Legislation would eliminate state laws that restrict city Internet services

It’s a long shot, but muni broadband advocates aren’t giving up after court loss.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Yuri_Arcurs)

US Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) yesterday proposed legislation that would allow cities and towns to build their own Internet services even in states that have laws restricting municipal broadband.

Eshoo's Community Broadband Act of 2016 comes a month after the states of North Carolina and Tennessee won a federal appeals court ruling preserving laws preventing municipal broadband providers from expanding outside their territories. The Federal Communications Commission had tried to overturn the laws, which remain in place in about 20 states.

“I’m disappointed that a recent court ruling blocked the FCC’s efforts to allow local communities to decide for themselves how best to ensure that their residents have broadband access,” Eshoo said in an announcement. “Rather than restricting local communities in need of broadband, we should be empowering them to make the decisions they determine are in the best interests of their constituents. Too many Americans still lack access to quality, affordable broadband and community broadband projects are an important way to bring this critical service to more citizens.”

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Deals of the Day (9-14-2016)

Deals of the Day (9-14-2016)

Fully wireless earbuds are getting cheaper… but if you don’t mind having a wire that runs from one earbud to the other, you can still pick up a more traditional Bluetooth headphone set for way cheaper. Like 15 times cheaper than Bragi’s new $150 headphones.

The Jarv NMotion sport wireless earbuds are water and sweat-resistant wireless headphones that get decent (but hardly spectacular reviews). But it’s hard to argue with the price: while Amazon currently sells them for $20, Groupon is offering the earbuds for just $10.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (9-14-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (9-14-2016)

Fully wireless earbuds are getting cheaper… but if you don’t mind having a wire that runs from one earbud to the other, you can still pick up a more traditional Bluetooth headphone set for way cheaper. Like 15 times cheaper than Bragi’s new $150 headphones.

The Jarv NMotion sport wireless earbuds are water and sweat-resistant wireless headphones that get decent (but hardly spectacular reviews). But it’s hard to argue with the price: while Amazon currently sells them for $20, Groupon is offering the earbuds for just $10.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (9-14-2016) at Liliputing.

EU-Kommissar Oettinger: USA haben Tempolimit, Europa bekommt Leistungsschutzrecht

EU-Kommissar Oettinger hat die Pläne für ein europäisches Leistungsschutzrecht verteidigt. Kommission-Vize Ansip klingt dagegen nicht sehr überzeugt von dem Konzept. Google will weiter nicht für Snippets zahlen. (Leistungsschutzrecht, Google)

EU-Kommissar Oettinger hat die Pläne für ein europäisches Leistungsschutzrecht verteidigt. Kommission-Vize Ansip klingt dagegen nicht sehr überzeugt von dem Konzept. Google will weiter nicht für Snippets zahlen. (Leistungsschutzrecht, Google)

Debugger.html: Neuer Firefox-Debugger nutzt offene Webtechniken

Um die Entwicklerwerkzeuge des Firefox aufzuräumen, hat ein Team von Mozilla den Debugger von Grund auf in Webtechniken neu erstellt. Unterstützt werden zudem Chrome und NPM. (Firefox, Browser)

Um die Entwicklerwerkzeuge des Firefox aufzuräumen, hat ein Team von Mozilla den Debugger von Grund auf in Webtechniken neu erstellt. Unterstützt werden zudem Chrome und NPM. (Firefox, Browser)

Desktop apps make their way into the Windows Store

The Project Centennial “bridge” for Win32 apps is now ready for production.

(credit: Sean Gallagher)

Traditional desktop Windows applications can now be distributed and sold through the Windows Store, with note-taking application Evernote being one of the first to use this new capability.

Until now, applications built for and sold through the Windows Store in Windows 10 have been built for the Universal Windows Platform (UWP), the common set of APIs that spans Windows 10 across all the many devices it supports. This has left one major category of application, the traditional desktop application built using the Win32 API, behind.

Announced at Build 2015, codename Project Centennial—now officially titled the Desktop App Converter—is Microsoft's solution to this problem. It allows developers to repackage existing Win32 applications with few or no changes and sell them through the store. Applications packaged this way aren't subject to all the sandbox restrictions that UWP applications are, ensuring that most will work unmodified. But they are also given the same kind of clean installation, upgrading, and uninstallation that we've all come to expect from Store-delivered software.

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Qualcomm unveils Clear Sight dual-camera system for smartphones

Smartphones with dual cameras are all the rage these days. Some dual-camera systems are designed to let you capture images with more depth. Others also enable a sort of optical zoom feature.
But so far most smartphone makers have had to come up with th…

Qualcomm unveils Clear Sight dual-camera system for smartphones

Smartphones with dual cameras are all the rage these days. Some dual-camera systems are designed to let you capture images with more depth. Others also enable a sort of optical zoom feature.

But so far most smartphone makers have had to come up with their own implementation plans for a dual-camera system. Now chip maker Qualcomm has unveiled a system it calls Clear Sight that can be used for any device with a Snapdragon 820 or Snapdragon 821 processor.

Continue reading Qualcomm unveils Clear Sight dual-camera system for smartphones at Liliputing.

NYC threatens to sue Verizon over FiOS shortfalls

Default notice sent to Verizon is first step toward a lawsuit.

(credit: The Advance Guard)

New York City officials yesterday notified Verizon that the company is in default of an agreement to bring fiber connections to all households in the city and could file a lawsuit against the company.  

The road to a potential lawsuit has been a long one. In June 2015, New York released an audit that found Verizon failed to meet a commitment to extend FiOS to every household in the five boroughs by June 2014. City officials and Verizon have been trying to resolve the matter since then with no success, as Verizon says that it hasn't actually broken the agreement.

The default letter (full text) sent yesterday by the city Department of Information Technology & Telecommunications (DoITT) says Verizon has failed to pass all residential buildings in the city with fiber. As of October 2015, there were at least 38,551 addresses where Verizon hadn't fulfilled installation service requests that were more than a year old, the letter said.

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Videostreaming: Amazon löscht Prime-Markierungen von Fire-TV-Oberfläche

Doch kein Fehler, sondern System: Amazon verschlechtert für Fire-TV-Besitzer die Übersichtlichkeit in ihrem eigenen Videodienst. Denn die typischen Prime-Banderolen wurden systematisch entfernt und kommen auch nicht wieder. (Amazon Prime, Amazon)

Doch kein Fehler, sondern System: Amazon verschlechtert für Fire-TV-Besitzer die Übersichtlichkeit in ihrem eigenen Videodienst. Denn die typischen Prime-Banderolen wurden systematisch entfernt und kommen auch nicht wieder. (Amazon Prime, Amazon)

Liberty Global: Unitymedia-Konzern will als erster Gigabit für Kunden bieten

Liberty Global will schnell mit Docsis 3.1 hohe Datenraten von 1 GBit/s für seine Kunden anbieten. Golem.de sagte der Konzern, wann das Angebot starten soll. (Unitymedia, Kabel Deutschland)

Liberty Global will schnell mit Docsis 3.1 hohe Datenraten von 1 GBit/s für seine Kunden anbieten. Golem.de sagte der Konzern, wann das Angebot starten soll. (Unitymedia, Kabel Deutschland)

EU Commission Proposes Mandatory Piracy Filters For Online Services

Today, the European Commission published its long-awaited proposal to modernize the EU’s copyright law. Among other things, it will require online services to install mandatory piracy filters. While the Commission intends to strengthen the position of copyright holders, opponents warn that it will do more harm than good.

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

upload During his State of the Union address today, EU Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker announced several plans to modernize copyright law in Europe.

The proposal (pdf) is part of the Digital Single Market reforms, which have been in the making for several years.

Despite earlier suggestions that geo-blocking would be banned for streaming portals such as Netflix, these ideas haven’t made it into the final text. Instead, it introduces a wide range of reforms that improve the position of rights holders.

One of the suggestions that has a lot of people worried is Article 13, which requires online services to police pirated content. This means that online services, which deal with large volumes of user-uploaded content, must use fingerprinting and filtering mechanisms to block copyright infringing files.

“The Commission proposal obliges such service providers to take appropriate and proportionate measures to ensure the protection of user-uploaded works, for example by putting in place content recognition technologies,” the commission explains.

This could, for example, be similar to the Content-ID system YouTube has in place, which hasn’t been without controversy itself.

While the Commission stresses that small content platforms won’t be subject to the requirement, the proposal doesn’t define what “small” means. It also fails to define what “appropriate” or “effective” content recognition systems are, creating a fair bit of uncertainty.

Article 13

article13

Commenting on the proposal, Digital rights group EDRi says that it will put many European companies at risk while endangering users’ right to free speech.

“The text that was launched today includes a proposal to potentially filter all uploads to the Internet in Europe. The draft text would destroy users’ rights and legal certainty for European hosting companies,” EDRi notes.

The Commission, however, notes that the changes are needed to reinforce the negotiating position of copyright holders, so they can sign licensing agreements with services that provide access to user uploaded content.

Perhaps not surprisingly, this language is directly aligned with recent calls from various music industry organizations.

Just a few month ago the BPI asked for new legislation to prevent platforms like YouTube abusing safe harbor protections in order to create “royalty havens”. With the current proposal, this wish has been partly granted.

TorrentFreak spoke with Pirate Party Member of Parliament Julia Reda who is fiercely against mandatory piracy filters.

“There are countless problems with this approach. First of all, Google spent upwards of $60 million on the development of ContentID. Asking every startup or community project to make the same kind of investment is ludicrous,” Reda says.

Most services that deal with user-uploaded content can’t invest millions into content recognition technologies so they would have to license it from others such as YouTube, Reda adds. This will only increase the already dominant positions of the major players.

In addition, she points out that automated systems often lead to overt mistakes and are poorly equipped to deal with the finer nuances of copyright.

“Just because part of a copyright-protected work shows up in a video, that doesn’t mean that the new work constitutes a copyright infringement,” Reda says.

“There are numerous exceptions to copyright such as parody or quotation – different in every EU country – that could justify the re-use of part of a protected work. An algorithm can’t detect that. It will take down lots of legal remixes and mashups, thus stifling freedom of expression,” she adds.

A valid comment, as we witnessed ourselves just a few days ago when one of our perfectly legal videos was inaccurately flagged as a copyright infringement.

YouTube aside, Reda stresses that there are many other platforms to which automated recognition systems are not well suited. Wikipedia, for example, which uses mostly Creative Commons licensed content, or services such as DeviantArt which hosts user-uploaded artwork, or MuseScore that hosts sheet music.

“There is no technology available that would reliably detect copyright infringements in these formats. The Commission is asking Internet companies to do the impossible, thus endangering collaborative communities on the Internet as well as European startups,” Reda tells us.

The filtering requirement is not the only plan that’s getting a lot of pushback.

Another controversial proposal is the introduction of a new related right for press publications. This allows online newspapers to negotiate licences from third party services that use their texts, such as Google showing article clippings in its news section.

Opponents, including several young members of the European Parliament, have dubbed the proposal a “link-tax” and are fiercely against it.

#Savethelink

“This plan would break the internet as we know it. The way people share news online today – by posting a link that includes a short snippet or image from the article – would be made illegal unless a licence had been previously agreed,” MEP Marietje Schaake says.

Considering the stakes at hand, it’s expected that there will be several organized protests, similar to the “Save the Link” campaign, to stop the proposals from becoming law in their current form.

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