Report: WikiLeaks published rape victims’ names, credit cards, medical data

“If the family of my wife saw this… that could destroy people.”

Enlarge / WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange prepares to speak from the balcony of the Ecuadorian embassy on February 5, 2016 in London, England. (credit: Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)

Even as WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange sits trapped in the Ecuadorean embassy, the WikiLeaks website continues to publish the secrets of various governments worldwide.

But that's not all it's publishing. A report today by the Associated Press highlights citizens who had "sensitive family, financial or identity records" published by the site.

"They published everything: my phone, address, name, details," said one Saudi man whose paternity dispute was revealed on documents published by the site. "If the family of my wife saw this... Publishing personal stuff like that could destroy people."

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Cloudflare Faces Lawsuit For Assisting Pirate Sites

In recent months CloudFlare has been called out repeatedly for offering its services to known pirate sites, including The Pirate Bay. These allegations have now resulted in the first lawsuit after adult entertainment publisher ALS Scan filed a complaint against CloudFlare at a California federal court.

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

cloudflareAs one of the leading providers of DDoS protection and an easy to use CDN service, Cloudflare is used by millions of sites across the globe.

This includes many “pirate” sites who rely on the U.S. based company to keep server loads down.

The Pirate Bay is one of the best-known customers, but there are literally are thousands of other ‘pirate’ sites that use services from the San Francisco company.

As a result, copyright holders are not happy with CloudFlare’s actions. Just recently, the Hollywood-affiliated group Digital Citizens Alliance called the company out for helping pirate sites to stay online.

Adult entertainment outfit ALS Scan agrees and has now become the first dissenter to take CloudFlare to court. In a complaint filed at a California federal court, ALS describes piracy as the greatest threat to its business.

The rise of online piracy has significantly hurt the company’s profits, they argue, noting that “pirate” sites are not the only problem.

“The problems faced by ALS are not limited to the growing presence of sites featuring infringing content, or ‘pirate’ sites. A growing number of service providers are helping pirate sites thrive by supporting and engaging in commerce with these sites,” ALS writes (pdf).

These service providers include hosting companies, CDN providers, but also advertising brokers. The lawsuit at hand zooms in on two of them, CloudFlare and the advertising provider Juicy Ads.

According to the complaint, both companies have failed to cut their ties with alleged pirate sites, even though they received multiple takedown notices.

CloudFlare and Juicy Ads’ terms state that they terminate accounts of repeat infringers. However, according to ALS both prefer to keep these sites on as customers, so they can continue to profit from them.

“Even though the law requires parties to terminate business with repeat infringers, and even though both Juicy Ads and Cloudflare’s own terms
state that they will terminate business with repeat infringers, neither Juicy Ads nor Cloudflare has terminated its business accounts with these chronic direct infringers.

“On information and belief, this is because Juicy Ads and Cloudflare make money by continuing to do commerce with sites that draw traffic through the lure of free infringing content,” the company writes.

The complaint lists Imgchili.net, Slimpics.com, Cumonmy.com, Bestofsexpics.com and Stooorage.com and CloudFlare customers that host copyright infringing material from ALS, and as of today these sites are still using the CDN provider’s services.

Juicy Ads reportedly terminated the accounts of several infringing sites after they learned about the lawsuit, but that doesn’t mean that it can escape liability for its earlier actions.

ALS holds both companies responsible for various counts of copyright and trademark infringement, for which it demands actual and statutory damages. With hundreds of works at stake, theoretical damages can run to dozens of millions of dollars.

Both CloudFlare and Juicy Ads have yet to file a formal response to the allegations.

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

Deals of the Day (8-23-2016)

Deals of the Day (8-23-2016)

The Lenovo IdeaPad Miix 700 is a 2-in-1 Windows tablet with a 12 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for up to 8GB of RAM and up to 256GB of solid state storage.

Lenovo sells the Miix 700 for $750 and up. But Newegg is currently offering models for as low as $500.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-23-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (8-23-2016)

The Lenovo IdeaPad Miix 700 is a 2-in-1 Windows tablet with a 12 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and support for up to 8GB of RAM and up to 256GB of solid state storage.

Lenovo sells the Miix 700 for $750 and up. But Newegg is currently offering models for as low as $500.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-23-2016) at Liliputing.

“THANKYOU”—possibly the dumbest trademark dispute ever—has been dropped

Flap between Citigroup, AT&T was about how the companies said thanks to customers.

(credit: Iain Farrell)

We've seen some pretty strange intellectual property litigation in our day. We can now check off one of the dumbest IP lawsuits we've seen in a while. That's because Citigroup and AT&T resolved a trademark dispute Monday concerning how they each said thanks to their customers.

Banking behemoth Citigroup had trademarked "THANKYOU" and then sued AT&T over how the technology giant thanked its own loyal customers. Citigroup called it trademark infringement, amounting to "unlawful conduct" in a federal lawsuit lodged against AT&T this summer.

A federal judge ruled she wouldn't block (PDF) AT&T from thanking its customers pending a trial. US District Judge Katherine Forrest of New York also ruled that Citigroup likely wouldn't win at a trial. It's essentially a dispute in which AT&T is being accused of creating consumer confusion because it says "THANKYOU" in a manner similar to how Citigroup says "THANKYOU" to its customers.

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Next-gen Amazon Fire tablet may be coming soon (FCC leaks)

Next-gen Amazon Fire tablet may be coming soon (FCC leaks)

It’s been nearly a year since Amazon introduced its first $50 Amazon Fire tablet. Now it looks like there may be a new model on the way.

As AFTV News notes, a new tablet showed up at the FCC website this week, and while the documentation doesn’t use the words “Amazon,” or “Fire,” the listing has all the hallmarks of an unannounced Amazon device… complete with the use of a shell company to make it a little harder for people to find.

Continue reading Next-gen Amazon Fire tablet may be coming soon (FCC leaks) at Liliputing.

Next-gen Amazon Fire tablet may be coming soon (FCC leaks)

It’s been nearly a year since Amazon introduced its first $50 Amazon Fire tablet. Now it looks like there may be a new model on the way.

As AFTV News notes, a new tablet showed up at the FCC website this week, and while the documentation doesn’t use the words “Amazon,” or “Fire,” the listing has all the hallmarks of an unannounced Amazon device… complete with the use of a shell company to make it a little harder for people to find.

Continue reading Next-gen Amazon Fire tablet may be coming soon (FCC leaks) at Liliputing.

Sony leak points to PlayStation Now coming to Windows PC

Site metadata hints at news; follows Amazon France listing for PC controller adapter.

PlayStation Now, Sony's two-year-old game-streaming service, will soon come to Windows PCs, if an incorrect image tag on a Sony blog post is meant to be believed.

Game-news sleuth Wario64 posted the discovery on Tuesday after mousing over an image promoting the upcoming PlayStation VR Worlds game. Upon doing so, a caption for something entirely different popped up: "PS Now on PC Announce Post by PlayStation Europe, on Flickr." Ars confirmed the caption was still live as of press time, though a peek at the blog post's metadata didn't point to any links to such a news post.

The news follows a report from French gaming news site Gamekult earlier in August that suggested PS Now would first be announced for Windows PCs in Europe on August 23, with American users getting a crack one week later. Amazon France may have also let the streaming cat out of the bag on Tuesday by launching a product page for a "DualShock USB adapter for PlayStation 4," which could be used to more easily connect the PS4's DualShock 4 controller to Windows PCs—though thanks to an empty product description, that's only speculation.

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Google begins posting Nexus images for the Android 7.0 Nougat update [Updated]

Google has started posting images for clean installs and upgrade installs.

Enlarge / If you're impatient and your Nexus phone or tablet isn't already downloading Nougat, these files can help you out. (credit: Ron Amadeo)

Google released the final version of Android 7.0 Nougat yesterday after months of public beta testing, and people with supported Nexus phones and tablets should all be able to download it soon. But Google favors a staggered rollout for its updates so it can find and squash early bugs, and it may be several days before your phone or tablet actually offers to download and install the update for you.

Impatient early adopters have a couple of options. You can download full system images that require you to wipe your device when you install them or OTA update files that can patch the operating system in place without data loss (the official OTA option is relatively new, and this is the first time Google has offered these downloads for a major update directly).

Both methods require the use of the command line adb and fastboot tools and a little bit of knowhow, and you can follow the directions on those pages if you would like to give it a try. As of this writing, only the Pixel C, Wi-Fi Nexus 9, and Nexus Player files have been posted, but we'll link all the images below as they post for your convenience. These are coming directly from Google's servers, the same as they would if you were using the pages above.

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Sandscout: Angriff auf Apples Sandkasten

Im Sicherheitsvergleich mit Android schneidet iOS meist besser ab. In einem aktuellen Versuch gelang es Forschern aber, einen erfolgreichen Angriff auf die Sandboxing-Funktion von iOS-Apps durchzuführen. (Apple, iPhone)

Im Sicherheitsvergleich mit Android schneidet iOS meist besser ab. In einem aktuellen Versuch gelang es Forschern aber, einen erfolgreichen Angriff auf die Sandboxing-Funktion von iOS-Apps durchzuführen. (Apple, iPhone)

Google Android 7.0 source and Nexus factory images released

Google Android 7.0 source and Nexus factory images released

Google started rolling out Android 7.0 Nougat to folks with recent Nexus devices yesterday. Now the company has made factory images, OTA images, and binaries available for those devices.

The source code for Android 7.0 is also being uploaded.

In plain English, that means if you’ve got a supported device you can download and install the update without waiting for Google to push it out over the air, and if you’re a developer you can start examining (and modifying) the code for your own purposes.

Continue reading Google Android 7.0 source and Nexus factory images released at Liliputing.

Google Android 7.0 source and Nexus factory images released

Google started rolling out Android 7.0 Nougat to folks with recent Nexus devices yesterday. Now the company has made factory images, OTA images, and binaries available for those devices.

The source code for Android 7.0 is also being uploaded.

In plain English, that means if you’ve got a supported device you can download and install the update without waiting for Google to push it out over the air, and if you’re a developer you can start examining (and modifying) the code for your own purposes.

Continue reading Google Android 7.0 source and Nexus factory images released at Liliputing.

Analogue Nt mini: Neue NES-Famicom-Konsole kostet 450 US-Dollar

Analogue hat mit dem Nt mini eine neue Spielekonsole vorgestellt, die sowohl NES- als auch Famicom-Spiele wiedergeben und mit Original-Zubehör genutzt werden kann. Anders als beim Vorgänger Nt kommen aber nicht mehr die Original-Chips des NES zum Einsatz. (Spielekonsole, Nintendo)

Analogue hat mit dem Nt mini eine neue Spielekonsole vorgestellt, die sowohl NES- als auch Famicom-Spiele wiedergeben und mit Original-Zubehör genutzt werden kann. Anders als beim Vorgänger Nt kommen aber nicht mehr die Original-Chips des NES zum Einsatz. (Spielekonsole, Nintendo)