Megaupload: Police Prepare to Seize Assets of Co-Founder Mat­hias Ortmann

After New Zealand’s Supreme Court handed down a “mixed bag” decision this week which allows Kim Dotcom more time in the country to fight extradition, former colleague Mat­hias Ortmann is now under the spotlight. Police in Australia are reportedly preparing to seize the assets of the Megaupload co-founder in response to a forfeiture order issued by the United States.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Mat­hias OrtmannEarlier this week attention turned to New Zealand’s Supreme Court as a panel of judges prepared to publish their decision in the extradition case of Kim Dotcom and several of his former Megaupload colleagues.

In their ruling, a panel of judges at the Supreme Court confirmed that Dotcom and former Megaupload colleagues Mathias Ortmann, Bram van der Kolk, and Finn Batato, can technically be extradited to the United States to face charges of criminal copyright infringement.

However, the Court also granted the men permission to challenge the decision via a judicial review.

Mathias Ortmann Now Under the Spotlight

Just days after Dotcom’s legal team welcomed the chance to have their say on the alleged deficiencies in the case thus far, all eyes are now turning to Mathias Ortmann.

While all of the defendants are facing extradition and serious criminal charges in the United States, as Megaupload co-founder and Dotcom’s former right-hand man, Ortmann is one of the more important pieces in this constantly shifting puzzle.

Like Dotcom, Ortmann helped generate significant sums of money for Megaupload and indeed himself, something that didn’t go unnoticed by authorities in the United States who are now trying to get their hands on his assets overseas.

Police Are Preparing to Seize Assets in Australia

According to a report in The Australian (paywall), the Australian Federal Police (AFP) are preparing to seize assets in the country attributable to Ortmann.

The precise nature of those assets is unclear but back in 2015, an asset forfeiture complaint (pdf) filed by the US Government as part of the action against the ‘Mega Conspiracy’ listed Ortmann as the account holder for several Megaupload-related bank accounts in Australia.

Ortmann Assets

Huge volumes of cash, vehicles and other assets were originally seized by the authorities following the 2012 raid on Megaupload. Dotcom was subsequently able to claw back some of these after legal processes in New Zealand and Hong Kong.

However, after being branded as fugitives by the US Government, Dotcom and his co-defendants were still denied access to millions of dollars. An appeal failed, as did further action at the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.

Authorities Obtained Order to Seize Ortmann’s Australian Assets

In 2017, the US Supreme Court refused to hear a further appeal by the defendants. As a result, the authorities obtained an order from a court in Virginia to use the Australian Federal Police to seize Ortmann’s Australian assets.

On the back of the US foreign forfeiture order, the AFP is now pursuing Ortmann through the Supreme Court of New South Wales. According to The Australian, Ortmann – who together with co-defendant Finn Batato still works at Megaupload successor Mega in New Zealand – is yet to respond to the forfeiture attempt.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Coronavirus cases skyrocket: Over 116,000 new cases, 53,000 hospitalized

Hospitalizations are also rising, with a spike in deaths to come.

Workers in full gowns, masks, face shields, and gloves work at a table to process tests for COVID-19

Enlarge / Coronavirus testing in Wisconsin, November 2. (credit: Getty | Star Tribune)

The United States on Wednesday reached an alarming milestone in its failed pandemic response: a day’s tally of new coronavirus cases reached over 100,000 for the first time. But the record was short-lived. Today, Thursday, new cases surpassed 116,000.

The country’s third spike in cases is now towering over those before it, which saw peaks of daily new cases no higher than around 76,500. It’s unclear how high the new peak will ultimately get, but it’s likely that Friday will see yet another frightening record.

Overall, the country has seen a 20 percent jump in cases since last week, according to The COVID Tracking Project. While nearly every state in the country is seeing cases increase to some extent, the areas propelling the rise are the Midwest and the Mountain West. In fact, the Midwest’s current number of cases per capita are well above that of any other region during the pandemic, the Project notes in a blog post Thursday.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Bellingcat blamiert sich mit Fake-Leak über OPCW

Online-Magazin veröffentlicht Brief an Kritiker einer umstrittenen Syrien-Recherche der Organisation. Doch der hat das Schreiben nie erhalten

Online-Magazin veröffentlicht Brief an Kritiker einer umstrittenen Syrien-Recherche der Organisation. Doch der hat das Schreiben nie erhalten

Münchner Corona-Antikörper-Studie: Infektionssterblichkeitsrate ein "Vielfaches über der für saisonale Grippeinfektionen"

In der ersten Welle lag die Zahl der Infizierten viermal höher als die der positiv Getesteten. In der Gangelt-Studie war sie fünfmal höher, die Infektionssterblichkeit aber bei 0,37 Prozent, in München bei 0,76 Prozent

In der ersten Welle lag die Zahl der Infizierten viermal höher als die der positiv Getesteten. In der Gangelt-Studie war sie fünfmal höher, die Infektionssterblichkeit aber bei 0,37 Prozent, in München bei 0,76 Prozent

GitHub’s source code was leaked on GitHub last night… sort of

GitHub wasn’t actually compromised, despite appearances to the contrary.

The source code leak disappeared from GitHub itself very quickly—and didn't stay up on web.archive.org for very long after that.

The source code leak disappeared from GitHub itself very quickly—and didn't stay up on web.archive.org for very long after that. (credit: Jim Salter)

Last night, developer and privacy activist Resynth1943 announced that GitHub's source code had been leaked on GitHub itself, in GitHub's own DMCA repository. It's going to take some unpacking to talk about that, but first things first—this isn't as big a deal as it might sound like.

GitHub Enterprise Server != GitHub.com

Shortly after Resynth1943—who seems to have broken the news and described the code as having "just been leaked" by an unknown individual—reshared the announcement on Hacker News, GitHub CEO Nat Friedman showed up at HN to provide some context.

According to Friedman, the upload in question was actually of GitHub Enterprise Server, not the GitHub website itself. While the two share a considerable volume of code, the distinction is significant. Part of that significance is that GitHub itself was not actually hacked.

Read 15 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Lilbits: Xiaomi’s telescopic smartphone camera, Purism’s Linux phone that’s also a PC

In order to keep smartphones thin while still offering versatile camera features, smartphone makers have largely taken the same approach in recent years – instead of using cameras with lots of moving parts, throw a bunch of different stationary …

In order to keep smartphones thin while still offering versatile camera features, smartphone makers have largely taken the same approach in recent years – instead of using cameras with lots of moving parts, throw a bunch of different stationary cameras on a phone. That way you can have different focal lengths to mimic the kind […]

The post Lilbits: Xiaomi’s telescopic smartphone camera, Purism’s Linux phone that’s also a PC appeared first on Liliputing.

Apple patches iOS against 3 actively exploited 0-days found by Google

Project Zero has reported 7 actively zerodays in the past two weeks.

A young woman is using her smartphone

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Apple has patched iOS against three zero-day vulnerabilities that attackers were actively exploiting in the wild. The attacks were discovered by Google’s Project Zero vulnerability research group, which over the past few weeks has detected four other zero-day exploits—three against Chrome and a third against Windows.

The security flaws affect iPhone 6s and later, seventh-generation iPod touches, iPad Air 2s and later, and iPad mini 4s and later. The flaws are:

  • CVE-2020-27930, a code-execution vulnerability that attackers can trigger using maliciously crafted fonts
  • CVE-2020-27950, which allows a malicious app to obtain the locations in kernel memory, and
  • CVE-2020-27932, a bug that allows code to run with highly privileged system rights.

Apple has fixed the zero-days and other vulnerabilities with the release of iOS 14.2 earlier. Apple patched the same vulnerabilities in the Supplementary Update for macOS Catalina 10.15.7. Project Zero leader Ben Hawkes provided his own bare-bones disclosure here.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments