News of the Week; September 13, 2017

MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY

  1.  TV Ad Spend To Remain Flat Through 2021 As Cord-Cutting Surpasses Projections (Report)
  2. More on Media Deregulation – Chairman Pai Speaks to NAB Radio Show and Promises to Propose the Repeal of a Rule Each Month 
  3. Comcast Whines That The Net Neutrality Debate It Keeps Rekindling Is A Lot Like ‘Groundhog Day’
  4. Comcast Continues To Insist Its Sneaky, Misleading Fees Are Just The Company’s Way Of Being ‘Transparent’
  5. Comcast Sues Vermont, Insists Having To Expand Broadband Violates Its First Amendment Rights
  6. Comcast raises sports and TV fees again, says it’s about “transparency”: Charges fees even in areas where Comcast owns local sports networks.
  7. Comcast puts YouTube in its TV boxes to entice would-be cord-cutters: YouTube follows Netflix to a prime spot on Comcast’s X1 set-top boxes. 
  8. Senators Blast The FCC For Weakening The Definition Of Broadband To Try And Hide The Industry’s Lack Of Real Competition
  9. AT&T’s John Stankey hopes to avoid a disconnect in merger with Time Warner
  10. This Sinclair-Tribune merger is a rotten deal for America: What’s to be done about “the most dangerous company most Americans haven’t heard of?”
  11. New analysis suggests Fox News is working, shifting votes to R column: Research relies on Americans being too lazy to keep channel surfing.
  12. Dirty, big secrets: Why won’t CNN and Fox account for their mistakes? 

DIGITAL

  1. Why Has the Government Failed to Act on Copyright Notice-and-Notice When Internal Docs Raise Abuse and Fraud Concerns? (Michael Geist)
  2. RT, Sputnik and Russia’s New Theory of War: How the Kremlin built one of the most powerful information weapons of the 21st century — and why it may be impossible to stop.
  3. The Fake Americans Russia Created to Influence the Election
  4. Russia’s Facebook Fake News Could Have Reached 70 Million Americans: Facebook acknowledged that Russian propagandists spent $100,000 on election ads. It neglected to mention how many millions of people those ads reached.
  5. Russian-made Facebook page invited Americans to protest “upsurge of violence”: Effort to unmask the Kremlin’s propaganda campaign takes a dark turn.
  6. I Bought a Russian Bot Army for Under $100
  7. Facebook May Have More Russian Troll Farms To Worry About
  8. Russia Piracy Blocking: Four Thousand ‘Pirate’ Sites Blocked… Along With Forty Thousand Sites Worth Of Collateral Damage
  9. Kaspersky software banned from US government agencies: Kaspersky: We have “never helped, nor will help, any government with cyberespionage.”
  10. Social influence and political mobilization: Further evidence from a randomized experiment in the 2012 U.S. presidential election (Jason J. Jones, Robert M. Bond, Eytan Bakshy, Dean Eckles & James H. Fowler)
  11. How Facebook Changed the Spy Game: I fought foreign propaganda for the FBI. But the tools we had won’t work anymore.
  12. Facebook Wins, Democracy Loses
  13. Why it’s so hard to trust Facebook
  14. Facebook will ban monetizing on violence and tragedy, even for news and awareness
  15. Facebook Sets Guidelines To Dictate What Types Of Content It Won’t Monetize
  16. The Terrifying Power of Internet Censors
  17. Facebook’s Failed $608 Million Bid For Cricket Rights Sends Strong Signal
  18. Facebook To Spend $1 Billion On Original Content For ‘Watch’ Through 2018 
  19. Make Mark Zuckerberg Testify
  20. Facebook Wins Appeal Over Allegedly Discriminatory Content Removal–Sikhs for Justice v. Facebook (Eric Goldman)
  21. The Fake News Pipeline: How A Small-Time Clickbait Farmer Is Spreading the Gospel of Big Oil
  22. America Is a Cyberpunk Dystopia
  23. Adding a “disputed” label to fake news seems to work, a little. But for some groups, it actually backfires: Labeling only some fake news stories as fake can make some people more likely to believe other fake news that aren’t labeled.
  24. China’s Social-Media Smoke Screen
  25. 1st Amendment wins in self-proclaimed e-mail inventor’s Techdirt libel suit: The truth, whatever that may be, is the best defense to defamation.
  26. Texas AG’s office accuses ‘reputation management company’ of procuring fraudulent libel takedown lawsuits
  27. Texas Attorney General Issues Complaint Against Reputation Management Company For Bogus Lawsuits
  28. Blacklock’s Loses Appeal of Justice Barnes’ Costs Order: Dismissed from the Bench
  29. Patent Trolls’ Favorite Judge Comes Up With Test To Keep Patent Cases In East Texas, No Matter What SCOTUS Said
  30. The Latest Scam To Protect Sketchy Patents From Patent Office Review: Sell To Native Americans
  31. YouTube stream-ripping site for the masses dead in wake of RIAA suit: Youtube-mp3.org facilitated 40% of illegal stream-ripping from YouTube globally.
  32. Digital Network Collab Launches New Rights Management Tool
  33. Facebook Testing ‘Instant Videos’ Feature That Enables Offline Viewing
  34. The no-sports streaming bundle is coming soon from Viacom, Discovery, and others: The entertainment-focused service could cost less than $20 per month.
  35. Verizon customers can sue ad company over “zombie” cookies, judges rule: Judges say ad company can’t use Verizon’s arbitration clause to avoid lawsuit.
  36. Uber is apparently facing a third federal criminal investigation: Uber allegedly created fake Lyft accounts to gather data on drivers and prices.
  37. The first man at trial over a “gig economy” job got dismantled on cross-examination
  38. Amazon’s 1-Click Patent Is About To Expire. What’s The Big Deal?
  39. Canadian cities jump at chance to play host to massive Amazon HQ
  40. Amazon’s New Headquarters Should Be in Hell
  41. White Supremacist Threatens to Sue News Outlet Over Photoshopped Gun (That He Tweeted a Month Earlier)
  42. PewDiePie Draws More Ire By Using N-Word During Live Stream
  43. PewDiePie Uses Racial Slur In Livestream, Game Dev Says He’s “Worse Than A Closeted Racist”: The super-popular streamer has found himself in hot water, again.
  44. PewDiePie Is Inexcusable but DMCA Takedowns Are Not the Way to Fight Him
  45. PewDiePie racial slur sparks backlash from Campo Santo, Simogo: Prominent YouTube streamers brace for fallout from “liability” PewDiePie’s actions
  46. Why was it so easy to weaponize copyright against PewDiePie?
  47. Let’s Play Copyright Threat Raises Questions About The Law And How To Use It
  48. Campo Santo legally able to file DMCA against PewDiePie over racial slur: But court costs to enforce could be “well over six figures” so dangerous defence for indies and smaller studios
  49. Here’s what the law says about PewDiePie’s fight with Campo Santo: Game company wants to take down YouTube star’s livestreams after n-word incident.
  50. As PewDiePie Offers Apology For Racial Slur, YouTube’s ‘Let’s Play’ Gamers Worry About Financial Fallout
  51. Ted Cruz Liked a Porn Tweet and I Can’t Even Decide Which Joke to Say 
  52. Cruz blames ‘staffing issue’ for porn video ‘liked’ on his Twitter account
  53. No “Contract By Tweet” for Plaintiff Who Pitches Movie Idea via Social Media (Eric Goldman)
  54. Congress Is About To Eviscerate Its Greatest Online Free Speech Achievement (Eric Goldman)
  55. Why Has the Government Failed to Act on Copyright Notice-and-Notice When Internal Docs Raise Abuse and Fraud Concerns?
  56. LinkedIn’s efforts to stop the bots
  57. Bitcoin investors could lose all their money, FCA warns: UK financial watchdog spells out risk for those participating in initial coin offerings using cryptocurrencie
  58. CSA Staff Narrow the Path for Cryptocurrency Offerings
  59. A Debate about Google and Its Critics: Recent allegations stoke growing ‘antitrust sentiment’ about Google.
  60. Can You Get Addicted to Trolling?: It’s becoming increasingly evident that, for some people, trolling isn’t just playing an a—-le on the internet.
  61. News Use Across Social Media Platforms 2017 (Pew Research Center)
  62. A tech critic on the sham populism of Silicon Valley: Ex-New Republic editor Franklin Foer on the expansive power of big tech.
  63. There’s Blood In The Water In Silicon Valley: The bad new politics of big tech.
  64. Conservatives, liberals unite against Silicon Valley: The fading of the tech industry’s bipartisan glow in Washington puts it at risk for tighter regulations.
  65. Tech Is Public Enemy #1. So Now What?: If tech wants to reverse the crushing tide of negative public opinion, it must start creating public good commensurate with its extraction of private profit.
  66. Teen Girls With Smartphones Flirt Most With Depression and Suicide: A spike in the teen suicide rate parallels almost exactly the rise of smartphone use, especially among teen girls, who are the most vulnerable to cyberbullying and alienation.
  67. Searching For Help: She turned to Google for help getting sober. Then she had to escape a nightmare.
  68. Terms Of Service Aren’t Just Annoying—They’re A Failure
  69. Phones Are Changing How People Shoot And Watch Video
  70. Attacked by Rotten Tomatoes
  71. Hollywood’s Movies Suck, and It Doesn’t Want You to Know
  72. Lawyer who sued Gawker and Techdirt has a new target: Jezebel – “Whatever he says, goes,” former Superstar Machine member “Poppy” told Jezebel.
  73. AG Szpunar advises CJEU on cloud-based recording and private copying exception
  74. iPhone X: Software leak appears to confirm name, features, and specs – Meanwhile, iPhone 8 is an updated iPhone 7 with a glass back, and wireless charging.
  75. The Biggest IPhone Leak Yet Won’t Bruise Apple
  76. How Apple Finally Made Siri Sound More Human
  77. Apple, Facebook And Disney To Shake Up Video Streaming With Original Content
  78. Apple strikes deal with Warner Music, looks to pay labels lower rates: More paid subscribers means less money directly out of Apple’s pocket.
  79. Should Spotify Try to Become the ‘Netflix Of Music’? Not So Fast
  80. Disney To Move Marvel, ‘Star Wars’ Films From Netflix To Its Own Streaming Service
  81. Disney is pulling Star Wars and Marvel films from Netflix: In 2019, you’ll have to subscribe to Disney’s service to stream these movies.
  82. H3h3productions Raises Over $100,000 With Twitch Live Stream To Support Hurricane Harvey Relief
  83. Artificial Intelligence’s Fair Use Crisis (Benjamin L. W. Sobel)
  84. For Superpowers, Artificial Intelligence Fuels New Global Arms Race
  85. Putin says the nation that leads in AI ‘will be the ruler of the world’: The Russian president warned that artificial intelligence offers ‘colossal opportunities’ as well as dangers
  86. Elon Musk: Competition for AI Superiority at National Level Will Be the “Most Likely Cause of WW3”
  87. Following Elon Musk Letter, UK Government Plans to Ban Fully Autonomous Weapons
  88. Elon Musk auto-magically extended the battery life of Teslas in Florida to help drivers evacuate
  89. MIT, IBM team up on $240 million effort to rule the AI world: The open-ended research will explore consumer tech, health, and security applications
  90. Apple’s ‘Neural Engine’ Infuses The Iphone With AI Smarts
  91. Brain-Machine Interface Isn’t Sci-Fi Anymore
  92. How Seoul Is Reinventing Itself As A Techno-Utopia
  93. Every NFL Football Will Have A Data Tracking Chip This Season
  94. Are Your Jokes Always Bombing? This App Crowdsources Them
  95. It Took A Natural Disaster For Me To Understand Snap Map
  96. The Music Industry Bands Together To Finally Get Paid Online
  97. Inside Juicero’s Demise, From Prized Startup to Fire Sale: The shuttering of the much-ridiculed Silicon Valley startup was the culmination of unsustainable costs, slow sales and unflattering media reports.
  98. Before trying robot judges, let’s learn from robot referees: Automated rulings in sports can help inform the development of criminal justice tech.
  99. How Indian Smartphone Makers Lost the War Against Chinese Companies
  100. In Irma prep, GasBuddy downloads increased 10x, nuclear reactors stayed online
  101. Tesla remotely extends the range of some cars to help with Irma: An over-the-air software update temporarily unlocks spare battery capacity.
  102. Hurricane Irma took 7 million cable and wireline subscribers offline: Comcast, AT&T, other ISPs try to get customers online as power outages persist.
  103. How Silicon Valley is erasing your individuality
  104. Whose record is it anyway? Musical ‘crate digging’ across Africa
  105. Are nonprofit news sites just creating more content for elites who already read a lot of news?
  106. Internet Archaeology
  107. The History Of The Music Industry’s First-Ever Digital Single, 20 Years After Its Release 

CREATIVITY 

  1.  Judge throws out 57-year-old copyright on “We Shall Overcome”: Pete Seeger asked for his name to be removed from the copyright in 1994.
  2. Monkey selfie case settles out of court 
  3. Lawsuit settled over rights to monkey’s selfie photo
  4. PETA drops lawsuit arguing animals have right to own property: Naruto can beat his chest: Monkey’s habitat wins 25% stake in the selfies.
  5. Monkey Selfie Case Reaches Settlement — But The Parties Want To Delete Ruling Saying Monkeys Can’t Hold Copyright
  6. 9th Circuit’s VidAngel decision vindicates lawful video filtering service
  7. Federal Court Says Utah Theater Can Serve Up Beer And R-Rated Movies Simultaneously
  8. Another Craft Beer Brand Gets Bullied To Death Over Shaky Trademark Claims
  9. Why Is This Peppa Pig Cartoon Banned In Australia?
  10. Can a tattoo on human flesh be copyrighted? We’ll soon find out: Is the human body a protectable medium of expression for purposes of copyright?
  11. Is Moviegoing Dead? Lessons Learned From The Worst Summer At The B.O. In Over A Decade
  12. America’s local newspapers might be broke – but they’re more vital than ever: Local journalism is doing great work across the country while fighting cutbacks and tight budgets.
  13. Intellectual Property and Architecture
  14. Boats Are Art; Is Fashion?
  15. Who Cares Whether Cake-Baking Is “Expressive”? The Doctrinal Costs of Focusing on Private Burdens Rather Than Governmental Purpose
  16. UGC Uncertainty Consternation Continues 
  17. Pop Stars or Porn Stars? ‘Blurred Lines’ Book Examines Music’s Role In Sexual Assault on Campus
  18. Dr. Phil Misuses Copyright In A False Imprisonment Claim
  19. Police Chief Says He’ll Decide Who Is Or Isn’t A Real Journalist
  20. Effectively Regulating E-Cigarettes and Their Advertising—and the First Amendment (Eric Lindblom)
  21. How Don Hewitt Invented 60 Minutes And Changed Journalism Forever
  22. Why the Fall TV Season is Like Your Junk Drawer
  23. Nicolas Cage Believes His Scrapped Superman Movie Is Better Than Man of Steel, Because It Exists Only in Our Minds
  24. Imagination is ancient: Our imaginative life today has access to the pre-linguistic, ancestral mind: rich in imagery, emotions and associations

SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY

  1. Judge won’t release man jailed 2 years for refusing to decrypt drives: Kid-porn suspect to remain jailed pending 5th Amendment appeal to Supreme Court.
  2. Remember the artist whose iPhone was searched at border? He’s suing the feds: “The border doctrine does not say that the Constitution doesn’t exist at the border.”
  3. MA SJC Ruling on Bail Instructive Re: Algorithms and Criminal Justice
  4. NSA Broke The Encryption On File-Sharing Apps KAZAA And EDONKEY
  5. What you should know about privacy and Apple’s FaceID on iOS 11: Your rights may differ if phone is locked via biometrics compared to a passcode.
  6. New AI can guess whether you’re gay or straight from a photograph: An algorithm deduced the sexuality of people on a dating site with up to 91% accuracy, raising tricky ethical questions
  7. So, Equifax says your data was hacked—now what?: 143 million now face identity theft threat, so here’s what to do if you’re one of them.
  8. Why the Equifax breach is very possibly the worst leak of personal info ever: Consumers’ most sensitive data is now in the open and will remain so for years to come.
  9. Equifax Breach Response Turns Dumpster Fire
  10. Equifax Security Breach Is A Complete Disaster… And Will Almost Certainly Get Worse
  11. Why Some Are Recommending ‘Credit Freezes’ in the Wake of the Gigantic Equifax Data Breach
  12. Are you an Equifax breach victim? You could give up right to sue to find out: Visiting Equifax site to see if you’re a victim can require you to waive lawsuit rights.
  13. Failure to patch two-month-old bug led to massive Equifax breach: Critical Apache Struts bug was fixed in March. In May, it bit ~143 million US consumers.
  14. Don’t waste your breath complaining to Equifax about data breach (Bruce Schneier)
  15. Apple’s IOS 11 Will Make It Even Harder For Cops To Extract Your Data
  16. It’s about to get tougher for cops, border agents to get at your iPhone’s data
  17. The DNC’s Technology Chief Is Phishing His Staff. Good.
  18. Mandatory Data Breach Reporting One Step Closer with Publication of Proposed Regulations

Jon