UK Porn Filters Could Mean Sweaty Palms For Piracy Blockers

This summer the UK government will attempt to ban underage access to sites that have a third or more of their content dedicated to porn. Everyone will be required to verify their age and sites that don’t comply with the regime will be blocked by ISPs. However, citizens who seek to circumvent the rules with VPNs, for example, will also find pirate sites wide open again.

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

Before the dawn of the mainstream Internet, underage access to pornographic content meant trying to sneak a glance over someone’s shoulder at a well-thumbed adult magazine.

Or, if you were ‘lucky’, finding a VHS cassette in a friend’s dad’s cupboard, behind the coats and shoes, in a box, inside another box, in an envelope marked “holiday video”. Such things apparently happened.

With the dawn of the Internet, things have certainly changed. With just a few clicks, one can find pornographic material, with ‘graphic’ often being the operative word. What adults choose to watch is their business, but children being able to access much of the content on today’s platforms is probably not what most parents want.

So in the absence of traditional parental controls, the UK government has stepped in to prevent youngsters from inadvertently stumbling across adult content. From July 15, the country will adopt a checking scheme that will require profit-making sites with more than a third of their content pornographic in nature to verify visitors’ ages.

It’s believed that the AgeID system, operated by major porn site owner Mindgeek, will one of the key facilitators of that. People who want to access porn sites will be required to provide scans of their driving licenses or passports, provide credit card details, or activate via SMS. Users’ details will then be verified by a third-party.

There will be other ways to obtain verification too, since some shops will be selling special cards containing a code that people can use to access sites like Pornhub and YouPorn. However, eligible sites that refuse to play by the verification rules will be blocked by local ISPs, preventing them from doing any business in the UK.

In theory, at least.

While the aims are noble, circumvention of this entire scheme (for adults and children alike) lies just a few key presses away. Subscribing to a VPN will effectively drive a coach and horses through the legislation, providing no-fuss and instant access to all age-compliant websites, and those that refuse to comply too.

The government acknowledges that this could happen, but it wants to be seen to be doing something. Indeed, as part of the Digital Economy Act 2017, the UK will become the first country in the world to proudly deploy such a system. However, thanks to many years of website blocking on the piracy front, large numbers of people will already have the tools at hand to make July 15 seem like life on the 14th.

Herein lies the problem. As website blocking increases – whether that’s via direct ISP action or the verification scheme detailed above – people have more and more reasons to learn how to evade those blocks. It doesn’t really matter whether it’s adults or even teenagers spreading the knowledge, on July 15 (if not sooner) circumvention methods will spread like wildfire.

And this can only mean bad news for those who have worked incredibly hard to have many hundreds of pirate sites blocked in the UK over the past nine years or so.

Once those VPNs get fired up to access XVideos or whatever other sites tickle people’s fancies, it will soon become apparent that every single one of those previously blocked torrent and streaming portals will become accessible again too.

Good VPNs do not discriminate and they don’t care what people are looking at. Their aim is to protect their users’ privacy and make web censorship a thing of the past. The only saving grace in respect of the verification scheme is that decent ones also cost money, so teenagers may not always have the means to pay for one.

That raises the possibility – or even likelihood – that many people will take the easy option of downloading a ‘free’ VPN from Google Play or Apple’s variant. Many of these have a questionable track history, especially when it comes to privacy, so people flocking in this direction won’t be doing themselves any favors.

All that being said, the architects of the scheme say that the potential for circumvention of the verification scheme is low. Perhaps today’s teenagers are less interested in seeing forbidden content than those that went before and will embrace the scheme with open arms. We shall see.

For most adults, however, it seems likely that handing over passports, driving licenses, and credit cards will only add to the already considerable but relatively straightforward pressure of remembering browser history wiping and incognito tabs.

In the meantime, there’s always The Pirate Bay, RARBG and all the other ‘pirate’ sites offering adult material. None of them will be included in the verification scheme but could see a small surge in traffic, if ‘porn-pass panic’ sweeps the country. And if it does, they’ll be easier to access than ever before.

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

AVM: FritzOS-Version 7.10 für Fritzbox 7560 freigegeben

AVM hat die Arbeiten an FritzOS 7.10 für eine weitere Fritzbox abgeschlossen. Es handelt sich um ein älteres Gerät aus dem Jahr 2016, das von dem verbesserten Betriebssystem profitiert. (AVM, WLAN)

AVM hat die Arbeiten an FritzOS 7.10 für eine weitere Fritzbox abgeschlossen. Es handelt sich um ein älteres Gerät aus dem Jahr 2016, das von dem verbesserten Betriebssystem profitiert. (AVM, WLAN)

Staffsource: Ars’ most coveted work-from-home essentials

Our staffers gush about the items that make their homes better than any office.

A keyboard sits next to an expensive set of headphones.

Enlarge (credit: Jon Brodkin)

We at Ars have a unique work situation: instead of congregating in a stuffy office among the maze of stuffy offices in a high-rise in a big city, each of us works from the comfort of our home. Some of us have been doing so for decades, while others have only a few work-from-home years under our belts. It's an adjustment to go from an office environment to your living room, bedroom, or home office, but each of us has found unique ways to make it work and ensure our motivation and productivity levels stay high (most of the time).

That couldn't happen without key things we've grown attached to in our homes. For most of us, making adjustments to our at-home working spaces has been crucial to maintaining our mental and physical wellbeing. While some of us have found we cannot live without certain objects we already used regularly, others among us have invested in things that make our work-from-home lives better. Check out some of our work-from-home essentials below.

Note: Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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Soziales Netzwerk: Facebook hat Kontaktdaten von 1,5 Millionen Nutzern kopiert

Und wieder ein Datenskandal bei Facebook: Diesmal ist herausgekommen, dass das Unternehmen seit Mai 2016 die Kontaktdaten von 1,5 Millionen neuen Mitgliedern ohne deren Erlaubnis auf seine Server kopiert hat. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Und wieder ein Datenskandal bei Facebook: Diesmal ist herausgekommen, dass das Unternehmen seit Mai 2016 die Kontaktdaten von 1,5 Millionen neuen Mitgliedern ohne deren Erlaubnis auf seine Server kopiert hat. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Leistungsschutzrecht: VG Media will Milliarden von Google

Kaum ist das europäische Leistungsschutzrecht beschlossen, will die VG Media bei Google kräftig abkassieren. Dabei will die Verwertungsgesellschaft sämtliche Verlage und Sender in der EU vertreten. (Leistungsschutzrecht, Google)

Kaum ist das europäische Leistungsschutzrecht beschlossen, will die VG Media bei Google kräftig abkassieren. Dabei will die Verwertungsgesellschaft sämtliche Verlage und Sender in der EU vertreten. (Leistungsschutzrecht, Google)

You can now download the source code for all Infocom text adventure classics

Yes, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and Zork are both included.

Photograph of a keyboard of a late '80s/early '90s computer.

Enlarge / The Apple II, one of the myriad personal computers used to play Infocom games years ago. (credit: SSPL/Getty Images)

The source code of every Infocom text adventure game has been uploaded to code-sharing repository GitHub, allowing savvy programmers to examine and build upon some of the most beloved works of digital storytelling to date.

There are numerous repositories under the name historicalsource, each for a different game. Titles include but are not limited to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the GalaxyPlanetfall, Shogun, and several Zork games—plus some more unusual inclusions like an incomplete version of Hitchhiker's sequel The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, Infocom samplers, and an unreleased adaptation of James Cameron's The Abyss.

The code was uploaded by Jason Scott, an archivist who is the proprietor of textfiles.com. His website describes itself as "a glimpse into the history of writers and artists bound by the 128 characters that the American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII) allowed them"—in particular those of the 1980s. He announced the GitHub uploads on Twitter earlier this week.

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Noctua NH-U12A im Test: Lautlos, leistungsstark, luxuriös

Der NH-U12A mit seinen zwei fast spaltlosen 120-mm-Lüftern erreicht exzellente CPU-Temperaturen und agiert auf Wunsch sehr leise. Diese Leistung und die weitreichende Kompatibilität lässt sich Noctua allerdings fürstlich bezahlen: Der NH-U12A kostet dr…

Der NH-U12A mit seinen zwei fast spaltlosen 120-mm-Lüftern erreicht exzellente CPU-Temperaturen und agiert auf Wunsch sehr leise. Diese Leistung und die weitreichende Kompatibilität lässt sich Noctua allerdings fürstlich bezahlen: Der NH-U12A kostet dreistellig. (Noctua, Prozessor)

Google: Android Studio 3.4 unterstützt Android Q

Android-Entwickler können ab sofort Version 3.4 von Android Studio verwenden. Die neue Version unterstützt unter anderem die Android-Q-Beta und beinhaltet Verbesserungen beim Project Structure Dialog sowie einen neuen Resource Manager. (Android, Google…

Android-Entwickler können ab sofort Version 3.4 von Android Studio verwenden. Die neue Version unterstützt unter anderem die Android-Q-Beta und beinhaltet Verbesserungen beim Project Structure Dialog sowie einen neuen Resource Manager. (Android, Google)

ZBook 14U G6 und 15U G6: HP aktualisiert leichte Workstation-Notebooks

Mit der Generation 6 hat HP die ZBooks verbessert. Es gibt teilweise erheblich hellere Displays, eine Radeon Pro WX3200 und längere Akkulaufzeiten. Zu beachten ist allerdings, dass HP derzeit die G5-Geräte noch als nagelneu verkauft. (Business-Notebook…

Mit der Generation 6 hat HP die ZBooks verbessert. Es gibt teilweise erheblich hellere Displays, eine Radeon Pro WX3200 und längere Akkulaufzeiten. Zu beachten ist allerdings, dass HP derzeit die G5-Geräte noch als nagelneu verkauft. (Business-Notebooks, Notebook)

Kanzleramtschef Braun: Staat soll auch selbst Funkmasten aufstellen

Kanzleramtsminister Helge Braun will das restliche 1 Prozent der Haushalte staatlich mit Mobilfunk-Masten versorgen. Doch laut Opposition geht es um den Versorgungsgrad der Fläche Deutschlands, der weit niedriger ist. (Mobilfunk, Telekom)

Kanzleramtsminister Helge Braun will das restliche 1 Prozent der Haushalte staatlich mit Mobilfunk-Masten versorgen. Doch laut Opposition geht es um den Versorgungsgrad der Fläche Deutschlands, der weit niedriger ist. (Mobilfunk, Telekom)