Kanada: Sag mir, wer die Kinder sind

Seit Ende Mai wurden in Kanada rund 1.200 anonyme Gräber indigener Kinder entdeckt – im Umfeld ehemaliger Spezialschulen, die der kulturellen Umerziehung dienten

Seit Ende Mai wurden in Kanada rund 1.200 anonyme Gräber indigener Kinder entdeckt - im Umfeld ehemaliger Spezialschulen, die der kulturellen Umerziehung dienten

Sechs Vorschläge an die Umweltbewegung

Trotz aller Erfolge stockt die Umweltbewegung. Die Ursachen zu beheben wäre nicht schwer – wenn Millionen mitmachen

Trotz aller Erfolge stockt die Umweltbewegung. Die Ursachen zu beheben wäre nicht schwer - wenn Millionen mitmachen

Vom neuen Leviathan

Unter dem Paradigma “Überleben ist alles” werden wir Bürger zu Untertanen einer Medizindiktatur. Freiheitsrechte und Lebenssinn zeigen sich arg verkürzt. Covid-19 als Staats- und Regierungskrise: Wie stimmig ist Agambens Zeitdiagnose?

Unter dem Paradigma "Überleben ist alles" werden wir Bürger zu Untertanen einer Medizindiktatur. Freiheitsrechte und Lebenssinn zeigen sich arg verkürzt. Covid-19 als Staats- und Regierungskrise: Wie stimmig ist Agambens Zeitdiagnose?

QNAP TVS-675 NAS (network attached storage) is powered by a Zhaoxin x86 processor

Intel and AMD aren’t the only companies making x86 processors. A Chinese organization called Zhaoxin has been designing its own x86 chips for the past few years. Up until recently those chips have only been available in computers designed for Ch…

Intel and AMD aren’t the only companies making x86 processors. A Chinese organization called Zhaoxin has been designing its own x86 chips for the past few years. Up until recently those chips have only been available in computers designed for Chinese market. But now network attached storage company QNAP has introduced a NAS device powered […]

The post QNAP TVS-675 NAS (network attached storage) is powered by a Zhaoxin x86 processor appeared first on Liliputing.

Corona: Stiko wehrt sich gegen politischen Druck

Äußerungen von Söder, die Kommission würde nicht professionell arbeiten, müssten korrigiert werden. Söder wiederum ist verstört von Apartheids-Vergleich seines Vizes. Astrazeneca-Entwicklerin stellt Impfungen für Jugendliche in Frage

Äußerungen von Söder, die Kommission würde nicht professionell arbeiten, müssten korrigiert werden. Söder wiederum ist verstört von Apartheids-Vergleich seines Vizes. Astrazeneca-Entwicklerin stellt Impfungen für Jugendliche in Frage

‘Copyright Troll’ Lawyer Seeks to Reduce 14-Year Prison Sentence Due to COVID Pandemic

Paul Hansmeier, one of the lead attorneys behind the controversial Prenda Law firm, has asked the court for a reduction of his 14-year prison sentence. The disbarred lawyer says that he faced extraordinarily difficult living conditions in prison due to the COVID pandemic. While the measures were well-intended, they didn’t prevent the lawyer from getting infected.

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

prisonIn 2019, a U.S. District Court in Minnesota sentenced Paul Hansmeier to 14 years in prison, to be followed by two years of supervised release.

Hansmeier was a key player at the Prenda Law firm, which pursued cases against people who were suspected of downloading pirated porn videos via BitTorrent.

While suing alleged pirates is not illegal, Prenda Law went much further. Over the years the firm faced negative court rulings over identity theft, misrepresentation, and even deception.

The Pirate Honeypot

Most controversial were the shocking revelations that Prenda itself produced adult videos and uploaded its own torrents to The Pirate Bay. In doing so, the company created a honeypot for the people they later sued over pirate downloads.

The allegations were serious enough to appear on the radar of US law enforcement agencies which launched a criminal investigation, culminating in prison sentences for the two key players.

Today, Paul Hansmeier and his former colleague John Steele are both in prison. While the latter received a reduced sentence for his cooperative stance, Hansmeier was sentenced to 14 years in prison, a verdict he appealed. To make a point, the lawyer even restarted his honeypot scheme from prison.

Lawyer Continues Fight

Earlier this year the Court of Appeal upheld the original ruling after Hansmeier’s motion to dismiss the claims was denied. In addition, the Court also confirmed that the lawyer must pay victims more than $1.5 million in restitution.

This was a clear setback for Hansmeier, but it’s not the end of his legal battle. Over the past year and a half, he filed multiple lawsuits involving several (former) law enforcement officials and the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

This has reached the point where these federal defendants are clearly fed up with Hansmeier’s activities. A few weeks ago, Acting U.S. Attorney for the District of Minnesota Anders Folk asked the court to restrict Hansmeier’s pro se filings, fearing that even more lawsuits could come in.

Hansmeier Wants Sentence Reduction

Most recently, the convicted lawyer added a new approach to his arsenal. In another pro se motion, Hansmeier asks a Minnesota federal court to reduce his sentence, due to the hardships he endures as a result of restrictive COVID-prevention measures.

April last year, President Trump declared a national emergency and, as a result, federal prisons including the one in Sandstone where Hansmeier resides, took various restrictive measures.

Among other things, prisoners had no access to fresh air, sunlight, or exercise. They were required to stay confined 24/7 while family visits and education programs were canceled as well.

According to Hansmeier, these circumstances were much harder than the court intended. At the same time, they did very little to limit COVID infections.

“However well intentioned these measures may have been, these measures subjected Defendant to conditions that were orders of degrees harsher than what this Court could have reasonably anticipated when it weighed the 18 U.S:C. 3553 factors and sentenced Defendant to a term of imprisonment,” he writes.

“Moreover, these harsh conditions–which, again, were aimed at safeguarding prisoners—were, in fact, entirely ineffective in safeguarding Defendant against infection.”

The lawyer says that nearly all inmates eventually contracted COVID, he himself included. Meanwhile, the stringent preventative measures remained active for many months.

In the request, Hansmeier mentions an inmate who served 38 years in the Bureau of Prisons across the US, who said that the COVD restrictions resulted in the very worst living conditions he had ever experienced.

Through this motion, Hansmeier hopes that the court will reduce his sentence. While he doesn’t object to an immediate release, a minimum reduction of 14 months should be fair.

“Though Defendant would accept the Court’s granting of immediate release if it were to be ordered, at a minimum Defendant is requesting a 14 month reduction in sentence to account for the 14 months of extraordinarily difficult living conditions that Defendant has been subjected to during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

This isn’t the first time that the lawyer has used COVID as an argument to be released from prison. When the Coronavirus outbreak started last year he requested a temporary release, fearing that the risk of infection was higher inside the prison. That request was eventually denied.

A copy of Hansmeier’s pro se motion to reduce the term of imprisonment is available here (pdf)

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

The weekend’s best tech deals: Mass Effect, Jabra wireless earbuds, and more

Dealmaster also has deals on Xbox gamepads, Amazon tablets, and USB-C chargers.

A collage of electronic consumer goods against a white background.

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

This weekend's edition of the Dealmaster includes the first major deal we've seen on the recently released Mass Effect: Legendary Edition; a good price drop on Jabra's Elite 75t, one of our favorite pairs of true wireless earbuds; and a sweeping sale on Amazon's Fire HD Kids tablets, among many other good prices on gadgets and gear. You can find our full curated roundup below.

Note: Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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Slow train across Siberia offers glimpse of Russia’s rail ambitions

Redevelopment of a 4,300km Soviet-era line aims to propel the network into this century.

Tourists enjoy a walk on Lake Baikal in March 2021.

Enlarge / Tourists enjoy a walk on Lake Baikal in March 2021. (credit: Natalia Fedosenko/TASS/Getty Images)

On the shore of Lake Baikal, deep in eastern Siberia, one of the most ambitious feats of modern Russian rail engineering is nearing completion.

The Baikalsky tunnel, carved through 7km of mountain rock, has taken seven years to build, with construction teams labouring in temperatures as low as minus 60C.

Designed to withstand the weekly earthquakes that strike this remote corner of Russia, it is the flagship project of the redevelopment of one of the country’s most iconic rail lines that aims to propel the Soviet-era train network into the 21st century.

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Ist Kolonialismuskritik strafbar?

Liberaler Beifall für das Stürzen von Denkmälern in den USA und in Großbritannien. Polizeieinsatz in Deutschland für einen Aufruf des Künstlerkollektivs “Peng”

Liberaler Beifall für das Stürzen von Denkmälern in den USA und in Großbritannien. Polizeieinsatz in Deutschland für einen Aufruf des Künstlerkollektivs "Peng"