EU parliament pushes ahead with plans to block, remove terrorist content online

… despite fears that overblocking could undermine fundamental rights.

Civil liberties MEPs on Monday night approved plans to create a law that will block terrorist content online.

The counter terrorism directive also deals with terrorism training and financing as well as “Internet propaganda, and the misuse of the Internet for terrorist purposes." It was passed by 41 votes to four, with 10 abstentions meaning that the parliament’s chief negotiator, German MEP Monika Hohlmeier, can now start talks with the European ministers for justice and home affairs on a final text.

The initial draft proposal contained no reference to online activity, but Hohlmeier introduced two new sections taken in part from the EU law against child sex abuse. Under the latest wording, national authorities must take measures to ensure the prompt removal of illegal content hosted from within their territory that constitutes public incitement to commit a terrorist offence. If this is not feasible, they may take the necessary measures to block access to such content “while adhering to transparent procedure, adequate safeguards, and subject to judicial review.”

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

YouTubers under fire for promoting their own CS:GO gambling site in videos

Syndicate and TmarTn promoted CSGO Lotto, but didn’t disclose that they own it.

(credit: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images)

Until yesterday, if you were to browse the video pages of popular gaming YouTubers Trevor "TmarTn" Martin and Tom "Syndicate" Cassell, you'd have found a string of videos about the about Counter-Strike: Global Offensive gambling site CSGO Lotto. These videos showed the pair gambling weapon skins on the site, which allows anyone over 13 years of age to trade their hard-earned weapon skins for actual money. They often won big, resulting in videos with titles like "HOW TO WIN $13,000 IN 5 MINUTES."

Ordinarily, such a video would be regarded as little more than clickbait, the sort of thing you might see on a banner ad while browsing unscrupulous websites. But, with millions of subscribers, both Martin and Cassell have a captive audience who watch the videos in their hundreds of thousands. Now, these same subscribers have been turning out in their droves to launch allegations of unethical behaviour and a complete lack of disclosure.

It turns out the owners of the CSGO Lotto website are none other than Martin and Cassell.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Deals of the Day (7-05-2016)

Deals of the Day (7-05-2016)

Dell’s 2016 line of XPS laptops feature Skylake processor, super-slim designs, and starting prices of $800. But last year’s models with Broadwell processors are almost as good… and right now you can save $130 by picking up a 2015 model from B&H.

Or you can spend a little more money and get an HP Envy 13 thin and light laptop with a faster CPU and twice as much memory and storage.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (7-05-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (7-05-2016)

Dell’s 2016 line of XPS laptops feature Skylake processor, super-slim designs, and starting prices of $800. But last year’s models with Broadwell processors are almost as good… and right now you can save $130 by picking up a 2015 model from B&H.

Or you can spend a little more money and get an HP Envy 13 thin and light laptop with a faster CPU and twice as much memory and storage.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (7-05-2016) at Liliputing.

Tech industry gangs up on European Commission, calls for cookie law to be scrapped

Coalition of hundreds of tech companies and telcos ask EU to ditch new ePrivacy Directive.

A massive coalition of tech and telco companies have called for the EU’s so-called cookie law to be repealed.

Ars reported yesterday that the European Commission was working to overhaul the current ePrivacy Directive, and had held a public consultation soliciting feedback. But a group of 12 trade bodies has now called for it to be scrapped altogether. The coalition includes the European Telecommunications and Network Operators association (ETNO), the European Competitive Telecommunications Association (ECTA), the GSMA representing mobile operators, the Computer and Communications Industry Association (CCIA), IAB, the interactive advertising bureau, and DigitalEurope.

“We believe that simplifying and streamlining regulation will benefit consumers by ensuring they are provided with a simple, consistent, and meaningful set of rules designed to protect their personal data," said the group. "At the same time, it will encourage innovation across the digital value chain and drive new growth and social opportunities. This is critical at a time when digital companies are striving to launch new innovative services and working to build a 5G Europe."

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Google’s DeepMind AI to use 1 million NHS eye scans to spot diseases earlier

Privacy is unlikely to be an issue for this fully anonymised dataset.

Google’s DeepMind division has announced a partnership with the NHS’s Moorfields Eye Hospital to apply machine learning to spot common eye diseases earlier. The five-year research project will draw on one million anonymous eye scans which are held on Moorfields’ patient database, with the aim to speed up the complex and time-consuming process of analysing eye scans.

The hope is that this will allow diagnoses of common causes of sight loss, like diabetic retinopathy and age-related macular degeneration, to be spotted more rapidly and hence be treated more effectively. For example, Google says that up to 98 percent of sight loss resulting from diabetes can be prevented by early detection and treatment.

Two million people are already living with sight loss in the UK, of whom around 360,000 are registered as blind or partially-sighted. Google quotes estimates that the number of people suffering from sight loss in the UK will double by 2050. Improvements in detection and treatment would therefore have a major impact on the quality of life for large numbers of people in the UK and around the world.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Tropic Fallout: a look back at the Bikini nuclear tests, 70 years later

Operation Crossroads resulted in what a leading scientist called “the world’s first nuclear disaster.”

In July of 1946, the US military conducted a pair of nuclear weapons tests on the previously inhabited island of Bikini, a coral atoll in the Marshall Islands chain. Advertised as a "defensive" test to see how ships would withstand a nuclear blast, the tests—code-named "Crossroads"—were described by the Manhattan Project team as "the most publicly advertised secret test ever conducted."

The National Security Archive project at George Washington University has assembled a collection of documents and videos related to the Bikini tests—the second of which would be called "the world's first nuclear disaster"by Atomic Energy Commission chairman Glenn T. Seaborg. The Baker explosion, detonated underwater, was the first to create significant fallout, as a "base surge" of irradiated water and debris washed over the entire fleet of target ships and Bikini's lagoon itself.

Bikini was chosen for its deep, large lagoon, and because the island was far off international shipping routes. To prepare the site, the US Navy (which governed the Marshall Islands immediately following World War II) convinced the inhabitants of Bikini to relocate for the tests, which military governor Commodore Ben Wyatt told them was for "the good of all mankind and to end all world wars."

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Geoblocking: Netflix blockt deutsche Nutzer wegen falschen VPN-Verdachts

Wenn der Provider ein VPN einsetzt, kann der Nutzer kein Netflix in Deutschland mehr bekommen. Die Erfahrung musste ein Journalist machen. Der Netflix-Kundendienst räumt ein, dass dann die Nutzer des Providers blockiert werden. (Netflix, Streaming)

Wenn der Provider ein VPN einsetzt, kann der Nutzer kein Netflix in Deutschland mehr bekommen. Die Erfahrung musste ein Journalist machen. Der Netflix-Kundendienst räumt ein, dass dann die Nutzer des Providers blockiert werden. (Netflix, Streaming)

Shuttle launches 5 new fanless desktops with 4K support

Shuttle launches 5 new fanless desktops with 4K support

Shuttle has been making small form-factor computers (and cases) since before nettops were a thing… and has continued to do so long since people stopped using that word.

The company’s latest mini PCs include five new models in the Shuttle XPC slim series. Each features an Intel Skylake-U processor, 802.11ac WiFi. and 4K and/or dual-display support.

Each also measures just 7.9″ 6.5″ x 1.6″ and features a fanless design.

The Shuttle XPC slim computers each feature dual Gigabit Ethernet ports, HDMI 1.4 and DisplayPort 1.2.

Continue reading Shuttle launches 5 new fanless desktops with 4K support at Liliputing.

Shuttle launches 5 new fanless desktops with 4K support

Shuttle has been making small form-factor computers (and cases) since before nettops were a thing… and has continued to do so long since people stopped using that word.

The company’s latest mini PCs include five new models in the Shuttle XPC slim series. Each features an Intel Skylake-U processor, 802.11ac WiFi. and 4K and/or dual-display support.

Each also measures just 7.9″ 6.5″ x 1.6″ and features a fanless design.

The Shuttle XPC slim computers each feature dual Gigabit Ethernet ports, HDMI 1.4 and DisplayPort 1.2.

Continue reading Shuttle launches 5 new fanless desktops with 4K support at Liliputing.

Swiftpoint The Z: Die Drucksensor-Gyroskop-Maus

Tasten, die druckempfindlich sind oder Aktionen, die durch Kippen und Rotieren ausgelöst werden: Swiftpoints The Z genannte Maus soll das und mehr können. Das Finanzierungsziel bei Kickstarter ist erreicht, der Preis für das Eingabegerät fällt allerdings hoch aus. (Maus, Eingabegerät)

Tasten, die druckempfindlich sind oder Aktionen, die durch Kippen und Rotieren ausgelöst werden: Swiftpoints The Z genannte Maus soll das und mehr können. Das Finanzierungsziel bei Kickstarter ist erreicht, der Preis für das Eingabegerät fällt allerdings hoch aus. (Maus, Eingabegerät)

‘Just’ 5% of UK Internet Users are Hardcore Pirates

A report published by the Intellectual Property Office has revealed that around a quarter of all UK media consumers pirated at least one item during a three-month period earlier this year. Infringement of movies and TV shows are both up in 2016, but music has shown a marked decrease.

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

ip-officeIn an effort to monitor the shifting habits of Internet pirates in the UK, the Intellectual Property Office has commissioned regular reports from the researchers at Kantar Media.

Originally commissioned by telecoms watchdog Ofcom and sponsored by the IPO back in 2012, the reports cover the consumption of both legal and illegal content by Internet users aged 12 and above. “Wave 6” was published this morning and covers the three-month period March to May 2016.

The headline figure is that around 15% of Internet users consumed at least one item of infringing content during the monitoring period, which equates to around 6.7 million people throughput the population.

However, when the study considered only Internet users who had actually consumed content online during the three-month period (rather than all Internet users regardless of consumption), the number of infringers jumped to 25%.

According to the study, the use of peer-to-peer (P2P) networks has decreased again this year, from 12% down to 10% among all Internet users and from 26% to 23% among those who admit to being infringers.

UTorrent remains the most popular ‘service’ used to infringe, but usage is on the decline from 17% of infringers last year to 12% in 2016. The Pirate Bay sits one place behind with 11%.

Levels of infringement vary across content formats. The highest levels relate to audio, with 8% of all Internet users saying they obtain music from illegal sources.

“Music was by far the most-consumed content type, both digitally (355 million tracks) and physically (88 million tracks) over the three-month period. We estimate that 78 million music tracks were accessed illegally online [during the monitoring period],” the researchers write.

Those are indeed big numbers but progress is being made. Estimated illegal consumption of music in the same period last year was more than 96 million tracks.

This year, around 7% of Internet users say they obtained TV shows from illegal sources, with movies in third place with 6%. While consumption of legal content has gone up, both figures represent a deteriorating piracy situation when compared to last year.

“[Legal consumption of] films showed an increase in volumes of just over 5 million and a more notable shift was seen for TV programmes of a 16 million increase over the last year,” the researchers note.

“These categories also both showed increases in the digital volumes of infringement with films now estimated at 24 million and TV programmes 27 million pieces of content.”

This year there are few surprises when it comes to people’s motivation to obtain content without paying for it.

“The most commonly cited reasons for infringing were because it is free (49%), convenient (45%) and quick (42%). Speed and convenience have both shown increases in 2016,” the researchers report.

Given the above, it’s straightforward to predict how infringers say they could be persuaded to pirate less.

Just under a quarter of infringers say that cheaper prices would help, while one in five say that content being made available legally would reduce their reliance on illicit sources.

Interestingly, the study also shows that non-service related solutions to deter pirates might not be particularly effective. Year on year, it appears that fewer Internet users are worried about oppressive anti-piracy measures.

“Responses to the threat of ISP letters suspending their accounts or restricting their internet speed have decreased again in 2016; the suspension of internet service in particular has fallen by a small proportions wave-on-wave, from 22% in the first wave, to 15% in 2015 and the current level of 11%,” the researchers write.

The headline figure of millions of citizens engaged in piracy certainly sounds like a lot but there are relatively few hardcore pirates in the UK.

Just 5% of all UK Internet users admit to exclusively obtaining content from illegal sources, meaning that the remainder who consume content are also happy to “do the right thing” via subscription or ad-supported services. That’s a very encouraging sign.

The full report can be downloaded here (pdf)

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