Schulstreiks: Breite Beteiligung in Deutschland
Am globalen Aktionstag von Fridys for Future beteiligten sich hierzulande auch viele Erwachsene
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Am globalen Aktionstag von Fridys for Future beteiligten sich hierzulande auch viele Erwachsene
Digital rights management company Pex aims to become the standard for copyright licensing and enforcement on user-generated content sites. The company, which works with major music labels and movie studios, scrapes services such as YouTube and Facebook to spot problematic content. To do this efficiently and without legal hassle, Pex now asks the Copyright Office for a DMCA anti-circumvention exemption.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Section 1201 of the DMCA prohibits the circumvention of copyright controls without permission.
This restriction prevents the general public from bypassing DRM protection on many types of content.
There are some important exemptions to this rule, with phone jailbreaking as a well-known example. These are reviewed every three years by the U.S. Copyright Office, which generally puts copyright holders on the defense.
This year, however, there is a notable exception. Digital rights management company Pex, which works with many prominent copyright holders, is advocating for a DMCA exemption to track down infringing content.
To properly understand the nature of this request, some background on Pex and its service is warranted.
To the public at large Pex isn’t a familiar name but, in copyright circles, it’s a major player. The company was founded in 2014 and has developed a technology to scrape online services such as YouTube for infringing content.
In its early years, Pex and its founder Rasty Turek had trouble getting funded. There was a fair bit of interest but investors were petrified that scraping was illegal. Despite backing from legal experts, this fear almost drove the company into bankruptcy at the end of 2017.
With roughly two weeks of money left to keep the business afloat, Pex offered a major copyright holder a free taste of its platform. At that point, it had nothing to lose. This move paid off as the rightsholder was impressed with the service, becoming the first big investor a few days later.
This early adopter was none other than Universal Music. And once Universal was on-board, many competing music labels and Hollywood movie studios joined in as well. Instead of going bankrupt, a multi-million dollar business was born.
While copyright holders are pleased with Pex’s service, the same isn’t necessarily true for the online services it scrapes. In fact, companies including Facebook and YouTube actively block third-party scrapers.
“YouTube did fight us quite the hard to stop us from doing these kinds of things,” Pex founder Rasty Turek said in a Mixenergy podcast last summer.
Turek, who previously worked as a security engineer at Google, pressed on and decided to bypass Google’s restrictions. To add to the irony, Pex was actively helped by Google’s Cloud service, something YouTube was “very angry” about.
Similarly, when Pex started scraping Facebook the social media platform tried to prevent this as well. While it’s not clear whether that is due to the nature of Pex’s business, scraping activity is generally not welcomed. And that brings us to the DMCA exemption request.
In a letter sent to the US Copyright Office earlier this month, Pex’s Head of Business and Government Affairs, Cesar Fishman, explains the problem. The letter stresses that copyright infringement on user-generated content (UGC) platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok is a massive problem.
Services such as Pex try to limit the damage for copyright holders, but they face significant hurdles. When their scrapers are blocked, for example, which is an issue Pex is all too familiar with.
“Crawlers that collect data and content present on UGC platforms and allow rights holders to know where and when their works are being used illegally, a practice colloquially referred to as ‘web scraping,’ are regularly blocked by platforms,” Pex informs the copyright office.
“This action results in rightsholders being largely unable to identify their works and send DMCA takedown notices as appropriate. In order for the DMCA’s notice and takedown system to be effective, the Copyright Office should consider an exception to monitor content.”
Pex is essentially asking for an exemption to bypass copyright controls, so it can find copyright-infringing content. These are the same ‘copyright controls’ stream-rippers use to download content from platforms such as YouTube.
There is a crucial difference of course. In Pex’s case, this exemption would be used to help copyright holders.
Pex’s Cesar Fishman informs TorrentFreak that, right now, UGC platforms often block or limit third-party companies from reviewing their content, which ultimately hurts copyright holders. The company hopes that this will change.
“We’re asking the Copyright Office to make sure that the DMCA works as intended – by providing all rightsholders, regardless of size, with the opportunity to find all of their content amongst the millions of posts published on platforms every second,” Fishman says.
In addition, these UGC platforms should provide an API to rightsholders and selected third-parties – chosen by those rightsholders – to help protect their content, Pex argues.
The letter to the Copyright Office is submitted as part of the DMCA section 1201 review. However, it was submitted as a general comment and is not a formal proposal being considered as part of the regular review process.
That said, it’s interesting to see that even major copyright holders can have problems with the DMCA’s anti-circumvention restrictions.
Pex, meanwhile, is working hard on dominating the copyright attribution space. The company has developed its own fingerprinting and filtering system that can be used by UGC platforms. Ideally, they would like the ‘Facebooks’ and ‘YouTubes’ of this world to use that system as well. But that’s a whole other battle.
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A copy of the letter Pex sent to the Copyright Office is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Disney+’s latest won’t unseat Justice League this weekend—but it belongs in your queue.
The Falcon & The Winter Soldier's opening sequence feels like it's ripped out of a feature-length film—which bodes well for this series' action sequences to come. [credit: Marvel Studios ]
How much energy can you muster for a drawn-out superhero option on TV this weekend? In terms of content that favors deliberately paced cinematics over instant, wham-bam action, the DC Comics universe already has a four-hour option capturing headlines—and for good reason.
Hence, HBO Max has mildly spoiled the debut of new Disney+ series The Falcon and the Winter Soldier. The first episode launched Friday, March 19, without the surprise and weirdness factor that came with January's Wandavision premiere. Without novelty on its side, the series has to stand on more familiar laurels. Thankfully it succeeds at that, but the results don't quite reach the "rush to watch right now" conversation-starter status Disney+ has enjoyed over the past few months.
This is now Marvel Studios' second post-"unsnappening" series, and it's the first to take a more predictable tack on the fallout throughout the Marvel universe. Endgame set this new TV series up in shameless corporate-synergy fashion when Chris Evans handed his Captain America shield to Anthony Mackie (The Falcon) and Sebastian Stan (The Winter Soldier), essentially telling audiences, "Two superheroes will continue a specific plotline—so stay tuuuuned."
The change is expected to come with iOS 14.5 within just a few weeks.
Apple CEO Tim Cook on stage during an Apple event in September 2018. (credit: Valentina Palladino)
With Apple's big app-tracking policy change just around the corner, Chinese companies drew a warning from Cupertino that their efforts to circumvent the change will not be successful. At the same time, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg appeared to shift his messaging about the change.
Several months ago, Apple announced that it will require user opt-in for IDFA (Identifier for Advertisers), a tool that advertisers use to identify and track users across apps and websites. If users opt in, it will be business as usual. But if they decline, the app in question will not be able to use that tracking method. The change will apply to all iPhone and iPad apps, and it will take full effect in iOS 14.5, which is due out sometime in the next few weeks.
Press coverage so far has focused on US and European countries grappling with the change, particularly Facebook, which ran ads and looked into the possibility of an antitrust lawsuit to battle Apple's decision. Several reports over the past few days have indicated that some major Chinese tech companies are no less determined to fight or get around Apple's new policy.
This week Intel introduced its new 11th-gen desktop processors, code-named Rocket Lake-S. Set to hit the streets at the end of the month, the new processors are manufactured using a 14nm process rather than the 10nm process the company uses for most o…
This week Intel introduced its new 11th-gen desktop processors, code-named Rocket Lake-S. Set to hit the streets at the end of the month, the new processors are manufactured using a 14nm process rather than the 10nm process the company uses for most of its recent laptop chips. But Intel is still promising a modest boost […]
The post Lilbits: Intel’s Adaptive Boost for Rocket Lake chips, Android 11 for Chromebooks, PinePhone Beta Edition appeared first on Liliputing.
The FDA has warned not to drink or use the water.
Enlarge / Images of Real Water's "alkalized" products, which the FDA now says you should not drink or use. (credit: FDA)
At least five infants and children in Nevada have suffered acute non-viral hepatitis, resulting in liver failure, after drinking “alkalized” water by the brand “Real Water,” local and federal regulators reported this week. At least six others fell ill with less severe conditions after drinking the water—and additional reports continue to surface.
The initial five infants and children with liver failure fell ill in November 2020 and required hospitalization, but they have since recovered. They lived in four different households in southern Nevada. The other six ill people—three adults and three children—came from at least two of those same households and reported vomiting, nausea, loss of appetite, and fatigue, according to the Southern Nevada Health District.
The health district is working to investigate the cases with the Food and Drug Administration. It’s not yet clear what caused the illnesses but “to date, the consumption of ‘Real Water’ brand alkaline water was found to be the only common link identified between all the cases,” the health district said.
Einige Zeit ging bei Whatsapp nicht viel: Nachrichten ließen sich nicht versenden. Auch Instagram war down, die Störung scheint aber behoben. (Whatsapp, Instant Messenger)
Mit starker Verzögerung erscheinen die ersten 10-nm-Xeons mit mehr Kernen als bisher erwartet, denn Intel hat offenbar lange CPUs gesammelt. (Xeon, Prozessor)
Razer is running a sale on select gaming laptops, which means you can save hundreds of dollars on certain models available from the Razer Store. But Amazon is offering even better deals, with some models selling for as much as $450 off the list price….
Razer is running a sale on select gaming laptops, which means you can save hundreds of dollars on certain models available from the Razer Store. But Amazon is offering even better deals, with some models selling for as much as $450 off the list price. Meanwhile the Microsoft Store is running its own gaming PC […]
The post Daily Deals (3-19-2021) appeared first on Liliputing.
Garamond—it’s just too small for the DC Circuit.
Enlarge / Keep your Garamond out of your briefs! (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)
Let me bury the lede for a moment to tell you a story. Long ago, in a magical realm called Academe, professors grew wise to the old student tricks of futzing with both margins and text spacing to make their essays fit a prescribed page limit. Triple spacing and two-inch margins could no longer save you from the effects of a debauched evening spent drinking on Franklin Street when you should have been in the library reading "Aurora Lee" instead.
But for a few shining years, professors didn't mandate font choices—and they wouldn't deploy the Red Pen of Shame unless you headlined your takedown of Barthes' S/Z in, say, Comic Sans.
As someone intent on being a Serious Writer, I felt it my duty to write papers that would fully showcase my genius. Papers that might, in the strictest sense, exceed the given page count. And when I was really wordsmithing the hell out of my analysis of the court sermons of Lancelot Andrewes, it was always Garamond that came to my rescue.
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