New Anti-Piracy Coalition Calls For Canadian Website Blocking

A new coalition of Canadian companies is calling on the local telecom regulator CRTC to establish a local piracy site blocking program. The plan is the first of its kind in North America, aimed at lowering local piracy rates. Opponents, however, believe the proposal goes too far and equate it to a censorship deal.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

In recent years pirate sites have been blocked around the world, from Europe, through Asia, and even Down Under.

While many of the large corporations backing these blockades have their roots in North America, blocking efforts have been noticeably absent there. This should change, according to a new anti-piracy coalition that was launched in Canada this week.

Fairplay Canada, which consists of a broad range of organizations with ties to the entertainment industry, calls on the local telecom regulator CRTC to institute a national website blocking program.

The coalition’s members include Bell, Cineplex, Directors Guild of Canada, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, Movie Theatre Association of Canada, and Rogers Media, which all share the goal of addressing the country’s rampant piracy problem.

The Canadian blocklist should be maintained by a yet to be established non-profit organization called “Independent Piracy Review Agency” (IPRA) and both IPRA and the CRTC would be overseen by the Federal Court of Appeal, the organizations propose.

“What we are proposing has been effective in countries like the UK, France, and Australia,” says Dr. Shan Chandrasekar, President and CEO of Asian Television Network International Limited (ATN), who is filing Fairplay Canada’s application.

“We are ardent supporters of this incredible coalition that has been formed to propose a new tool to empower the CRTC to address online piracy in Canada. We have great faith in Canadian regulators to modernize the tools available to help creators protect the content they make for Canadians’ enjoyment.”

The proposal is unique in the sense that it’s the first of its kind in North America and also has support from major players in the Telco industry. Since most large ISPs also have ties to media companies of their own, the latter is less surprising as it may seem at first glance.

Bell, for example, is not only the largest Internet provider in Canada but also owns the television broadcasting and production company Bell Media, which applauds the new plan.

“Bell is pleased to work with our partners across the industry and the CRTC on this important step in ensuring the long-term viability of the Canadian creative sector,” says Randy Lennox, President of Bell Media.

“Digital rights holders need up-to-date tools to combat piracy where it’s happening, on the Internet, and the process proposed by the coalition will provide just that, fairly, openly and effectively,” he adds.

Thus far the Government’s response to the plan has been rather reserved. When an early version of the plans leaked last month, Canadaland quoted a spokesperson who said that the Government is committed to opening doors instead of building walls.

Digital rights group OpenMedia goes a step further and brands the proposal a censorship plan which will violate net neutrality and limit people’s right to freedom of expression.

“Everybody agrees that content creators deserved to be paid for their work. But the proposal from this censorship coalition goes too far,” Executive Director Laura Tribe says.

“FairPlay Canada’s proposal is like using a machine gun to kill a mosquito. It will undoubtedly lead to legitimate content and speech being censored online violating our right to free expression and the principles of net neutrality, which the federal government has consistently pledged support for.”

While CTRC is reviewing FairPlay Canada’s plans, OpenMedia has launched a petition to stop the effort in its tracks, which has been signed by more than 45,000 Canadians to date.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

Spieleentwickler: Zum Game Jam gehört das Scheitern

Zeitverknappung und zusammengewürfelte Teams – das sind die Zutaten des Global Game Jam. Golem.de war dabei, als 27 Spiele in 47 Stunden entstanden. Ein Bericht von Achim Fehrenbach (Global Game Jam, Games)

Zeitverknappung und zusammengewürfelte Teams - das sind die Zutaten des Global Game Jam. Golem.de war dabei, als 27 Spiele in 47 Stunden entstanden. Ein Bericht von Achim Fehrenbach (Global Game Jam, Games)

Spionage: China baut Abhörfunktion in den Sitz der Afrikanischen Union

Das Hauptquartier der Afrikanischen Union und dessen Computersysteme sind von China gebaut und bezahlt worden. Einem Pressebericht zufolge soll Peking den Zugang zur Technik genutzt haben, um den Afrikanern jahrelang interne Daten zu stehlen. China nen…

Das Hauptquartier der Afrikanischen Union und dessen Computersysteme sind von China gebaut und bezahlt worden. Einem Pressebericht zufolge soll Peking den Zugang zur Technik genutzt haben, um den Afrikanern jahrelang interne Daten zu stehlen. China nennt den Vorwurf absurd. (Spionage, Datenschutz)

Auto: Whatsapp darf auf CarPlay

Whatsapp-Nachrichten werden in der neuen iOS-Version auf Autoradios mit Carplay angezeigt. Der Nutzer kann sich eingehende Nachrichten vorlesen lassen und Antworten diktieren. Das soll sicherer sein als der Griff zum Smartphone – und auch erlaubt. (Car…

Whatsapp-Nachrichten werden in der neuen iOS-Version auf Autoradios mit Carplay angezeigt. Der Nutzer kann sich eingehende Nachrichten vorlesen lassen und Antworten diktieren. Das soll sicherer sein als der Griff zum Smartphone - und auch erlaubt. (Carplay, Smartphone)

Auto: Tomtom stoppt Kartenaktualisierung auf älteren Navis

Ein Navigationsgerät ist nur so gut wie sein Kartenmaterial, daher bieten die Hersteller regelmäßig Updates an. Tomtom stellt künftig für zahlreiche Navis jedoch keine neuen Karten mehr zur Verfügung. Kunden sollen sich neue Geräte kaufen. (Tomtom, Nav…

Ein Navigationsgerät ist nur so gut wie sein Kartenmaterial, daher bieten die Hersteller regelmäßig Updates an. Tomtom stellt künftig für zahlreiche Navis jedoch keine neuen Karten mehr zur Verfügung. Kunden sollen sich neue Geräte kaufen. (Tomtom, Navigationssystem)

Carsharing: BMW übernimmt Drivenow komplett

BMW ist nun alleiniger Eigentümer des Autovermieters Drivenow, der Fahrzeuge in zahlreichen Städten zur Kurzmiete anbietet. Die Anteile von Sixt sind an BMW übergegangen. Drivenow könnte künftig mit Car2Go fusionieren. (Drivenow, Elektroauto)

BMW ist nun alleiniger Eigentümer des Autovermieters Drivenow, der Fahrzeuge in zahlreichen Städten zur Kurzmiete anbietet. Die Anteile von Sixt sind an BMW übergegangen. Drivenow könnte künftig mit Car2Go fusionieren. (Drivenow, Elektroauto)

More than 2,000 WordPress websites are infected with a keylogger

Malicious script logs passwords and just about anything else admins or visitors type.

Enlarge / A screenshot showing a keylogger extracting user names and passwords. It's currently infecting more than 2,000 WordPress websites. (credit: Sucuri)

More than 2,000 websites running the open-source WordPress content management system are infected with malware, researchers warned late last week. The malware in question logs passwords and just about anything else an administrator or visitor types.

The keylogger is part of a malicious package that also installs an in-browser cryptocurrency miner that's surreptitiously run on the computers of people visiting the infected sites. Data provided here, here, and here by website search service PublicWWW showed that, as of Monday afternoon, the package was running on 2,092 sites.

Website security firm Sucuri said this is the same malicious code it found running on almost 5,500 WordPress sites in December. Those infections were cleaned up after cloudflare[.]solutions—the site used to host the malicious scripts—was taken down. The new infections are hosted on three new sites, msdns[.]online, cdns[.]ws, and cdjs[.]online. None of the sites hosting the code has any relation to Cloudflare or any other legitimate company.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

“Heatmap” for social athlete’s app reveals secret bases, secret places

Data map inadvertently reveals movements of people in dangerous and sensitive places.

Enlarge / A heatmap of Strava "workout" data revealed sensitive locations around the world, including some mysterious places in Syria. (credit: Strava)

On January 27, Nathan Ruser, a founder of the Institute for United Conflict Analysts, started looking at a rich source of geospatial data for locating military operations in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, and other conflict zones: a newly published “activity hotmap” for the fitness tracking application Strava. Others, including Tobias Schneider, started plumbing the depths of the Strava data store, based on data pulled from app users’ mobile devices. The heatmap was meant as a demonstration of the mass of activity over 2017 by Strava users.

But it, along with the other data available through Strava's website and APIs, also may be exposing sensitive “patterns of life” of military and contractor personnel in conflict zones and even information about individuals in some of those places.

There’s nothing in the heatmap that specifically identifies who is connected with the data for a very confined path of movement in a compound northeast of Raqqa, for example, or the long tracks of what is most likely a vehicle route from Iraq to northern Syria. But those traces on the heatmap, along with others in areas around the world linked to military operations, have highlighted sometimes covert locations from Niger to Ukraine to Taiwan. And with a little work, it is in some cases possible to connect those activities to individuals—and track them back to their homes.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Now you can get a Moto X4 with 6GB of RAM (in India)

The Motorola Moto X4 is a mid-range smartphone with dual rear cameras, a glass back, long battery life, and respectable performance thanks to its Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor. The versions sold in the US ship with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage an…

The Motorola Moto X4 is a mid-range smartphone with dual rear cameras, a glass back, long battery life, and respectable performance thanks to its Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor. The versions sold in the US ship with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of storage and have a list price of about $400 (although you can pick […]

Now you can get a Moto X4 with 6GB of RAM (in India) is a post from: Liliputing