesn't do auto shows or CES, but it evidently didn't want to be left out; it's just begun rolling out its latest firmware, version 7.1. The update includes improvements to the Model S' various driver assists and adds a new beta feature that allows the car to drive into or out of one's garage remotely.

According to the firmware release notes posted over at the Tesla Motors Club forums, the improvements to Tesla's adaptive cruise control systems include better traffic awareness, and the Autosteer function has been refined so that it won't exceed the speed limit by more than 5mph (8km/h) on residential streets or roads without a central divider.

The new beta feature is called Summon. This lets a Model S drive or reverse into or out of of a parking space, up to 39 feet (12m). We should caution that Summon can only be used on private property at this point; outside of special permits granted by states for manufacturers to test self-driving vehicles, there are no currently-approved vehicles that the general public can use on the roads to be driven autonomously.

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