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Showing posts with label wants. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wants. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

MPAA Wants Regulators To Force ISPs To Block Sites 'At The Border'


by Tim Cushing

When SOPA died its inglorious death, the MPAA's best shot at ISP-level site blocking died with it. But the MPAA is nothing if not stubborn and is still willing to wreak havoc on the internet in exchange for a slight dip in infringement.

According to a leaked document from the MPAA's law firm [pdf link] and two public filings in support of the International Trade Commission (sent over by Charles Duan of Public Knowledge), the movie industry is hoping to use the agency's new willingness to regulate digital transmissions like physical goods as a foundation for site blocking.

As we've discussed for years, the ITC has been an active player in helping US patent holders go after those they believe are infringing. Generally, this has taken the form of blocking imports of infringing physical goods -- that the ITC deems as infringing (using different rules than the US court system). This has often allowed patent holders two separate bites at the apple -- one in the courts, and one at the ITC. But a recent case saw the ITC shift its focus -- and its purview -- in response to some circuitous patent infringement. Russell Brandon at the Verge details the case that has led to the MPAA's next attempt at site blocking.

The heart of the case is a company called ClearCorrect, which 3D prints clear plastic braces custom-designed for each patient's teeth. Much of the technology involved in the process is already under patent, but ClearCorrect has gotten around those patents by farming out its intricate computer modeling to an office in Pakistan. That modeling violates a number of US patents ? and if ClearCorrect were shipping back the resulting braces in a box, it would be a simple case: the goods would be contraband, to be stopped at the border. But instead, ClearCorrect is only transmitting digital models from Pakistan and printing out the braces in local offices in Texas. The only thing coming in from Pakistan is raw modeling data. So what's a trade commission to do?
In October of 2014, the trade commission -- blowing past legal precedent and established statutory limits -- granted itself the power to treat the incoming digital models as physical goods? and stop them at the border.
In the sweeping and unprecedented decision below, the International Trade Commission found that its authority to regulate trade extends to pure "electronic transmission of digital data" untied to any physical medium. Generally, by statute, the Commission's jurisdiction is limited to oversight of "importation . . . of articles." However, the Commission expansively construed the term "articles" to potentially include anything "bought and sold in commerce," thereby leading to its conclusion that digital data was an article of importation.
The MPAA, which has entered comments in favor of the ITC's self-granted power expansion, wants to use the agency's power over digital imports to block websites at the ISP level. The leaked Jenner & Block memo confirms this. The MPAA's lawyers don't consider it a slam dunk but they are cautiously hopeful that the ITC's land grab will pay off.
As discussed in the 2012 ITC Memo, seeking a site-blocking order in the ITC would appear to offer a number of advantages over federal court litigation, at least at first blush. This now seems even more so given the ITC?s recent decision (albeit now on appeal) holding that electronic transmissions are ?articles? within the meaning of Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930, 19 U.S.C. ? 1337. As also discussed in the 2012 ITC Memo, however, such an action would still involve several difficult questions of first impression, making the prospect of success in that forum uncertain.
While the ITC's new aim -- stopping infringing digital files at the "border" -- would seem to be the ideal starting point, the memo points out that many technical limitations make this approach less than feasible. The "transit" ISPs -- those that "ship in" data from other countries -- can be handled more easily by other court orders than by ITC regulation. The ITC's purview only covers inbound traffic, and technical limitations make this a weaker approach. For one, the lack of information on incoming packets means the blocks would only affect IP addresses. If a "pirate site" shares an IP address with another site, the block won't work. And IP addresses could easily be shared to circumvent blocking at transit ISP level.

The memo also notes that the internet is designed to flow around obstructions. Applying blocks at the transit level would simply shift infringing loads to other pathways, nullifying the blocks altogether.

The law firm then addresses blocking outbound traffic to infringing sites at the ISP level. This would ignore the inbound traffic of "transit" ISPs and demand action be taken by US ISPs.

Even though site blocking by transit ISPs may be impractical in most (and likely all) cases, it may still be possible for the ITC to issue orders to the consumer-facing network access ISPs requiring them to cease and desist from providing their subscribers with access to the pirate site. To do so, however, the ITC would first have to find that the network access ISPs, by providing their subscribers with access to the pirate site, have themselves violated Section 337.
That's the sales pitch for ISP-level site blocking. It somewhat ignores the new powers of the ITC and instead relies on convincing the agency that access to "pirate sites" -- even as a "dumb pipe" -- is a violation of Section 337. Definitions will need to be stretched and ISPs that allow their customers to roam the web freely will need to be painted as contributors to infringing activity.
Because it is the transit ISPs and not the network access ISPs that actually carry the infringing data across the border, we would need to persuade the ITC that the network access ISPs? conduct is also tantamount to ?importation into the United States? of copyright-infringing articles... For this reason, we may be able to develop a case that the network access ISPs, by virtue of the integral role that they play in the process of accessing and delivering infringing content from the foreign site to the end user, should be treated as an importer for purposes of Section 337.
If that doesn't work, the next argument is to portray the ISPs as involved in the sale of counterfeit goods.
Even if we cannot persuade the ITC that network access ISPs are ?importers? of the infringing articles, it can plausibly be argued that the network access ISPs are engaged in a post-importation ?sale? of the infringing articles to their end-user subscribers, in violation of Section 337. See 19 U.S.C. ?1337(a)(1)(B) (providing that ?sale after importation into the United States? is an unlawful act). The difficult question presented here is whether an ISP, by providing network access in exchange for its subscribers? payment, can be found to have engaged in the ?sale? of the infringing articles as that term is used in Section 337.
The arguments don't get any less ridiculous. There's a pitch for ISPs to have participated in "unfair acts" by "forcing" (read: allowed customers to access sites the MPAA doesn't like) the motion picture industry to "compete" against infringing copies of its own works. There's even a small paragraph that pushes the notion of contributory infringement, although the law firm notes that this would be the longest shot of all. The likeliest approach appears to be the use of the ITC's power to obtain cease-and-desist orders against ISPs, forbidding them from allowing access to "pirate" sites.

Public Knowledge's brief [pdf link] in opposition to the ITC's pending power shift points out that even though the statute itself is old (Tariff Act of 1930), its authors directly contemplated the difference between physical and more ethereal goods -- and made it clear that the two shouldn't be treated identically.

Evidence from the early 1900s indicates that Congress and others would have cleanly distinguished importation and telecommunication, vesting authority over each in distinct agencies. Treating the Commission as having authority over telecommunications data, then, conflicts with this distinction. To the extent that the Commission?s interpretation of ?digital data? as an imported article encompasses such telecommunications data, this Court should reject that erroneous interpretation of the Commission?s purview.

[...]

There is substantial evidence that, around 1930, data transmissions were generally understood to be distinct from articles of commerce and international trade. This understanding influenced Congress, as reflected in its creation of separate and distinct agencies to oversee trade and telecommunications.

The distinction was highlighted by the Supreme Court as early as 1887, in considering one specific type of telecommunications data, namely telegrams:

Other commerce deals only with persons, or with visible and tangible things. But the telegraph transports nothing visible and tangible; it carries only ideas, wishes, orders, and intelligence. Other commerce requires the constant attention and supervision of the carrier for the safety of the persons and property carried. The message of the telegraph passes at once beyond the control of the sender, and reaches the office to which it is sent instantaneously. It is plain, from these essentially different characteristics, that the regulations suitable for one of these kinds of commerce would be entirely inapplicable to the other.

The brief also points out that, while the ITC is correct in noting that internet transmissions couldn't possibly have been envisioned during the crafting of the 1930 Tariff Act, similar "articles" like telecommunications and radio signals had already been discussed by Congress, and each time, these were not allowed to fall under the same regulatory agency.

Putting the ITC in charge of digital transmissions will turn ISPs into ad hoc customs agents who need to inspect incoming packets and outgoing requests. Cloud services would also be negatively affected, as load balancing would need to be rebuilt from the ground up in order to accommodate the legal concerns now inherent in every transmission. The DMCA safe harbor would no longer exist, forcing ISPs to stay one step ahead of IP holders, building in anticipatory takedown response systems and choke points. The MPAA still wants site blocks and is still willing to break the internet to get them. Even the cautiousness displayed in the legal memo still glosses over the severe disruptions this use of the ITC's new powers will cause.

The good news? The ITC's "digital = physical" shift isn't in effect yet. The case prompting this shift is still under appeal and no decision is expected until late 2015. Chances are, this decision will be appealed as well, likely landing it in front of the Supreme Court sometime in the next few years. The MPAA can't move on its arguments until this is all decided. But it's ready to move as soon as it can, and this isn't its only plan of attack.

Use of the ITC to Block Foreign Pirate Websites (PDF)


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Thursday, May 30, 2013

DOJ Wants To Be Able To Fine Tech Companies Who Don't Let It Wiretap Your Communications


by Mike Masnick

We've talked a lot about how the Justice Department (DOJ), mainly via the FBI, has been pushing for years to change the laws in order to require tech companies to build wiretapping backdoors into any and every form of communication online. As we've explained over and over again, this is a really silly proposal, that won't make us any safer. Instead, it's likely to make us a lot less secure, because those backdoors will be abused, not just by law enforcement, but by those with malicious intent who will work hard to find the backdoors and make use of them.

The latest proposal on this front is equally ridiculous. While it wouldn't dictate specific wiretapping/backdoor standards, it would require that companies make some sort of backdoor available or face rapidly escalating fines.

Under the draft proposal, a court could levy a series of escalating fines, starting at tens of thousands of dollars, on firms that fail to comply with wiretap orders, according to persons who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. A company that does not comply with an order within a certain period would face an automatic judicial inquiry, which could lead to fines. After 90 days, fines that remain unpaid would double daily.
This would be a disaster for innovative companies and for public security and privacy as well. The DOJ really needs to learn that not everything must be tappable. As it stands now, if I just sit on a park bench talking to someone, the DOJ can't tap it. Sometimes law enforcement doesn't get the right to hear everything I have to say. That's the nature of freedom and privacy protection that we're supposed to believe in. I'm sure with the news that chat apps are now more popular than SMS worldwide, law enforcement folks think that they need to "do something" to make sure they can spy on those conversations, but that's not true. Yes, it may make their job harder at times, but in a free country, the focus should be on protecting the freedom of the people, not decimating it to make the job of law enforcement easier. Those who commit crimes leave other clues beyond their communications online. Tapping such communications will lead to a massive security risk and huge expense for many innovative companies (likely slowing down the pace of innovation in that space). Is that worth it just so the DOJ can spy on what you have to say? That seems doubtful.

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Monday, March 26, 2012

The CIA wants to spy on you through your TV: Agency director says net-connected gadgets will 'transform' surveillance

By Rob Waugh

When people download a film from Netflix to a flatscreen, or turn on web radio, they could be alerting unwanted watchers to exactly what they are doing and where they are.

Spies will no longer have to plant bugs in your home - the rise of 'connected' gadgets controlled by apps will mean that people 'bug' their own homes, says CIA director David Petraeus.

The CIA claims it will be able to 'read' these devices via the internet - and perhaps even via radio waves from outside the home.

Everything from remote controls to clock radios can now be controlled via apps - and chip company ARM recently unveiled low-powered, cheaper chips which will be used in everything from fridges and ovens to doorbells.

The resultant chorus of 'connected' gadgets will be able to be read like a book - and even remote-controlled, according to CIA Director David Petraeus, according to a recent report by Wired's 'Danger Room' blog.

Petraeus says that web-connected gadgets will 'transform' the art of spying - allowing spies to monitor people automatically without planting bugs, breaking and entering or even donning a tuxedo to infiltrate a dinner party.

Read More


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Cool, now they can watch me wander around the house in my underwear, with my dennis hanging out. The great thing about the New World Order is that it allows us to feel like we're all so important as to be worthy of being watched, 24/7. I feel like a God because of this.

Now, who wants to watch my dang-a-lang do the super scoop loopie? Get a good LOOK now ;-)

I do that same way to keep the ghosts away. Nothing want to see me burping my worm in a tank top. Works every time!!!!! Don't worry, once the common graves are ready they won't be watching us anymore. By the way: why do they see us as a threat?

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"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened..." - Winston Churchill


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Friday, March 23, 2012

Rick Santorum wants to ban hard-core pornography

By Dylan Stableford | The Ticket

Rick Santorum wants to put an end to the distribution of pornography in the United States.

"America is suffering a pandemic of harm from pornography," Santorum's official website reads. "Pornography is toxic to marriages and relationships. It contributes to misogyny and violence against women. It is a contributing factor to prostitution and sex trafficking."

The former Pennsylvania senator states that, "as a parent, I am concerned about the widespread distribution of illegal obscene pornography and its profound effects on our culture."

Santorum criticized the Obama administration for turning "a blind eye ... to the scourge of pornography" and for refusing to enforce obscenity laws.

"If elected President, I will appoint an Attorney General who will do so," Santorum writes. "While the Obama Department of Justice seems to favor pornographers over children and families, that will change under a Santorum Administration."

Read More


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It's always the deprived ones that jump on the bandwagon first. Somebody, please, fuck Rick Santorum's brains out already. He's way overdue. And who owns the porno industry? Walt Disney! and who owns Walt Disney? the zionist Santorum bows down to......Do you believe in any politician? how long and how bad is it going to take before you stop this bastards that have stolen your country. Big Lobbies and big corporations are destroying your society. The media and enterteiment corporations have destroy your morals and all you see as entertaiment is pornography, war, destruction and horror.
They are poisoning your food and robbing you at the doctors with their prescriptions that don't work. they want you dead. It's not just Rick Santorum. You know the U.S. government would ban all porn if they thought they could get away with it.

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"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened..." - Winston Churchill


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Saturday, February 25, 2012

Justice Department Wants $5 Million To Bolster Its Efforts As Hollywood's Private Police Force

by Mike Masnick

While the proposed Obama 2013 budget for the federal government is supposed to be about cutting extraneous expenditures, one area where it's seeking more money is to expand the Justice Department's copyright enforcement efforts. You see, this is what happens when you hand the Justice Department over to the RIAA and MPAA. DOJ is seeking an extra $5 million to focus on these kinds of efforts, to hire 14 new employees, including nine lawyers, claiming that it's "had an increase in the number of cases that we're dealing with in IP." Oh really? You mean like the case of Dajaz1? The site that the DOJ illegally held and censored for over a year? Perhaps if they had a few more lawyers on staff, someone would have taken the time to realize that they were supposed to give the domain back within a specified time frame. Or perhaps they could have used those people to realize that the site was posting music sent by the copyright holders. Of course, that's not what would happen. Instead, they'd just focus on seizing more sites and creating more collateral damage. The real question, of course, should be why are we allowing the government to be Hollywood's private police force?

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This site contains copyrighted material the use of which in some cases has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Such material is made available for the purposes of news reporting, education, research, comment, and criticism, which constitutes a 'fair use' of such copyrighted material in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. It is our policy to respond to notices of alleged infringement that comply with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (found at the U.S. Copyright Office) and other applicable intellectual property laws. It is our policy to remove material from public view that we believe in good faith to be copyrighted material that has been illegally copied and distributed by any of our members or users.
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"Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing ever happened..." - Winston Churchill


View the original article here

Monday, February 6, 2012

USA in financial meltdown -- but Israel still wants more money

US government cannot pay its debts, but Israel is asking for more cash as usual

Stocks lower as anxiety grows over looming threat of U.S. debt default

SOURCE

Stocks lower as anxiety grows over looming threat of U.S. debt default (2011)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/markets/article-2019235/FTSE-PREVIEW-U-S-debt-ceiling-standoff-hits-stocks.html

FURTHER READING

Israel wants 20 Billion more (2011)
http://www.businessinsider.com/ehud-barak-20-billion-defense-2011-3

US regime promises Israel THIRTY BILLION DOLLARS from American tax-payers -- a 25% increase! (2007)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=2571

Israel asks America for $12 billion dollars more (2003)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=247

Israel wants $450 million extra from US for new Nazi-style checkpoints (2005)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=0787

US taxes pay $700 million more aid to Israel than to all Africa (2002)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=22

Israel secretly sells American nuclear weapons to China (2004)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=776

Israel caught spying on America again (2004)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=566

*** HACKING NOTICE ***

This article was restored from backup after being hacked -- within a week of us naming and shaming Google as a company which actively provides free hosting for a major hacking network:

http://twitter.com/theinsider_org/status/106344598795845632

It was a lame automated brute force attack, but very inconvenient for people working hard to produce this website -- and what makes this especially stupid is that this website clearly agrees with most of what the hackers in question are saying.

It's lame to attack a website for making a stand. It's beyond lame to do so when the hackers are blindly deleting articles that actually agree with most of what the hackers themselves are saying in their own activism literature.

Err, take a closer look my friends, you attacked a website that supports your cause. Doh! That doesn't mean we can't be critical, too. We say it how it is. That's no grounds for a cyber attack.

"The Insider" mailing list article, 29 July 2011.


View the original article here

Saturday, August 27, 2011

USA in financial meltdown -- but Israel still wants more money

US government cannot pay its debts, but Israel is asking for more cash as usual

Stocks lower as anxiety grows over looming threat of U.S. debt default

SOURCE

Stocks lower as anxiety grows over looming threat of U.S. debt default (2011)
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/markets/article-2019235/FTSE-PREVIEW-U-S-debt-ceiling-standoff-hits-stocks.html

FURTHER READING

Israel wants 20 Billion more (2011)
http://www.businessinsider.com/ehud-barak-20-billion-defense-2011-3

US regime promises Israel THIRTY BILLION DOLLARS from American tax-payers -- a 25% increase! (2007)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=2571

Israel asks America for $12 billion dollars more (2003)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=247

Israel wants $450 million extra from US for new Nazi-style checkpoints (2005)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=0787

US taxes pay $700 million more aid to Israel than to all Africa (2002)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=22

Israel secretly sells American nuclear weapons to China (2004)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=776

Israel caught spying on America again (2004)
http://www.theinsider.org/news/article.asp?id=566

*** HACKING NOTICE ***

This article was restored from backup after being hacked -- within a week of us naming and shaming Google as a company which actively provides free hosting for a major hacking network:

http://twitter.com/theinsider_org/status/106344598795845632

It was a lame automated brute force attack, but very inconvenient for people working hard to produce this website -- and what makes this especially stupid is that this website clearly agrees with most of what the hackers in question are saying.

It's lame to attack a website for making a stand. It's beyond lame to do so when the hackers are blindly deleting articles that actually agree with most of what the hackers themselves are saying in their own activism literature.

Err, take a closer look my friends, you attacked a website that supports your cause. Doh! That doesn't mean we can't be critical, too. We say it how it is. That's no grounds for a cyber attack.

"The Insider" mailing list article, 29 July 2011.


View the original article here