FCC accused of “spreading lies” about DDoS hitting comment system

A year later, FCC hasn’t proven that DDoS disrupted net neutrality comments.

Enlarge / John Oliver takes on FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in a May 2017 net neutrality segment. (credit: HBO Last Week Tonight)

Federal Communications Commission officials are facing more accusations that they lied about the cause of a May 2017 comment website outage that temporarily prevented people from submitting comments on FCC Chairman Ajit Pai's plan to eliminate net neutrality rules.

The FCC maintains that its system was hit by multiple distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks, but it hasn't provided evidence publicly to support that claim. The US Government Accountability Office (GAO) is investigating the FCC's DDoS claims at the urging of Democratic lawmakers.

The controversy flared up again this week in a Gizmodo story titled "FCC Emails Show Agency Spread Lies to Bolster Dubious DDoS Attack Claims."

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Sonos Beam: TV-Soundbar mit Alexa-Steuerung kostet 450 Euro

Sonos hat seinen zweiten smarten Lautsprecher vorgestellt. Das neue Modell heißt Beam, es ist in Form einer Soundbar gehalten und kann über Alexa mit der Sprache bedient werden. (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

Sonos hat seinen zweiten smarten Lautsprecher vorgestellt. Das neue Modell heißt Beam, es ist in Form einer Soundbar gehalten und kann über Alexa mit der Sprache bedient werden. (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

Google releases Android P Developer Preview 3

The road to the next major release of Google Android is paved with five developer previews… but it’s the first three that count the most, since DP4 and DP5 are basically release candidates (which means the only significant changes are likel…

The road to the next major release of Google Android is paved with five developer previews… but it’s the first three that count the most, since DP4 and DP5 are basically release candidates (which means the only significant changes are likely to be bug fixes). With that in mind, Google has released Android P DP3, […]

The post Google releases Android P Developer Preview 3 appeared first on Liliputing.

TV-Kabelnetz: Vodafone will Unitymedia komplett auf 1 GBit/s ausbauen

Kommt der Kauf von Unitymedia durch Vodafone zustande, sollen in drei Jahren alle Anschlüsse mit Docsis 3.1 ausgestattet werden. Das und mehr verriet ein Vodafone-Manager auf dem Hessischen Breitbandgipfel. (Wirtschaft, Vodafone)

Kommt der Kauf von Unitymedia durch Vodafone zustande, sollen in drei Jahren alle Anschlüsse mit Docsis 3.1 ausgestattet werden. Das und mehr verriet ein Vodafone-Manager auf dem Hessischen Breitbandgipfel. (Wirtschaft, Vodafone)

The Tetris Effect is the trippy block-stacking game we didn’t know we needed

From the maker of Rez Infinite comes a hypnotic, musical take on the old formula.

If we did a news post for every game that was announced in the run-up to and midst of next week's Electronic Entertainment Expo, we'd not have time to write anything else. But when an announcement involves both Tetsuya Miziguchi (creator of the amazing Lumines and Rez Infinite) and the inescapable appeal of Tetris (quite possibly one of the most important video games of all time), our attention immediately perks up.

Thus we direct your attention to The Tetris Effect, which was revealed via an extremely trippy trailer launched on a PlayStation livestream this morning. The game is named after the well-known (and lightly studied) phenomenon where people report "seeing" Tetris blocks falling through their vision hours after a play session.

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The Moto Z3 Play is official with rare, side-mounted fingerprint reader

The good news is that this should be the last year of cookie-cutter MotoMod phones.

Motorola

Motorola has announced the latest in the mid-range Z Play line of phones, the $499 Moto Z3 Play. Motorola is still pushing its "MotoMod" modular system, and for that $499 price, the Z3 will come with an extra battery backpack.

Your $500 gets you a glass front and back with aluminum sides. Inside there's a 1.8GHz Snapdragon 636 SoC, 4GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a 3000mAh battery. There's a dual-camera setup on the back with one 12MP sensor and a 5MP depth sensor, while the front has an 8MP selfie cam. You get a USB-C port on the bottom, a microSD slot, and no headphone jack.

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Police follow as guardsman takes personnel carrier on unscheduled deployment

Va. Guard officer apprehended by police cars in Richmond after armored trip on I-95.

The wayward M577, with a police escort, rolling down a Virginia highway Tuesday evening.

Just before 8pm on Tuesday, June 5, Joshua Phillip Yabut, a 29-year-old 1st Lieutenant in the Virginia National Guard, drove off the Guard's Fort Pickett training center in Blackstone, Virginia in an M577 command post vehicle. This unscheduled deployment was followed by one of the strangest police chases ever.

Yabut drove the tracked vehicle east on US Route 460 and then north on Interstate 95, followed by a swarm of Virginia State Police vehicles, reaching the M557's top-end speed of 40mph. He finally stopped the vehicle in the Fan district of Richmond, blocked in by police cars, and was apprehended at 9:40pm.

The M577 is a variant of the M113 armored personnel carrier (APC), in use by the US Army since the 1960s, and exported widely to foreign militaries.

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We know you hate the Internet of Things, but it’s saving megafauna from poachers

In the war on endangered species, the IT department keeps upending those who stalk rhinos.

Enlarge (credit: Foto24/Gallo Images/Getty Imagesi)

For much of this decade, organizations seeking to protect wildlife have attempted to use emerging technology as a conservation tool, allowing small numbers of people to monitor and manage data from animals over a wide area. Nowhere is that effort more focused—and more desperate—than in the regions of Africa where illegal animal trade is threatening to wipe out endangered animals such as rhinos, elephants, pangolins, and lions. Here, several organizations are applying Internet of Things (IoT) technology to protect animals, providing rangers with data that helps them intercept poachers before they can get to their quarry.

Many conservation efforts elsewhere use IoT to try to track the location of animals, such as Vodafone's IoT tagging of Scottish harbor seals and tracking of endangered dugongs in Philippines. But in Africa, the task of protecting rhinos is slightly different—it's about tracking people, specifically the poachers who hunt down the rhinos for their tusks.

Rhinos, of course, aren't unique in needing such intervention. Based on data from the Great Elephant Census (GEC), a continent-wide survey conducted by Microsoft cofounder Paul Allen's Vulcan Inc., Africa's savanna elephant population declined by 30 percent between 2007 and 2014 for instance. That's a loss of 144,000 elephants. Current data shows the rate of decline of the elephant population is now eight percent per year, and ivory poachers are the main reason for that decline.

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Private Internet Access’ “No-Logging” Claims Proven True Again in Court

VPN provider Private Internet Access, which has a strict no-logging policy, has proven once again that it is unable to link online activities with a user’s identity. The conclusion, which was revealed as part of a hacking trial in San Jose federal court, is the second time that the provider’s claims have been successfully tested in public.

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

In April 2017, San Francisco resident Ross M. Colby was arraigned in U.S. District Federal Court in San Jose following an FBI investigation into alleged hacking offenses.

The 34-year-old was accused of hacking into several local media websites owned by Embarcadero Media Group including the Palo Alto Weekly and the Almanac. He was charged with intentional damage to a computer, attempted damage, and misdemeanor computer intrusion.

According to the indictment, Colby illegally accessed Embarcadero Media email accounts in July 2015. Then, in September 2015, several of the company’s websites were hacked to display the Guy Fawkes image associated with Anonymous. The message “Unbalanced Journalism for profit at the cost of human right. Brought to you by the Almanac” was also left behind.

Facing more than two decades in prison and fines totaling several hundred thousand dollars, Colby pleaded not guilty and was freed on bail. On May 29, 2018, Colby’s trial began in federal court in San Jose. Palo Alto Online has been reporting (1,2) on the case, which has thrown up something of interest to VPN users.

According to evidence provided by FBI Special Agent Anthony Frazier, between July and September 2015, IP addresses operated by VPN provider Private Internet Access (PIA) were used to access email accounts and systems belonging to Embarcadero Media.

A former Colby roommate claims that the pair discussed computer security and frequently had discussions about the use of VPNs. He had even helped Colby set one up, he said. Last Friday, the San Jose Federal Court also heard that Colby told his roommate that he’d hacked a news website for pay.

Also giving testimony was John Allan Arsenault, general counsel for London Trust Media, the owner of Private Internet Access.

According to Almanac News, Arsenault told the Court that some VPN companies, PIA included, do not retain logs of customers’ Internet activities. This means they are unable to produce useful information in response to a subpoena.

Arsenault told the Court that PIA accepts several payment methods, including cryptocurrency, but doesn’t keep records of customers’ names and addresses. The only thing the company holds is the email address used when the customer signs up. There was no record of Ross Colby signing up to PIA with his two known email addresses, Arsenault said.

“We’re limited to search by what the government gives us. Just because we can’t find it doesn’t mean they didn’t use the VPN service,” he said.

“Someone could create a throw-away (email) account to subscribe to us,” he added.

But while PIA could not connect Colby’s IP addresses to any illegal activity, the same could not be said of other companies. Evidence presented to the Court showed that in addition to the PIA addresses that were used to access the Embarcadero Media email accounts, an IP address belonging to Comcast was also used on 20 occasions.

Records provided by Comcast showed that John Colby, Ross Colby’s father and a retired Massachusetts state trooper, was assigned that particular IP address between June 2015 and October 2015, the date of the FBI’s subpoena to Comcast. John Colby further testified that his son stayed with him for about 10 days in July 2015, a period which coincided with the email breaches at Embarcadero Media.

Evidence provided by the FBI also showed that an IP address used by Ross Colby at his home in San Francisco was used to access Embarcadero accounts, as was an IP address registered to a cafe frequently used by Colby.

The case highlights some important points for those interested in Internet security.

The most interesting for privacy advocates is that this is the second time that Private Internet Access’s “no-logging” policy has been tested in court. Such claims are notoriously difficult to prove but PIA has now passed twice with flying colors.

However, the big lesson is that if an Internet crime is serious enough to involve the FBI, IP address evidence will be just part of the equation, with testimony from family and associates playing a major role too.

The final decision on Colby’s plea lies with the jury, which is yet to render its decision.

Disclaimer: PIA is one of our sponsors. This article was written completely independently of that fact, as always.

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

Raumfahrt: Der traditionelle Weg zur Internationalen Raumstation

Mit Alexander Gerst wird erstmals ein deutscher Astronaut das Kommando über eine Mission der Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) übernehmen. Zunächst muss er dort aber ankommen. (ISS, Nasa)

Mit Alexander Gerst wird erstmals ein deutscher Astronaut das Kommando über eine Mission der Internationalen Raumstation (ISS) übernehmen. Zunächst muss er dort aber ankommen. (ISS, Nasa)