Kim Dotcom’s Extradition Hearing Will Be Live Streamed on YouTube

Kim Dotcom’s request for his extradition hearing to be live streamed on the Internet has been granted by a New Zealand High Court judge. Beginning tomorrow, proceedings will be broadcast live on YouTube, despite protests from the United States that the stream could prejudice Dotcom’s criminal trial in the U.S. should he be extradited.

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

dotcom-laptopLast week, Kim Dotcom indicated that he’d like his extradition hearing to be broadcast live on the Internet.

“Because of global interest in my case we have asked the High Court to allow live-streaming of my 6 weeks of copyright extradition hearings,” he wrote on Twitter.

Yesterday morning, just before the hearing got underway, Dotcom’s lawyer Ron Mansfield again raised the issue. He said that a complex case of this nature might not receive fair reporting so a live stream could help restore the balance and ensure public scrutiny. Mansfield suggested YouTube as the perfect platform.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the U.S. government opposed Dotcom’s application, stating that the coverage might prejudice the criminal trial in the United States should Dotcom be extradited. In particular, the U.S. said footage from the hearing could threaten a potential jury pool.

But despite U.S. objections, earlier today Justice Murray Gilbert said the stream could go ahead, on YouTube. There will be some restrictions, however.

Guidelines for broadcasting from New Zealand courts mandate a 10-minute delay, but in Dotcom’s case that will be extended to 20 minutes. This will ensure that the court has the opportunity to suppress anything deemed unfit for public consumption.

Dotcom took to Twitter to celebrate.


But while the judge has granted Dotcom’s wishes, there will be restrictions. In addition to the delay, the comments section on YouTube will be disabled and footage from the hearing will not be permitted to remain online after the hearing has taken place.

Of course, neither option will be possible to control completely. Discussion of live events can easily take place elsewhere, notably on Twitter where the action takes place in real-time. Furthermore, people will undoubtedly rip the live stream from YouTube, so keeping that offline after the hearing has passed will prove entirely impossible.

Nevertheless, the transparency the stream will provide is being welcomed by many, not least Dotcom’s US-based lawyer Ira Rothken.

“It provides everybody in the world with a seat in the gallery of the New Zealand courtroom,” Rothken said. “It’s democracy at its finest.”

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

Leitlinien vereinbart: Regulierer schwächen Vorgaben zu Netzneutralität ab

Die europäischen Regulierungsbehörden haben sich auf die Leitlinien zur Netzneutralität geeinigt. Trotz Hunderttausender Eingaben von Internetnutzern konnten vor allem die Provider Änderungen durchsetzen. (Netzneutralität, Technologie)

Die europäischen Regulierungsbehörden haben sich auf die Leitlinien zur Netzneutralität geeinigt. Trotz Hunderttausender Eingaben von Internetnutzern konnten vor allem die Provider Änderungen durchsetzen. (Netzneutralität, Technologie)

Kartendienst: Microsoft und Amazon könnten sich an Here beteiligen

Der Kartendienstleister Here, den BMW, Daimler und Audi übernommen haben, könnte weitere Eigentümer bekommen. Im Gespräch sind laut Zeitungsbericht Microsoft und Amazon. So könnten auch Logistik und Handel integriert werden. (Here, Smartphone)

Der Kartendienstleister Here, den BMW, Daimler und Audi übernommen haben, könnte weitere Eigentümer bekommen. Im Gespräch sind laut Zeitungsbericht Microsoft und Amazon. So könnten auch Logistik und Handel integriert werden. (Here, Smartphone)

Draufsicht: Neuer 5er BMW mit Überwachungskameras

BMW baut in den neuen 5er, der Anfang 2017 erscheinen soll, mit Remote View 3D eine Überwachungsfunktion für Nutzer ein, die ihr Fahrzeug ständig im Blick haben wollen. Das Besondere: Der Autofahrer muss nicht vor Ort sein, um sein Fahrzeug von oben sehen zu können. (BMW, Technologie)

BMW baut in den neuen 5er, der Anfang 2017 erscheinen soll, mit Remote View 3D eine Überwachungsfunktion für Nutzer ein, die ihr Fahrzeug ständig im Blick haben wollen. Das Besondere: Der Autofahrer muss nicht vor Ort sein, um sein Fahrzeug von oben sehen zu können. (BMW, Technologie)

Catastrophic Surface Pro 3 battery life finally has its firmware fix

Initial reports suggest it’s definitely working, at least for some.

Enlarge / Surface Pro 3. (credit: Peter Bright)

Back in July, Microsoft acknowledged that some Surface Pro 3 systems were seeing their battery life drop to as little as a few minutes, apparently the result of a firmware bug of some kind. The fix for this is now out (via Mary Jo Foley).

The fix is a firmware update dated 29 August that must be installed while the system is charged and plugged in. It apparently takes a couple of reboots to install. Over the course of the following few battery cycles, the batteries will return to their correct charge level. The problem is caused by something in the Surface Pro 3's firmware causing the maximum charge to be improperly reported—meaning, the SP3 mistakenly thinks the battery is full and stops accepting charge accordingly. LG and Simplo provide batteries for Microsoft's two-in-one slabs, and while users have reported issues with LG batteries, the Simplo ones appear to be the main victims of this firmware trouble.

Early reports from Microsoft's support forums suggest that, for many at least, the firmware fix does indeed do the trick.

Read on Ars Technica | Comments

Google Cast gets built into Chrome

Chrome no longer needs an extension to beam media to your TV.

Enlarge / The Google Cast integration in Chrome. (credit: Google)

Google Cast—the protocol that powers Chromecast—previously worked inside of Chrome thanks to an extension released by Google. Buttons on YouTube, Google Music, and other sites allowed you to beam music and video to your TV or stereo system. Now you no longer need an extension to sling media across the room. Google has built the protocol directly into Chrome.

Like all Chrome features, Cast support started in the "Dev" and "Beta" versions. Cast has finally hit the stable channel that most consumers use. The Cast buttons in web site UIs will continue to work the way they always have, and if you click on the Chrome menu button, you'll be treated to a new "Cast..." option that can beam an entire tab to your television.

To get the new Cast functionality, you just need the latest version of Chrome and a Cast-aware device on your local network. According to this page, the old Cast extension will apparently still live on for those who want the tab-beam button in their toolbar.

Read on Ars Technica | Comments

Fedora 24 review: The year’s best Linux distro is puzzlingly hard to recommend

Even for a great update, rollout trouble reminds us release cycles can mar a distro.

Enlarge (credit: Fedora Magazine)

Fedora 24 is very near the best Linux distro release I've used, and certainly the best release I have tested this year. Considering 2016 has welcomed new offerings like Mint 18 and Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, that says a great deal about the Fedora project's latest work. But like many Fedora releases before it, even Fedora 24 got off to a rocky start.

Longtime Fedora users are more than likely conservative when it comes to system upgrades. And historically, new Fedora releases tend to be rough around the edges. Wise Fedora followers tend to be patient and give a new release a couple of months for the kinks to work out and the updates to flow in. Usually, such a timing cushion also means all the latest packages in RPM Fusion have been updated as well. With that kind of precedent, being the first to jump on a Fedora upgrade—which comes every eight or so months—can be risky.

Patience does typically reward you with a really great Linux distro, though. And far more valuable than updated apps, waiting means you can skip catastrophic bugs like the one that completely broke Fedora 24 on Skylake systems after a kernel update. Fedora 24 shipped with Linux kernel 4.5 and managed to miss kernel 4.6 by about two weeks, which is a shame because no less than Linus Torvalds himself called kernel 4.6 "a fairly big release - more commits than we've had in a while." In other words, perhaps Fedora should have waited a few weeks to ship.

Read 37 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Dogs recognize both words and tone to know when they’re good

MRI studies show dogs recognize both words and how they’re said.

Enlarge / "Who's a good puppy?!" (credit: Enikő Kubinyi)

In most tests of general intelligence, dogs rate as reasonably clever, but nothing like primates. The one place where dogs beat primates is in interacting with humans. It's not clear whether dogs are better at reading human intentions or simply more motivated to act on them, but dogs truly seem to get us.

Now, researchers in Hungary have tested dogs' willingness to cooperate with us by getting them to sit still in an MRI machine. By tracking the dogs' brain activity, the researchers were able to determine that dogs can recognize not only words, but the emotional tone behind them. Dogs recognize when both words and tone indicate praise. That's when they feel rewarded.

The work was performed by a group of researchers based in Budapest, which becomes important when we get to the words the dogs were responding to. The hypothesis behind their work: dogs can recognize both the meaning of what's being said (technically, its lexical content) as well as the intonation used in saying it. In other words, it's not enough to say "good boy" to your dog—you have to sound like you mean it.

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

French Education minister: Get rare Pokémon out of our schools

The minister is worried that “legendary” Pokemon could draw strangers.

Enlarge / French Education minister Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, leaving the Elysee Presidential Palace last week in Paris. (credit: Frederic Stevens/Getty Images)

France's education minister has asked the company that makes Pokemon Go to keep its most valuable creatures out of French schools.

At a press conference earlier today, Najat Vallaud-Belkacem said she will soon meet with California-based Niantic to ask them to tweak their game. According to statements reported by The Associated Press, Vallaud-Belkacem wants to keep some creatures out of French schools, since she's worried they would tempt non-students to enter.

Principals can already apply online for a school to be wholly removed from the game's map, but Vallaud-Belkacem wants the company to take some steps without being asked. The minister says that her main concern is the placement of extremely rare or "legendary" Pokemon creatures in schools, which would prove too tempting to strangers who shouldn't be around the school.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

AT&T’s common carrier status helps it defeat data throttling lawsuit

But AT&T could still face $100 million fine from FCC.

Enlarge (credit: Mike Mozart)

AT&T today won a major victory over the Federal Trade Commission, which was trying to punish AT&T for throttling the Internet connections of customers with unlimited data plans.

The FTC sued AT&T in October 2014, seeking refunds for customers who paid for unlimited data. The FTC said AT&T deceived customers by offering unlimited data plans and then throttling speeds once customers hit certain usage thresholds, such as 3GB or 5GB in a month. In response, AT&T claimed that the FTC had no jurisdiction over AT&T because of the company's status as a common carrier.

This argument was complicated. At the time, AT&T was a common carrier for landline phone and mobile voice service, but not for mobile Internet access. The Federal Communications Commission later reclassified mobile Internet as a common carrier service, which put it under a stricter FCC regime but exempted AT&T from FTC oversight.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments