Buyin: Telekom-Manager von chinesischem Unternehmen bestochen

Ein Manager der Telekom hat gegen Bestechungsgeld interne Geheimnisse an das Unternehmen ZTE verraten. Die Staatsanwaltschaft hat Ermittlungen aufgenommen und kritisiert die Telekom, weil die Justiz erst spät informiert wurde. (Telekom, Internet)

Ein Manager der Telekom hat gegen Bestechungsgeld interne Geheimnisse an das Unternehmen ZTE verraten. Die Staatsanwaltschaft hat Ermittlungen aufgenommen und kritisiert die Telekom, weil die Justiz erst spät informiert wurde. (Telekom, Internet)

Routerfreiheit: Was beim Umstieg auf das eigene Kabelmodem zu beachten ist

Nach dem Wegfall des Routerzwangs haben die Kabelnetzbetreiber unterschiedliche Verfahren für die Aktivierung eigener Endgeräte entwickelt. Golem.de erläutert, wie die Nutzer an ihre Zugangsdaten gelangen und welche unangenehmen Überraschungen sie erleben können. (Router, DSL)

Nach dem Wegfall des Routerzwangs haben die Kabelnetzbetreiber unterschiedliche Verfahren für die Aktivierung eigener Endgeräte entwickelt. Golem.de erläutert, wie die Nutzer an ihre Zugangsdaten gelangen und welche unangenehmen Überraschungen sie erleben können. (Router, DSL)

DNC Breach extended to systems used by Clinton campaign

Congressional campaign and DNC breach allegedly by same Russian group.

Enlarge / Hillary Clinton's campaign acknowledged systems used by the campaign, hosted at the DNC, had been hacked, allegedly by a group tied to Russian intelligence agencies. (credit: Clinton campaign.)

An analytical system hosted by the Democratic National Committee and used by Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign team was accessed by hackers. In a statement issued by the Clinton campaign, a spokesperson said that a network intrusion had exposed data on the system maintained by the DNC, but that the campaign organizations's own systems did not appear to have been breached. No financial or personal identifying data other than voter information was stored on the analytical system.

In a separate statement, a spokesperson for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee acknowledged that its network and systems had been hacked. Upon discovering the breach, "we immediately took action and engaged with CrowdStrike, a leading forensic investigator, to assist us in addressing the incident," said Meredith Kelly, a spokeswoman for the DCCC.

The New York Times cited information from an unnamed federal law enforcement official that both the breach of the Clinton campaign system hosted at DNC and the DCCC hack—which redirected would-be donors to a lookalike site that collected their personal data—were executed by groups of hackers affiliated with Russia's intelligence services. Both the DNC and DCCC attacks were attributed to the group behind the "Fancy Bear" family of malware and intrusions, which the official identified as being tied to the Russian military intelligence agency known as Glavnoye Razvedyvatel'noye Upravleniye (GRU), or Main Intelligence Directorate. "It's the same adversary," the official told the Times.

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Anti-Piracy Group Reveals Personal Details of Counter-Notice Senders

In what appears to be a retaliatory move against DMCA notice archive Lumen Database, anti-piracy outfit Remove Your Media has launched a transparency report of its own. The report lists people who have sent the company DMCA counter-notices but it goes much further than Lumen by publishing their names, addresses, and telephone numbers.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

remove-smallOver the past few years, transparency reports have become more and more common. Many big Internet companies publish them on an annual basis to keep the public informed about requests for user data or content takedowns.

One of the largest archives is maintained at Lumen Database and contains millions of DMCA notices received by companies including Google, Twitter, WordPress and Reddit.

Typically these notices contain the name of the complainant, the title of the content, the URLs where it can be found, and other non-sensitive information. Nevertheless, their publication is still unpopular with some.

In 2014, when Lumen was known as Chilling Effects, the archive was described as “repugnant” by then Copyright Alliance CEO Sandra Aistars.

“[T]he site unfairly maligns artists and creators using the legal process created by Section 512 [of the DMCA] as proponents of censorship,” she said.

While Lumen insists that is not the case, the project still has its enemies. Thanks to the transparency it brings, the work of anti-piracy outfits is made more public. This is an irritant to some, a notion that was made clear this week when US-based Remove Your Media took to Twitter to announce a new project.

removemedia1

As the tweet shows, Remove Your Media has launched its own transparency report which details the counter-notices filed by people it has filed DMCA notices against.

However, while Lumen Database goes to some lengths to protect the personal details (company names aside) of the people who send DMCA notices, Remove Your Media offers no such courtesy.

remove-counter

As can be seen from the screenshot above, the company publishes names, addresses, email address and even personal telephone/cellphone numbers of counter-notice senders. Given the tone of the tweet directed towards Lumen (transparency “works both ways now”), it seems reasonable to presume this is a deliberately provocative move.

What’s more, in practical terms the report is hopeless. The counter-notices published so far don’t contain any information that might allow the public to understand the complaints or whether they’re justified. It’s simply a list of names and other personal details plus a link to the copyright holder involved, no content details are provided.

TorrentFreak contacted Remove Your Media for comment on the aims of the just-launched database but received no response. However, some of those targeted by the company were happy to contribute.

“I run a website called fanart.tv which is community of fans submitting artwork for their favorite media,” site operator ‘Kode’ told TF.

“We are in effect offering free promotion for artists / tv shows / movies and making them look as good as possible.”

Kode told us that he believes the original complaint that triggered the counter-notice might be related to one of three YouTube videos that are already more than four years old.

“To be honest, it’s all a bit confusing as I only very vaguely remember submitting a YouTube counter-notice, and i’m pretty sure it wasn’t even this year. I’m trying to find out where I would see the details of it.”

Strangely, in correspondence with FanArt.tv around a year ago, Remove Your Media promised to whitelist the site from takedowns after acknowledging that there was no issue with its activities. Why the company has chosen to go back on its word now is a mystery.

But while Kode took his personal contact details being outed somewhat in his stride, others were not so relaxed.

“What the hell??? I never gave permission for this, and I doubt anyone else did either. This is illegal. I’ve reported the blog,” another told TF.

“I really don’t know [what this is about]. I have a YouTube account where I used to make [anime videos] years ago but there is no action against them. My account is fine. I don’t recognise the name [Remove Your Media]. As far as I’m concerned it’s BS. And even if they are taking action, my details should not have been published.”

TF is aware that Remove Your Media adopted an aggressive stance against people who sent false DMCA counter-notices in the past, so this move isn’t a complete surprise.

However, if the aim of the report really is transparency, the company should consider publishing its original DMCA complaint alongside a lightly redacted counter-notice. That will allow people to evaluate the credibility (or otherwise) of both claims.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

This science fiction novel is a perfect antidote to the U.S. election season

Malka Older’s Infomocracy is a realistic picture of a future global democracy.

Sometimes you need to escape from the news by plunging into a fictionalized version of it. Malka Older's second novel Infomocracy is a sci-fi thriller about the third election cycle in the world's first global government, a data-driven "microdemocracy." The first in a trilogy, Infomocracy manages to be incredibly action packed while also exploring plausible political futures you may never have imagined.

Election integrity in the world of Infomocracy is guaranteed by a techno-political organization called "The Information" (think Google merged with Facebook). Committed to non-partisan transparency, The Information is supposed to give citizens the data they need to vote wisely. Its real mission, of course, is more ambiguous. The action reaches a fever pitch and stays there, as our protagonists race to find out who is behind a series of bombings aimed at shutting down the election.

Life in a global democracy

From page one, Older plunges us into a bewildering global election season with only two semi-trustworthy guides to the madness. Ken is an idealistic campaigner for the progressive Policy1st party, which is devoted to openness and free exchange. Mishima is an operative for The Information with ninja powers and a mysterious "narrative disorder" that helps her find patterns in vast quantities of data. After hooking up randomly at a drunken party in Tokyo, the two discover they are the only people who seem to care that Liberty, a political party that's one of the top contenders for the next Supermajority, is quietly spreading propaganda about the need to start a war.

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Gole1 mini PC giveaway

Gole1 mini PC giveaway

The Gole1 mini PC is one of the oddest devices I’ve reviewed in recent years: it’s either a tiny desktop computer with a touchscreen and a battery, or a chunky handheld tablet that can also be used like a dekstop, depending on how you look at it.

I’m not entirely sure what you’re supposed to use it for or why you wouldn’t use a different device that’s better suited for that specific task… but for some reason I was still kind of charmed by the review unit Gole sent me to test.

Continue reading Gole1 mini PC giveaway at Liliputing.

Gole1 mini PC giveaway

The Gole1 mini PC is one of the oddest devices I’ve reviewed in recent years: it’s either a tiny desktop computer with a touchscreen and a battery, or a chunky handheld tablet that can also be used like a dekstop, depending on how you look at it.

I’m not entirely sure what you’re supposed to use it for or why you wouldn’t use a different device that’s better suited for that specific task… but for some reason I was still kind of charmed by the review unit Gole sent me to test.

Continue reading Gole1 mini PC giveaway at Liliputing.

White dwarf bombards its companion with relativistic electrons

AR Scorpii turns out to be a binary system, not a single variable star.

(credit: M. Garlick/University of Warwick/ESO)

When observing AR Scorpii, researchers noticed that its brightness varied over a 3.5 hour period. So they labelled it a periodic variable and paid it no further attention. Now, however, a large international team of astronomers has gone back and taken a more careful look at the star. The astronomers found that AR Scorpii is much more variable than first thought, with 400 percent changes in brightness occurring within only 30 seconds. The reason for this? AR Scorpii is actually two stars, and one of them is launching relativistic electrons at the other.

The paper describing these results was published this week in Nature.

The researchers were drawn to AR Scorpii because of seven years of archival images that revealed a lot of additional variability layered on top of its well-described 3.5 hour period. Rather than peaking at a similar level each time, the output could vary by as much as a factor of four.

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Volkswagen could have a fix for its 2.0L diesels, air regulator says

“New team of people” at VW “understand their credibility is on the line.”

(credit: freshwater2006)

In an e-mail to Ars on Friday, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) confirmed that the regulator was ready to begin testing hardware and software that could potentially fix pollution issues with 475,000 2.0L diesel vehicles from Volkswagen Group. The German automaker was caught last year adding illegal software to its cars in order to cheat on US emissions tests—the cars turned on their emissions control system when they were being tested in a lab and turned the emissions control system off when they were being driven under real world conditions.

According to Reuters, CARB now says there will be fixes for three generations of diesels, involving both hardware and software updates. The regulator has said that VW Group must bring its cars within 80 to 90 percent of pollution limits to have any fixes approved. CARB head Mary Nichols told Reuters that VW Group need not bring its cars to 100 percent compliance with pollution limits because the company has agreed to put up $2.7 billion in a pollution mitigation fund that will offset the damage of the still-polluting cars.

CARB is working closely with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and any fix approved by California’s air regulator stands a good chance of being approved by the EPA, too. In January, CARB rejected VW Group’s proposed recall plan by saying the company did not provide enough necessary information to the regulator. The EPA issued a quick statement after CARB’s decision saying that it agreed.

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Soylent CEO charged over illegal shipping container his neighbors hate

Rob Rhinehart calls container “experimental,” but City Attorney dubs it illegal.

(credit: Rob Rhinehart)

The City of Los Angeles filed criminal charges Friday against Soylent CEO Rob Rhinehart, who owns a property on a hillside known as “Flat Top,” east of downtown LA. The company makes a product of the same name that consists of a “food substitute.” (In 2013, Ars editor Lee Hutchinson ate and drank nothing but Soylent for five days.)

According to a statement released by City Attorney Mike Feuer, Rhinehart has been “allegedly performing unpermitted work and refusing to remove a vandalized and abandoned cargo container from a Montecito Heights hillside.”

The Los Angeles Times reported that Rhinehart bought the property last year and put a shipping container on it in the name of “experimental living.” Since then, the site has attracted graffiti and trash.

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