Klimaneutralität: Siemens-Energy-Chef fordert mehr Tempo bei der Energiewende

Das Ziel der Klimaneutralität in Deutschland sei bei dem gegenwärtigen Tempo bis zum Jahr 2045 nicht zu erreichen. Und die Transformation sei komplexer als gedacht. (Energiewende, Siemens)

Das Ziel der Klimaneutralität in Deutschland sei bei dem gegenwärtigen Tempo bis zum Jahr 2045 nicht zu erreichen. Und die Transformation sei komplexer als gedacht. (Energiewende, Siemens)

Sky Views Personal Data as a Potential Weapon in IPTV Piracy War

Ireland’s Data Protection Commission (DPC) says it has been “engaging with Sky for some time” over the use of personal data to crackdown on streaming piracy, including IPTV services accessed via set-top boxes. Ongoing engagement and a meeting between the DPC and Sky in two weeks time, will focus on the lawful sharing or processing of personal data outside the company under the GDPR.

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

skypour1sSky’s war on TV piracy has raged for well over thirty years and despite the passing of time, the goal remains the same.

In broad terms, pirates retain their original goals too, but how that can be achieved is always subject to change, largely depending on who has taken the lead in an increasingly complex arms race.

News emerging from Ireland suggests that Sky’s use (or proposed use) of a valuable asset to boost its fight against piracy, has led to a powerful Irish authority “engaging” in the process for quite some time. Only very rarely are the stakes this high.

Data Protection Commission “Engaging With Sky”

The Data Protection Commission (DPC) is the national independent authority responsible for ensuring that Irish citizens have their personal data protected to the standards required under the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

In an RTE report published this week, the DPC is described as “engaging with Sky on the company’s efforts to clampdown on so-called TV ‘dodgy boxes’,” a catch-all term for pirate devices that enable unauthorized access to premium content.

RTE confirmed that DPC’s contact with Sky concerns the broadcaster’s use of personal data for the purpose of taking action against illegal streaming.

Fighting Fraud “In an Appropriate, Ethical Manner”

In comments to RTE, Commissioner for Data Protection Des Hogan said that companies may have legitimate reasons for taking action against fraud. The issue for DPC turns on whether the use of protected data meets the standards required.

“[T]he use of personal data would be the question for us, and whether that’s been done in an appropriate, ethical manner,” Hogan said.

“We have been engaging with Sky for some time, and we’re going to be meeting them in two weeks time, and I expect that we’ll be bringing things forward with them at that point in time.”

Nothing Solid Given Away, But Plenty of Fuel For Speculation

The finer details of the “engagement” will presumably appear at a later stage but until then, recent comments may put some extra meat on the bones.

In the Irish Independent (paywall) this week, Sky Ireland CEO JD Buckley warned of “consequences” for operators of pirate IPTV platforms, and those tempted to use them.

“We continuously evolve our investigative strategies to crack down on illegal streaming and protect consumers from risks including malware, fraud and identity theft. Further action will follow with consequences for those identified as operating illegal services and for those who watch them,” Buckley said.

700,000 Subscribers, 400,000 Dodgy Box Users

An unnamed spokesperson for Sky confirmed that the company was “exploring various options” including “ongoing engagement” with the DPC. While vague statements have a tendency to fuel the rumor mill, depending on what Sky has in mind, the potential for impact could be significant.

Towards the lower end, Sky may be considering a significant expansion of its existing investigation footprint. Targeting a large number of individuals would necessarily mean the collection of evidence, including personal data. Ensuring every last detail of that process had been ‘vetted’ by DPC in advance, would reduce risk of a successful challenge by an individual on data protection grounds, undermining a whole campaign.

At the higher end are less likely options. If Sky as an ISP, and Sky as a broadcaster, saw no benefit from barriers restricting the ability to act publicly, on intelligence obtained from a figurative commingling of the companies’ knowledge of pirate activity, that would be a game changer. Complex legal issues aside, ISP records are nevertheless a potential goldmine of information.

To what extent intelligence sharing already happens is unknown, but a number mentioned by the Irish Independent – 400,000 users of “dodgy boxes”- can’t be casually brushed under a carpet. Figures quoted in Irish media estimate that Sky Ireland has around 700,000 subscribers.

Partners in Crime (Fighting)

While there was no explicit reference to Sky, it seems unlikely that Hogan would mention the GDPR and a particular type of data sharing, if that wasn’t directly relevant to the matter in hand.

“Any sharing of personal data, or processing of that personal data outside a company has to be done in a lawful manner under the GDPR,” Hogan said.

With whom Sky may have shared, or intends to share, personal data for piracy-fighting purposes, receives no mention, much less the type and volume of personal data involved. If this is more about collection of personal data concerning investigations, the sky’s the limit; pirates are hardly in short supply.

Under Article 35 of the GDPR, a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) must be carried out when a new activity “is likely to result in a high risk to the rights and freedoms of natural persons to other people’s personal information.”

Whatever the specifics of the engagement, the issue appears to be sufficiently important to place in the public eye. Sky’s privacy policy makes it quite clear that it reserves the right to take anti-piracy action.

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

Souveränität: AWS-Manager spricht über Kundenrückgang in Europa

Amazons AWS betont sein langjähriges Engagement in Europa. Gegen europäische Pläne für eigene KI-Gigafabriken setzt man das Konzept “KI einzusetzen bedeutet mehr, als nur Chips zu haben”. (AWS, Cloud Computing)

Amazons AWS betont sein langjähriges Engagement in Europa. Gegen europäische Pläne für eigene KI-Gigafabriken setzt man das Konzept "KI einzusetzen bedeutet mehr, als nur Chips zu haben". (AWS, Cloud Computing)

Firefly: Crossover mit Buffy – Spike auf der Serenity

Die Serien Buffy und Angel bilden ein Universum. Hätte Firefly mehr als eine Staffel erlebt, wäre auch diese Serie Teil des Shared Universe geworden – mit einem Vampir an Bord der Serenity. (Science-Fiction, Unterhaltung & Hobby)

Die Serien Buffy und Angel bilden ein Universum. Hätte Firefly mehr als eine Staffel erlebt, wäre auch diese Serie Teil des Shared Universe geworden - mit einem Vampir an Bord der Serenity. (Science-Fiction, Unterhaltung & Hobby)

(g+) Zero-Day-Exploits: Wie Hacker IT-Systeme knacken

Hacker lieben sie wie Kinder Überraschungseier: Zero-Days wie CVE-2025-33053. Wie funktionieren solche Angriffe und wie kann man sich schützen? Ein Ratgebertext von Steffen Strunz (Security, Server)

Hacker lieben sie wie Kinder Überraschungseier: Zero-Days wie CVE-2025-33053. Wie funktionieren solche Angriffe und wie kann man sich schützen? Ein Ratgebertext von Steffen Strunz (Security, Server)

Anzeige: Jobs für Data Scientists, AI-Profis und Data Strategists

Machine Learning, Datenstrategie, KI-Projekte: Sechs Positionen bieten vielfältige Aufgaben in Data Science, Business Intelligence und digitalen Transformationsprojekten – quer durch alle Branchen. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

Machine Learning, Datenstrategie, KI-Projekte: Sechs Positionen bieten vielfältige Aufgaben in Data Science, Business Intelligence und digitalen Transformationsprojekten - quer durch alle Branchen. (Golem Karrierewelt, KI)

Psyche keeps its date with an asteroid, but now it’s running in backup mode

Engineers switched to a backup fuel line less than a quarter of the way through Psyche’s mission.

A NASA spacecraft bound for an unexplored metal-rich asteroid has reignited its plasma thrusters, continuing its cruise deeper into the Solar System after switching to a backup fuel line.

The $1.4 billion Psyche mission, built to explore an asteroid with the same name, has four electric thrusters fueled by xenon gas. Psyche's solar electric propulsion system is more fuel efficient than conventional rocket thrusters, and it works by flowing xenon through an electromagnetic field, which ionizes the gas and expelling the ions at high speed to produce thrust.

The plasma engines generate lower thrust than chemical rocket engines, but they can accumulate years of run time over the course of a mission, enabling a spacecraft to make significant changes in its velocity to steer its way through space.

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New body size database for marine animals is a “library of life”

Marine Organizational Body Size (MOBS) database fills a crucial gap in understanding ocean biodiversity.

Legend has it that physicist Ernest Rutherford once dismissed all sciences other than physics as mere "stamp collecting." (Whether he actually said it is a matter of some debate.) But we now live in the information age, and scientists have found tremendous value in amassing giant databases of information for large-scale analysis, enabling them to explore different kinds of questions.

The latest addition is the Marine Organizational Body Size (MOBS) database, an open-access resource that—as its name implies—has collected body size data for more than 85,000 marine animal species and counting, ranging from microscopic creatures like zooplankton to the largest whales. MOBS is already enabling new research on the ocean's biodiversity and global ecosystem, according to a paper published in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography. The database is now available though GitHub and currently covers 40 percent of all described marine animal species, with a goal of achieving 75 percent coverage.

"We've really lacked that broader persecutive for a lot of ocean life," marine ecologist Craig McClain of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette told Ars. McClain is the lead creator of MOBS,. "We know about evolution and ecology for mammals and birds especially, and to a lesser extent reptiles and amphibians. We just haven't had these big collated body size data sets for the marine groups, especially the invertebrates." The MOBS project is basically constructing a "library of [marine] life."

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