Slack’s top engineer suggests that Google do “blind assessments” for hiring

Right now tech employees at Google are 81% male, 3% Hispanic, and 1% Black.

Enlarge / Leslie Miley, center, is the head of engineering at Slack. Nancy Lee, third from left, is Google's head of diversity. (credit: Cyrus Farivar)

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.—It’s one thing to say that Silicon Valley needs to do better in terms of diversity hiring. It’s another thing to do so literally down the street from Google headquarters and to display disappointing diversity numbers above the heads of executives from two big companies, PayPal and Google.

But during a Wednesday conference entitled “Inclusion in Silicon Valley,” hosted by The Atlantic magazine at the Computer History Museum, there weren’t many firm commitments by those companies about what they would do, beyond what they've already done, to change their corporate cultures.

Leslie Miley, the director of engineering at Slack, reminded Nancy Lee, a Google vice president and head of diversity, that Google could be doing more.

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Evernote’s new privacy policy raises eyebrows

You cannot opt out of having humans read your notes.

Evernote is testing out machine learning algorithms on all the reams of content it has accumulated over the past eight years. But when it announced this move with a new privacy policy that goes into effect January 24, 2017, the company also pointed out something that many users hadn't realized: Evernote staffers will sometimes look at the content of your notes.

There are actually a number of perfectly good reasons why Evernote employees might need to read note content, and they are explained clearly in Evernote's Privacy Policy. These include complying with a lawful court order, investigating whether there has been a violation of the Terms of Service, and "protect[ing] against potential spam, malware or other security concerns."

What concerned some users, including journalist and former BuzzFeed News Editor Stacy-Marie Ishmael, is a vaguely worded section of the Privacy Policy stating that employees will look at your notes "for troubleshooting purposes or to maintain and improve the Service." She noted on Twitter that this clause is "so broad as to be all inclusive" and that it's particularly worrying for a "minority journalist in 2016." Given the hostile stance President-elect Donald Trump and some of his supporters have shown toward journalists, it's possible that journalists who want to preserve the anonymity of sources will have to stop using services like Evernote.

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Dealmaster: Get a Dell XPS Tower desktop with Core i7 processor for $729

Plus more savings on notebooks, monitors, and more.

Greetings Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at Dell, we have a number of great deals to share. Today, we're featuring Dell desktops and notebooks—in particular we have a great deal on an XPS Tower PC with an Intel Core i7 CPU, Windows 10 Pro, 8GB of RAM, and a 1TB hard drive for just $729. Aside from the desktops and laptops on sale, there are also a few monitors you can save big on now, too.

Check out the list below for all available deals.

(credit: Dell)

Desktops

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Arista beats Cisco’s $335M copyright claim with an unusual defense

Claim rejected based on legal doctrine known as scènes à faire.

(credit: Scott Jones)

After a two-week trial, a San Jose jury has cleared Arista Networks of allegations that it infringed copyrights and patents belonging to Cisco Systems.

In a lawsuit filed in 2014, Cisco accused Arista of violating copyright because Arista's high-end switching equipment used some of the same commands from Cisco's Command Line Interface, or CLI. Arista lawyers claimed that the CLI was an industry standard, promoted by Cisco, and that now Cisco was trying to change the rules because of Arista's success.

This morning, the eight-person jury cleared Arista of both patent and copyright infringement. The copyright claim, which was the bulk of Cisco's case, was rejected by the jury based on a legal doctrine known as "scènes à faire." A French term that means "scene that must be done," the phrase refers to a situation in which the creation of a certain work can only be accomplished in a limited number of ways, thus producing a more limited copyright.

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Flash will become click-to-run in Edge, Chrome in 2017

A few sites will be whitelisted; everywhere else will have it disabled by default.

The Windows 10 Creators Update, due in spring next year, is going to make almost all Flash content click-to-run in the Edge browser.

The Windows 10 Anniversary Update already applied click-to-run to most online advertising, following in the steps of Safari and Chrome. In the next major update, Microsoft will extend the restrictions on Flash. By default, Flash will not be loaded or offered to sites, and users will have to opt to enable it on a site-by-site basis. A handful of popular, Flash-dependent sites will see the plugin enabled automatically, with Microsoft intending to cut down this whitelist as more and more sites switch their interactive content to be native HTML5.

Earlier this year, Google announced a similar plan for Chrome. Currently, 1 percent of users of the stable Chrome 55 release have click-to-run enabled by default, along with 50 percent of users of the Chrome 56 beta release. When the stable Chrome 56 release is made in February, Flash click-to-run will be enabled by default for everyone. Google also intends to whitelist the ten most popular flash-dependent sites, though it says that this whitelist will only be in place for a year.

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Nova Launcher turns 5, celebrates with Pixel Launcher-style features

Nova Launcher turns 5, celebrates with Pixel Launcher-style features

Don’t like the home screen that comes with your Android phone? The Google Play Store is filled with alternative “launcher” apps which replace the home screen and app drawer.

Nova Launcher is one of the most popular, and it’s also one of the oldest. The app turned 5 years old this week, and developer Cliff Wade announced the release of Nova Launcher 5.0 to celebrate.

Among other things, the new app borrows some ideas first introduced by Google with the Pixel Launcher for the new Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones.

Continue reading Nova Launcher turns 5, celebrates with Pixel Launcher-style features at Liliputing.

Nova Launcher turns 5, celebrates with Pixel Launcher-style features

Don’t like the home screen that comes with your Android phone? The Google Play Store is filled with alternative “launcher” apps which replace the home screen and app drawer.

Nova Launcher is one of the most popular, and it’s also one of the oldest. The app turned 5 years old this week, and developer Cliff Wade announced the release of Nova Launcher 5.0 to celebrate.

Among other things, the new app borrows some ideas first introduced by Google with the Pixel Launcher for the new Pixel and Pixel XL smartphones.

Continue reading Nova Launcher turns 5, celebrates with Pixel Launcher-style features at Liliputing.

Hacked cheating site Ashley Madison will pay $1.6 million to FTC for breach

Commission settlement officially $17.5 million, but fine reduced due to inability to pay.

Enlarge

Ashley Madison, the dating website for married people seeking extramarital affairs, will pay the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) $1.6 million for its failure to protect the account information of 36 million users, for failing to delete account information after regretful users paid a $19 fee, and for luring users with fake accounts of “female” users.

In a press conference call, FTC Chairwoman Edith Ramirez said the commission had secured a $17.5 million settlement, but the company will only pay $1.6 million of that amount due to inability to pay. Ashley Madison's operators are also required to implement a data security program that will be audited by a third party, according to the settlement.

The website was hacked in August 2015, and the hack resulted in the release of user names, first and last names, hacked passwords, partial credit card data, street names, phone numbers, records of transactions, and e-mail addresses. In the wake of the hack, it was discovered that many people who paid the company $20 for a “Full Delete” had been bilked—Ashley Madison parent company Avid Life Media, now Ruby Corporation, had left that data on its servers for up to 12 months after the request had been made.

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EPA’s final fracking report re-writes takeaways

After outside review, conclusions are a little more cautious.

Enlarge (credit: EPA)

In August, the US Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) four-year effort to summarize the environmental risks of fracking for oil and natural gas got its evaluations from a panel of outside experts. The highlight was a determination that the report’s summary painted slightly too rosy a picture of the practice.

The original draft led by saying, “We did not find evidence that these mechanisms have led to widespread, systemic impacts on drinking water resources in the United States.” While it noted that there had been instances of contamination (mostly from spills at the surface), the number “was small compared to the number of hydraulically fractured wells."

The outside reviewers said that was not clear enough and not sufficiently supported by the evidence in the rest of the report. They also wanted to see more explicit descriptions of the gaps in our knowledge that led to uncertainty in certain conclusions.

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Court Protects BitTorrent Pirate From Overaggressive Filmmakers

Filmmakers and other rightsholders should not be allowed to aggressively exploit copyright law for financial gain. In a recent court order, an Oregon Judge denied the makers of The Cobbler a request for more than $17,000 in attorney fees, arguing that individual downloaders don’t have to pay for more than their fair share of the piracy problem.

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

cobblerIn recent years, file-sharers around the world have been pressured to pay significant settlement fees, or face legal repercussions.

These so-called “copyright trolling” efforts have been a common occurrence in the United States for more than half a decade.

The makers of the Adam Sandler movie The Cobbler are one of the parties actively involved in these practices. In one of their Oregon cases they recently settled with local resident Santos Cerritos, after a lengthy legal back-and-forth.

Cerritos eventually agreed to pay the statutory minimum damages of $750 and reasonable attorney fees. A substantial amount, but better than the $150,000 maximum damages rightsholders often want.

However, when the filmmakers announced their fees demand things took a turn for the worse. They wanted Cerritos to pay for their entire legal bill of $17,348, which is many times more than the damage award itself.

The accused pirate protested this request in court and in a recent ruling Oregon Magistrate Judge Stacie Beckerman agreed that the “fee-shifting” request is unreasonable.

The Judge notes that the damages amount in the settlement is already substantial and that it acts as a proper deterrent. That is enough. The defendant should not be required to fund the filmmakers’ copyright enforcement actions.

“In light of the substantial financial penalty already imposed, an attorney fee award is not necessary to deter further infringement, nor is a fee award necessary to encourage Plaintiff to continue to protect its rights, where Plaintiff has been vigilant to date and has the resources to police their copyright,” Judge Beckerman writes.

In a critical note, the Judge adds that these BitTorrent cases are creating results that are not in line with the goals of the Copyright Act. Instead, the threat of unreasonably high damages creates an unequal and unfair bargaining position.

“For this Court to award Plaintiff its attorney’s fees in this case would only contribute to the continued overaggressive assertion and negotiation of these Copyright Act claims,” she notes.

As a result of such overaggressive actions, several defendants have chosen not to defend themselves at all, opting for a default judgment instead. This isn’t purely in the interest of justice, but rather to exploit copyright law for commercial gain, the Judge suggests.

“A startling number of subscribers are failing to show up for Rule 45 depositions, and alleged infringers are more often than not choosing default judgments over litigation,” Judge Beckerman writes.

“By allowing this scenario to occur for several years now, the federal courts are not assisting in the administration of justice, but are instead enabling plaintiffs’ counsel and their LLC clients to receive a financial windfall by exploiting copyright law.”

Another argument against the high demand for attorney fees is the fact that the filmmakers unnecessarily prolonged the case. The case could have been settled early, but the rightsholder refused to do so, likely for financial reasons.

Keeping Cerritos’ financial position in mind, Judge Backerman doesn’t see it as appropriate to leave the defendant with more than $17,000 in debt that could have been avoided with an early settlement.

“If the Court were to force Cerritos to pay Plaintiff’s counsel his fee of $17,348.60, it would take Cerritos and his family years and years to satisfy that debt. It is a debt that was avoidable had counsel working together cooperatively to resolve this case.”

The Judge therefore denies the motion for attorney fees. While admitting that piracy is a problem, she doesn’t believe that these high costs are a burden an individual downloader should carry.

“Online piracy is a serious problem that demands meaningful solutions. Plaintiff has every right to enforce the copyright it holds, but not to demand that individual consumers who downloaded a single movie pay more than their share of the problem,” Judge Beckerman concludes.

Although Cerritos still lost the case and still owes the $750 in damages and $525 in other costs, he will be pleased with this outcome. Others who are in the same position will be glad too. It presents another hurdle to the ‘copyright trolls’ and makes it a little easier for their targets to fight similar demands.

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

Attorney wants Google to unmask reviewer who only wrote “It was horrible”

Attorney decries review as an opinion “to disparage a person in his profession.”

(credit: Anthony Ryan)

A New York lawyer has gone to court to unmask an anonymous person who on Google gave him a one-star review that solely said "it was horrible."

The 8-month-old Google review, searchable under Manhattan commercial litigator Donald J. Tobias' name, was written under the handle "Mia Arce." The lawyer wants to know the identity of the reviewer, perhaps so that person can be sued.

Here's what Tobias is demanding that a New York state judge order Google to divulge:

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