MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY
- FCC Sued For Ignoring FOIA Request Investigating Fraudulent Net Neutrality Comments
- Ajit Pai’s plan to lower broadband standards is “crazy,” FCC Democrat says: “This is crazy. Lowering standards doesn’t solve our broadband problems.”
- Mission Accomplished: Ajit Pai’s FCC Declares Wireless Competition Issues Fixed: from the ignore-a-problem-and-it-goes-away,-right? dept
- Ajit Pai should be fired, petition says before Senate re-confirmation vote: Senate Democrats plan “very loud” debate on vote to give Pai a new term.
- To save net neutrality rules, senator tries to get Ajit Pai off FCC: Pai accused of ignoring “public interest” but will likely get new term on FCC.
- FCC declares that USA’s wireless competition problem has been solved: Ajit Pai’s FCC says mobile market is competitive, in change from Obama years.
- Joly’s Challenge: Digital Cancon Without New Digital Tax Dollars (Michael Geist)
- How to build an effective digital Cancon strategy on the cheap (Michel Geist)
- Not Just Netflix: Government Asks the CRTC To Conduct a Review of Changing Broadcast Models (Michael Geist)
- Bell Calls for CRTC-Backed Website Blocking System and Complete Criminalization of Copyright in NAFTA (Michael Geist)
- ‘Radical and overreaching’: Bell wants Canadians blocked from piracy websites – Company says a federal agency like the CRTC should create a blacklist of sites
- European Commission Backed Study Confirms Canada Among the Most Expensive for Broadband Internet Access (Michael Geist)
- Mysterious Apocalyptic Message Interrupts TV Broadcasts in California: ‘Violent Times Will Come’
- Report: T-Mobile, Sprint finally figuring out this merger thing – T-Mobile owner would take majority stake; US would be left with 3 big carriers.
- Prepare For An Epic BS Sales Pitch For The Competition-Killing Sprint, T-Mobile Merger
- Verizon backtracks—but only slightly—in plan to kick customers off network: Rural users with no other options can switch plans but can’t get unlimited data.
- Cox starts charging data cap overage fees in California: A new group of Cox customers gets a 1TB data cap and $10 overage fees.
- The Soaring Cost Of Sports Programming Is Simply Not Sustainable
- Global BC (CHAN-DT) re Global News Hour at 6 & Global News at 11 – Abbotsford school stabbing
- CTV Vancouver (CIVT-DT) re CTV News at 6 – Abbotsford school stabbing CBSC Decision 16/17-0554 2017 CBSC 9 September 26, 2017
DIGITAL
- Russian operatives used Facebook ads to exploit divisions over Black Lives Matter and Muslims
- Facebook’s Frankenstein Moment
- Facebook Can Absolutely Control Its Algorithm
- Facebook revamps political-ad rules after discovering Russian ad buys: Shadowy Russian group spent $100,000 on political ads during the 2016 election.
- Mark Zuckerberg Is Still Pissed That We Know About His Army of Handlers
- Shareholders force Zuckerberg to give up plan for non-voting shares: The plan would have further cemented Zuck’s total control over Facebook.
- Facebook will target ads to people based on store visits, offline purchases, calls to businesses: Facebook is using its online-to-offline ad measurement tools for offline-to-online ad targeting.
- Facebook’s Ad Scandal Isn’t a ‘Fail,’ It’s a Feature (Zeynep Tufekci)
- Could public pressure cause Facebook to regulate itself?
- Facebook’s Crackdown Ahead Of German Election Shows It’s Learning
- How Germany’s far right took over Twitter – and tilted the election: A sophisticated and tightly organised troll army has spent the last three months championing a ‘patriotic revolution’. Boosting the AfD’s power is just the start
- Iceland authorities weighing options after neo-Nazi site registers there: The racist site has been at a .is domain for more than a week.
- Reddit’s campaign against hate speech worked: Even when users stuck around, they started watching their words more carefully.
- Jared Kushner conducted White House business with personal e-mail: Kushner lawyer says it was “fewer than a hundred e-mails.”
- Members Of Trump’s Admin Team Using Private Email Accounts Because Of Course They Are
- How One Syrian Fought To The Death For A Free Internet
- Judge spanks Mugshots.com hard for charging for photo removal: Lawsuit claims one arrestee was told it would cost $15k to have profile removed.
- EU Buried Its Own $400,000 Study Showing Unauthorized Downloads Have Almost No Effect On Sales
- EU study finds piracy doesn’t hurt game sales, may actually help: Results suggest a positive effect, but there’s a huge margin of error.
- German Court: Thumbnail Images In Search Engines Not A Copyright Violation
- German Federal Court of Justice rules that GS Media presumption of knowledge does not apply to Google Images
- Twitter testing shift from 140 to 280 characters: Twitter thinks 140 characters might be too constraining for English writers.
- Framing It Another Way: Tweets, Copyright and the De Minimis Doctrine
- Google Pulls YouTube From Amazon Echo: All About Control Or Just More Corporation On Corporation Violence?
- Ninth Circuit Blesses Amazon’s Terms of Service
- British News Channel Touts Amazon Bomb Materials Moral Panic That Ends Up Being About Hobbyists And School Labs
- Eros Beats Investor Suit Over Statements About Streaming Platform: The company touted 30 million users for Eros Now. The judge rules it was never said they were “meaningful” users.
- In my opinion, this is an opinion
- Fordham University Named in Class Action Lawsuit by Blind Individuals, Alleging Fordham.edu Website is Inaccessible
- Contact Lens Seller Agrees To $7 Million Settlement Over Search Ads
- U.S. Floats Nafta Proposal That Could Erode Copyright-Liability Protection: Language in the trade talks could weaken internet companies’ liability protections for pirated content
- NAFTA 2.0 and Intellectual Property Rights: Insights on Developing Canada’s Knowledge Economy
- FTC serves health-app maker massive slice of humble pie—and $1.5M bill: The app was meant to motivate users to go to the gym, eat veggies. It went very wrong.
- FTC clarifies influencer guidelines: Federal Trade Commission warns that platforms’ built-in disclosure methods aren’t sufficient, reviews of products given for free must be marked as ads
- The FTC, Like, Revises Its Social Media Endorsement Guides, Bruh!
- Disney’s New, Influencer-Led Mickey Mouse Club Releases Music Video For First Original Song
- Another Student Athlete Facing Scrutiny From NCAA For Budding YouTube Presence
- Emojis Head to a Courthouse Near You
- Victory for YouTubers as New York District Court rules “reaction video” is fair use
- Fair use is never simple
- Vimeo To Acquire Livestream, Launches ‘Vimeo Live’ Pro Broadcasting Product
- Verizon Reveals The Secrets Of Yahoo Search
- Facebook, NFL Back In Business Again With Programming Partnership
- Canon Virtual Camera System Enables Fans To Watch From Any 3D Angle
- Block The Pirate Bay Within 10 Days, Dutch Court Tells ISPs
- Company CEO Pleads Guilty After Forging Judge’s Signatures On Bogus Court Orders Sent To Google
- More Thoughts On The Senate’s SESTA Hearing
- My Senate Testimony on SESTA + SESTA Hearing Linkwrap (Eric Goldman)
- Google Will Survive SESTA. Your Startup Might Not.
- SESTA Is Being Pushed As The Answer To A Sex Trafficking ‘Epidemic’ That Simply Doesn’t Exist
- New Essay: The Ten Most Important Section 230 Rulings (Eric Goldman)
- Rohingya Ethnic Cleansing (Once Again) Demonstrates Why Demanding Platforms Censor Bad Speech Creates Problems
- London regulator announces Uber ban: Uber has 21 days to appeal the ruling, which could affect 40,000 drivers.
- Uber CEO apologizes for “mistakes” in London: Uber has vowed to appeal a decision banning the company from London.
- Uber really doesn’t want its drivers to be considered employees: O’Connor v. Uber one of 11 cases heard together at 9th Circuit.
- Waymo to judge: We want Uber to pay “only” $1.86 billion: Waymo says big numbers are based on Uber’s own calculations.
- ISIS Launches The Spelling Teacher, A New App For Kids
- Dispute Between Roberto Escobar And Netflix Over ‘Narcos’ Gets Weird: Licensing Talks And A Dead Location Scout
- What Netflix’s Congenial Trademark ‘Threat Letter’ Says About Everyone’s Tolerance For Trademark Bullying
- Why Big Tech Is Clashing With Internet Freedom Advocates
- Mattress Startup Casper Sued a Mattress Review Site, Then Paid for Its Acquisition
- Machine-learning cloud platforms get to work: Analytic platforms as a service (PaaS) could shorten machine-learning learning curve.
- Self-Driving Cars Will Kill People. Who Decides Who Dies?
- When Websites Design Themselves
- Bill Gates Says We Shouldn’t Panic About Artificial Intelligence
- Robots have already taken over our work, but they’re made of flesh and bone: Many jobs in the modern economy have been sapped of their humanity. How should we resist the rise of ‘digital Taylorism’? (Brett Frischmann &Evan Selinger)
- BCSC Grants Bitcoin Investment Fund Manager Registration
- If Bill Gates really thinks ctrl-alt-del was a mistake, he should have fixed it himself: You can’t pin the blame for this one on IBM.
- 4K titles on iTunes can only be streamed, not downloaded: You also can’t stream 4K videos from YouTube either.
- YouTube Revamps Analytics Reports To Help Creators Better Understand Subscription Traffic
- YouTube’s Technology Can Now Spit Out Thousands of Different Video Ads at Once: And target them based on apps that consumers have downloaded
- New French Law Orders Video Services Like YouTube, Netflix To Pay 2% Tax On Local Revenues
- Instagram now has 800 million monthly and 500 million daily active users
- Twitter explains why Trump can use site as venue for violence, hate: Announcement comes as social media is under pressure to remove hate-based accounts.
- Twitter sold enough ads to support all the live video shows it was pitching: Twitter is moving forward with 16 live video shows and features it said it wanted to stream.
- Vice Ramps Up Original French Content With Three New Shows
- Report recommends new legal approaches to online defamation
- Ivanka Trump: Computer science education a new “priority” – “We do have a major diversity problem in the tech industry,” president’s daughter adds.
CREATIVITY
- University Defeats Cyberbullying Lawsuit Related to Yik Yak–Feminist Majority v. UMW (Eric Goldman)
- What the Constitution says Berkeley can do when controversial speakers come knocking: The rules governing the right-wing “Free Speech Week” showdown.
- Italian Supreme Court confirms availability of copyright protection to TV formats
- The Grinch loses and protection of parody wins
- Osaka Court’s Ruling Helps Destroy Tattoos In Japan
- Turkish President Claims Jailed Journalists Are Actually Terrorists: From the wobbles-so-much-you-can’t-even-call-it-‘spin’ dept
- Kim Jong-Un Calling Trump A ‘Dotard’ Gave The Internet A Language Lesson
- Furie-ous creator of Pepe the Frog determined to use copyright to get his green creation back
- Is the alt-right’s use of Pepe the Frog “fair use?”: Is Pepe like Luke Skywalker—or just super-chill frog anyone can use?
- Penguin Random House LLC v. Frederick Colting d/b/a Moppet Books: District court finds that child-focused literary guides infringed copyrights in four famous novels and that literary guides did not qualify as fair use, granting summary judgment in favor of owners and exclusive licensees of copyrights in novels.
- Saudi minister fired after textbook shows Yoda at UN signing ceremony: Begun, the textbook scandal has.
- How The RIAA Helped Pave The Way For Spain To Undermine Democracy
- Appeals Court Limits Ability of Patent Trolls to File Suit in Far-Flung Districts
- Appeals Court Tells Patent Trolls’ Favorite Judge He Can’t Just Ignore The Supreme Court To Keep Patent Cases In Texas
- Instagram rolls out comment-control, puts onus on user to filter trolls
- “Comic-Con” trademark may have to activate superpowers to survive attack – Epic intellectual property battle: San Diego Comic-Con versus Salt Lake Comic Con.
- Challenge on offensive trademarks could bring clarity
- Velcro’s Hilarious Trademark Lesson Video Actually A Good Lesson In Just How Stupid Trademark Law Has Become
- Velcro’s anti-genericide song is big, bold and brash – but critics question whether it will actually be effective
- Scientific Publishers Want Upload Filter To Stop Academics Sharing Their Own Papers Without Permission
- Burger King is Trying to Ban It In Russia For the Most Insane Reason
- The very dirty history of on-demand video technology: In the early 1970s, hotels experimented with new video delivery systems for X-rated movies.
- Netflix Pulls Cartoon Episode After Mom Spots Stealthy NSFW Drawing
- Netflix Sends Cease-and-Desist to “Stranger Things”-Themed Bar
- A Brief History of Hiding Dicks in Cartoons
- Police: Armed Robber Dressed As Coke Bottle – Costumed perp held up eatery manager at Kentucky Rally’s
- Project Jengo Strikes Its First Targets (and Looks for More)
- Copyright’s Framing Problem (Margot Kaminski & Guy Rub)
- Is the First Amendment Obsolete? (Tim Wu)
- Response to Tim Wu’s piece on First Amendment obsolescence (Rebecca Tushnet)
SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY
- Bill C-58’s Order-Making Powers: A Huge Disappointment (Teresa Scassa)
- Justice Department goes nuclear on Google in search warrant fight: Google’s conduct is a “willful and contemptuous disregard of various court orders.”
- Report Details The NSA’s Decade-Long Abuse Of Its Surveillance Powers
- US Homeland Security Will Start Collecting Social Media Info on All Immigrants October 18th
- DHS To Officially Require Immigrants’ Files To Contain Social Media Info
- WhatsApp Reportedly Rejected UK Government Demand For Encryption Backdoor
- UK Man Gets 12-Month Sentence For Refusing To Turn Over Passwords To Police
- Another court tells police: Want to use a stingray? Get a warrant – DC Court of Appeals: Even if you know the police can track you doesn’t mean they should.
- Judge overturns local law that effectively banned drones over small town: Newton, Mass. wanted drone pilots to get permission to fly at or below 400 feet.
- Deloitte Hit By Cyberattack That Compromised Client Information & Decided To Basically Tell Nobody At All
- Deloitte hit by cyber-attack revealing clients’ secret emails: Hackers may have accessed usernames, passwords and personal details of top accountancy firm’s blue-chip clients
- Password-theft 0day imperils users of High Sierra and earlier macOS versions: Rogue apps can exfiltrate all plaintext passwords, no master password required.
- CCleaner Hack May Have Been A State-Sponsored Attack On 18 Major Tech Companies
- CCleaner malware outbreak is much worse than it first appeared: Microsoft, Cisco, and VMWare among those targeted with additional mystery payload.
- CCleaner backdoor infecting millions delivered mystery payload to 40 PCs: Samsung, Asus, Fujitsu, Sony, and Intel among those infected.
- How Malware Keeps Sneaking Past Google Play’s Defenses
- SEC Chairman reveals financial reporting system was hacked: EDGAR system data may have been used for “illicit gain through trading.”
- Man held website hostage for $10,000, failed, redirected it to porn, got busted: After plea deal, DOJ says: “this appears to be a one-time lapse in judgment.”
- All The Ways Equifax Epically Bungled Its Breach Response
- After huge Equifax breach, CEO “retires”: Board is “deeply concerned about and totally focused on the cybersecurity incident.”
- New York Governor Cuomo Directs NYDFS to Make Credit Reporting Agencies Comply with the State’s Cybersecurity Regulation
- NSA-Developed Crypto Technology No Longer Trusted For Use In Global Standards
- More Government Agencies Filing Lawsuits Against Public Records Requesters
- Released Snowden Doc Shows NSA Thwarting Electronic Dead Drops By Using Email Metadata
- Internet Explorer bug leaks whatever you type in the address bar: All your private addresses and search queries are belong to us.
- In a first, Android apps abuse serious “Dirty Cow” bug to backdoor phones: The critical Linux vulnerability is exploited on Android 1 year after coming to light.
- In spectacular fail, Adobe security team posts private PGP key on blog: Since deleted, post gave public and private key for Adobe incident response team.
- Do Tech Companies Really Need All That User Data?
- Cross-Border Data Access Primer
- Don’t Rely On An Unlock Pattern To Secure Your Android Phone
- How Much Do Your Dating Apps Know About You?
- One Tinder user’s data request turned into 800 pages of probing info: Yet another reminder that when a service is free, you are the product.
Jon