Landmark Anti-Piracy Database Agreement Signed in Moscow

Russia’s most powerful tech companies including Yandex, Mail.ru Group, and Rambler have signed a Memorandum of Cooperation designed to rid their platforms of infringing content. Signed today in Moscow alongside movie and TV companies, the agreement will see the formation of a central database of infringing sites which will provide information on what content to delete.

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

Back in August, Russian search giant Yandex found itself in a tight spot after refusing to remove ‘pirate’ links from its indexes.

The situation was serious, with Yandex facing blocking by all of the country’s Internet service providers. Yandex eventually complied with the demands and avoided a catastrophe but it seemed clear that moving forward, something would have to be done.

Local telecoms watchdog and defacto mediator Roscomnadzor said the solution could be found in a voluntary agreement between the country’s largest tech platforms and rightsholders. To that end, a meeting took place September 19 between the parties at Roscomnadzor headquarters.

While discussions had been underway for months, things appear to move pretty quickly in Russia. Earlier this week, the deputy of Roscomnadzor announced that a memorandum of cooperation between search engines and copyright holders “to combat the proliferation of pirated content” would be signed today in Moscow.

A few minutes ago that event took place, with Channel One, the National Media Group, Gazprom-Media, the Internet Video Association, the Association of Film and Television Producers, Yandex, Rambler Group, Mail.Ru Group, vKontakte, and RuTube signing up. Google did not immediately sign, in part because it already follows the requirements of the DMCA.

Details made available so far indicate that within three weeks, a Roscomnadzor-maintained database will be created and populated with links to sites that the entertainment industry groups claim are infringing their intellectual property rights.

Then, every five minutes, the operators of search platforms will be required to query the database to obtain updates. Within six hours, infringing URLs will have to be removed from search results visible in Russia. In addition, signatories that host video content (Yandex.video and RuTube, for example) will have to remove pirated content from their platforms.

In the period before the database is established, Internet companies will remove pirate content within 24 hours following a request. The approach is similar to the requirements of the DMCA in the United States and is currently followed by both Google and Mail.ru.

If a dispute arises between the signatories, the aim is to reach a negotiated agreement with the assistance of Roscomnadzor. If problems aren’t solved within a month, the aggrieved parties can either fight things out in court or remove themselves from the memorandum.

The memorandum will be valid until September 1, 2019. By this time, the signatories expect that Russian anti-piracy legislation will have been amended to encompass the terms of the agreement.

After first making a successful application to Roscomnadzor, it’s hoped that other rightsholders and tech companies will sign the memorandum. Google is expected to enter into talks during the coming month, with a view to joining.

Alexander Zharov, head of Roskomnadzor, welcomed today’s agreement.

“As a result of quite a lot of work, we have arrived at a historic moment when both content producers and content distributors unite their efforts in the fight against piracy,” Zharov said.

“As a result of this work, the [Russian Internet] will become the cleanest space for piracy in the world.”

A couple of the signatories to the memorandum show that lines between rightsholders and Internet companies can be blurred. Movie portal Kinopoisk signed on the side of the rightsholders, yet is owned by Yandex. RuTube, which is a YouTube-like video platform, signed on the side of the tech companies. It is co-owned by Gazprom-Media.

While the agreement is a welcome achievement for rightsholders in the video field, some companies will be missing out. Book publishers reportedly took no part in the negotiations preceding today’s signing, so will not initially benefit from the agreement.

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

Sony RX100 VI im Test: Besser geht Kompaktkamera kaum

2012 hat die Sony seine Kompaktkameraserie RX100 gestartet. Das neueste Modell RX 100 VI mit extra großem Zoom zeigt, dass sich auch eine gute Kamera immer noch verbessern lässt. Perfekt ist sie jedoch immer noch nicht. Ein Test von Andreas Donath (Dig…

2012 hat die Sony seine Kompaktkameraserie RX100 gestartet. Das neueste Modell RX 100 VI mit extra großem Zoom zeigt, dass sich auch eine gute Kamera immer noch verbessern lässt. Perfekt ist sie jedoch immer noch nicht. Ein Test von Andreas Donath (Digitalkamera, Sony)

Smart Home: Google will Staubsaugerdaten von iRobot nutzen

Google und iRobot wollen das Smart Home mit Hilfe der Kartierungsfähigkeiten von Staubsaugerrobotern weiterentwickeln. Die Vermessung von Wohnungen und Häusern soll genutzt werden, um die Elektronik in den Räumen zu steuern. (iRobot, Google)

Google und iRobot wollen das Smart Home mit Hilfe der Kartierungsfähigkeiten von Staubsaugerrobotern weiterentwickeln. Die Vermessung von Wohnungen und Häusern soll genutzt werden, um die Elektronik in den Räumen zu steuern. (iRobot, Google)

Wright Electric: Easyjet will 2019 elektrisch fliegen

Die britische Fluglinie Easyjet will ab dem nächsten Jahr auf Kurzstrecken ein neunsitziges Elektroflugzeug testen. Dazu soll ein Modell des US-Startups Wright Electric eingesetzt werden. (Flugzeug, Technologie)

Die britische Fluglinie Easyjet will ab dem nächsten Jahr auf Kurzstrecken ein neunsitziges Elektroflugzeug testen. Dazu soll ein Modell des US-Startups Wright Electric eingesetzt werden. (Flugzeug, Technologie)

Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending October 20, 2018

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 20, 2018 are in. The smallest superhero in the Marvel Universe is proving, yet again, that size doesn’t matter in this successful sequel. Find out what mov…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 20, 2018 are in. The smallest superhero in the Marvel Universe is proving, yet again, that size doesn't matter in this successful sequel. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD,Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

Web-Bytecode: So sieht die Zukunft für Webassembly aus

Webassembly ist eine der vielversprechendsten Webtechnologien, doch noch fehlen wichtige Features. Die Mozilla-Entwicklerin Lin Clark erklärt, welche Entwicklungen bevorstehen. Ein Bericht von Moritz Stückler (Wasm, POSIX)

Webassembly ist eine der vielversprechendsten Webtechnologien, doch noch fehlen wichtige Features. Die Mozilla-Entwicklerin Lin Clark erklärt, welche Entwicklungen bevorstehen. Ein Bericht von Moritz Stückler (Wasm, POSIX)

The Pirate Bay Remains Mysteriously Inaccessible to Many

Over the past few weeks, many people have been under the impression that The Pirate Bay is down. It’s not. Instead, the site is simply inaccessible on some networks around the world. The Pirate Bay is aware of the issue. It’s not related to ISP blocking or domain name trouble, but the true source of the problem remains a mystery.

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

The Pirate Bay has suffered quite a bit of downtime over the past several years, but in recent weeks a more alarming pattern has begun to emerge.

While many people can assess the site just fine, at the time of writing there are also millions of visitors who see a Cloudflare error instead of the iconic pirate ship logo.

Luckily for them, there is no shortage of workarounds. Accessing TPB through proxies, its Tor domain, or the site VPN server still works. But, if a problem like this has lasted for weeks, there’s clearly something wrong.

According to various traffic tracking websites, direct visits to The Pirate Bay are down significantly, with Similarweb estimating a drop of more than 32 percent last month alone.

The Pirate Bay is aware of the issues but it doesn’t have a definite answer either.

This means that, like many others, we can only speculate. From our experience with various outages, there are a few options that can be easily ruled out.

For one, this is not the result of a consumer ISP blocking access. The problems are worldwide, occurring in the US, Europe, Latin America and elsewhere. There is no clear location-based pattern.

The site’s domain name is working just fine too and the same is true for its DNS. The correct address is being resolved, even from locations where the site is inaccessible.

Many people have been pointing out Cloudflare as the culprit, suggesting the company is willingly blocking TPB. This doesn’t seem likely either. Why would Cloudflare block a site in a few places scattered around the world, and make it appear as if they can’t connect to it?

Since The Pirate Bay itself has no idea what’s happening, the problem doesn’t seem to be on their end either. So what’s going on then?

One option that’s left is that an Internet backbone network is somehow causing trouble. These are the providers which make sure that traffic is routed from your ISP connection, through their infrastructure, to The Pirate Bay.

If one of these networks is not passing on traffic to The Pirate Bay, Cloudflare can’t connect to it, at least not everywhere. This could also explain why the site is unreachable in some locations while working just fine in others.

Something similar happened last year when backbone provider Cogent blocked The Pirate Bay and other pirate sites. In that case, Cogent actually blocked Cloudflare’s IP-addresses.

It’s a possible explanation but, in this case, we haven’t been able to trace the issues to a specific backbone network. This means that, for now, the mystery remains.

A common problem

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

Danish physicists claim to cast doubt on detection of gravitational waves

LIGO responds: “There is absolutely no validity to their claims.”

The Nobel Prize-winning first direct detection of gravitational waves announced in 2016 is being called into question. LIGO calls shenanigans.

Enlarge / The Nobel Prize-winning first direct detection of gravitational waves announced in 2016 is being called into question. LIGO calls shenanigans. (credit: Julian Stratenschulte/DPA/Getty Images)

The first direct detection of gravitational waves was announced on February 11, 2016, spawned headlines around the world, snagged the 2017 Nobel Prize in Physics, and officially launched a new era of so-called "multi-messenger" astronomy. But a team of physicists at the Niels Bohr Institute in Copenhagen, Denmark, is calling that detection into question based on its own independent data analysis conducted over the last two-and-a-half years.

As New Scientist reports, the group thinks that the original gravitational wave signal detected by the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) was an "illusion." The researchers allege that the collaboration mistook patterns in the noise for a signal. The magazine oddly touts this as an "exclusive," but group spokesperson Andrew Jackson has been banging this particular drum for a while now, after first experiencing misgivings about LIGO's analysis as presented during the February 11, 2016 press conference in Washington, DC. The group's original paper was published in the Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics in August of that year, and there has been considerable back and forth within the physics community about Jackson's claims since then.

"Andrew Jackson and his group have been saying for the past few years that LIGO's detections are not real," says LIGO executive director David Reitze of Caltech. "Their analysis has been looked at by many people who have all concluded there is absolutely no validity to their claims." Reitz characterized the New Scientist article as "very biased and sensational."

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Hawaiian Supreme Court gives go-ahead to giant telescope

State land board’s approval of construction plans survives legal challenges.

Two large white domes on a barren reddish landscape.

Enlarge / Keck 1 and Keck 2, near the summit of Mauna Kea. (credit: Eric Berger)

The giant volcanoes of Hawaii's Big Island held a special place for the Polynesians who first settled there, with the peak of Mauna Kea being reserved for that society's elite. But in recent years, they've become home to a new kind of elite: some of the best telescopes humanity has designed. For the past several years, those legacies have clashed through a mix of protests, hearings, and legal maneuvers.

Scientists wanted to build one of our next-generation giant telescopes on Mauna Kea and received approval from the state to do so. But native Hawaiians and their supporters, disturbed by the ever-growing population of observatories and poor past stewardship of the mountain, protested and appealed. Now, the state's Supreme Court has issued what appears to be a comprehensive ruling that upholds the latest construction approval from the Board of Land and Natural Resources. This appears to clear the last hurdle astronomers faced before starting construction.

A contentious history

Scientists have been building telescopes with state approval on top of Mauna Kea for decades, despite its significance to the Polynesians who first settled the islands. Over time, however, three trends set the stage for the current controversy. One was that a telescope, once built, tended not to come down, and the people doing the building didn't always plan to keep the hardware unobtrusive or minimize the environmental damages of construction. At the same time, cultural awareness among those who could trace their ancestry to the first Hawaiians increased, as did our knowledge of their political and religious practices. Work on Mauna Kea identified many shrines and features that are of cultural and/or religious significance.

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