Hollywood Urges FTC to Help Combat Online Piracy

The MPAA hopes that the Federal Trade Commission will offer a helping hand to curb the ongoing threat of online piracy. The commission could bring unfair and deceptive trade practices actions against services that market pirate streaming devices, the Hollywood group suggests. In addition, it could help convince European policymakers that privacy regulations shouldn’t be used to shield domain name WHOIS data.

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Last week the FTC hosted several discussions on its role when it comes to innovation and intellectual property policy.

The commission asked a broad group of stakeholders how the FTC can use its enforcement and policy authority to advance innovation.

This is a question Hollywood, and its lobby group MPAA in particular, are not leaving unanswered. In a detailed response, Neil Fried of the MPAA laid out several possible actions the Government body can take to help the industry.

Ideally, the FTC should move beyond its consumer advisor role and take concrete action to target several piracy threats, either directly, or by encouraging other bodies to step in.

“Given the harms of piracy to competition and consumer welfare, we ask the FTC to take affirmative steps to combat piracy,” Fried writes.

“Taking more affirmative steps would help prevent unlawful services from stifling investment in, and competition by, legitimate online content services; would help combat cybersecurity threats; and would help protect consumers from identity theft and fraud stemming from malware.”

One of the focus areas highlighted by the MPAA’s SVP for Federal Advocacy and Regulatory Affairs are streaming boxes. Specifically, he suggests that the FTC could go after companies that market pirate streaming boxes as legal alternatives.

This practice is deceptive and warrants the attention of the Government, he argues. In addition, the FTC could educate both the general public and lawmakers about the risks of piracy, including malware-related threats.

“For example, the FTC could consider an unfair and deceptive trade practices action against entities marketing streaming piracy devices and applications as ‘100 percent legal’ and a way to ‘never pay for content again,’ or for harm to consumers stemming from malware.

“In addition, an expanded effort to educate consumers and policymakers about the harms of piracy, the threat to the competitive market for American digital products and services, and the risks to cybersecurity could also pay dividends,” Fried adds.

Another option for the FTC is to reach out other U.S. agencies, to see if it’s possible to bring criminal actions against blatant copyright infringers, and to encourage U.S. Customs and Border Patrol to block the import of pirate streaming devices.

It’s clear that the MPAA isn’t short on suggestions for the FTC to get involved.

As a final point of action, the MPAA mentions the recent controversy surrounding Europe’s new privacy regulation, the GDPR. As a result, many domain registrars and registries are shielding information about registrants from the public, which complicates enforcement efforts.

Fried urges the FTC to convince European lawmakers that this goes a step too far. The GDPR should not affect the availability of WHOIS data, and they hope to receive the commission’s support in calls to preserve the old “transparency” model.

Of course, the MPAA is not the only party to submit comments to the FTC. Other organizations are less enthusiastic about increased enforcement, and could even argue that some measures will impact freedom of speech.

Anticipating this, the MPAA notes that these kinds of fears are overblown, adding that enforcement in these areas will benefit free expression.

“In fact, curbing illegal activity promotes free expression by creating a safer, virtual environment where individuals feel comfortable to communicate and engage in commerce, as well as to create and lawfully access content,” Fried notes.

A written copy of the comments from MPAA’s SVP for Federal Advocacy and Regulatory Affairs is available here (pdf).

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Apple: Es ändert sich einiges bei der App-Entwicklung für das iPad

Erstmals baut Apple ein iPad-Modell, das nicht im 4:3-Format kommt. Außerdem kommt der Apple Pencil mit Doppeltipp. Und die Displays der iPad Pros sind nicht mehr eckig. Der Hersteller zeigt im Video, was Entwickler beim Entwickeln künftiger Tablet-App…

Erstmals baut Apple ein iPad-Modell, das nicht im 4:3-Format kommt. Außerdem kommt der Apple Pencil mit Doppeltipp. Und die Displays der iPad Pros sind nicht mehr eckig. Der Hersteller zeigt im Video, was Entwickler beim Entwickeln künftiger Tablet-Apps beachten sollten. (iPad, Apple)

Unhappy Elon Musk went on firing spree over slow satellite broadband progress

Musk fired 7 SpaceX managers, aims to stay on schedule for mid-2019 launch.

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk standing and holding a microphone.

Enlarge / Elon Musk at a SpaceX press conference on September 17, 2018 in Hawthorne, California. (credit: Getty Images | Mario Tama)

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk recently "fired at least seven" managers in order to speed up development and testing of satellites that could provide broadband around the world, Reuters reported today.

SpaceX has Federal Communications Commission approval to launch 4,425 low-Earth orbit satellites between 2019 and 2027 in a bid to compete against cable and fiber ISPs and to bring broadband to unserved and underserved areas. SpaceX is also seeking FCC approval of another 7,518 satellites. SpaceX's "goal of having Internet service available in 2020 is 'pretty much on target' with an initial satellite launch by mid-2019," one of Reuters' sources said.

But Musk apparently concluded that keeping the Starlink project on schedule required a management shakeup. In June, Musk flew to the Seattle area for meetings with engineers who were leading the satellite project, Reuters reported:

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14-nm-Knappheit: Intel soll Atom-Chips bei der TSMC fertigen lassen

Nachdem Intel bereits einige Mainboard-Chipsätze beim weltgrößten Auftragsfertiger TSMC herstellen lässt, sollen nun auch Atom-Prozessoren ausgelagert worden sein. Hintergrund ist die 14-nm-Knappheit, da Intel mit 10 nm Probleme hat. (Halbleiterfertigu…

Nachdem Intel bereits einige Mainboard-Chipsätze beim weltgrößten Auftragsfertiger TSMC herstellen lässt, sollen nun auch Atom-Prozessoren ausgelagert worden sein. Hintergrund ist die 14-nm-Knappheit, da Intel mit 10 nm Probleme hat. (Halbleiterfertigung, Prozessor)

Ars Lunch Break: Spying out ancient ruins on Earth from space

Astroarchaeologist Sarah Parcak on using futuristic tools to peer into the past.

Okay, this isn't <em>exactly</em> the kind of thing one is likely to find on Earth during an astroarchaeological study....but you never know!

Enlarge / Okay, this isn't exactly the kind of thing one is likely to find on Earth during an astroarchaeological study....but you never know! (credit: MGM/UA)

This week we’re serializing yet another episode from the After On Podcast here on Ars. The broader series is built around deep-dive interviews with world-class thinkers, founders, and scientists, and it tends to be very tech- and science-heavy. You can access the installments on Ars via an embedded audio player or by reading accompanying transcripts (both of which are below).

This week my guest is Sarah Parcak, a co-founder of the emerging field of astroarchaeology. We’ll be running the interview in three installments, starting today.

Astroarchaeology doesn’t involve digging up ancient artifacts on Mars (yet!). Instead, it enlists satellite imagery to identify ancient, undiscovered sites on our home planet. Sarah’s work in this field won her the 2016 TED prize—which came with a million-dollar check to advance her work.

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Apple’s new MacBook Air features a 7W Intel Core i5-8210Y Amber Lake chip

When Apple unveiled the 2018 MacBook Air this week, the company announced it would be powered by a dual-core Intel Core i5 processor… but the company didn’t say which processor. Now we know. The thin and light laptop is the first device to …

When Apple unveiled the 2018 MacBook Air this week, the company announced it would be powered by a dual-core Intel Core i5 processor… but the company didn’t say which processor. Now we know. The thin and light laptop is the first device to ship with the previously unannounced Intel Core i5-8210Y processor. That’s a low-power processor […]

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Geoengineering could stop warming but comes with side of sea-level rise

Simulation of one way of shading the planet has some surprising side-effects.

Sunset seen from the International Space Station.

Enlarge / Sunset seen from the International Space Station. (credit: NASA/ISS Expedition 23 Crew)

Since we've only made moderate progress in cutting greenhouse gas emissions, climate science has turned to seriously investigating options that have typically been in the “far-fetched” category. That includes something called “solar radiation management”—increasing the reflectivity of the atmosphere to, in essence, shade the planet. That could provide a bit of human-caused cooling to temporarily offset some human-caused warming.

Eliminating greenhouse gas emissions is the only long-term solution, but solar radiation management could buy us time to get our act together.

Such a planet-wide intervention certainly makes many uneasy, and we’ve long known that it would come with some side-effects. For example, while greenhouse warming generally causes an increase in global precipitation, cooling the planet in this way would cause an even stronger precipitation decrease that more than cancels that out. And while most ideas revolve around injecting tiny aerosol particles into the upper atmosphere, the spatial pattern of cooling can depend on where those injections are done.

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Honor: Neues Magic 2 mit Slider und ohne Notch vorgestellt

Honor hat sein neues Top-Smartphone Magic 2 präsentiert, das ohne sichtbare Frontkamera und einem bis an den Rand reichenden Display kommt. Die Kamera ist mit zwei Hilfsobjektiven in einem Slider-Mechanismus versteckt, auch auf der Rückseite kommen dre…

Honor hat sein neues Top-Smartphone Magic 2 präsentiert, das ohne sichtbare Frontkamera und einem bis an den Rand reichenden Display kommt. Die Kamera ist mit zwei Hilfsobjektiven in einem Slider-Mechanismus versteckt, auch auf der Rückseite kommen drei Kameras zum Einsatz. (Honor, Smartphone)

Honor Magic 2 is a bezel-free slider with 6 cameras

Huawei was the first company to launch a smartphone with three rear cameras. So maybe it shouldn’t be surprising that the company is now also the first to launch a phone with three front cameras. All told, the new Honor Magic 2 smartphone has a t…

Huawei was the first company to launch a smartphone with three rear cameras. So maybe it shouldn’t be surprising that the company is now also the first to launch a phone with three front cameras. All told, the new Honor Magic 2 smartphone has a total of six cameras: three on each side. But you’ll only […]

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Nubia X is has no front camera (and a second screen on the back)

For the past year or two device makers have been trying to find ways to reduce the size of smartphone bezels and increase the screen-to-body ratio. That’s given rise to phones with notches and slide-out cameras. But Nubia’s new phone wins t…

For the past year or two device makers have been trying to find ways to reduce the size of smartphone bezels and increase the screen-to-body ratio. That’s given rise to phones with notches and slide-out cameras. But Nubia’s new phone wins the prize for the most unusual solution. As expected, the Nubia X doesn’t need […]

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