ICANN: We Won’t Pass Judgment on Pirate Sites

Following more pressure from rightsholders, domain name oversight body ICANN has again made it clear that it will not act as judge and jury in copyright disputes. In a letter to the president of the Intellectual Property Constituency, ICANN chief Stephen Crocker says that ICANN is neither “required or qualified” to pass judgment in such cases.

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

There are plenty of options for copyright holders seeking to hinder the progress of pirate sites but one of the most effective is attacking domains.

The strategy has been employed most famously against The Pirate Bay and over the past couple of years the site has lost most of the domains it deployed to stay online.

At the very top of the domain name ‘tree’ is the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). This non-profit body is responsible for the smooth-running of the Internet’s Doman Name System. However, if copyright holders had their way, ICANN would also act as the Internet’s piracy police by forcing registrars to prevent illegal use of domain names.

Last year, ICANN told TorrentFreak that it had no role to play in “policing content” but of course, copyright holders continue to pile on the pressure.

The latest efforts come from the Intellectual Property Constituency (IPC) and the Coalition for Online Accountability (COA), which count the major studios and record labels among their members.

Both have concerns over the “Public Interest Commitments” (PICs) present in new gTLD registry agreements. Specification 11 states that registry operators must include a clause in their registry/registrar agreements which prohibits domain name holders from engaging in various kinds of abuse, from malware and phishing through to copyright and trademark abuse.

This contractual wording allows registries to lay down acceptable use rules with registrars, who in turn do the same with domain owners. However, IPC believes that it is the job of the registries, registrars and ultimately ICANN to enforce these terms and conditions and suspend pirate domains.

In April, IPC chief Greg Shatan wrote to ICANN chair Dr. Stephen Crocker (pdf). He expressed concern at earlier ICANN comments which indicated that the group considers copyright infringement, counterfeiting, and other fraudulent practices to be “outside its mandate”.

That was followed by a June 17, 2016 follow-up letter to ICANN from COA (pdf) expressing similar concerns.

This week, ICANN’s Dr. Crocker responded (pdf) to the April letter from IPC, confirming that his group will “bring enforcement actions” against registries and registrars that fail to include abuse warnings in their end-user agreements.

However, ICANN also made it crystal clear that it won’t be getting directly involved in disputes involving allegedly infringing domains.

“This does not mean, however, that ICANN is required or qualified to make factual and legal determinations as to whether a Registered Name Holder or a website operator is violating applicable laws and governmental regulations, and to assess what would constitute an appropriate remedy for such activities in any particular situation,” Dr. Croker told IPC.

Noting that both registries and registrars have expressed difficulty in assessing alleged violations of the law, ICANN invites those with a grievance against allegedly infringing sites to deal with matters themselves. One possibility might be through voluntary agreements such as those the MPAA struck with Donuts and Radix.

“While these initiatives are outside of ICANN’s limited remit, we are hopeful that these voluntary efforts will produce usable tools and mechanisms for use by Registries and Registrars,” Dr. Croker said.

Finally, ICANN notes that there is nothing stopping “harmed parties” from taking action against registries, registrars or domain owners “through administrative, regulatory or judicial bodies to seek fines, damages, injunctive relief or other remedies available at law.”

In other words, if copyright holders want something done about their disputes, there are several options available already. Just don’t expect ICANN to become judge, jury, and executioner.

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

Mammals were almost destroyed with the dinosaurs 65 million years ago

Some inherent feature of mammal biology allowed them to adapt after global disaster.

Watch out! (credit: Donald E. Davis,)

You've heard the story about how an astroid smashed into the Gulf of Mexico roughly 65 million years ago, lighting fires on the ground and sending sun-blocking debris high into the atmosphere. In the millennia that followed, harsh environmental conditions wiped out over 75 percent of species on the planet. Most dinosaurs met their demise, and mammals rose in their ashes. This dark period of die-outs is called the K-T mass extinction, and it marks the boundary between the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods in the geological record. But a new study challenges that picture by suggesting that mammals were killed off at rates similar to those of the dinosaurs. Mammals simply recovered better than their counterparts among the Dinosauria.

Writing in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology, a group of British biologists offers a portrait of the K-T mass extinction that diverges from conventional wisdom in a couple of ways. First, their reassessment of fossil evidence shows that mammal species suffered just as much as dinosaurs during the asteroid climate disaster. And second, biodiversity returned to the planet faster than previously thought. In some areas, rich ecosystems were thriving in as little as 200 thousand years after the asteroid impact. Previous studies have estimated that it took at least a million years for diverse ecosystems to return.

The researchers say our understanding of the catastrophe 65 million years ago has been warped both by an incomplete fossil record and observation bias. The animals that are most likely to be wiped out by mass extinctions are those that have small, localized populations, which are the same animals that are least likely to appear in the fossil record because there were so few of them. So we've underestimated how many mammal species died during the K-T because we didn't account for rare species that lived in small areas at low population size.

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County sheriff quietly expands drone fleet to 6, flown dozens of times

In June alone, sheriff’s deputies in Alameda Co., California flew 3 drone missions.

Earlier this week in San Leandro, California, law enforcement officers closed in on a house that they believed was being used as an illegal casino. But before deputies from the Alameda County Sheriff’s Office could secure the residence, one of the suspects bolted and started hopping fences. Luckily for the cops, the ACSO had a secret weapon: a drone. After the bust, they even bragged about it on Twitter.

"In this situation the suspect fled, and the UAV was able to observe the suspect flee and to alert the first responders to where he was so they could contain him and apprehend him as safely as possible," Capt. Tom Madigan, who was present for the bust, told Ars.

And what would have happened if the drone hadn’t been overhead?

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Review: Quadropolis, Days of Wonder’s new city-building board game

Puzzle your way to victory in this math-y construction zone.

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage right here—and let us know what you think.

From Shadows over Camelot to Ticket to Ride to Mystery of the Abbey (complete with tiny tin bell), Days of Wonder has put out some richly thematic games often set long ago or far away. Its last title, Five Tribes, was a turn toward more puzzle-y games, but even it was set in the world of the Arabian Nights.

So new title Quadropolis, from French designer François Gandon, is something of an anomaly: a puzzle-style city builder set in contemporary Eurmerica. Can Days of Wonder keep its streak of hits alive?

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My 6-month review testing newfangled beer-dispensing tech is finally done

Testing continued despite giant bar tabs.

Bartender John Olson and owner Dan Lilly of Pinky's Pizza Parlor show us the latest in keg technology from Walnut Creek, Calif. I'm the moderator sporting the Oakland Raiders sweatshirt. RAIDERS! (video link)


We at Ars are always on the lookout for new technology. So when I learned (belatedly) that Heineken USA had introduced a new beer-dispensing technology called "Brewlock,” I jumped at the chance to review it. After all, only a grizzled reporter with massive experience in the genre could handle a story like the Brewlock. This was a job for a writer who feels just as comfortable drinking alone as he does imbibing with strangers at the local watering hole.

At Ars we're often under deadlines to churn out reviews quickly. But in this case of the Brewlock, I assigned myself no deadline (you can do that when you’re the senior editor). Instead, I spent the better part of six months testing and comparing Heineken's new technology. Because that's what real journalists do. We push the envelope. Whether I pushed too far here and over the years might be better understood by my larger-than-normal bar tabs, breakups, mishaps, and run-ins with law enforcement.

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More Samsung Galaxy Note 7, HTC Nexus “Marlin” details leak

More Samsung Galaxy Note 7, HTC Nexus “Marlin” details leak

I don’t know why companies even bother holding launch events for smartphones anymore. All of the most anticipated smartphone unveiling are usually preceded by a series of leaks… and the upcoming Google Nexus and Samsung Galaxy Note smartphone launches are no different.

We already have a pretty good idea of what to expect from each… but new benchmark results provide some confirmation about the upcoming 5.5 inch Nexus phone from HTC and a few leaked pictures are giving us our first good look at the upcoming Samsung Galaxy Note 7.

Continue reading More Samsung Galaxy Note 7, HTC Nexus “Marlin” details leak at Liliputing.

More Samsung Galaxy Note 7, HTC Nexus “Marlin” details leak

I don’t know why companies even bother holding launch events for smartphones anymore. All of the most anticipated smartphone unveiling are usually preceded by a series of leaks… and the upcoming Google Nexus and Samsung Galaxy Note smartphone launches are no different.

We already have a pretty good idea of what to expect from each… but new benchmark results provide some confirmation about the upcoming 5.5 inch Nexus phone from HTC and a few leaked pictures are giving us our first good look at the upcoming Samsung Galaxy Note 7.

Continue reading More Samsung Galaxy Note 7, HTC Nexus “Marlin” details leak at Liliputing.

Mehr Sicherheit: Radar soll Orientierungsverlust autonomer Autos vermeiden

Mit Hilfe eines zusätzlichen Bodenradarsystems sollen Unfälle durch Orientierungsverlust autonomer Autos künftig vermieden werden. Das Radar kann die Position des Wagens bis auf vier Zentimeter genau bestimmen – komplett ohne erkennbare Fahrbahn- und Umgebungsmarkierungen. (Autonomes Fahren, Internet)

Mit Hilfe eines zusätzlichen Bodenradarsystems sollen Unfälle durch Orientierungsverlust autonomer Autos künftig vermieden werden. Das Radar kann die Position des Wagens bis auf vier Zentimeter genau bestimmen - komplett ohne erkennbare Fahrbahn- und Umgebungsmarkierungen. (Autonomes Fahren, Internet)

Superpowers mix with office politics in The Regional Office Is Under Attack!

Die Hard, Kill Bill, David Cronenberg collide in a bloodily delightful action novel.

The Regional Office Is Under Attack! is like Die Hard meets Kill Bill, with a smattering of Charlie Kaufman and David Cronenberg. (credit: 20th Century Fox)

Action movies ain't what they used to be. Sure, computer imaging has helped Hollywood create some of the craziest action scenes you could possibly imagine, but when CGI replaces lower-tech tricks like intrigue, strong characters, and good old-fashioned explosions, what's an '80s action nostalgic to do?

Author Manuel Gonzales may have the answer with The Regional Office Is Under Attack!, which I recommend to anyone who would rather get their summer-movie fix on paper—and who hungers for that rare mix of crazy action and phenomenal character introspection.

This review contains a few spoilers, not least of which is the book's title. The Regional Office is a secret organization, disguised as a boutique travel agency, that sends an army of young women superheroes to fight the "forces of darkness," including zombies, alien invaders, and mad scientists.

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Zukunftspläne: Sony plant offenbar neuen Roboterfreund

In einem Strategiepapier kündigt Sony einen neuen Roboter an, der zu emotionalen Bindungen fähig sein soll. Zehn Jahre nach der Einstellung des Aibo arbeitet eine Abteilung am Start des neuen Roboters. Auch für den industriellen Bereich will Sony in Zukunft verstärkt Roboter entwickeln. (Sony, Roboter)

In einem Strategiepapier kündigt Sony einen neuen Roboter an, der zu emotionalen Bindungen fähig sein soll. Zehn Jahre nach der Einstellung des Aibo arbeitet eine Abteilung am Start des neuen Roboters. Auch für den industriellen Bereich will Sony in Zukunft verstärkt Roboter entwickeln. (Sony, Roboter)

240 years of US energy use

Biomass and renewables surge, coal use plunges.

(credit: US EIA)

With the 4th of July weekend about to begin, the US Energy Information Administration decided to look back to our nation's founding. So it plotted the country's energy use starting from 1776. Most of the result isn't a surprise: biomass had a long run before fossil fuels took over and stayed on top. But recent years have seen the biggest change since nuclear was added to the mix.

Biomass spent nearly a century on top of the US energy mix before being displaced by coal, although it never went above providing four quadrillion Btus (each Btu is a bit over 1,000 Joules). But biomass never entirely went away, and its resurgence this century puts it at its highest level ever. With nuclear holding steady and renewables surging to nearly the same level as hydropower, fossil fuels are on the verge of dropping below 80 percent of the US' energy mix.

Fossil fuels haven't been that low a percentage for over a century.

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