VPN Users’ Anonymity Under Threat Following Indian Security Order

Claiming that criminals use encryption to stay anonymous, last year a parliamentary committee urged the Indian government to ban VPNs. While that didn’t happen, new security-focused directions published by the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology look set to make effective online anonymity a thing of the past.

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

lockPeople being free to share and access ideas, knowledge and opinions with their peers is a universally accepted standard for the entire human race. The big problem is that the definition of ‘free’ differs widely and is often defined by the few, not the many.

In online terms, true freedom is already under threat. As governments take more control over ‘their’ parts of the internet, citizens are informed that this is for the greater good, to keep their families safe and economies strong. Giving up small freedoms here….and a few others over there….are presented as insignificant sacrifices hardly worth our attention.

However, once these systems are in place, governments can use them to ‘protect’ citizens from dissenting opinions, unpalatable news, whistleblowing, and our ability to absorb all information, thereby reaching educated conclusions of our own. Early adopters of VPNs recognized this years ago, and as more people retain choice by using them, some governments are calling for VPNs to be restricted or even banned.

Calls for VPN Ban in India

In common with many countries worldwide, India has introduced laws to render illegal certain types of content online. It blocks thousands of websites due to copyright infringement and pornography, for example, but is now engaged in censorship to suppress political opposition in the name of national security. It even threatened to put Twitter executives in prison for refusing to censor opponents.

Due to the increased security and anonymity they provide, good VPN services with high standards enable people to absorb and impart information more freely. They are not a silver bullet but can be considered as part of a toolkit to unfilter internet access and restore freedoms. As a result, India’s government (and more besides) view them as a threat.

Last year a Parliamentary Standing Committee called for a total ban on VPNs, advising that they allow criminals to be anonymous online. The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology was urged to force ISPs to block these encryption tools and increase online surveillance to clear any remnants.

While the government didn’t respond with a full ban, new directions to India’s IT sector reveal that if VPNs are to stay, the authorities will have the power to identify their users.

Security Measures for a “Safe & Trusted Internet”

The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) serves as the national agency for online security. It analyzes cyber threats and can obtain logging information from service providers, intermediaries, data centers and corporate bodies. After identifying gaps in its ability to analyze ‘incidents’, CERT-In recently issued directions to companies providing internet services designed to ensure a “safe & trusted Internet” in the country.

While the directions focus on improved responses to security incidents, Indian authorities have also ordered all service providers, intermediaries, and data centers to enable and maintain logs. These must contain 180 days of event logging and be maintained within Indian jurisdiction for straightforward access. For other service providers the requirements are even tougher.

VPN Providers Cannot Be Anonymous, Must Carry Logs

Although caveats apply (and vary between providers), a good VPN service should be able to offer enhanced or even complete anonymity to users. Many do this, at least in part, by not carrying logs that can link a specific user to any IP address at any given time. India’s directions are designed to thwart this business model.

All VPN services, data centers, VPS (virtual private server) providers, and cloud services must store a laundry list of information and logs for at least five years, longer if the government chooses to change the law. The rules apply to all of the above services, but given the nature of VPN services as censorship-busting anonymity tools, they appear to be the hardest hit.

An email address is often sufficient when a customer signs up for a VPN service. In future, VPN providers in India will be required to obtain a customer’s real name, address, and phone number. All information provided must be validated as accurate.

Providers will also be required to record the user’s email address, IP address and timestamp used at the time of registration and obtain a statement of intent from the subscriber, i.e a description of what the VPN will be used for.

The ‘period of hire’ (times and dates) must also be logged to include every IP address allocated to and used by customers. All service providers must synchronize their clocks with specified NTP servers for uniform accuracy across the industry.

Implications for VPN Providers and Users

The full implications will become clearer over time, but the directions seem to impact VPN providers in India and, to a lesser extent, those based overseas operating servers in India.

Pervasive logging throughout the entire system translates to a generally hostile environment for anonymity so after consideration, some providers may be less keen to do business locally. Especially given that prison sentences are available for non-compliance.

The directions can be found here (pdf)

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

Twitter warns of possible employee exodus before Musk completes purchase

Twitter SEC filing cites “inability to attract and retain key personnel.”

In this photo illustration, Elon Musk's twitter account is displayed on a smartphone in front of a background with the twitter logo.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | SOPA Images)

Twitter warned that it may lose key employees and have difficulty hiring during the period before it closes its $44 billion sale to Elon Musk. Twitter also warned that it could have trouble keeping advertisers on board.

"During the period prior to the closing of the merger, our business is exposed to certain inherent risks and certain restrictions on our business under the terms of the Merger Agreement that could harm our business relationships, financial condition, operating results, cash flows, and business," Twitter said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Monday.

Twitter's stated list of risks includes "whether advertisers continue their spending on our platform" and "our inability to attract and retain key personnel and recruit prospective employees, and the possibility that our current employees could be distracted, and their productivity decline as a result, due to uncertainty regarding the merger."

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Nintendo Switch Sports players are breaking TVs like it’s 2006

Flying Joy-Cons recall the errant Wii remotes of the mid-’00s.

This is what can happen if you don't secure your wrist strap before playing <em>Nintendo Switch Sports</em>.

Enlarge / This is what can happen if you don't secure your wrist strap before playing Nintendo Switch Sports. (credit: Reddit / Equivalent_Actuary_6)

When you've covered the game industry for as long as I have, you tend to see the same types of stories appearing over and over. Still, new reports that Nintendo Switch Sports players are breaking their TVs with accidentally thrown Joy-Cons are a bit too reminiscent of similar stories during Wii Sports' heyday in the mid-2000s.

So far, these new reports of virtual sports-related accidents are limited but dramatic. Twitch-streamer 63man started things off by breaking his monitor live on stream during a particularly energetic tennis swing Saturday. "HAS HE MENTIONED HE DOESNT HAVE A WRIST STRAP," one viewer wrote in chat shortly following the incident.

The look on his face is priceless...

The next day, Reddit user Equivalent_Actuary_6 shared an image showing "my first broken TV playing Switch Sports." In a subsequent comment, that poster said they had lost the wrist straps originally provided with the Joy-Cons but that they were "confident on [sic] my grip" after playing through The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword strapless.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

NASA chief says cost-plus contracts are a “plague” on the space agency

“You get it done with that competitive spirit. You get it done cheaper.”

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson is seen in firing room four during the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the company's Crew Dragon spacecraft on the Crew-4 mission in April.

Enlarge / NASA Administrator Bill Nelson is seen in firing room four during the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying the company's Crew Dragon spacecraft on the Crew-4 mission in April. (credit: Joel Kowsky/NASA via Getty Images)

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson appeared before a US Senate Appropriations subcommittee on Tuesday to discuss NASA's budget request for the upcoming fiscal year. Then, quite unexpectedly, he dropped a bombshell.

After his opening remarks, Nelson was asked what, in his opinion, was the biggest threat to NASA's goal of landing humans on the Moon by 2025. Nelson responded that the agency needed competition in its program to develop a Human Landing System. In other words, he wanted Congress to support NASA's request for funding to develop a second lander alongside SpaceX's Starship vehicle.

But Nelson didn't stop there. He said Congress needs to fund this lander contract with a fixed-price award, which only pays companies when they reach milestones. This contracting mechanism is relatively new for the space agency, which traditionally has used "cost-plus" contracts for large development programs. Such awards pay contractors their expenses, plus a fee.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Firefox 100 arrives with caption & subtitle support for picture-in-picture videos, new mobile features

Eighteen years after Firefox 1.0 hit the streets, the folks at Mozilla have released version 100 of the open source, cross-platform web browser. The latest release marks a numerical milestone, but it doesn’t bring a particularly large amount of changes or new features. There are a few goodies though. First up, the Firefox picture-in-picture video […]

The post Firefox 100 arrives with caption & subtitle support for picture-in-picture videos, new mobile features appeared first on Liliputing.

Eighteen years after Firefox 1.0 hit the streets, the folks at Mozilla have released version 100 of the open source, cross-platform web browser.

The latest release marks a numerical milestone, but it doesn’t bring a particularly large amount of changes or new features. There are a few goodies though.

First up, the Firefox picture-in-picture video player now supports captions and subtitles when watching videos from YouTube, Amazon Prime Video, Netflix, Courseray, Twitter, and any other sites that support WebVTT (Web Video Text Tracks Format).

To use this, just fire up the browser on a Windows, Mac, or Linux computer then navigate to a page with a video you want to play, hit play, enable subtitles or captions, and hit the picture-in-picture icon to pop out the video so you can keep watching as you browse other web pages or interact with other apps.

At least that’s how it’s supposed to work. In practice, I couldn’t get it to work with any of the YouTube videos I tried it with, but hopefully things will get better over time as Mozilla tweaks the feature and/or video streaming sites adopt WebVTT.

Other changes in Firefox 100 include support for spell checking in multiple languages, support for HDR video playback on Macs running macOS 11 or later, hardware-accelerated decoding of AV1 videos on Windows PCs with supported GPUs, and some updates for the company’s mobile browsers.

Firefox for Android has a new “clutter-free” history view which groups related items into folders and removes duplicate sites. There’s also now support for searching your history. The feature is coming this week to Firefox for iOS as well.

A new clutter-free tabs experience also puts recent tabs in your tray, with any open tab that you haven’t visited in the past 14 days moving to an “inactive state” in the tab tray. They’re still available if you go looking for them, but they won’t take up as much space. on the main screen.

Clutter Free History & Tabs

Firefox for Android also now supports HTTPS-only mode as an optional security measure.

While Firefox has seen its market share plunge in recent years, it remains one of the few continuously developed alternatives to Google Chrome and its Chromium-based cousins including Microsoft Edge, Brave, Opera, and Vivaldi as well as more distant cousins like Apple’s Safari web browser (which uses the WebKit rendering engine, which Google forked for its own use years ago).

You can find out more about Firefox 100 in the announcement on the Mozilla blog, an article about the new picture-in-picture subtitle & caption support, and the Firefox 100 release notes.

The post Firefox 100 arrives with caption & subtitle support for picture-in-picture videos, new mobile features appeared first on Liliputing.

Kindle e-readers finally (kind of) support ePub books

Support relies on “Send to Kindle” file conversion, is better than nothing.

Kindles still won't directly open ePub files, but there's one less hoop to jump through now.

Enlarge / Kindles still won't directly open ePub files, but there's one less hoop to jump through now. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

Amazon's Kindles are some of the best dedicated e-readers you can buy, but a longstanding criticism from users of DRM-free books from non-Amazon sources is that they don't support the open ePub standard. That has changed at some point in the recent past, as spotted by Good E-Reader: Amazon's Kindle Personal Documents Service will now accept ePub files sent to your device's Send to Kindle email address, the same way it currently handles PDF files, Word documents, and other image and text files.

Kindles still don't natively support sideloading ePub files—the Send to Kindle service converts the documents to AZW3 files, something users could already do themselves using a variety of free tools. But official support from Amazon removes a step from the process and will help users avoid shady ad-riddled third-party conversion sites. We've tested it with an 11th-generation Kindle Paperwhite running the latest version of the Kindle software, and the conversion process seemed to go off without a hitch.

If using the Send to Kindle email address is still too onerous, Amazon's support document says it will add the same ePub conversion support to its Send to Kindle apps at some point in late 2022. Amazon also says that it will discontinue Send to Kindle support for MOBI files in late 2022, since those files "won't support the newest Kindle features for documents." MOBI files already on your device will remain there and continue to work as they currently do.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Turning waste into gold drugs

Given waste as starting material, software finds viable reaction path to drugs.

Image of green colored solutions in glass vials.

Enlarge (credit: Krisana Antharith / EyeEm)

Earth Day was April 22, and its usual message—take care of our planet—has been given added urgency by the challenges highlighted in the latest IPCC report. This year, Ars is taking a look at the technologies we normally cover, from cars to chipmaking, and finding out how we can boost their sustainability and minimize their climate impact.

Countless things we use in modern societies, from food to food containers, rely on industrial-scale chemistry. That chemistry often produces materials that aren't useful to us—and in some cases, they're hazardous or toxic. Not only are these materials wasteful, but paying to dispose of them safely can add to the costs of materials.

Early developments in green chemistry have mostly focused on finding reaction pathways that limit the production of unwanted byproducts and the use of toxic solvents. But researchers are looking beyond that, trying to find ways to better integrate chemistry into a circular economy, where source materials are either sustainable or recycled.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments