Canada Prohibits Piracy Settlement Demands in ISP Copyright Notices

The rules for Canada’s notice-and-notice regime will change following the passing of C-86, the Budget Implementation Act. Moving forward, rightsholders will not be allowed to send copyright infringement notices for ISPs to pass onto their customers, if they contain a direct or indirect offer to settle. The development effectively ends Rightscorp-style business models in Canada.

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

In several countries around the world, notably the United States, Canada, and the UK, rightsholders and their agents send copyright notices to alleged infringers.

In most cases, recipients are accused of downloading and sharing copyright-infringing content using BitTorrent. The notices contain details of the alleged offense along with instructions to cease-and-desist.

These notices, sent to Internet users’ ISPs, are regularly passed on to the subscriber. However, some companies targeting US and Canadian citizens augment their notices with text indicating that a cash settlement is required, ranging from just a few dollars to several hundred.

Many users who see these demands pay up but these notices are unusual in that the original sender has no idea who the subscriber is. This means that some recipients ignore them, with no further consequences.

While the practice operates largely unhindered in the US, over in Canada (where there is a so-called notice-and-notice regime) there has been considerable opposition since its inception in 2015.

ISPs, who have to bear the brunt of the administrative burden, have also cried foul, with TekSavvy recently describing the content of some notices as akin to “scams and spam“, with Bell noting that it would like to see an end to the copyright-notice settlement model.

Back in October, it became clear that the ISPs and other opponents had strong government backing with the publication of a new bill that would prevent the activity from continuing.

Bill C-86, the Budget Implementation Act, has now received royal assent, so there will be some big changes in the Great White North. Section 41.‍25 of the Copyright Act is now amended with the addition of the following;

(3) A notice of claimed infringement shall not contain:

(a) an offer to settle the claimed infringement;
(b) a request or demand, made in relation to the claimed infringement, for payment or for personal information;
(c) a reference, including by way of hyperlink, to such an offer, request or demand; and
(d) any other information that may be prescribed by regulation.

The text is pretty straightforward, in that it prohibits demands for settlement in the notices themselves or on a third-party site where such a demand may also be available. This is important since some notices contain hyperlinks that not only lead to demands for cash but also undermine subscriber privacy with the use of tracking code.

The news was welcomed by Canadian law professor Michael Geist, who notes that notices that do not meet the new standards can be withheld by local ISPs without them facing penalties.

However, Geist also cautions that the new amendments contain no punishments for anti-piracy companies that fail to follow the rules.

“The key remaining question is whether ISPs will crackdown on non-compliant notices. Since there is no penalty associated with sending non-compliant notices, subscribers are dependent upon ISPs carefully reviewing notices to ensure that they only forward those that fully comply with the law,” Geist notes.

Considering their earlier opposition, however, it seems unlikely that TekSavvy, Shaw, Rogers, and Bell will have many problems with withholding non-compliant notices.

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

Raiju Mobile: Razer präsentiert Smartphone-Controller für 150 Euro

Mit dem Raiju Mobile hat Razer seine Controller-Reihe für Sonys Playstations auf Smartphones erweitert. Das Mobiltelefon kann in eine neigbare Halterung gesteckt werden, neben den gewohnten Steuerungselementen stehen vier programmierbare Buttons zur Ve…

Mit dem Raiju Mobile hat Razer seine Controller-Reihe für Sonys Playstations auf Smartphones erweitert. Das Mobiltelefon kann in eine neigbare Halterung gesteckt werden, neben den gewohnten Steuerungselementen stehen vier programmierbare Buttons zur Verfügung. (Razer, Smartphone)

Video: Total War: Rome II devs built all of Europe—and the AI ignored most of it

Continuing “War Stories,” a series on challenges that almost derailed a game’s development.

Shot and edited by Justin Wolfson. Motion graphics by John Cappello. Click here for transcript.

Creative Assembly's Total War franchise has been around for so long that it's old enough to drive, vote, and even drink in most countries. For the three people reading this who haven't played at least one title in the series, the games provide a blend of real-time strategy and turn-based resource management that manages to scratch a number of itches simultaneously. You can direct the conquest of large regions from a god's-eye overhead view and then step down to the battlefield and move units around like Command and Conquer.

As technology and the 2000s progressed, new entries in the series became more sophisticated; by the time 2013 rolled around and Creative Assembly was working its magic on Total War: Rome II, the design goals were ambitious indeed. Designers wanted to give players total freedom to move around all of classical-era Europe, from Caledonia to Arachosia and all points in between. Building a canvas this broad to play on meant the small team of designers had to rely on some clever procedural tools, and although you might expect those tools to be the point of this particular War Story, that's not actually what the problem turned out to be.

What if we threw a war and nobody came?

In order to properly test a game with thousands of square miles of playable space, the designers employed automated tools running on their office PCs. In the evenings when it was time to go home, Creative Assembly would set as many PCs as they could to playing the game in AI-only mode, iterating through battles and scenarios in order to help see which units needed balancing and which scenarios needed tweaking. Along the way, they would also find areas where their procedural terrain generation hadn't gotten things quite right (like requiring a campaign battle to awkwardly play out on a near-vertical slope).

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Charter users who didn’t get promised speeds will get $75 or $150 refunds

Charter settles speed fraud lawsuit, will refund 700,000 customers in NY.

A man's hand grabbing a fist full of money.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | tazytaz)

Charter has agreed to pay $62.5 million in refunds to more than 700,000 customers to settle a lawsuit filed by the New York state attorney general's office, which alleged that Charter defrauded customers by promising Internet speeds that it knew it could not deliver.

The 700,000 New York-based customers will receive between $75 and $150 each, NY AG Barbara Underwood announced today. Charter will also provide access to "streaming services and premium channels, with a retail value of over $100 million, at no charge for approximately 2.2 million active subscribers." The settlement's total value is $174.2 million, the AG's office said.

"The $62.5 million in direct refunds to consumers alone are believed to represent the largest-ever payout to consumers by an Internet service provider (ISP) in US history," the AG's announcement said. "The landmark agreement settles a consumer fraud action alleging that the state's largest ISP, which operated initially as Time Warner Cable (TWC) and later under Charter's Spectrum brand name, denied customers the reliable and fast Internet service it had promised."

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Datenschutz: Löschen des Tracking-Verlaufs auf Facebook macht Probleme

Im Mai 2018 hatte Facebook versprochen, dass Nutzer ihren Tracking-Verlauf löschen können – ein sehr weitgehendes Zugeständnis an den Datenschutz. Jetzt hat sich das Unternehmen mit einem Zwischenstand über die Umsetzung gemeldet. (Facebook, Soziales N…

Im Mai 2018 hatte Facebook versprochen, dass Nutzer ihren Tracking-Verlauf löschen können - ein sehr weitgehendes Zugeständnis an den Datenschutz. Jetzt hat sich das Unternehmen mit einem Zwischenstand über die Umsetzung gemeldet. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

NVIDIA’s next-gen MX250 entry-level laptop graphics leaked

NVIDIA offers a range of graphics processors for laptops and desktops, and over the past year or so we’ve seen a number of notebooks ship with the company’s entry-level MX150 graphics. The GPU offers better graphics performance than you&#82…

NVIDIA offers a range of graphics processors for laptops and desktops, and over the past year or so we’ve seen a number of notebooks ship with the company’s entry-level MX150 graphics. The GPU offers better graphics performance than you’d get from Intel’s integrated graphics alone, while having relatively low power consumption — so when you’re […]

The post NVIDIA’s next-gen MX250 entry-level laptop graphics leaked appeared first on Liliputing.

Weather and technical issues forced multiple launch scrubs Tuesday, but…

Four launches are possible from the Americas, and one from India.

SpaceX held its Falcon 9 launch with 7 minutes, 1 second left in the countdown.

Enlarge / SpaceX held its Falcon 9 launch with 7 minutes, 1 second left in the countdown. (credit: SpaceX webcast)

Tuesday had the potential to be a pretty amazing day of rocket launches, with SpaceX, Arianespace, and United Launch Alliance all on the pad for their final orbital missions of 2019. Blue Origin, too, said it intended to fly the tenth mission of its New Shepard Launch system from West Texas.

But by early Tuesday, Mother Nature and the intricacies of rocketry had other ideas.

By around 8am ET, Arianespace said it was scrubbing the launch of a Russian-made Soyuz launch vehicle from the Guiana Space Center in South America due to "high-altitude wind conditions." Launch has been pushed back a day in hopes of better weather.

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Callcenter: Unerlaubte Telefonwerbung kann teuer werden

Die Bundesnetzagentur hat zwei Callcenter mit einem Bußgeld von 300.000 Euro belegt. Mehr als 1.400 Verbraucher hatten sich über die Methoden der Firmen beschwert. (Verbraucherschutz, Bundesnetzagentur)

Die Bundesnetzagentur hat zwei Callcenter mit einem Bußgeld von 300.000 Euro belegt. Mehr als 1.400 Verbraucher hatten sich über die Methoden der Firmen beschwert. (Verbraucherschutz, Bundesnetzagentur)

print@home: Eventim schafft Online-Ticketgebühr nun doch ab

Eventim verzichtet doch darauf, eine niedrigere Gebühr für den Ausdruck von Online-Tickets mit print@home zu erheben. Man wolle keinen Streit, sagte der Eventim-Chef Klaus-Peter Schulenberg. Die Gebühr bringe nur 1 Million Euro im Jahr. (Verbrauchersch…

Eventim verzichtet doch darauf, eine niedrigere Gebühr für den Ausdruck von Online-Tickets mit print@home zu erheben. Man wolle keinen Streit, sagte der Eventim-Chef Klaus-Peter Schulenberg. Die Gebühr bringe nur 1 Million Euro im Jahr. (Verbraucherschutz, Internet)

Windows 10: Nutzer können Oktober-Update jetzt manuell herunterladen

Microsoft ruft noch einmal die Verfügbarkeit seines October 2018 Update für Windows 10 aus. Nutzer können sich die Version 1809 manuell über die Systemeinstellungen herunterladen. Allerdings verhindern einige ältere Bugs noch immer eine Installation. (…

Microsoft ruft noch einmal die Verfügbarkeit seines October 2018 Update für Windows 10 aus. Nutzer können sich die Version 1809 manuell über die Systemeinstellungen herunterladen. Allerdings verhindern einige ältere Bugs noch immer eine Installation. (Windows 10, Microsoft)