Digital hoarders: “Our terabytes are put to use for the betterment of mankind”

Nerds with hoarding tendencies? Preservationists of history? Many terabytes either way.

Think we prefer the album version, but OK, sure Top of the Pops

Today perhaps more than ever, data is ephemeral. Despite Stephen Hawking's late-in-life revelation that information can never truly be destroyed, it can absolutely disappear from public access without leaving a trace.

It’s not just analogue data, either. Just as books go out of print, websites can drop offline, taking with them the wealth of knowledge, opinions, and facts they contain. (You won't find the complete herb archives of old Deadspin on that site, for instance.) And in an era where updates to stories or songs or short-form videos happen with the ease of a click, edits happen and often leave no indication of what came before. There is an entire generation of adults who are unaware that a certain firefight in the Mos Eisley Cantina was a cold-blooded murder, for instance.

So on any given day, 19-year-old Peter Hanrahan now spends his evenings binging on chart-topping radio shows from the 1960s. A student from the North of England, he recently started collecting episodes of Top of The Pops—a British chart music show which ran between 1964 and 2006—after seeing the 2019 Tarantino flick, Once Upon a Time In Hollywood.

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Judge in eBook.bike Piracy Case Asks Author to Consider a Massively Reduced Damages Claim

The copyright infringement lawsuit filed by author John van Stry against former Pirate Party leader Travis McCrea may be edging closer to financial discomfort. A motion for summary judgment filed by the plaintiff demanded $15,000 in damages for each title infringed, to a total of $180,000 plus costs. The presiding judge has now asked Van Stry to consider accepting just $750 per work to keep things simple.

Drom: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

Just over a year ago, author John Van Stry filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in a Texas court against former Pirate Party Canada leader Travis McCrea, the operator of eBook download platform eBook.bike.

The complaint alleged that McCrea infringed the copyrights of Van Stry by making at least a dozen of his books available for download without a license, along with other titles by prominent authors including Stephen King and J.K. Rowling.

Following the case has been testing, to say the least. The discovery process was labored, disorganized, and at times not much short of chaotic. The parties, when they communicated at all, were beset by problems that were agonizingly detailed in pages of court filings. McCrea cited various defenses, including under the DMCA and on religious grounds, and was flat-out accused of frustrating the entire process by Van Stry’s legal team.

Behind that briefest summary of events, the case has been rumbling on the background, consuming large sums of time and money as it has done so. Given McCrea’s earlier claim that he would never be able to pay should he lose the case and Van Stry’s obvious financial investment in the matter, it was always going to be hard to pick a ‘winner’.

That being said, Van Stry seems determined to make a point about piracy, not only for him but for all authors. It might prove difficult to put a price tag on that but it is the court’s job to try. That leads us to a proposed motion for final summary judgment filed by Van Stry’s legal team that has just been dealt with by the judge.

The proposed summary judgment asks the court to find that McCrea “knowingly and intentionally” committed direct infringement in respect of 12 of Van Stry’s books and is “contributorily and vicariously responsible” for copyright infringements carried by Ebook.bike’s users in respect of the same works.

Demanding a broad injunction to prevent McCrea and his “agents, servants, employees, attorneys, and all persons in active concert and participation with him” from infringing, causing, enabling, facilitating, encouraging, contributing to, or participation in infringement of the works in future, it further proposes significant damages.

“Pursuant to 17 U.S.C. §504(c)(1), the Court awards Mr. Van Stry $15,000 per each of the twelve works-at-issue, consisting of $3,800 in compensatory damages and, due to Mr. McCrea’s willful infringement, $11,200 in punitive damages, for a total of $180,000,” the proposal reads.

On top, of course, Van Stry is demanding full costs, including attorneys’ fees, to ensure he isn’t left out of pocket.

In a memorandum and opinion issued this week, District Court Judge William Bryson notes that under the Copyright Act, Van Stry could’ve demanded a whole lot more in statutory damages – $150,000 per work, to be precise. The Judge then goes on to address several documents filed by McCrea in which he denied any wrongdoing because there was no evidence “that there had been any downloads of copyrighted material.”

“At the same time, Mr. McCrea said that he was ‘practising [his] religion by helping authors connect with their readers’,” the Judge writes. “McCrea also claimed that his actions were protected by the safe harbor provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. And, in the event of liability, Mr. McCrea disputed Mr. Van Stry’s contention as to the appropriate amount to be awarded in damages.”

On the DMCA issue, the Judge goes into some detail but ultimately notes that McCrea is not entitled to claim safe harbor due to his failure to register an agent at the Copyright Office.

In respect of some kind of defense under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act 1993 (RFRA), the Judge states that the RFRA doesn’t apply because the case is a dispute between private parties.

“Even assuming the sincerity of Mr. McCrea’s beliefs and even if RFRA were applicable to this case, Mr. McCrea’s affirmative defense would still fail because he has provided no evidence that the government, or any entity, has substantially burdened his practicing of his religion,” the Judge notes.

“The only religious practices Mr. McCrea identifies is ‘helping authors connect with their readers’ and copying and sharing information. I fail to see the suggested conflict between those practices and abiding by the Copyright Act. Mr. McCrea certainly could have approached Mr. Van Stry to obtain a license to copy, make available, and distribute Mr. Van Stry’s copyrighted works, if that was how Mr. McCrea chose to help connect Mr. Van Stry with his readers.”

At this stage, the motion appears to be going nowhere good for McCrea but the Judge then reveals he won’t be rubber-stamping Van Stry’s request for damages as outlined in his proposed motion. The Supreme Court provides a right to a trial and the scale of statutory damages is a question for the jury, unless both sides agree to a decision being made by the court.

Given submissions from the parties, Judge Bryson says he believes Van Stry and McCrea want him to decide the appropriate amount of statutory damages. However, what Van Stry is demanding ($15,000 per work) conflicts with the statutory minimum suggested by McCrea ($750 per work).

As a result, the Judge wants both sides to write to the court to confirm that they want him to decide the amount, rather than a jury. This, however, raises other issues.

“[I] note that the right to a jury trial on the issue of statutory damages does not apply when the plaintiff seeks an award limited to the statutorily guaranteed minimum amount,” the Judge notes.

“In light of Mr. Van Stry’s acknowledgement that damages in this case are likely to be illusory, he may wish to limit his request for statutory damages to the statutory minimum award of $750 per work —an amount that Mr. McCrea has already agreed would be appropriate. In that event, a jury trial on damages would not be necessary.

“Mr. Van Stry may, if he chooses, make the request to limit the award of statutory damages in the alternative. The request, that is, would only control in the event that Mr. McCrea does not waive his right to a jury trial,” Judge Bryson adds.

The parties have been given seven days to advise the Court whether they wish to have the Court “resolve all issues pertinent to an award of statutory damages” in excess of the statutory limit of $750 per work. We know that $750 is acceptable to McCrea but seems unlikely to be acceptable to Van Stry – 12 x $750 sounds like $9,000, a lot less than the $180,000 previously mentioned.

Should the author win the case he will, however, be entitled to recover his costs. Earlier this year, Van Stry indicated he was already in the hole for $60,000 in legal fees, only half of which was covered by donations from fellow authors and other well-wishers.

But even that figure must’ve been surpassed by now, especially if the associated GoFundMe campaign’s target of $90,000 is anything to go by. That still leaves the question of whether he can recover anything at all – damages or costs – from McCrea, who doesn’t even live in the United States.

Either way, eBook.bike shut down many months ago.

The motion for summary judgment and memorandum opinion and order can be found here and here

Drom: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, torrent sites and more. We also have an annual VPN review.

Do you even 10-key, bro? Our homage to the classic keyboard standard

A bygone relic of an old computing era? Or a productivity must? We dive in.

Stylized image of a hand holding a wireless 10-key pad.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

While going through a full, cleaning sweep of my home office—something I know I'm not alone in doing lately—I had to blow dust off quite a few forgotten items. At my house, this included a range of electronics I haven't used in years: an Amazon Echo Dot, an Ouya, a burner phone full of discontinued Google apps, and so on.

Beneath all of those was a surprise: an extra 10-key pad for my wireless, daily driver keyboard. This model, a wireless Microsoft Sculpt Ergonomic Keyboard, breaks its 10-key portion into a separate, wireless piece, which I'd apparently put away and forgotten about. I mentioned it in the Ars "staff" chat channel for funsies, with some sarcastic version of "who even uses these things anymore?"

What followed was an explosion in 10-key-number-pad opinions that I hadn't anticipated but should have expected. This is Ars Technica, after all. If something accepts any form of electrical current, we can find a way to make it a "stop everything, let's hash this out" conversation piece. And hash we did, with staffers recalling decades of 10-key anecdotes and memories.

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9 Amazon workers describe the daily risks they face in the pandemic

These jobs are essential because people need deliveries… and to feed their families.

An Amazon Prime-branded delivery van and driver.

Enlarge / An Amazon Prime-branded delivery van and driver. (credit: Amazon)

As the novel coronavirus pandemic sweeps the globe, an otherwise marginalized class of workers is suddenly in the spotlight. Often undervalued and poorly paid, they are grocery store clerks, sanitation workers, medical professionals, and other employees who can’t stay home—even when the nation is on lockdown. In the United States, hundreds of thousandsof these so-called essential workers are employed by or contract for Amazon, whose delivery network has emerged as a vital service for millions of Americans stuck inside their homes.

Wired spoke with nine people working for Amazon during the Covid-19 crisis over the past two weeks and is publishing their accounts of being on the job, in their own words. They work in Amazon fulfillment centers, deliver packages and groceries, and stock food in Amazon cafeterias. Some are employed by Amazon directly, while others are contractors. Each of them say they are terrified for their health and that of their families, and many believe Amazon isn’t doing enough to ensure their safety. While the company has often framed its frontline workers as heroes, the people WIRED spoke with say they didn’t sign up for this level of risk.

Covid-19 has now spread to at least 50 Amazon facilities in the US, out of a total of more than 500, according to The New York Times. The outbreaks have led to employee protests in Detroit, New York City, and Chicago, where workers said Amazon was slow to notify them about infections and failed to conduct adequate cleaning. At Amazon-owned Whole Foods, staff staged a nationwide demonstration citing similar safety concerns and calling for free coronavirus testing for all employees. And more than 5,000 Amazon workers have signed a petition asking for additional benefits given the health crisis, including hazard pay and for the company to shut down any facility where a worker tests positive so it can be properly cleaned.

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Stichproben zur Aufdeckung der Sars-CoV-2-Dunkelziffer

Ein stufenweiser Ausstieg aus den Maßnahmen zur Abwehr der Corona-Epidemie erfordert verlässliche Angaben über die Verbreitung des Virus

Ein stufenweiser Ausstieg aus den Maßnahmen zur Abwehr der Corona-Epidemie erfordert verlässliche Angaben über die Verbreitung des Virus