Aussie Senate Dismisses Concerns & Approves New Tough Anti-Piracy Law

The Senate’s Environment and Communications Legislation Committee has given its seal of approval to tough new amendments to Australian copyright law. In its report, the Committee acknowledges widespread concern over the proposals but says that “adequate safeguards” will prevent “adverse consequences.”

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Section 115a of Australia’s Copyright Act allows copyright holders to apply for injunctions to force ISPs to prevent subscribers from accessing ‘pirate’ sites.

The legislation has been used on many occasions since its introduction in 2015 but copyright holders say the law needs to be tightened to prevent circumvention. Those concerns spawned the Copyright Amendment (Online Infringement) Bill 2018, which contains proposals to close the loopholes.

One of the key aims is to restrict access to proxy and mirror sites that appear after an injunction has been granted. However, the amendments lay out the ability to do that without court intervention, something that’s making activists and academics nervous.

Another is to expand grounds for an injunction. Currently “online locations” outside Australia with a “primary purpose of infringing” are targets for blocking. The amendments would see sites that have “the primary effect” of infringing or facilitating infringement also being sucked in, opening the door for blocking general purpose file-hosting sites.

Finally, search engines are seen as useful indexes for people looking for information to access sites that have already been blocked. The amendments forsee platforms like Google purging their search results of references to blocked sites.

Yesterday, the Senate’s Environment and Communications Legislation Committee published the results of its inquiry. Those hoping for an additional dissenting voice will be disappointed.

“The committee is of the view that the amendments proposed by the bill are likely to improve the operation of the injunctive scheme in section 115A of the Copyright Act, and represent a measured and proportionate response to concerns identified by stakeholders in relation to the operation of that scheme,” the report reads.

“In this respect, the committee also notes that the majority of submissions received by the committee supported the bill and recommended that it be passed unamended.”

Quantifying its decision, the Committee acknowledges concerns that “adaptive injunctions” (which allow for post-injunction proxy and mirror sites to be blocked) will be left up to copyright holders and ISPs to decide, so without intervention from the Court they could be open to abuse. However, it believes that enough safeguards are in place to ensure that does not happen.

“[T]he committee is of the view that the measures are appropriately circumscribed. In particular, the committee notes the evidence that the Court would maintain ultimate oversight over these injunctions, as well as the evidence that there must a sufficient nexus between the online location covered by the original injunction and the location to which the order is expanded,” the report reads.

Tackling the complex “primary effect” amendment, the Committee notes that it has its critics and could, in theory, encompass legitimate platforms. However, it says that there are “adequate safeguards” already present in Section 115A of the Copyright Act so “this would not occur in practice.”

Finally, on forcing search engines to purge their results of previously-blocked sites, the Committee again acknowledges objections from those who feel such measures are unnecessary. Again, however, the report dismisses the concerns, noting that search engines may play a role in both infringement and enforcement of copyright so the measures are “appropriate.”

It also notes that a voluntary arrangement between copyright holders and search engine providers may yet be reached, so if all else fails the proposed amendment will provide an “important backstop” in the event such agreements prove ineffective.

Summing up, the Committee offers the suggestion that the new amendments should be subject to a review two years after being put in place, a period that should allow enough time to assess whether any components need to be “clarified, rationalised or improved”

“The committee considers that, on balance, the benefits of the bill outweigh any potential negative impacts that could arise from the proposed amendments. The committee therefore recommends that the bill should be passed,” the report concludes.

The full report can be downloaded here (pdf)

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Rockstar Games: Red Dead Redemption 2 geht schrittweise online

Jeden Tag ein paar Nutzer mehr: Rockstar Games will bis Ende November 2018 allen Besitzern von Red Dead Redemption 2 die Möglichkeit geben, auch online durch den Wilden Westen zu reiten. Spieler sollen allein oder mit bis zu sieben anderen Banditen Abe…

Jeden Tag ein paar Nutzer mehr: Rockstar Games will bis Ende November 2018 allen Besitzern von Red Dead Redemption 2 die Möglichkeit geben, auch online durch den Wilden Westen zu reiten. Spieler sollen allein oder mit bis zu sieben anderen Banditen Abenteuer erleben. (Red Dead Redemption 2, Red Dead Redemption)

Amazon: AWS bekommt SFTP-Server für S3-Buckets

Offenbar nutzen immer noch sehr viele AWS-Kunden SSH für Dateitransfers. Deshalb bietet Amazon für seine Cloud-Dienste nun einen eigenen gehosteten SFTP-Server, der direkt an den Objektspeicher S3 angeschlossen ist. Das soll die Analyse genauso vereinf…

Offenbar nutzen immer noch sehr viele AWS-Kunden SSH für Dateitransfers. Deshalb bietet Amazon für seine Cloud-Dienste nun einen eigenen gehosteten SFTP-Server, der direkt an den Objektspeicher S3 angeschlossen ist. Das soll die Analyse genauso vereinfachen wie das Teilen der Daten mit anderen. (AWS, Server-Applikationen)

Gaming-Tastaturen im Test: Neue Switches für Gamer und Tipper

Corsair und Roccat haben neue Gaming-Tastaturen auf den Markt gebracht, die sich vor allem durch ihre Switches auszeichnen. Im Test zeigt sich, dass Roccats Titan Switch besser zum normalen Tippen geeignet ist, aber nicht an die Geschwindigkeit des Cor…

Corsair und Roccat haben neue Gaming-Tastaturen auf den Markt gebracht, die sich vor allem durch ihre Switches auszeichnen. Im Test zeigt sich, dass Roccats Titan Switch besser zum normalen Tippen geeignet ist, aber nicht an die Geschwindigkeit des Corsair-exklusiven Cherry-Switches herankommt. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (Tastatur, Eingabegerät)

Rivian R1T: Neuer Elektro-Pickup soll in 3 Sekunden Tempo 100 erreichen

Der R1T ist ein elektrischer Pickup des US-Startups Rivian, der mit dem größten Akku ohne Nachladen 640 km weit kommen soll. Die spurtstärkste Variante des Elektroautos soll in etwa 3 Sekunden auf 100 km/h beschleunigen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Der R1T ist ein elektrischer Pickup des US-Startups Rivian, der mit dem größten Akku ohne Nachladen 640 km weit kommen soll. Die spurtstärkste Variante des Elektroautos soll in etwa 3 Sekunden auf 100 km/h beschleunigen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Multi-Cam-Technik: LG patentiert Smartphone mit 16 Kameras

LG hat ein 16-Kamera-Modul für Smartphones patentieren lassen. Mit der Technik kann eine Szene aus leicht versetzten Winkeln aufgenommen werden, was 3D-Videos oder Bildmanipulationseffekte ermöglicht. (LG, Smartphone)

LG hat ein 16-Kamera-Modul für Smartphones patentieren lassen. Mit der Technik kann eine Szene aus leicht versetzten Winkeln aufgenommen werden, was 3D-Videos oder Bildmanipulationseffekte ermöglicht. (LG, Smartphone)

Chargery: Sixt will mit Fahrrad-Powerbank leere Elektroautos aufladen

Der Autovermieter Sixt beteiligt sich an dem Berliner Startup Chargery, das einen mobilen Ladeservice für Elektroautos entwickelt hat. Per Fahrrad wird dabei ein großer Akku zum liegengebliebenen Auto gebracht. (Elektromobilität, Technologie)

Der Autovermieter Sixt beteiligt sich an dem Berliner Startup Chargery, das einen mobilen Ladeservice für Elektroautos entwickelt hat. Per Fahrrad wird dabei ein großer Akku zum liegengebliebenen Auto gebracht. (Elektromobilität, Technologie)

Massenentlassungen: GM beendet die Produktion des Chevrolet Volt

General Motors strukturiert sich um und will sich stärker auf autonome und elektrische Fahrzeuge konzentrieren. 14.000 Menschen sollen ihren Arbeitsplatz verlieren. Selbst den Plug-in-Hybrid Chevrolet Volt wird es nicht mehr geben. (Elektroauto, Techno…

General Motors strukturiert sich um und will sich stärker auf autonome und elektrische Fahrzeuge konzentrieren. 14.000 Menschen sollen ihren Arbeitsplatz verlieren. Selbst den Plug-in-Hybrid Chevrolet Volt wird es nicht mehr geben. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

$2 billion class-action lawsuit over failed nuclear plant sees settlement offer

Agreement contingent on Dominion Energy purchasing the South Carolina energy company.

A nuclear plant in a grassy field during the summer.

Enlarge / V C Summer Nuclear Station Unit 1. (credit: DJSlawSlaw / Wikimedia Commons)

Today, South Carolina energy company SCANA and its potential purchaser Dominion Energy reached a settlement with class-action litigants to offer a significant energy bill rate cut in exchange for the litigants dropping a lawsuit over $2 billion in energy bill fees. Attorneys for the class-action members told The Post and Courier that they will accept the deal if it’s approved.

SCANA was a 55 percent owner of the VC Summer nuclear power plant expansion, and when reactor maker Westinghouse went bankrupt early last year, the owners of the plant found themselves in a very bad position.

Stakeholders opted not to continue construction on Summer, unlike in Georgia, where a similar reactor construction project from Westinghouse found the public support to fulfill construction. Meanwhile, SCANA and its public-facing utility, South Carolina Electric and Gas (SCG&E) still found themselves on the hook after massive cost overruns. Customer energy bills subsidized the billions of dollars of construction that would ultimately go nowhere.

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Microsoft (briefly) passed Apple to become the most valuable US company today

Microsoft’s cloud strategy has impressed. Apple’s smartphone sales? Not so much.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella.

Enlarge / Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella. (credit: Microsoft)

For a brief period today, Microsoft achieved greater market value than Apple, which is often called the world's most valuable company. The temporary shift recalls a long, up-and-down history of a rivalry between the two companies—though they are partners in many areas today.

Microsoft reached a market capitalization of close to $813 billion today, with Apple falling only about a billion behind. Apple has fallen a long way since earlier this year, and Microsoft has also seen declines along with many other tech companies, but Microsoft's struggles have not been as pronounced, at least in terms of investor confidence.

The last time Microsoft secured this lead was in 2010. Earlier this year, Apple became the world's first company to achieve a $1 trillion market cap. Amazon followed shortly after. Microsoft has still not reached that milestone, and all three are below it now following a trying period for tech stocks.

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