“Complete incompetence:” Biden team slams Trump’s COVID work

Biden Administration starts off with a flurry of orders, actions, and comprehensive plan.

A man in a suit holds up a laminated binder while speaking at a microphone.

Enlarge / US President Joe Biden releases his strategic COVID-19 plan at the White House on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

Just a day into office, President Joe Biden and his administration have unveiled a comprehensive, 200-page strategic plan and over a dozen executive orders and actions to tackle the COVID-19 pandemic currently rampaging across the country.

With the running start, the administration hopes to finally get control over the virus, which has already taken the lives of more than 408,000 Americans. The number of deaths is expected to top 500,000 next month, Biden said in an appearance Thursday to unveil his strategic plan.

"Things are going to continue to get worse before they get better," he said, calling his approach to the pandemic a "full-scale wartime effort."

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Parler’s attempt to get back on Amazon Web Services rejected by judge

Judge denies injunction motion, says Parler’s claims against Amazon are weak.

3D Amazon logo hangs from a convention center ceiling.

Enlarge / Amazon Web Services (AWS) logo displayed during the 4th edition of the Viva Technology show at Parc des Expositions Porte de Versailles on May 17, 2019, in Paris, France. (credit: Chesnot | Getty Images)

A federal judge today rejected Parler's motion for a preliminary injunction against Amazon Web Services (AWS), scuttling the social network's attempt to quickly get back onto Amazon's Web-hosting platform.

Parler, which bills itself as a conservative alternative to Twitter, had asked for a court order requiring Amazon to reinstate its Web-hosting service pending a full trial. But "Parler has fallen far short... of demonstrating, as it must, that it has raised serious questions going to the merits of its claims," and it has failed to prove "that the balance of equities tips in its favor, let alone strongly so; or that the public interests lie in granting the injunction," said the ruling by Judge Barbara Jacobs Rothstein in US District Court for the Western District of Washington.

Parler could still prevail in the case, but it won't be reinstated to Amazon's service in the meantime. Parler accused Amazon of conspiracy in restraint of trade, in violation of the Sherman Act; breach of contract; and tortious interference with business expectancy.

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Google agrees to pay French news sites to send them traffic

The French agreement could become a template for similar deals across Europe.

Google's corporate headquarters.

Enlarge / Google's corporate headquarters. (credit: Alex Tai | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images)

French news sites have prevailed in negotiations with Google over "neighboring rights," a new legal right granted by the 2019 EU Copyright Directive. An agreement between Google and the French news industry "establishes a framework within which Google will negotiate individual licensing agreements" with individual news organizations, according to Google. Under these deals, French news articles will be featured in a new Google product called News Showcase.

This isn't the outcome Google wanted. For years, European news organizations have tried to force Google to pay them for the privilege of indexing their articles, and for years Google flatly refused to do so. When Spain passed legislation to force Google to pay to link to Spanish News organizations in 2014, Google responded by shutting down Google News in Spain.

Google tried to use that same playbook in France after the passage of the EU copyright directive. France was the first country to transpose the EU directive into its own laws. In 2019, Google announced it was going to stop displaying "snippets" from French news articles in search results. Google believed that showing only news story headlines, not brief excerpts from articles, would bring it into compliance with the new law.

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These Linux laptops have Intel Tiger Lake chips, 15.6 inch screens, and weigh less than 4 pounds

System76 and Tuxedo Computers are both taking orders for new thin and light laptops with 15.6 inch displays and support for up to a 28 watt Intel Core i7-1165G7 Tiger Lake processor. As far as I can tell, the new System76 Darter Pro and Tuxedo Infinit…

System76 and Tuxedo Computers are both taking orders for new thin and light laptops with 15.6 inch displays and support for up to a 28 watt Intel Core i7-1165G7 Tiger Lake processor. As far as I can tell, the new System76 Darter Pro and Tuxedo InfinityBook S 15 are based on the same OEM design, since the […]

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Facebook calls in its Oversight Board to rule on Trump ban

Facebook finally made a judgement call; now wants someone else to decide if it was right

Facebook logo on a street sign outside a wooded campus.

Enlarge / Facebook's Menlo Park, California, headquarters as seen in 2017. (credit: Jason Doiy | Getty Images)

Facebook's Oversight Board is getting its highest-profile case yet, as the company kicks its decision to boot former-President Donald Trump off its platforms to the largely untested "Supreme Court" of social media for review.

Facebook suspended Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts on January 7 in the immediate aftermath of the insurrectionist riots at the US Capitol. "The shocking events of the last 24 hours clearly demonstrate that President Donald Trump intends to use his remaining time in office to undermine the peaceful and lawful transition of power to his elected successor, Joe Biden," company CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at the time. "We believe the risks of allowing the President to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great. Therefore, we are extending the block we have placed on his Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely and for at least the next two weeks until the peaceful transition of power is complete."

Although that two-week period is now complete, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg confirmed to Reuters last week that the company expected to continue the bans indefinitely and had "no plans" to let Trump resume posting content to their platforms.

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Democrat Jessica Rosenworcel replaces Ajit Pai, is now acting FCC chairwoman

Net neutrality supporter Rosenworcel leads FCC on at least an interim basis.

FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel speaking at a Senate committee hearing in June 2020.

Enlarge / Jessica Rosenworcel answers a question during a Senate Commerce Committee oversight hearing to examine the Federal Communications Commission on June 24, 2020 in Washington, DC. (credit: Getty Images | Jonathan Newton)

President Joe Biden today appointed Democrat Jessica Rosenworcel to be the acting chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission. Rosenworcel became an FCC commissioner in 2012 and served in a Democratic majority during the Obama years and in a Democratic minority during the Trump years.

"I am honored to be designated as the Acting Chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission by President Biden," Rosenworcel said in a statement. "I thank the President for the opportunity to lead an agency with such a vital mission and talented staff. It is a privilege to serve the American people and work on their behalf to expand the reach of communications opportunity in the digital age."

With ex-Chairman Ajit Pai having left the FCC yesterday, there is a 2-2 split between Democrats and Republicans. To form a 3-2 Democratic majority, Biden will have to nominate a new commissioner and secure confirmation from the Senate—which shouldn't be too difficult now that Democrats control the chamber. Biden's decision to promote Rosenworcel from commissioner to acting chairwoman does not require Senate approval.

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Phishing scam had all the bells and whistles—except for one

A reminder that stuff published on the Internet gets published on the Internet.

Extreme closeup of laptop monitor.

Enlarge / The query window for username and password on a webpage can be seen on the monitor of a laptop. (credit: Jens Büttner/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Criminals behind a recent phishing scam had assembled all the important pieces. Malware that bypassed antivirus—check. An email template that got around Microsoft Office 365 Advanced Threat Protection—check. A supply of email accounts with strong reputations from which to send scam mails—check.

It was a recipe that allowed the scammers to steal more than 1,000 corporate employee credentials. There was just one problem: the scammers stashed their hard-won passwords on public servers where anyone—including search engines—could (and did) index them.

“Interestingly, due to a simple mistake in their attack chain, the attackers behind the phishing campaign exposed the credentials they had stolen to the public Internet, across dozens of drop-zone servers used by the attackers,” researchers from security firm Check Point wrote in a post published Thursday. “With a simple Google search, anyone could have found the password to one of the compromised, stolen email addresses: a gift to every opportunistic attacker.”

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Daily Deals (1-21-2021)

The Epic Games Store is giving away Galactic Civilization III for free this week. You can pick up an Acer Swift 3 laptop with a Ryzen 5 4500U processor for $432 with the coupon code PLAYCR20 (it’s refurbished, but comes with a 2-year warranty). …

The Epic Games Store is giving away Galactic Civilization III for free this week. You can pick up an Acer Swift 3 laptop with a Ryzen 5 4500U processor for $432 with the coupon code PLAYCR20 (it’s refurbished, but comes with a 2-year warranty). Meanwhile, there are some good deals on power banks, wall chargers, […]

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Tucows Downloads is retiring after hosting freeware and shareware for nearly 3 decades

Once upon a time when the web was young and trustworthy sites for downloading Windows software were hard to find, TUCOWS emerged and quickly became a top destination for folks looking for the latest versions of freeware and shareware applications, eve…

Once upon a time when the web was young and trustworthy sites for downloading Windows software were hard to find, TUCOWS emerged and quickly became a top destination for folks looking for the latest versions of freeware and shareware applications, eventually adding support for Linux, Mac and a handful of other operating systems. Nearly 3 […]

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UFC to Pirates: Watch McGregor on Saturday and “See What Happens”

During today’s pre-fight press conference for UFC 257 Poirier v McGregor, UFC President Dana White had an interesting prediction on piracy. Informing journalists and the thousands tuning in online that “we got one”, he invited illegal streamers to tune in on Saturday night and “see what happens.” More bluster from the UFC or is it time for a proper beatdown?

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

UFC LogoEarlier this month, UFC President Dana White delivered a trademarked foul-mouthed response to a UFC fan on Instagram who said he was looking forward to pirating the next pay-per-view.

“I can’t wait to catch u!!!” he wrote. “Gotta surprise for u mother f*****s this year.”

The outburst provoked a lot of discussions, including our analysis of his legal options, should the UFC decide to step up to the plate and deal with piracy as promised.

Quite what the UFC has planned still isn’t clear but today, during the pre-fight press conference for UFC 257 Poirier v McGregor, White had more news – and more threats for pirates.

“We Got You F****r. I Can’t Wait”

Soon after the conference got underway, a member of the press reminded Dana of his warning earlier in the year, asking whether he had any remorse for agitating the pirating masses with his previous outburst.

“This is a huge PPV event to kick off the year. You kinda stirred the pot a little bit with the piracy, the online streamers, they want to come after you and give this thing away. Any regrets?” the interviewer asked.

Never one to back down, White responded with new information and apparent progress in the fight against pirates.

UFC 257 Press

“Oh, I’m glad you asked me about that because…we got one. We got him,” he said with a broad smile on his face. “We’re watching this guy right now. All you have to do is turn it on on Saturday. And we got you f****r. I can’t wait.”

Appearing to broaden his threats beyond the unnamed individual in question, White then turned to the fans intending to stream the event illegally.

“Turn it on on Saturday streamers and see what happens. Thank you for asking me that question.”

Deciphering Dana White

Dana White’s piracy threats over the years have all had something in common: they always sound tough but rarely carry enough information to work out what he means. That said, there are some clues that provide a taster of what this could be about.

So in the same way that the fighters will be trying to work out each other’s strategies in advance of stepping into the Octagon, let’s have a little think about this conundrum.

Importantly, while Dana White and the UFC claim to be “watching” someone “right now”, that person – whoever he or she is – doesn’t appear to be aware of that, at least not yet. If they were, then the UFC’s lawyers would already be all over them and it’s doubtful their stream would go ahead. Then there would be no surprise to tune in for.

So, if we presume that the UFC is lying in wait and then add in the other threat (that illegal stream viewers should tune in on Saturday “and see what happens”) there appears to be a suggestion that both the illegal stream provider and his/her viewers will all get a surprise at the same time. And that is absolutely possible.

Watermarking Can Identify Sources, Surprise Pirates

Those with experience of pirate UFC streams will already know that major broadcasting companies can unwittingly supply the source material. For example, it is not uncommon for the UK’s BT Sport feed to be used as a source which is then spread around multiple IPTV providers and streaming sites in close to real-time.

However, in common with similar broadcasters, BT Sport is technically able to discover which of its customers is ‘stealing’ its content and restreaming it. It therefore follows that if a customer can be identified, they can also be cut-off. Or, considering Dana’s excitement, could even be presented with an alternative video stream containing a warning they have been ‘caught’. Just before and in place of the main event, for example.

Of course, all of the above is complete speculation and White’s threats may yet come to nothing. But he seemed excited – very excited – at the prospect of making his mark.

Event Expected To Do Well, Despite Piracy

Another journalist asked White whether the event was trending as expected. White seemed confident that pay-per-view buys would be up to scratch.

“It’s very good, this thing is trending great. Yeah, it’s good. It’s gonna be good. When was there a bad one? Since the pandemic started there hasn’t been a bad pay-per-view, they’ve all been over-performing, so you can only imagine what this is going to do,” he said.

Considering the UFC doesn’t appear to have much of a problem selling its product, it will be interesting to what the MMA organization has in store for pirates on Saturday night and what effect it will have moving forward. Unfortunately for the UFC, stopping a single source during the PPV isn’t going to cut it, but if large numbers of people miss the main event, that could have a knock-on effect.

Let’s see what happens.

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