Cloudflare Fails to Eliminate ‘Moot’ Pirate Site Blocking Threat

A Florida federal court has denied Cloudflare’s request to vacate a recent order which opened the door to widespread site blocking efforts. The order, obtained by the RIAA, applies to the defunct website MP3Skull but could have broader consequences.

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Representing various major record labels, the RIAA filed a lawsuit against pirate site MP3Skull three years ago.

With millions of visitors per month the MP3 download site had been one of the prime sources of pirated music for a long time.

In 2016, the record labels won their case against the MP3 download portal but the site initially ignored the court order and continued to operate. This prompted the RIAA to go after third-party services including Cloudflare, demanding that they block associated domain names.

Cloudflare objected and argued that the DMCA shielded the company from the broad blocking requirements. However, the court ruled that the DMCA doesn’t apply in this case, opening the door to widespread anti-piracy filtering.

The court stressed that, before issuing an injunction against Cloudflare, it still had to be determined whether the CDN provider is “in active concert or participation” with the pirate site. However, this has yet to happen. Since MP3Skull has ceased its operations the RIAA has shown little interest in pursuing the matter any further.

While there is no longer an immediate site blocking threat, it makes it easier for rightsholders to request similar blocking requests in the future. Cloudflare, therefore, asked the court to throw the order out, arguing that since MP3Skull is no longer available the issue is moot.

This week, US District Court Judge Marcia Cooke denied that request.

Denied

This is, of course, music to the ears of the RIAA and its members.

The RIAA wants to keep the door open for similar blocking requests in the future. This potential liability for pirates sites is the main reason why the CDN provider asked the court to vacate the order, the RIAA said previously.

While the order remains in place, Judge Cooke suggests that both parties are working on some kind of compromise or clarification and gave two weeks to draft this into a new proposal.

“The parties may draft and submit a joint proposed order addressing the issues raised at the hearing on or before April 10, 2018,” Judge Cooke writes.

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Apple’s macOS 10.13.4 is here with full external GPU support

The update also adds new privacy features and support for Business Chat.

Enlarge / When you have an eGPU connected and working, it appears in "About This Mac." (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple has released the 10.13.4 update for macOS. This update adds external graphics card (eGPU) support for most recent Macs, implements Apple's new approach to privacy that we already saw in iOS 11.3, and adds Business Chat in the United States.

Business Chat allows users to seek customer support and perform transactions with participating businesses using the Messages app. You can chat live with a representative, book appointments right inside Messages, and also pay for products and services with Apple Pay in the course of your conversation. The feature also launched on iOS.

Apart from eGPU support, the only other major feature is Apple's new approach to privacy issues. As in iOS 11.3, Apple has added a special image that appears each time its software or services access what Apple deems to be personal data. This image is accompanied by a short summary of what information Apple is using and how, and you can click a link to see a much more detailed explanation.

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Trump admin wants to track 14 million US visitors’ social media history

Follows a wholly optional “identifier” request created by Obama administration in 2016.

Enlarge / Roughly 14 million people per year may have to hand over their social-media "identifiers" before entering the United States, should the Trump administration get its way. (credit: TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)

Want to visit the United States in a non-immigrant capacity? Should the State Department get its way, your application to enter the country may soon hinge on coughing up five years of your online history.

The Trump administration's proposal, published at the Federal Register on Friday, would expand this request, which is currently required to apply for an immigrant visa. Friday's proposal could be enacted after a 60-day public-comment period pending passage by the Office of Management and Budget. Alternatively, the State Department could modify the proposal and start another comment period. But should this current iteration go into effect, an estimated 14 million non-immigrant visa applicants per year would be asked to list any "identifiers" used on a variety of popular social media sites. Those applicants will additionally be required to disclose identifiers they have used during that timespan on sites that aren't on the State Department's default list.

The proposal also expands the State Department's requests from applicants. These individuals would also be asked to supply past phone numbers, email addresses, passport numbers, and records of international travel.

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Finally extradited from Europe, suspected LinkedIn hacker faces US charges

DOJ: “Computer hacking is not just a crime, it is a direct threat… to Americans.”

Enlarge (credit: Lee Woodgate)

A Russian man accused of hacking LinkedIn, Dropbox, and Formspring made his first appearance in federal court on Friday.

In a brief hearing before a federal magistrate judge in San Francisco, Yevgeniy Nikulin pleaded not guilty to illegally accessing computers belonging to those companies in 2012.

Nikulin was arrested on October 5, 2016, but he was only very recently extradited from the Czech Republic to the United States. In the Czech Republic, Nikulin's attorneys and the Russian government attempted to get him sent back home to face significantly lesser criminal charges dating back to 2009.

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You can officially buy an Android Go phone in the US

Google’s barebones Android variant is here in the form of the $80 ZTE Tempo Go.

ZTE

ZTE put its new Tempo Go smartphone up for sale on Thursday, making it the first phone with Google's Android Go configuration to be available for purchase in the US.

The phone is now available for $79.99 on ZTE's website. The listing was first spotted by Android Police.

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Ajit Pai faces heat over proposal to take away poor people’s broadband plans

Pai offered no evidence that plan will boost network investment, Democrats say.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | jangeltun)

Democratic senators yesterday asked Ajit Pai to abandon a proposal that the senators say would take subsidized broadband plans away from "millions of Americans."

The Federal Communications Commission chairman's plan for the Lifeline subsidy program would force most users of the program to find new providers. But such users could have trouble finding replacement plans or similar prices because Pai's proposal would prevent all telecom resellers from offering Lifeline-subsidized service.

"Your proposal impacts over 70 percent of current Lifeline-recipient households by eliminating their wireless providers from the program, leaving less affordable and fewer Lifeline options, while making it more difficult for the companies trying to serve Lifeline customers," Senate Democrats wrote in the letter to Pai yesterday. "Instead of cutting the program, we should ensure Lifeline reaches more Americans in need of access to communication services."

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Now you can use an external graphics dock with a Mac

Appls has rolled out an updated version of macOS and, among other things, it adds support for external graphics cards. That means you should be able to connect a graphics dock to just about any Mac with a Thunderbolt 3 port. The most obvious reason to …

Appls has rolled out an updated version of macOS and, among other things, it adds support for external graphics cards. That means you should be able to connect a graphics dock to just about any Mac with a Thunderbolt 3 port. The most obvious reason to do that is so you can use a desktop-class […]

The post Now you can use an external graphics dock with a Mac appeared first on Liliputing.

NOAA just prevented SpaceX from showing its rocket in orbit

“SpaceX will be intentionally ending live video coverage of the 2nd stage.”

Enlarge / SpaceX cut its webcast from space at T+ 9:00 on Friday, and went back to Michael Hammersley in Hawthorne, due to "NOAA restrictions." (credit: SpaceX)

On Friday morning, SpaceX successfully launched a Falcon 9 rocket into space and later deployed 10 Iridium communications satellites into low-Earth orbit as planned. But unexpectedly for most watching, the company's webcast was precluded from showing the mission in its entirety.

At T+ 9:00 minutes, just two seconds before the rocket's second-stage engine cut off from firing, the video from space ended. The launch commentator, SpaceX engineer Michael Hammersley, explained earlier in the broadcast that "[d]ue to some restrictions from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, SpaceX will be intentionally ending live video coverage of the 2nd stage just prior to engine shutdown."

Asked about this on Friday morning, a NOAA spokesman was not aware of the situation. "I can only think it's an error," Chris Vaccaro told Ars. "I would double check with them (SpaceX)." NOAA has promised more information will be forthcoming.

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Frogs make a comeback, beat fungus

Amphibians may be evolving resistance to a disease that’s been wiping them out.

Enlarge / In the US, biologists are keeping watch for the amphibian-killing fungus. (credit: USGS)

Epidemics proceed with different dynamics. Sometimes they spike rapidly and disappear gradually; sometimes they ramp up slowly; sometimes they have multiple waves. What they all do at some point is end, usually with neither the pathogen nor the host going extinct. But we don’t usually understand how or why.

Chytridiomycosis is an epidemic that has been killing amphibians the world over for at least a decade. It is caused by a fungal pathogen called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), and it can cause limb deformities and skin abnormalities. Since amphibians absorb water and electrolytes through their skin rather than their mouths, such abnormalities can be fatal. But now we have some evidence that, as with past epidemics, Bd isn't a one-way ticket to extinction.

Between 2004 and 2007, Bd decimated frog populations in Panama. About five years later, however, frog populations rebounded. Bd was still around, although it was not nearly as prevalent. Scientists collected frog and fungus samples from the start of the outbreak, in 2004, and after the recovery, in 2013, in order to figure out what factors went into making this particular epidemic subside. They hypothesized that either (a) the later Bd samples would be less pathogenic to the frogs; (b) the later frog samples would be more resistant to Bd; or (c) both.

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Deals of the Day (3-30-2018)

You know how I said Monday was a good day to upgrade your home network to 802.11ac WiFi if you hadn’t already? That was because Best Buy was selling a pretty good Linksys AC1750 WiFi router for just $50. Today Amazon is selling a slightly less impressi…

You know how I said Monday was a good day to upgrade your home network to 802.11ac WiFi if you hadn’t already? That was because Best Buy was selling a pretty good Linksys AC1750 WiFi router for just $50. Today Amazon is selling a slightly less impressive TP-Link Archer AC1200 WiFi router for a much […]

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