UN Human Rights Rapporteur: Upload Filters “Disproportionate Response” to Copyright Infringement

David Kaye, the UN’s Special Rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, has raised the alarm over the EU’s proposals for Article 13 and its de facto filtering requirements. “Such sweeping pressure for pre-publication filtering is neither a necessary nor proportionate response to copyright infringement online,” Kaye warns.

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Later this month, Members of the European Parliament are set to cast their final votes on the EU Copyright Directive.

Given the almost continuous outrage online, it’s clear that both Article 11 and Article 13 remain highly controversial.

While there is some dissent, the latter is generally supported by rightsholder groups and artists. Opponents, however, fear that the proposals will lead to de facto upload filtering, the potential for abuse, and serious unintended consequences. The latest heavyweight to add an opinion in support of this stance is UN human rights experts David Kaye.

Speaking in his role as UN Special Rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, Kaye is now warning the European Union that the proposed amendments to the Copyright Directive will fall short of international standards on freedom of expression.

“Europe has a responsibility to modernize its copyright law to address the challenges of the digital age but this should not be done at the expense of the freedom of expression that Europeans enjoy today,” Kaye said in a statement Monday.

“Article 13 of the proposed Directive appears destined to drive internet platforms toward monitoring and restriction of user-generated content even at the point of upload.  Such sweeping pressure for pre-publication filtering is neither a necessary nor proportionate response to copyright infringement online.”

Proponents of Article 13 continue to insist that the proposed amendments create no obligation to filter. But, despite outcry from online platforms and activists, no one has yet put forward any explanation as to how such filters can be avoided. Platforms that fit the criteria could be held liable, if they host content for which they hold no license.

Indeed, less than two weeks ago, Ulrich Kelber, Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, issued a similarly stark warning over the potential for an “oligopoly” of third-party filtering vendors having significantly increased access to huge volumes of user data.

Kelber suggested that the EU should explain how its Article 13 aims can be achieved without filtering of uploaded content but thus far, silence appears to have been the response.

While some platforms would be exempt from the requirements of Article 13 under the current proposals (platforms less than three years old, with fewer than five million unique visitors per month, and an annual turnover of less than €10 million), the limits are still too tight, the UN expert added.

“Most platforms would not qualify for the exemption and would face legal pressure to install and maintain expensive content filtering infrastructure to comply with the proposed Directive.

“In the long run, this would imperil the future of information diversity and media pluralism in Europe, since only the biggest players will be able to afford these technologies,” Kaye said.

Kaye also foresees problems with upload filtering systems’ inability to differentiate between infringing works and those that are uploaded within the parameters of existing law – when exercising the freedom to quote, criticize, review, caricature, parody, and pastiche, for example.

Computers cannot do that today and even proficient humans have difficulty, Kaye explained.

“Even the most experienced lawyers struggle to distinguish violations of copyright rules from exceptions to these rules, which vary across Member States. The lack of clear and precise language in the Directive would create even more legal uncertainty,” the UN expert warned.

But while content companies state that their support of Article 13 is based on an urgent need to protect artists and creators, Kaye believes that those individuals will be the first people to suffer, if the law is passed in its current form.

“Misplaced confidence in filtering technologies to make nuanced distinctions between copyright violations and legitimate uses of protected material would escalate the risk of error and censorship. Who would bear the brunt of this practice?

“Typically it would be creators and artists, who lack the resources to litigate such claims,” he warned.

Kaye’s opposition comes on the heels of a series of PR disasters (1,2,3) for supporters of Article 13 within the corridors of power at the EU itself. Even impartiality appears to be a problem, opponents argue.

Simultaneously, opposition among the public is continuing to build, via a record-breaking petition on Change.org (now visibly being signed every second) which is set to culminate in a series of physical protests throughout Europe later this month.

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Hydrogen One: Unklarheiten wegen der Modulfunktion des Red-Smartphones

Red hat alle Hinweise auf Module von der Hydrogen-One-Produktseite entfernt. Der Chef des Unternehmens hat sich bereits dazu geäußert, allerdings sehr vage. Es ist derzeit unklar, ob für das Smartphone jemals Module erscheinen werden. (Smartphone, Ster…

Red hat alle Hinweise auf Module von der Hydrogen-One-Produktseite entfernt. Der Chef des Unternehmens hat sich bereits dazu geäußert, allerdings sehr vage. Es ist derzeit unklar, ob für das Smartphone jemals Module erscheinen werden. (Smartphone, Stereoskopie)

Meyer-Optik Görlitz: 2.000-Euro-Objektiv war ein chinesisches Fabrikat

Meyer-Optik Görlitz hatte 2015 ein 50-mm-Objektiv mit f/0,95 vorgestellt, das für 2.000 Euro verkauft wurde. Es handelte sich um das geringfügig veränderte chinesisches Modell, das nur 900 Euro kostet. Das hat der neue Firmeneigentümer zugegeben. (Obje…

Meyer-Optik Görlitz hatte 2015 ein 50-mm-Objektiv mit f/0,95 vorgestellt, das für 2.000 Euro verkauft wurde. Es handelte sich um das geringfügig veränderte chinesisches Modell, das nur 900 Euro kostet. Das hat der neue Firmeneigentümer zugegeben. (Objektiv, Foto)

Sicherheitslücke: Homebox-6441-Nutzer sollten Firmware überprüfen

Eine Sicherheitslücke erlaubt es, nicht gepatchte O2-Router des Modells Homebox 6441 zu übernehmen. Normalerweise aktualisieren sich die Router automatisch. Besser ist es aber, den aktuellen Patchlevel zu überprüfen. (Router-Lücke, DSL)

Eine Sicherheitslücke erlaubt es, nicht gepatchte O2-Router des Modells Homebox 6441 zu übernehmen. Normalerweise aktualisieren sich die Router automatisch. Besser ist es aber, den aktuellen Patchlevel zu überprüfen. (Router-Lücke, DSL)

Suburban zombies are back and ravenous as ever in Santa Clarita Diet S3 trailer

Clever horror-comedy series about zombies in an affluent suburb returns to Netflix.

The family that preys together, stays together. Drew Barrymore and Tim Olyphant star as Sheila and Joel Hammond, real estate agents with a squicky secret, in The Santa Clarita Diet.

We've got our first peek at what's in store for the third season of The Santa Clarita Diet, Netflix's clever horror-comedy series about zombies in an affluent California suburb. It's what you'd get if the CW's hipster comic/horror procedural, iZombie, grew up and moved to the suburbs: same bloody, bonkers humor with more pastels and fake pasted-on smiles.

(Some spoilers for first two seasons below.)

The series centers on Joel and Sheila Hammond (Tim Olyphant and Drew Barrymore, respectively), married real estate agents who find their lives irrevocably altered after Sheila has an extreme upchucking incident while showing a house to prospective clients. She thinks it's a bad case of food poisoning but soon begins to crave human flesh. The upside: she feels better than she has in years, and her increased libido kick-starts the Hammonds' previously humdrum sex life into overdrive.

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GOP funds messaging sites that look remarkably like trusted local news

Local news is trusted more than national news, but that could change.

A stack of newspapers.

Enlarge / Americans trust local newspapers...do they trust local newspaper websites? (credit: Getty Images)

A variety of Republican Party messaging websites have been popping up, styled after local news sites. These sites claim to be "unbiased," but they are actually funded by Republican donors, candidates, and organizations. Politico has been chronicling the appearance of these sites, and an investigation from Snopes published last week reveals GOP funding sources for three similar sites: The Tennessee Star, The Ohio Star, and The Minnesota Sun.

The trend started gaining steam in 2017. In Maine, a website called the Maine Examiner was revealed to be owned by a top Maine Republican Party official after the site had reportedly influenced a contentious mayoral election. Democrats lodged an ethics complaint, but the party official, Jason Savage, said his work on the website was not related to his work for the party.

The Maine Ethics Committee declined to investigate the Democratic Party's complaint, but recent news of leaked emails that were passed to Savage and the Maine Examiner during the election could reopen the possibility of an investigation.

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“It’s show time:” Apple confirms March 25 event at the Steve Jobs Theater

Streaming TV, news subscriptions, and new iPads are all possible subjects.

The event invite strongly hints at the upcoming video service.

Enlarge / The event invite strongly hints at the upcoming video service. (credit: Apple)

Apple has sent invites out to members of the press and other guests for a March 25 "special event." The tagline and animation on the invitation strongly suggest that the company's long-rumored streaming TV service will take center stage.

The invitation is accompanied by the words "it's show time." Apple used the same tagline in 2006 for an event at which it unveiled its then-future Apple TV product. TechCrunch editor Matthew Panzarino tweeted out a GIF of the animation: it is a countdown throwback to old films and film production, again suggesting that video content be a focus for the event.

Apple has been courting Hollywood writers and other talent from its rapidly expanding Culver City, Calif., offices in the Los Angeles area. The company is reportedly seeking family-friendly content and has acquired an enormous amount of content from established entertainers. For example, it will reboot Steven Spielberg's Amazing Stores, distribute a film from the Oscar-winning director of La La Land, launch a new series from Battlestar Galactica and Star Trek: Deep Space Nine showrunner Ronald D. Moore, and run a series based on Isaac Asimov's Foundation series of stories. It also has a deal of some sort with Oprah Winfrey.

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Microsoft brings Oracle’s open source DTrace tracing to Windows

Popular open source Unix tool is now a part of Windows too.

The bits in the dashed box are the CDDL parts that are more or less common to every platform offering DTrace.

Enlarge / The bits in the dashed box are the CDDL parts that are more or less common to every platform offering DTrace. (credit: Microsoft)

The forthcoming Windows 10 feature update will bring support for DTrace, the open source debugging and diagnostic tracing tool originally built for Solaris. The port was announced at the Ignite conference last year, and today the instructions, binaries, and source code are now available.

DTrace lets developers and administrators get a detailed look at what their system is doing: they can track kernel function calls, examine properties of running processes, and probe drivers. DTrace commands use the DTrace scripting language, with which users can specify which information is probed, and how to report that information.

After its initial Solaris release, DTrace spread to a wide range of other Unix-like operating systems. Today, it's available for Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and macOS. The original Solaris code was released under Sun's Common Development and Distribution License. Microsoft has ported the CDDL portions of DTrace and built an additional driver for Windows that performs some of the system-monitoring roles. The latter driver will ship with Windows; the CDDL parts are all a separate download.

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3 men cop to $21 million vishing and smishing scheme

Phone-based scam may be low-tech, but it netted big bucks, prosecutors say.

Handcuffs on a nondescript blue background.

Enlarge (credit: Klaus with K)

Three Romainian citizens have pleaded guilty to carrying out a scheme that used recorded messages and cellphone texts to trick thousands of people into revealing their social security numbers and bank account information, federal authorities said.

The "vishing" and "smishing" scams are variations of phishing that use voicemails and SMS messages instead of email, federal prosecutors in Atlanta, Ga., said on Friday. From 2011 to 2014, the three Romanians compromised computers located in the US and installed interactive voice response and bulk emailing software on them. The hacked computers initiated thousands of phone calls and text messages that tricked recipients into disclosing personal information including account numbers, PINs, and social security numbers.

"When a victim received a telephone call, the recipient would be greeted by a recorded message falsely claiming to be a bank," federal prosecutors said. "The interactive voice-response software would then prompt the victim to enter their PII. When a victim received a text message, the message purported to be from a bank and directed the recipient to call a telephone number hosted by a compromised Voice Over Internet Protocol server. When the victim called the telephone number, they were prompted by the interactive voice response software to enter their PII."

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NASA’s new budget raises questions about the future of its SLS rocket

By launching a Europa mission on a private rocket, NASA would save $700 million.

An artist's impression of the Space Launch System on the launch pad in Florida.

An artist's impression of the Space Launch System on the launch pad in Florida. (credit: NASA)

With a Republican White House and a Democratic House of Representatives, it almost goes without saying that the President's fiscal year 2020 budget request won't get far within Congress. Yet with NASA's budget, there are intriguing hints about the increasingly commercial nature of lunar exploration.

Two sources familiar with the thinking of Vice President Mike Pence—who leads US space policy—have said he is frustrated with the slow pace of the nation's efforts to send humans to the Moon. In particular, he is growing tired of delays with NASA's Space Launch System rocket, which was originally due to launch in 2017 and is now likely delayed until 2021 at the earliest.

Notably, President Donald Trump's budget request calls for a 17 percent reduction in the budget for NASA's Space Launch System rocket, once viewed as the backbone of the space agency's efforts to explore deep space. The president's budget request chips away at the supremacy of the SLS booster in three important ways.

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