TuneIn Radio Infringed Sony & Warner’s Copyrights, High Court Rules

In 2017, Sony and Warner sued US-based radio service TuneIn, claiming the company infringed its copyrights in the UK. A judgment handed down today by the High Court states that while TuneIn does not offer content itself, the provision of hyperlinks to content not officially licensed in the UK constitutes a communication to the public and is therefore infringement.

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TuneIn is one of the most prominent and recognizable providers of radio content in the world.

Available for free or on a premium basis, the service offers access to well over 100,000 radio stations and millions of podcasts. It doesn’t provide this content itself but acts as an indexer (“audio guide service”, according to TuneIn) for those looking to access third-party streams.

In 2017 it emerged that Sony Music UK and Warner Music UK had sued the US-based company in the UK, claiming that since many of the TuneIn-indexed stations are unlicensed to play music in the region, linking to them amounts to infringement of the labels’ copyrights.

Today, the High Court of England Wales handed down its decision and it doesn’t look good for TuneIn. The judgment begins by stating the opposing positions of the labels and TuneIn, which are particularly familiar in these types of disputes concerning hyperlinking.

“The claimants say that a finding for the defendant will fatally undermine copyright. The defendant says that a finding for the claimants will break the internet,” Justice Birss writes.

The labels argued that TuneIn needs a license, an assertion “strongly disputed” by TuneIn. The company argued that it does not “store any music, and merely provides users of TuneIn Radio with hyperlinks to works which have already been made freely available on the internet without any geographic or other restriction.”

In other words, TuneIn presents itself as not unlike Google search but instead of indexing websites, it indexes and links to radio streams. However, Justice Birss declared the service to be “much more than that”, in part due to its curation and search features.

“I find therefore that the activity of TuneIn does amount to an act of communication of the relevant works; and also that that act of communication is to a ‘public’, in the sense of being to an indeterminate and fairly large number of persons,” he writes.

The ruling, which was first published by a blog connected to Bird and Bird, the law firm that represented TuneIn, runs to 47 pages and is both extremely detailed and complex. However, the conclusion to Judge Birss’ judgment can be summarized in a straightforward manner.

When TuneIn supplied UK users with links to radio stations that are already licensed in the UK, the company did not infringe Sony or Warner’s copyrights.

However, when TuneIn supplied UK users with links to radio stations that are not licensed for the UK or are not licensed at all, the company did infringe the labels’ rights.

Noting that TuneIn cannot rely on the safe harbor defenses under the E-Commerce Directive, Judge Birss declared TuneIn, “liable for infringement by authorization and as a joint tortfeasor.”

The full judgment can be found here (pdf)

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Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition Ubuntu laptop now available in more configurations

When Dell launched its latest XPS 13 Developer Edition laptop with Ubuntu Linux and an Intel Comet Lake processor a few months ago, the laptop was only available with an Intel Core i5-10210U quad-core processor. Now the company has expanded the configu…

When Dell launched its latest XPS 13 Developer Edition laptop with Ubuntu Linux and an Intel Comet Lake processor a few months ago, the laptop was only available with an Intel Core i5-10210U quad-core processor. Now the company has expanded the configuration options, which means you can pick up a version of this thin and […]

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Rats love driving tiny cars, even when they don’t get treats

It was for a study on how enriched environments can affect stress response.

Rats that learn to drive are more able to cope with stress. That might sound like the fever-dream of a former scientist-turned-car writer, but it's actually one of the results of a new study from the University of Richmond. The aim of the research was to see what effect the environment a rat was raised in had on their ability to learn new tasks. Although that kind of thing has been studied in the past, the tests haven't been particularly complicated. Anyone who's spent time around rats will know they're actually quite resourceful. So the team, led by Professor Kelly Lambert, came up this time with something a little more involved than navigating a maze: driving.

If you're going to teach rats to drive, first you need to build them a car (or Rat Operated Vehicle). The chassis and powertrain came from a robot car kit, and a transparent plastic food container provided the body. Explaining the idea of a steering wheel and pedals to rats was probably too difficult, so the controls were three copper wires stretched across an opening cut out of the front of the bodywork and an aluminum plate on the floor. When a rat stood on the plate and gripped a copper bar, a circuit was completed and the motors engaged; one bar made the car turn to the left, one made it turn to the right, and the third made it go straight ahead.

Rat Steering Compilation

If proof were needed that many existing psychology tests are too simple, rats did not take long to learn how to drive. The driving was conducted in a closed-off arena (1.5m x 0.6m x 0.5m) where the goal was to drive over to a food treat. Three five-minute sessions a week, for eight weeks, was sufficient for the rats to learn how to do it. The placement of the treat and the starting position and orientation of the car varied throughout, so the rats had more of a challenge each time. At the end of the experiment, each rat went through a series of trials, conducted a day or two apart, where they were allowed to drive around the arena but without any food treats to see if they were only doing it for the food.

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Trojaner: NSO soll Regierungsbeamte per Whatsapp gehackt haben

Whatsapp hat den Trojaner-Hersteller NSO verklagt. Dieser soll 1.400 Whatsapp-Nutzer gehackt haben. Laut Reuters waren darunter neben Journalisten und Menschenrechtsaktivisten auch hochrangige Regierungsbeamte aus mindestens 20 Staaten. Laut NSO wurden…

Whatsapp hat den Trojaner-Hersteller NSO verklagt. Dieser soll 1.400 Whatsapp-Nutzer gehackt haben. Laut Reuters waren darunter neben Journalisten und Menschenrechtsaktivisten auch hochrangige Regierungsbeamte aus mindestens 20 Staaten. Laut NSO wurden nur Kriminelle und Terroristen angegriffen. (Whatsapp, Sicherheitslücke)

Google is buying Fitbit for $2.1 billion, promises Google-made wearables

The rumors were true. Google has announced plans to acquire Fitbit in a deal valued at $2.1 billion. Fitbit is a 12-year-old company that currently dominates the wearable activity tracker space, but which has struggled to move beyond fitness devices. G…

The rumors were true. Google has announced plans to acquire Fitbit in a deal valued at $2.1 billion. Fitbit is a 12-year-old company that currently dominates the wearable activity tracker space, but which has struggled to move beyond fitness devices. Google, meanwhile, has been developing software for wearables for the past five years… but the […]

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Wearables: Google übernimmt Fitbit

Der Wearable-Hersteller Fitbit wird von Google gekauft. Damit könnten Google-Wearables nach Jahren der Spekulationen doch noch Realität werden. Entsprechende Andeutungen macht Google-Manager Rick Osterloh in seiner Nachricht zu der Übernahme. (Google, …

Der Wearable-Hersteller Fitbit wird von Google gekauft. Damit könnten Google-Wearables nach Jahren der Spekulationen doch noch Realität werden. Entsprechende Andeutungen macht Google-Manager Rick Osterloh in seiner Nachricht zu der Übernahme. (Google, Smartwatch)

Google buys Fitbit for $2.1 billion

Google says the move will bolster Wear OS and bring Google-branded fitness trackers.

It's official, Google is buying Fitbit. The company announced the move in a blog post this morning, and reports say the deal is worth $2.1 billion.

Google's SVP of hardware, Rick Osterloh, posted an announcement of the acquisition on Google's blog, saying the move was "an opportunity to invest even more in Wear OS as well as introduce Made by Google wearable devices into the market."

This is the second time this year Google has made an acquisition aimed at bolstering Wear OS, having previously purchased an unknown technology from Fossil Group for $40 million.

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Apple TV+ im Test: Apple-Kunden müssen auf jeden Streaming-Komfort verzichten

Apple ist mit Apple TV+ gestartet. Wir haben das Streamingabo ausprobiert und waren entsetzt, wie rückständig alles umgesetzt ist. Der Kunde von Apple TV+ muss auf sehr viele Komfortfunktionen verzichten, die bei der Konkurrenz seit Langem üblich sind….

Apple ist mit Apple TV+ gestartet. Wir haben das Streamingabo ausprobiert und waren entsetzt, wie rückständig alles umgesetzt ist. Der Kunde von Apple TV+ muss auf sehr viele Komfortfunktionen verzichten, die bei der Konkurrenz seit Langem üblich sind. Ein Test von Ingo Pakalski (Apple TV+, Apple)

Gesetz in Kraft getreten: Russland bekommt eigenes Staatsnetz

In Russland ist das Gesetz für ein eigenständiges Internet unter staatlicher Kontrolle in Kraft getreten. Kritiker warnen vor einer Ausweitung der Kontrolle und Zensur. (Politik/Recht, Vorratsdatenspeicherung)

In Russland ist das Gesetz für ein eigenständiges Internet unter staatlicher Kontrolle in Kraft getreten. Kritiker warnen vor einer Ausweitung der Kontrolle und Zensur. (Politik/Recht, Vorratsdatenspeicherung)

No, a genetic study didn’t pinpoint the ancestral homeland of all humans

The study published earlier this week ignores most of the archaeological record.

200,000 years ago, parts of the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa looked a lot like the  Okavango Delta in Botswana.

Enlarge / 200,000 years ago, parts of the Kalahari Desert in southern Africa looked a lot like the Okavango Delta in Botswana. (credit: Gorgo / Wikimedia)

A study published in the prestigious scientific journal Nature earlier this week supposedly determined that a particular region of southern Africa gave rise to modern humans 200,000 years ago. But, shockingly, it turns out that a single genomic study can't instantly resolve one of the biggest questions in human evolution.

The Nature paper's claim has drawn criticism from people in the field, in part because it contradicts a heap of other evidence—and it doesn't offer any explanation. And the actual emergence of our species is much older, much messier, and much more interesting.

Is this the homeland of modern humans?

Geneticist Eva Chan of the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Australia and her colleagues say that mitochondrial DNA can be used to trace the origins of modern humanity to an area spanning the borders of Botswana, Namibia, and Zimbabwe. This place is a dry landscape dotted with salt pans that hint at a former wetland paradise. Because mitochondrial DNA is passed directly from mother to child, the study claims that this is where the maternal ancestors of modern humans—6,500 generations removed—once lived.

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