Canadian ISP Bell Calls For Pirate Site Blacklist in NAFTA Hearing

In order to make the NAFTA trade agreement “work better”, Bell, Canada’s largest telecommunications company, is recommending that the Government commits to stronger intellectual property enforcement. The company envisions a system where all ISPs are required to block access to pirate sites, without court intervention.

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

Website blocking has become a common tool for copyright holders to target online piracy.

In most countries, these blockades are ordered by local courts, which compel Internet providers to restrict access to certain websites.

While most ISPs initially object to such restrictions, the largest Canadian telco Bell is actively calling for such measures. In a hearing before the Standing Committee on International Trade on NAFTA, the company is clear on how online piracy should be curbed.

Rob Malcolmson, Bell’s Senior Vice-President Regulatory Affairs, mentioned that the United States has repeatedly complained about Canada’s apparent lack of copyright enforcement. To make NAFTA “work better” for Canadian culture in the digital economy, stronger enforcement is crucial.

“US interests have long complained that widespread online copyright infringement here in Canada is limiting the growth of the digital economy. In fact, many of the most prominent global players in the piracy ecosystem operate out of Canada as a relative safe harbor,” Malcolmson said.

“We recommend that the Government commits to stronger intellectual property enforcement by having an administrative agency dedicated to such enforcement and by prioritizing enforcement against digital pirates.”

In Bell’s view, all Canadian Internet providers should be required to block access to the most egregious pirate sites, without intervention from the courts.

“We would like to see measures put in place whereby all Internet service providers are required to block consumer access to pirated websites. In our view, that is the only way to stop it,” Malcolmson said.

The telco, which is a copyright holder itself, has clearly thought the plan through. It notes that Internet providers shouldn’t be tasked with determining which sites should be blocked. This should be the job of an independent outfit. Alternatively, the Canadian telco regulator CTRC could oversee the blocking scheme.

“In our view, it would be an independent agency that would be charged with that task. You certainly would not want the ISPs acting as censors as to what content is pirate content,” Malcolmson said.

“But, surely, an independent third party agency could be formed, could create a blacklist of pirate sites, and then the ISPs would be required to block it. That is at a high level how we would see it unfolding, perhaps overseen by a regulator like the CRTC.”

In addition to website blocking, Bell also recommends criminalizing commercial copyright infringement, which would support stronger enforcement against online piracy.

Canadian law professor Micheal Geist, who picked up Bell’s controversial comments, is very critical of the recommendations. Geist says that the proposal goes above and beyond what US copyright holders have asked for.

“The Bell proposals […] suggest that the company’s position as a common carrier representing the concerns of ISPs and their subscribers is long over,” Geist writes.

“Instead, Bell’s copyright advocacy goes beyond what even some U.S. rights holders have called for, envisioning new methods of using copyright law to police the Internet with oversight from the CRTC and implementing such provisions through NAFTA.”

If the Canadian Government considers the suggestions, there is bound to be pushback from other ISPs on the blocking elements. Internet providers are generally not eager to block content without a court order.

It is also worth keeping in mind that while Bell’s plans are in part a response to criticism from US interests, American ISPs are still not required to block any pirate sites, voluntarily or not.

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

Apple Watch Series 3 teardown finds a bigger battery and few surprises

Latest iFixit teardown answers some questions, leaves others up in the air.

Enlarge (credit: iFixit)

After breaking apart Apple’s new iPhone 8 last week, popular gadget repair site iFixit released a teardown of the LTE-enabled Apple Watch Series 3 on Monday.

Given that the just-released wearable looks a great deal like its predecessor—big red dot aside—it shouldn’t be surprising to hear that it doesn’t have many major changes on the inside. There’s a new suite of RF chips presumably in place to handle LTE connectivity and a “slightly modified” charging coil to support Qi wireless chargers. But for the most part, the Series 3 is laid out similarly to the Series 2 before it.

iFixit says that the Series 3 does come with a slightly stronger battery, though: it has a 1.07Whr unit, a 4-percent increase over the 1.03Whr battery in the Series 2. That’s a very modest gain, though any extra juice should be welcome with the added strain that cellular connectivity puts on a battery. Since the new Watch isn’t significantly thicker than the Series 2, it seems that Apple is banking on its chips being more efficient to keep the device’s battery life from being totally anemic.

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After 15 yrs in vegetative state, patient becomes minimally conscious

Jolts to vagus nerve show potential to help patients with brain injuries, researchers say.

Enlarge / Information sharing across all electrodes before and after vagus nerve stimulation. On the right, the warmer colors (yellow/orange) indicated an increase of connectivity among posterior parietal regions. (credit: Current Biology)

After lying in a vegetative state for 15 years, a 35-year-old male patient in France appears to have regained minimal consciousness following months of vagus nerve stimulation, researchers report today in Current Biology.

The patient, who suffered severe brain damage in a car crash, had shown no signs of awareness or improvement before. He made no apparent purposeful movements and didn’t respond to doctors or family at his bedside. But after researchers surgically implanted a device that stimulates the vagus nerve, quiet areas of his brain began to perk up—as did he.

His eyes turned toward people talking and could follow a moving mirror. He turned his head to follow a speaker moving around his bed. He slowly shook his head when asked. When researchers suddenly drew very close to his face, his eyes widened as if he was surprised or scared. When caregivers played his favorite music, he smiled and shed a tear.

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MacOS 10.13: Apple gibt High Sierra frei

Apple hat das neue MacOS 10.13 alias High Sierra zum Download bereitgestellt. APFS wird damit für einige Nutzer Pflicht. Es gibt allerdings auch schon Warnungen von Herstellern, die mit den kurzen Entwicklungszyklen von Apple nicht zurechtkommen. (Mac OS, Apple)

Apple hat das neue MacOS 10.13 alias High Sierra zum Download bereitgestellt. APFS wird damit für einige Nutzer Pflicht. Es gibt allerdings auch schon Warnungen von Herstellern, die mit den kurzen Entwicklungszyklen von Apple nicht zurechtkommen. (Mac OS, Apple)

Deals of the Day (9-25-2017)

One of these days Microsoft is going to launch a new version of its Surface Book 2-in-1 laptop. But until that day comes, the list price for a model with a Core i5 Skylake processor is still $1499 and up, although you can often find models on sale for less. But right now eBay seller […]

Deals of the Day (9-25-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

One of these days Microsoft is going to launch a new version of its Surface Book 2-in-1 laptop. But until that day comes, the list price for a model with a Core i5 Skylake processor is still $1499 and up, although you can often find models on sale for less. But right now eBay seller […]

Deals of the Day (9-25-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

macOS 10.13 High Sierra: The Ars Technica review

A focus on foundation makes for an important but nigh-invisible update.

Enlarge / High Sierra wallpaper. The low-hanging clouds in the background may or may not be related to the name. (credit: Apple)

If you've felt like the last few macOS releases have been a little light, High Sierra won't change your mind.

That's not because there's nothing here but because most of Apple's development work this time around went into under-the-hood additions and updates to foundational technologies. Changing filesystems, adding external graphics support, adding support for new image compression formats, and updating the graphics API to support VR are all important, and none of them are small tasks. But the UI doesn’t change, apps get only minor updates (when they get them at all), and multiple features continue to be more limited than their iOS counterparts. Updates like Mountain Lion and El Capitan have drawn comparisons to Snow Leopard for focusing on refinement rather than features, but High Sierra is the closest thing we've gotten to a "no new features" update in years. High Sierra is so similar to Sierra in so many ways that it’s honestly pretty hard to tell them apart.

It’s not like the constancy of macOS is a bad thing; while the Mac operating system has been trundling along in a comfortable groove, iOS has been working its way through an exciting-but-occasionally-awkward teenage phase, and Windows has swerved wildly from desktop OS to tablet OS and back again. On the other hand, it has been a while since I came away from a new macOS version thinking, "Yes, this software absolutely makes my computer indisputably better than it was before."

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WatchOS 4.0 im Test: Apples praktische Taschenlampe mit autarkem Musikplayer

Etliche Neuerungen von WatchOS 4.0 sind nur Spielereien. Einige Kleinigkeiten machen die Apple Watch im Alltag aber deutlich praktischer. Ein Test von Andreas Sebayang (WatchOS, Test)

Etliche Neuerungen von WatchOS 4.0 sind nur Spielereien. Einige Kleinigkeiten machen die Apple Watch im Alltag aber deutlich praktischer. Ein Test von Andreas Sebayang (WatchOS, Test)

Uber CEO apologizes for “mistakes” in London

Uber has vowed to appeal a decision banning the company from London.

Enlarge / Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi. (credit: George Grinsted)

The new CEO of Uber says he's sorry for "mistakes" the company has made—mistakes that could lead to the company losing its license to operate in London. London's taxi regulator, Transport for London, announced Friday that Uber's license would not be renewed.

"While Uber has revolutionized the way people move in cities around the world, it’s equally true that we’ve got things wrong along the way," Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi wrote. "On behalf of everyone at Uber globally, I apologize for the mistakes we’ve made."

Uber's license expires at the end of the month, but Transport for London said Uber has 21 days to appeal the decision and can continue operating while the appeal is being heard. The agency faulted Uber for its poor record of reporting serious crimes involving Uber drivers to the police. It also objected to Uber's handling of driver background checks and said Uber had not adequately explained whether it used software called "Greyball" to mislead British regulators the way the company had misled some Americans.

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Never mind the Elon—the forecast isn’t that spooky for AI in business

Don’t fear the machines—AI tech isn’t nearly ready to think for itself.

Enlarge / Space Imaging's IKONOS satellite detected this jack-o-lantern corn maze in Bell County, Kentucky. Satellite images are being paired with other data to find a totally different sort of pattern—predicting crop yields and failures. (credit: Space Imaging/Getty Images)

Despite Elon Musk's warnings this summer, there's not a whole lot of reason to lose any sleep worrying about Skynet and the Terminator. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is far from becoming a maleficent, all-knowing force. The only "Apocalypse" on the horizon right now is an over reliance by humans on machine learning and expert systems, as demonstrated by the deaths of Tesla owners who took their hands off the wheel.

Examples of what currently pass for "Artificial Intelligence"—technologies such as expert systems and machine learning—are excellent for creating software that can help in contexts that involve pattern recognition, automated decision-making, and human-to-machine conversations. Both types have been around for decades. And both are only as good as the source information they are based on. For that reason, it's unlikely that AI will replace human beings' judgment on important tasks requiring decisions more complex than "yes or no" any time soon.

Expert systems, also known as rule-based or knowledge-based systems, are when computers are programmed with explicit rules, written down by human experts. The computers can then run the same rules but much faster, 24x7, to come up with the same conclusions as the human experts. Imagine asking an oncologist how she diagnoses cancer and then programming medical software to follow those same steps. For a particular diagnosis, an oncologist can study which of those rules was activated to validate that the expert system is working correctly.

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Ajit Pai should be fired, petition says before Senate re-confirmation vote

Senate Democrats plan “very loud” debate on vote to give Pai a new term.

Enlarge / Free Press petition to block FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's re-confirmation. (credit: Free Press)

Net neutrality advocacy group Free Press is gathering signatures on a petition to "fire" Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai, who needs a re-confirmation vote from the Senate in order to continue serving on the FCC.

The Senate's Republican majority will almost certainly ensure that Pai gets a new term. But Free Press's petition likely won't go unheeded by Democratic senators, who plan to criticize Pai's positions on net neutrality and broadband consumer privacy rules before the Senate vote.

The Free Press petition, available here, says that "The Senate needs to stand up for what's right and fire FCC Chairman Ajit Pai." Free Press, which says it collected 10,000 signatures on the petition in 24 hours, wrote:

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