MPAA Boss: Piracy Is Symptom of a ‘Toxic’, ‘Broken’ Internet

MPAA chief Charles Rivkin has made a speech that ties the resurgence of fake news, election meddling and hate speech to piracy, saying they’re all symptoms of a “broken” Internet.Referring to the “broken window” theory for urban environments,…



MPAA chief Charles Rivkin has made a speech that ties the resurgence of fake news, election meddling and hate speech to piracy, saying they're all symptoms of a "broken" Internet.

Referring to the "broken window" theory for urban environments, in which unrepaired broken windows and other visible signs of unaddressed crime encourages further crime and disorder, eventually leading to more serious crimes, Rivkin says that the existence of piracy leads to more piracy, and eventually, to more serious online crime.

Rivkin says that the solution is to address the piracy issue head on before other more serious issues, such as fake news and hate speech, can be addressed, or the Internet that we want can't be brought back.

"If we want to bring back the internet we all want, it's better to work together than cut each other off at the knees," Rivkin says. "There are too many online windows broken and left unfixed for us to do anything but take collective action – and take it now."

"Online piracy is also the proverbial canary in a coal mine. The same pervasive theft that my industry faces is part of a continuum of toxic developments that harm all of us in this ecosystem – consumers, creators, and commercial operators alike." 

As for the "action" that Rivkin refers to, his speech made many references to a single major issue, that is the protection that internet companies are given when it comes to the action taken by their users - the so called "safe harbor" provision. Rivkin believes such provisions, originally written in the 1990's, are out of date.

"The internet policies that we still have in place were written at a time when the online platforms were nascent. But they are nascent no longer. We live in an AI world that is still operating on an AOL policy framework. Yet many platforms still cite statutes written to address the specific conditions that existed in the 1990s to avoid accountability," says Rivkin.

And the solution lies not only in legislative changes, but for Internet companies and online platforms to take more "voluntary" action in curbing the spread of piracy.

"The case for online platforms to step forward and become accountable at this time could not be more clear ... They’re not only morally duty bound, they’re supremely qualified to solve these problems at their very core."

This may refer to companies like Google being more proactive in removing and keeping pirated content removed (also known as "take down, stay down"), or for ISPs to patrol and hunt more aggressively in order to police copyright protection for rights-holders, like the major Hollywood studios that the MPAA represents.

As for what the MPAA companies can do to alleviate the piracy problem, with many critics saying that piracy is a symptom of a supply issue, and that addressing value and accessibility will have a greater impact in reducing piracy than legal and technical measures, Rivkin says the MPAA companies have already proved they fully embrace the digital revolution, and that content is already available on "450 legal online distribution services worldwide".

[via TorrentFreak, MPAA]

TorrentFreak is Blocked as a Pirate Site and Hacking Resource

Court-ordered pirate site blockades are pretty common nowadays. While not everyone sees these as the ideal solution for the problem at hand, they follow the letter of the law. More problematic are the private blocking efforts by various Wifi providers, which we are frequently the target of. Apparently, TorrentFreak is a pirate site too.

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

From Australia to Sweden, all around the world courts have ordered ISPs to block access to pirate sites.

This usually happens after a careful review by a judge, who weighs the arguments from copyright holders and Internet providers before a final decision is made. That’s a fair process.

However, these court-ordered blockades are only the tip of the iceberg. Much more common are private blocking efforts where local WiFi providers use broad blocklists to shield people from visiting dangerous sites, including the one you’re on now.

This problem is not new but the lack of improvement has become increasingly frustrating.

Earlier this month a reader informed us that he was unable to read our news while staying at a Premier Inn in Croydon. Apparently, the hotel’s Virgin WiFi network banned us for our “Criminal Skills/Hacking, News.”

Hackers

This is no temporary or local mistake. In recent months we’ve received several reports of similar Virgin WiFi blockades, including from our colleagues at ISPreview. They ran into the same TorrentFreak blockade while conducting a study of WiFi performance in UK hotels.

And it’s not just Virgin that’s doing the blocking here.

This week another reader alerted us that he was unable to access TorrentFreak on a GovWifi connection. This network is used by many government institutions and managed by the Government Digital Service.

Apparently, they, or their blocklist provider, has classified our news site in the “Piracy and Copyright infringement” category, and accessing it would be a violation of the acceptable use policy.

No access

These two recent examples are related to the UK, but these broad blocklists are used elsewhere too. We’ve seen our site blocked in US libraries and airports, Norwegian trains, and even in a Canadian McDonalds.

We have reached out to both Virgin and the Government Digital Service for a comment on the most recent examples. At the time of publication, we have yet to hear back. Perhaps our email is blocked too?

We hope they can eventually shed some light on their motivations. In the meantime, let’s hope our readers have learned enough from our “hacking skills” to know how to bypass these blocks….

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

Running Windows 95 in an “app” is a dumb stunt that makes a good point

Software piracy remains an important part of preserving our digital heritage.

Enlarge (credit: Felix Rieseberg)

A silly new app has been doing the rounds this week: Windows 95 as a standalone application. Running on Windows, macOS, and Linux, the Windows 95 "app" combines Electron (a framework for building desktop applications using JavaScript and other Web technology) with an existing x86 emulator written in JavaScript. The emulator can run a bunch of operating systems: for the app, it's preloaded with Windows 95.

This is, of course, software piracy. The developer of the app has no rights to distribute Windows 95 like this, and I'm a little surprised that the app hasn't been yanked from GitHub yet. And for now, the app is just a toy; there's no real reason to run Windows 95 like this, other than the novelty factor of it actually working.

But Windows 95 (and software that runs on or requires Windows 95) was an important piece of computing history. I think a case could be made that it's Microsoft's most important Windows release of all time, and its influence continues to be felt today. Not only was it technically important as an essential stepping stone from the world of 16-bit DOS and Windows 3.x to 32-bit Windows NT, and not only did it introduce a user interface that's largely stayed with us for more than 20 years—Windows 95 was also a major consumer event as people lined up to buy the thing as soon as it was available. A full understanding of the computing landscape today can't really be had without running, using, and understanding Windows 95.

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Swirling your wine is not pretentious; it’s just good physics

Swirling a glass of wine produces a rotating wave; swirling beer foam reverses rotation.

Enlarge / Gently swirling a glass of wine creates a single, smooth crest, mixing in oxygen to enhance the flavor. (credit: Richard Theis/EyeEm and Getty Images)

Wine aficionados are known for gently swirling their wine in the glass before tasting, and it isn't as pretentious as it seems. (Well, maybe a little.) They claim the rotation mixes in oxygen and enhances the flavor. Physics backs them up, specifically a mini-subfield dubbed "oenodynamics." The swirling action—technically called "orbital shaking"—creates a rotating gravity wave in the direction of the swirling force being applied, churning up the liquid in the process.

It's often said that science begins with someone noting an unusual effect and thinking, "Huh... that's funny"—and then investigating to find out more. Such was the case for a coterie of wine-swirling physicists. Several years ago, Martino Reclari, then a graduate student at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland, was out to dinner with colleagues when the conversation turned to the different kinds of wave dynamics they could produce by swirling their wine glasses: one big smooth wave, a series of smaller ripples, or a splash, for instance.

Not content to leave it at the dinner table, they performed a series of experiments in the ensuing weeks by filling small cylinders of varying sizes with different volumes of a modest merlot. They used gyrating machines commonly found in chemistry labs to swirl the wine in the cylinders, duly noting how various factors affected the behavior of the wine.

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Analysis: Why Elon Musk abandoned his plan to take Tesla private

Elon Musk’s go-private plan faced serious obstacles.

Enlarge / Elon Musk speaks in Austin, Texas, on March 10, 2018. (credit: FilmMagic/FilmMagic for HBO)

Elon Musk has abandoned his effort to take Tesla private, announcing the move in a post on Tesla's website late on Friday evening.

"Given the feedback I've received, it's apparent that most of Tesla’s existing shareholders believe we are better off as a public company," Musk wrote. "I knew the process of going private would be challenging, but it's clear that it would be even more time-consuming and distracting than initially anticipated."

It's obvious why Musk was attracted to the idea of taking Tesla private. Private companies are exempt from most of the transparency requirements imposed on public companies, and they tend to face less pressure to meet quarterly earnings targets than public companies. But it was always a bit of a mystery why Musk thought shareholders would want to go along with his plan.

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Google reports vulnerability in Fortnite installer for Android, Epic issues patch

You know how Epic Games decided to bring their popular game Fortnite to Android, but not to distribute it via the Google Play Store? Yeah, it turns out there was a pretty big security vulnerability in the installer, or at least the version that was mad…

You know how Epic Games decided to bring their popular game Fortnite to Android, but not to distribute it via the Google Play Store? Yeah, it turns out there was a pretty big security vulnerability in the installer, or at least the version that was made available through the Samsung Galaxy Apps store. Google discovered […]

The post Google reports vulnerability in Fortnite installer for Android, Epic issues patch appeared first on Liliputing.

Play a Disney villain in new Villainous board game

Embrace your inner Prince John… or Ursula… or Jafar.

Enlarge

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage at cardboard.arstechnica.com.

Disney's 1973 Robin Hood is objectively the best film the studio ever made—send all e-mail disagreements on this point to lee@ars—and my childhood would have been vastly poorer without the song "Phony King of England." That's why new board game Villainous so grabbed my attention. A board game in which you can play Disney villains? Including Prince John? And in which you can summon wolf archers, rhino guards, and Sir Hiss to combat Robin Hood? Sign me up!

Villainous is now widely available in stores, including Target and Amazon, but it's not the mass-market cash-in you might expect. This is a surprisingly "gamery" game with some interesting mechanics and some lovely art. But still, can it live up to its legendary source material?

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Searching: You’ve never seen Windows XP and load screens like this

Ars chats up co-writers Aneesh Chaganty and Sev Ohanian as this John Cho-led thriller debuts.

Ars chats up the team behind Searching. Click here for transcript. (video link)

Searching may seem like a pass on paper: yet another thriller that plays out on computer screens. From Unfriended to Modern Family, viewers have seen this schtick before. To potentially complicate matters further, this one comes from a brand-new director.

But Aneesh Chaganty is not new to telling stories through screens—the Searching director and co-writer spent two years making ads at Google. He famously landed the role after making a viral short called "Seeds" that leveraged Google Glass, another creative constraint. "I quit my job at Google in NYC and moved to LA to make an indie movie," he tells Ars about Searching. "But I was a filmmaker at Google; I was writing, developing, and directing commercials there. And a lot of my job was to take technology and give it a larger emotional narrative that people understand."

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Kollaboration: Nextcloud bringt einfaches Signup und kommt auf NEC-Router

In Kooperation mit verschiedenen Hostern bietet Nextcloud interessierten Privatnutzern künftig eine einfache Möglichkeit, sich für die Verwendung der freien Kollaborationsplattform anzumelden. Darüber hinaus will der japanische Hersteller NEC seine Rou…

In Kooperation mit verschiedenen Hostern bietet Nextcloud interessierten Privatnutzern künftig eine einfache Möglichkeit, sich für die Verwendung der freien Kollaborationsplattform anzumelden. Darüber hinaus will der japanische Hersteller NEC seine Router künftig mit Nextcloud ausstatten. (Nextloud, Computer)

Elon Musk: Tesla bleibt öffentlich handelbar

Rückzieher von Elon Musk: Statt Tesla wieder zu einem Privatunternehmen zu machen, hat er sich nach wochenlanger Beratung dazu entschieden, dass es ein börsennotiertes Unternehmen bleibt. (Elon Musk, Börse)

Rückzieher von Elon Musk: Statt Tesla wieder zu einem Privatunternehmen zu machen, hat er sich nach wochenlanger Beratung dazu entschieden, dass es ein börsennotiertes Unternehmen bleibt. (Elon Musk, Börse)