China Bans Unauthorized VPN Services in Internet Crackdown

According to a notice published by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the government has launched a 14-month campaign to crack down on ‘unauthorized’ Internet platforms. That includes censorship-busting VPN services, which will require government pre-approval to exist.

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

blocked-censorWhile the Internet is considered by many to be the greatest invention of modern time, to others it presents a disruptive influence that needs to be controlled.

Among developed nations nowhere is this more obvious than in China, where the government seeks to limit what citizens can experience online. Using technology such as filters and an army of personnel, people are routinely barred from visiting certain websites and engaging in activity deemed as undermining the state.

Of course, a cat-and-mouse game is continuously underway, with citizens regularly trying to punch through the country’s so-called ‘Great Firewall’ using various techniques, services, and encryption technologies. Now, however, even that is under threat.

In an announcement yesterday from China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the government explained that due to Internet technologies and services expanding in a “disorderly” fashion, regulation is needed to restore order.

“In recent years, as advances in information technology networks, cloud computing, big data and other applications have flourished, China’s Internet network access services market is facing many development opportunities. However, signs of disorderly development show the urgent need for regulation norms,” MIIT said.

In order to “standardize” the market and “strengthen network information security management,” the government says it is embarking on a “nationwide Internet network access services clean-up.” It will begin immediately and continue until March 31, 2018, with several aims.

All Internet services such as data centers, ISPs, CDNs and much-valued censorship-busting VPNs, will need to have pre-approval from the government to operate. Operating such a service without a corresponding telecommunications business license will constitute an offense.

“Internet data centers, ISP and CDN enterprises shall not privately build communication transmission facilities, and shall not use the network infrastructure and IP addresses, bandwidth and other network access resources…without the corresponding telecommunications business license,” the notice reads.

It will also be an offense to possess a business license but then operate outside its scope, such as by exceeding its regional boundaries or by operating other Internet services not permitted by the license. Internet entities are also forbidden to sub-lease to other unlicensed entities.

In the notice, VPNs and similar technologies have a section all to themselves and are framed as “cross-border issues.”

“Without the approval of the telecommunications administrations, entities can not create their own or leased line (including a Virtual Private Network) and other channels to carry out cross-border business activities,” it reads.

The notice, published yesterday, renders most VPN providers in China illegal, SCMP reports.

Only time will tell what effect the ban will have in the real world, but in the short-term there is bound to be some disruption as entities seek to license their services or scurry away underground.

As always, however, the Internet will perceive censorship as damage, and it’s inevitable that the most determined of netizens will find a way to access content outside China (such as Google, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter), no matter how strict the rules.

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

Deals of the Day (1-23-2017)

Deals of the Day (1-23-2017)

Logitech’s C920 webcam has long been a popular option for folks looking for a PC camera with 1080p video support, H.264 compression, dual stereo mics, and low-light correction, among other features.

While Logitech has rolled out an updated model called the C922 Pro, the older camera is still a pretty solid option… especially today, since Staples is selling it for $50, or about half the list price for the C920.

FYI, this is the webcam I currently use in my home office.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (1-23-2017) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (1-23-2017)

Logitech’s C920 webcam has long been a popular option for folks looking for a PC camera with 1080p video support, H.264 compression, dual stereo mics, and low-light correction, among other features.

While Logitech has rolled out an updated model called the C922 Pro, the older camera is still a pretty solid option… especially today, since Staples is selling it for $50, or about half the list price for the C920.

FYI, this is the webcam I currently use in my home office.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (1-23-2017) at Liliputing.

Google remembers that Google Voice exists, overhauls app UI

Google Voice gets a modern UI, Direct Reply support, and MMS photo support.

Google

Apparently, someone at Google found the Google Voice source code sitting on a dusty server somewhere. Google just announced a big Google Voice overhaul, marking its first major update in five years.

First up, we've got new UIs for the Android, iOS, and Web clients of Google Voice. All platforms get a modern white design and separate tabs for text messages, calls, and voicemails. SMS looks a lot like an IM app, with threaded messages for every contact. On Android in particular, the Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich-era UI was an embarrassment.

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iOS 10.2.1 is all about fixing bugs and patching security holes

Beta builds of the more significant iOS 10.3 should follow soon.

Enlarge (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

After several weeks of beta testing, Apple has released iOS 10.2.1 to the public today. The update is fairly minor and includes no major improvements to core iOS apps or features. The release notes say only that it fixes bugs and includes security improvements. The security page for the update lists a number of vulnerabilities in the kernel, WebKit, and the Contacts app that have all been fixed. Apple also addressed a bug that could allow attackers to briefly access the home screen on an Activation Locked iPad that had been reset.

The update is available for everything that runs iOS 10: the iPhone 5 and newer, the fourth-generation iPad and newer, the iPad Mini 2 and newer, both iPad Pros, and the sixth-generation iPod Touch. Small updates for watchOS 3 and tvOS 10, both of which are iOS-based, have been released as well.

The release of iOS 10.2.1 clears the deck for betas of iOS 10.3, which is likely to be the final major revision to iOS 10 before work begins in earnest on iOS 11. We don't know much about what Apple plans to include in this next update, but older rumors suggest that it may renew focus on the iPad in advance of some new tablet launches in the spring. Hope also springs eternal about a dark mode for iOS.

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Google Voice gets its first major update in 5 years

Google Voice gets its first major update in 5 years

Google Voice is a free service that allows you to sign up for a single phone number that you can use to manage all of your phone lines. Give people that one number and Google will ring all you phones, let you receive automatic transcripts of voicemail messages and filter or record calls.

The service launched to the public in 2010, after a year in beta. And it’s long had a loyal, but small (by Google standards) following.

Continue reading Google Voice gets its first major update in 5 years at Liliputing.

Google Voice gets its first major update in 5 years

Google Voice is a free service that allows you to sign up for a single phone number that you can use to manage all of your phone lines. Give people that one number and Google will ring all you phones, let you receive automatic transcripts of voicemail messages and filter or record calls.

The service launched to the public in 2010, after a year in beta. And it’s long had a loyal, but small (by Google standards) following.

Continue reading Google Voice gets its first major update in 5 years at Liliputing.

Trump withdraws US from Trans-Pacific Partnership

“We’ve been talking about this for a long time,” Trump said of MPAA-backed pact.

Enlarge / President Donald Trump signs an executive order Monday withdrawing from the Trans-Pacific Partnership as Chief of Staff Reince Priebus looks on in the Oval Office. (credit: Saul Loeb/Getty Images)

With the stroke of a pen from President Donald Trump, the United States officially withdrew Monday from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed and controversial 12-nation trade pact dealing with everything from intellectual property to human rights.

"Everybody knows what that means, right? We’ve been talking about this for a long time," Trump said as he signed an executive order and made good on his campaign promise to remove the US from the trade deal. "A great thing for the American worker." During the election campaign, he called the TPP a "disaster."

President Barack Obama had praised the pact, but it was put on life support just days after Election Day. That's when congressional leaders told the White House that it would no longer consider entering the pact with a lame-duck president. The failing deal was of interest to Ars due to how intellectual property would have been treated. As we noted, "the TPP exported US copyright law regarding how long a copyright lasts. For signing nations, the plan would have made copyrights last for the life of the creator plus 70 years after his or her death. That's basically the same as in the US."

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Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue review: As messy as its title

Still just marking time until we actually get Kingdom Hearts 3.

Enlarge / Dream Drop Distance is nothing if not colorful.

Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue is a package as hard to parse as its name. The collection serves up three new-ish chapters in the Kingdom Hearts series: an HD remaster of the 3DS exclusive Kingdom Hearts: Dream Drop Distance; a two-hour followup to the PSP’s Kingdom Hearts: Birth By Sleep; and an extended cutscene based on the browser and mobile game prequel Kingdom Hearts χ.

Before booting up 2.8, I did my best to brush up on the 15-or-so years of series lore to get a grasp on where these episodes fit in Kingdom Hearts’ timeline. What I found was a swirling mess of proper nouns and unpronounceable names. It seems since the first Kingdom Hearts (the last one I finished) things have gotten complicated. Or more complicated than a world where Disney and Final Fantasy characters hang out on a regular basis, anyway.

If you’re hoping 2.8 will at least make sense as a self-contained collection, forget it. No single part of the trio seems directly connected to any other part. Dream Drop Distance is set at the extreme end of the Kingdom Hearts timeline (ostensibly leading up to the still mythical Kingdom Hearts 3), A Fragmentary Passage (the two-hour Birth by Sleep followup) runs concurrent with, but disconnected from, the original Kingdom Hearts; and Kingdom Hearts χ Back Cover (the “extended cutscene”) is set eons before either of the other two.

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Raumfahrt: Chang’e 5 fliegt zum Mond und wieder zurück

Chinas nächste Mondmission startet in diesem Jahr: Die Raumfahrtagentur CNSA will ein Landefahrzeug zum Mond schießen, das dort Proben sammelt und wieder zur Erde zurückbringt. (Mond, Raumfahrt)

Chinas nächste Mondmission startet in diesem Jahr: Die Raumfahrtagentur CNSA will ein Landefahrzeug zum Mond schießen, das dort Proben sammelt und wieder zur Erde zurückbringt. (Mond, Raumfahrt)

Foxconn wants “bargain rates” on land and power before it makes US investments

Plans involve flat-panel screens from Sharp, which Foxconn bought last year.

Foxconn, the Taiwanese contract manufacturing company best known for its partnership with Apple, has said that it is mulling a $7 billion investment in US manufacturing that could create between 30,000 and 50,000 jobs. According to The Wall Street Journal, Foxconn Chairman Tony Gou says the company is talking with the state of Pennsylvania among others about getting the land and electricity subsidies it would need to build a factory.

“If US state governments are willing to provide these terms, and we calculate and it is cheaper than shipping from China or Japan, then why wouldn’t Sharp build a factory in the US?" said Gou.

The factory would build flat-panel screens under the Sharp name—Foxconn bought Sharp around this time last year for $5.1 billion. Sharp President Tai Jeng-wu hinted in October of 2016 that US manufacturing could be a possibility for Sharp, and he also indicated that Apple could begin using OLED display panels in future iPhones. Apple currently uses OLED in the Apple Watch and in the new MacBook Pro's Touch Bar, but otherwise it hasn't pushed to adopt the technology as some Android phone manufacturers have.

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Episode VIII will be called Star Wars: The Last Jedi

But what does it mean? We’ll find out on December 15th.

Enlarge (credit: Lucasfilm)

Warning, this post contains spoilers about the previous Star Wars film, Episode VII.

Since Disney bought the Star Wars franchise, we've been treated to two rather excellent films. 2015's Star Wars: Episode VII—The Force Awakens was a return to form. Last year's Rogue One: A Star Wars Story filled in some plot points and explored the universe in a darker and more mature way.

Thanks to Disney's metronomic production schedule, the next installment of Star Wars will hit the screens in December, and we now have a title: Episode VIII will be Star Wars: The Last Jedi.

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