EPA says appointee can accept money from secret clients for consulting gigs

EPA ethics lawyer approved request, but handling of conflicts of interest is unclear.

Enlarge / A flag hangs over an entrance to the Environmental Protection Agency in Washington on April 22, 2017. (Photo By Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call) (credit: Bill Clark / CQ Roll Call / Getty Images)

A top aide appointed to work in the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Office of Public Affairs has been allowed to take outside consulting work for private clients whose names remain redacted.

The aide, John Konkus, was a part of the Trump administration's transition team after the 2016 election and was appointed as the associate administrator for the EPA's Office of Public Affairs in early 2017. This summer, the EPA's ethics lawyer signed off on Konkus' request to take outside work from private clients, but, according to the Associated Press, the in-house lawyer noted that "Konkus' outside contracts presented a 'financial conflict of interest.'" The ethics lawyer barred Konkus "from participating in matters at EPA that would have a 'direct and predictable' financial benefit for his clients," AP noted. However, it's unclear what those matters are and when Konkus would encounter them in his daily work.

The memo from the EPA's ethics lawyer approving Konkus' work was sent to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, six months after the committee requested information on conflicts of interest within the agency. According to a letter published by Democrats on that committee (PDF), the memo that the EPA sent to Congress had the names redacted of the two clients for whom Konkus wanted to work.

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Windows Insiders can begin testing Windows 10’s new privacy settings layout

Microsoft has received a fair amount of flak over the privacy settings in Windows 10, and the company has promised to provide more transparency around the data it collects in upcoming versions of the operating system. Users can also opt out of some dat…

Microsoft has received a fair amount of flak over the privacy settings in Windows 10, and the company has promised to provide more transparency around the data it collects in upcoming versions of the operating system. Users can also opt out of some data collection features, but the process for doing so hasn’t always been […]

The post Windows Insiders can begin testing Windows 10’s new privacy settings layout appeared first on Liliputing.

DOD napalms $950m AWS buy, burning it back by 90 percent

After protests and criticisms of deal with Rean LLC, DOD “narrows scope.”

Enlarge / DOD wants to build a giant cloud called JEDI. But it scaled back a nearly billion-dollar AWS buy, likely because of protests from Oracle. (credit: US Army)

A major Department of Defense commercial cloud deal has contracted considerably after officials experienced buyer's remorse―or maybe after Oracle protests used a Jedi mind trick.

Last year, as part of a program spurred by the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental (DIUx), the US Transportation Command inked a deal with Amazon Web Services reseller REAN Cloud to start moving five of its logistics applications into the commercial cloud. Since USTRANSCOM relies a great deal on commercial logistics and transportation providers to get things places, this was a relatively easy sell to Department of Defense top brass.

The migration went so smoothly (by DOD standards) that the "Sprint to the Cloud" team at USTRANSCOM won the program an honorable mention in the DOD CIO's Cyber and Information Technology Excellence awards. And it came at a time when DOD leadership—and Deputy Defense Secretary Patrick M. Shanahan (a former Boeing executive) in particular—has been pushing for the DOD to offload more stuff to the commercial cloud.

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$20 porn-unblocking fee could hit Internet users if state bill becomes law

The opposite of net neutrality: R.I. bill requires blocking and a $20 porn fee.

Enlarge

State legislation pending in Rhode Island would force Internet service providers to block "sexual content" by default and charge a one-time fee of $20 to any Internet user who wants to view porn or other "offensive material" online. ISPs would have to hand the money they collect over to the state so it can "help fund the operations of the council on human trafficking."

The bill was introduced on Thursday by Democratic state Senators Frank Ciccone and Hanna Gallo and is titled "An Act Relating to Public Utilities and Carriers—Internet Digital Blocking."

ISPs "shall provide... a digital blocking capability that renders inaccessible sexual content and/or patently offensive material as defined in § 11-31-1," the bill says. Under that state statute, sexual content includes depictions and descriptions of any act of sexual intercourse, whether "normal or perverted, actual or simulated." Depictions of masturbation are also considered sexual content under this statute.

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Judge Issues Mixed Order in RIAA’s Piracy Case Against ISP Grande

ISP Grande Communications and the RIAA are continuing their fight in court. US Magistrate Judge Andrew Austin recommends dropping the infringement claims against Grande’s management company and the vicarious infringement claim against the ISP itself. However, the request to dismiss the contributory infringement claim should be denied.

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

Regular Internet providers are being put under increasing pressure for not doing enough to curb copyright infringement.

Last year several major record labels, represented by the RIAA, filed a lawsuit in a Texas District Court, accusing ISP Grande Communications of turning a blind eye on its pirating subscribers.

According to the RIAA, the Internet provider knew that some of its subscribers were frequently distributing copyrighted material, and accused the company of failing to take any meaningful action in response.

Grande disagreed with this assertion and filed a motion to dismiss the case. The ISP argued that it doesn’t encourage any of its customers to download copyrighted works, and that it has no control over the content subscribers access.

The Internet provider admitted that it received millions of takedown notices through the piracy tracking company Rightscorp. However, it believes that these notices are flawed and not worthy of acting upon. It was not keeping subscribers on board with a profit motive, as the RIAA suggested.

A few days ago US Magistrate Judge Andrew Austin issued his “report and recommendation” on the motions to dismiss, which brings some good and bad news for both sides.

First of all, Judge Austin recommends granting the motion to dismiss the piracy claims against Grande’s management company Patriot Media Consulting, which is also listed as a defendant.

According to the order, the RIAA failed to show that Patriot employees were involved in the decisions or actions that led to the infringements, only that they may have been involved in formulating Grande’s infringement related policies.

“This is a far cry from showing that Patriot as an entity was an active participant in the alleged secondary infringement,” Judge Austin writes.

Moving to Grande Communications itself, Judge Austin recommends dropping the vicarious infringement claim, as Grande requested. To show vicarious infringement, the RIAA would have to prove that the ISP has a direct financial interest in the infringing activity. That is not the case here.

The record labels argued that the availability of copyrighted music lures customers, but the Judge found this allegation too vague, as it would apply to all ISPs.

“There are no allegations that Grande’s actions in failing to adequately police their infringing subscribers is a draw to subscribers to purchase its services, so that they can then use those services to infringe on UMG’s (and others’) copyrights,” Judge Austin argues.

“Instead UMG only alleges that the existence of music and the BitTorrent protocol is the draw. But that would impose liability on every ISP, as the music at issue is available on the Internet generally, as is the BitTorrent protocol, and is not something exclusively available through Grande’s services.”

While the above is good news for the Internet provider, the report and recommendation opt to keep the contributory infringement claim alive. Contributory copyright infringement happens where a defendant intentionally induces or encourages direct infringement.

Grande argued that Rightcorp’s notices were not sufficient to show that copyrighted material was ever downloaded, but Judge Austin disagrees. The RIAA has made a “plausible claim” that the ISP’s subscribers are infringing the labels’ copyrights.

“It would be inappropriate to dismiss the case based on factual allegations Grande makes about the Rightscorp notices and system, without any evidence to back those up,” Judge Austin’s recommendation reads.

In addition, Grande also argued that it’s protected from a secondary copyright infringement claim under the “staple article of commerce” doctrine, as “it is beyond dispute” that ISPs have numerous non-infringing uses.

Referring to the legal case between BMG and Cox Communications, Judge Austin says that this isn’t as clear as Grande suggests.

“The Court acknowledges that this is not yet a well-defined area of the law, and that there are good arguments on both sides of this issue,” the recommendation reads.

“However, at this point in the case, the Court is persuaded that UMG has pled a plausible claim of secondary infringement based on Grande’s alleged failure to act when presented with evidence of ongoing, pervasive infringement by its subscribers.”

The recommendation, therefore, is to deny the motion to dismiss the contributory infringement claim against Grande. If the U.S. District Court Judge adopts this position, it would mean that the case is heading to trial based on this claim.

Judge Austin’s full report and recommendations filing is available here (pdf).

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

The work-anywhere Surface Pro with LTE can now be preordered by anyone

The business-oriented system is now being opened up to consumers.

Enlarge / Surface Pro with a Cobalt Blue Type Cover.

The Surface Pro with LTE is set to become more widely available. Initially positioned and sold as a business-oriented device, Microsoft today opened the device up to consumers, with preorders starting today.

While business users have been able to buy the systems since last December, anyone preordering today still has a wait in store: the devices won't be shipping until May 1. Microsoft has two versions of the LTE device available to businesses; for $1,149, you get a Core i5 7300U, 4GB RAM, and 128GB storage, and for $1,449 you get the same processor with 8GB RAM and 256GB storage. In both cases, this is a $150 premium over the non-LTE versions. Currently, only the more expensive of the two appears to be available to preorder, though we would expect the other to materialize at some point. As with every Surface Pro, if you want a Type Cover keyboard or a Surface Pen, you'll have to pay extra.

We wouldn't expect to see much variety beyond these two configurations, however. In particular, there won't be an i7 version. The space where the modem would be contains a fan in the i7 units, so there simply isn't any room for LTE. And this means that the processors are still seventh generation—that is, dual-core, four-thread Kaby Lake chips instead of the four-core, eight-thread eighth-generation parts that are now current.

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Google helps Pentagon analyze military drone footage—employees “outraged”

“Project Maven” applies Google’s image recognition tech to drone footage.

A report from Gizmodo says that Google is partnering with the United States Department of Defense and building drone software. The project will reportedly apply Google's usual machine learning prowess to identify objects in drone footage. Google's involvement in the project wasn't public, but it was apparently discussed internally at Google last week and leaked.

The project is called "Project Maven," also known as the "Algorithmic Warfare Cross-Functional Team (AWCFT)." The project started in April of last year with a mission to “accelerate DoD’s integration of big data and machine learning.”

A DoD press release on Project Maven says the project aims to help deal with the "millions of hours of video" the military collects. Drone footage is pouring into the Pentagon at a rate faster than human analysts can keep up with, so the hope is that machine learning could help do some of the heavy lifting and identify interesting footage. As the owner of YouTube, Google is probably the world's foremost expert on having more video footage than you know what to do with.

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Electric cat: Jaguar stalks Tesla with $70,000 I-Pace SUV

Cheaper and faster than a Model X 100D, and it even gets over-the-air updates.

Jaguar

For far too long, Tesla has had the high-end electric vehicle market all to itself. But that's set to change in the next couple of years. Some of the more forward-thinking traditional automakers have gotten their act together, and the first out of the gate will be Jaguar with its new I-Pace SUV. And make no mistake about it: the I-Pace is gunning squarely at Tesla when it comes to the EV's vital statistics. What's more, with a starting price of $69,500 it's going to significantly undercut both the Model S and Model X.

We first saw the I-Pace as a concept car at the 2016 Los Angeles Auto Show. Since then, it has felt like a familiar face, appearing at every major auto show in 2017. There was even news last December that a one-make racing series will support Formula E in 2018. But we didn't actually see the production version until Jaguar revealed it last week in Austria. US pricing was revealed on Tuesday morning.

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Wanle iPhone case puts a game console on the back of your phone (Looks like a Game Boy, doesn’t play Game Boy games)

Want to play some classic games on your smartphone? Just fire up an emulator and your $1000 phone can run some decades-old, grayscale Game Boy games. But if you miss the physical buttons, greyscale (or greenscale) display, and distraction-free environm…

Want to play some classic games on your smartphone? Just fire up an emulator and your $1000 phone can run some decades-old, grayscale Game Boy games. But if you miss the physical buttons, greyscale (or greenscale) display, and distraction-free environment of the original Game Boy, the Wanle Gamers Console for iPhone is something a little… […]

The post Wanle iPhone case puts a game console on the back of your phone (Looks like a Game Boy, doesn’t play Game Boy games) appeared first on Liliputing.

Dealmaster: Get a DJI Mavic Pro drone for $769, the lowest we’ve seen it

Plus deals on an HP desktop with 32GB of RAM, Dell laptops, Kindles, and 4K TVs.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our friends at TechBargains, we have another round of deals to share. Today the Dealmaster is taking to the skies, as DJI's Mavic Pro drone is currently down to $769, well over $100 off its usual going rate and the lowest we've seen it to date.

While the Mavic Pro has been upstaged somewhat by the newer and smaller Mavic Air, the Mavic Pro is not exactly big, and it has been very well-reviewed. It gets about 20 minutes of battery life per flight—which is solid for a consumer drone—it reaches up to 40 miles per hour in its sport mode, and it captures good 4K video at up to 30 frames per second. It's not quite as powerful as DJI's Phantom 4 Pro, but it gets most of the way there in a smaller, and now much more affordable, package. When exactly DJI will launch a potential "Mavic Pro 2" isn't clear, but this is a good discount either way.

If drones aren't your thing, we've also got a refurbished HP desktop with a whopping 32GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD down to $769, a $100 cut for Sony's PlayStation VR Skyrim bundle, discounts on several Dell laptops and 4K TVs, Kindle deals, and more.

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