News of the Week; February 1, 2017

MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY

  1. Ajit Pai on net neutrality: “I favor an open Internet and I oppose Title II”: New FCC chairman won’t say whether he’ll enforce net neutrality rules.
  2. FCC Chairman Pai takes Wheeler’s set-top box plan off the table: Cable industry was open to compromise, but no Republican plan has been offered.
  3. FCC exempts small ISPs from broadband truth-in-billing rules: Rule requiring disclosure of hidden fees won’t benefit customers of small ISPs.
  4. Pai FCC’s First Commission-Level Vote Targets Rural Broadband Access 
  5. Sen. Franken asks AT&T to prove Time Warner merger is good for customers: AT&T won’t commit to public interest statement as it tries to avoid FCC review.
  6. Eliminating Net Neutrality likely to raise the cost of using the Internet
  7. New York AG Sues Charter For Slow Broadband Speeds, Says Company ‘Ripping Off’ Users With Substandard Service
  8. Republican-led FCC drops court defense of inmate calling rate cap: FCC lawyers no longer authorized to defend intrastate calling caps.
  9. Verizon Eyes Charter Megamerger, Because Who Likes Broadband Competition Anyway?
  10. Comcast will charge extra fee for watching TV on Roku boxes: Xfinity beta app is now on Roku; for now, customers still need a Comcast TV box.
  11. 13 Years Ago at the Last Houston Super Bowl – Janet Jackson’s Impact on FCC Indecency Rules 

DIGITAL

  1. Intellectual Property Owner Awarded Control of Infringer’s Social Media Accounts
  2. Perfect 10, Inc. v. Giganews, Inc.
  3. Facebook Live Is the Right Wing’s New Fox News: How the rough-around-the-edges live-streaming tool became the perfect incubator for conservative news in the Trump age.
  4. The Data That Turned the World Upside Down
  5. Axel Springer CEO: Facebook should not fact check ‘fake news’ — it is not a news organization
  6. Flush with anti-Trump donations, ACLU gets Y Combinator’s mentorship
  7. China’s Response To Study Confirms It Uses ‘Strategic Distraction’ To Prevent Collective Action. Sound Familiar?
  8. Copyright Trolls Overplay Their Hand In Finland, Bringing A Government Microscope To Their Practices
  9. RIP, “Six Strikes” Copyright Alert System: The anti-piracy accord between ISPs and entertainment industry meets its demise.
  10. Ding Dong: Silly Six Strikes Copyright Infringement Scheme Is Dead
  11. Internet Service Providers, Studios and Record Labels Call It Quits on Copyright Alert System
  12. The US ‘Six Strikes’ Anti-Piracy Scheme is Dead: The “six-strikes” Copyright Alert System is no more. In a brief announcement, MPAA, RIAA, and several major US ISPs said that the effort to educate online pirates has stopped. It’s unclear why the parties ended their voluntary agreement, but the lack of progress reports in recent years indicates that it wasn’t as successful as they had hoped
  13. Venezuelan officials arrest four Bitcoin miners on charges of stealing electricity: With the economy in shambles, Bitcoin miners have tried to side-step currency woes.
  14. Monero, the Drug Dealer’s Cryptocurrency of Choice, Is on Fire
  15. Sony missed writing on the wall for DVD sales, takes nearly $1B writedown: Or, in corporate-speak, loss was “mainly driven by an acceleration of market decline.”
  16. Thanks to YouTube, Vevo Nears 100 Million Active Monthly Users
  17. Lawyer for “inventor of e-mail” sends threat letter over social media posts: Shiva Ayyadurai’s attorney, who sued Techdirt, goes after another blogger.
  18. Thousands of College Kids Are Powering a Clickbait Empire: How a 29-year-old built Odyssey, a vast network of college students happy to fuel multi-million dollar marketing campaigns for peanuts.
  19. The internet of toys
  20. Robot knows when to hold ‘em, wins huge in poker tournament: 120,000 hands and a $1.7 million margin of victory later, Carnegie Mellon’s AI wins out.
  21. Click Here to Kill Everyone: With the Internet of Things, we’re building a world-size robot. How are we going to control it? (Bruce Schneier)
  22. The merging of humans and machines is happening now: Her organisation invented the internet. It gave us the self-driving car. And now DARPA’s former boss sees us crossing a new technological boundary
  23. Tech Leaders Are Just Now Getting Serious About the Threats of AI: Apple joins a leading AI ethics group, one of several tech-led initiatives preparing for a highly automated future.
  24. The Gates Foundation Emerges As A Leader In The Fight For Full Open Access And Open Data
  25. Apple will move its entire international iTunes business to Ireland: International HQ will move from one tax haven to another.
  26. Apple sets revenue and iPhone sales records in Q1 of 2017
  27. TV shows go into overdrive on Snapchat
  28. Can One App Revolutionize TV Ratings For The Streaming And Binge-Watching Era?
  29. Causality in machine learning
  30. Canada’s Supreme Court Is Preserving Every Website Mentioned In Its Rulings
  31. What We Buy When We Buy Now (Aaron Perzanowski & Chris Hoofnagle)

CREATIVITY

  1. Fairness Confirmed Again: Federal Court of Appeal Upholds Copyright Board’s Fair Dealing Ruling (Michael Geist)
  2. Supreme Court rejects appeal against B.C. Election Act: Registration rules for political ad sponsors don’t restrict individual political expression, court finds
  3. Back To The Stampede: Court Upholds Forum Selection Clause Requiring Copyright Action To Return to Alberta
  4. Actress in Viral Video Can’t Prevent Video From Being Made Into an Advertisement–Roberts v. Bliss (Eric Goldman)
  5. Ninth Circuit Finds First Amendment Protects Against Right-of-Publicity Claim Involving Film “The Hurt Locker” 
  6. Woman Claims Her Picture is Worth $2 Billion in Right of Publicity Suit
  7. Court of Appeal endorses Data Protection Act as alternative to defamation claim
  8. The Federal Court of Appeal Rules on Access Copyright’s K-12 Tariff
  9. The New Joint DOJ/FTC Antitrust Guidelines for the Licensing of Intellectual Property 
  10. Judge Gorsuch On Copyright And Technology (James Grimmelmann)
  11. Apple sued over singer’s right of publicity in iPhone ad singing: No copyright, but can an artist’s voice sustain a “right of publicity” case?
  12. Mac Repair Company iGeniuses Sends Legal Threats To Unhappy Customers, Demanding $2500 Per Negative Review
  13. Michael Jackson Is Worth More Than Ever, and the IRS Wants Its Cut: Jackson’s star lawyer made a mint for his heirs, so now the government has to be startin’ somethin’.
  14. Germany Finally Dumps Law That Says It’s A Crime To Insult Foreign Leaders
  15. Jose Cuervo Loses Bid To Block Trademark Registration For Il Corvo Wine
  16. The Shattered Mirror, Part One: Fair Dealing Reform Isn’t the Answer for News in the Digital Age (Michael Geist)
  17. How the arts helped kill off the NEA — by trying to play the conservative “economic value” game: Our strategy of ditching “Art for Art’s Sake” in favor of “ArtWorks” hasn’t saved the arts — and it never will
  18. Trump Advisor Pens Almost Totally Clueless Piece About ‘Intellectual Property Theft’
  19. How True Advertising Can Save Journalism From Drowning in a Sea of Content
  20. Strategies for Discerning the Boundaries of Copyright and Patent Protections (Pamela Samuelson)
  21. Freeing Buskers’ Free Speech Rights: Impact of Regulations on Buskers’ Right to Free Speech and Expression (John Jurich)

SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY

  1. Suspecting arson, cops subpoena homeowner’s pacemaker logs, then charge him with multiple felonies
  2. Trump’s Executive Order Eliminates Privacy Act Protections for Foreigners (Michael Geist)
  3. New Trump Executive Order Says Federal Agencies Should Exclude Foreigners From Privacy Protections
  4. President Trump’s Executive Order May Impact the Privacy Shield 
  5. Already Under Attack In Top EU Court, Privacy Shield Framework For Transatlantic Data Flows Further Undermined By Trump
  6. Trump Orders The Cyber To Be Fixed In The Next Sixty Days
  7. Twitter Reveals Two National Security Letters After Gag Orders Lifted; Rightly Complains About Gag Orders
  8. Court Says Location Of FBI’s Utility Pole-Piggybacking Surveillance Cameras Can Remain Secret
  9. Bodycam footage leaks, resisting arrest charges dropped – Girl screams: “I just recorded everything.” Police officer responds: “Me too.”
  10. Appeals court rules that stolen laptops class action against payer can proceed
  11. Live Streaming: The Privacy Concerns of Behind-the-Scenes Access
  12. Site that sold access to 3.1 billion passwords vanishes after reported raid: LeakedSource garnered criticism for actively cracking the passwords it sold.
  13. Majority of Android VPNs can’t be trusted to make users more secure: Study of nearly 300 apps finds shocking omissions, including a failure to encrypt.
  14. St. Louis Cardinals Hacking Scandal: A Real-World Example of the Importance of Password Management 
  15. Amidst Increased Government Surveillance, Chinese Internet Users Finally Gain Important Online Privacy Protections
  16. One More Time With Feeling: ‘Anonymized’ User Data Not Really Anonymous
  17. FTC Report Reinforces the Rules for Cross-Device Tracking
  18. “You took so much time to joke me”—two hours trolling a Windows support scammer: “Albert Morris” and team get taken for a ride while we tried to track their tradecraft.
  19. Blue Lies Matter: BuzzFeed News reviewed 62 incidents of video footage contradicting an officer’s statement in a police report or testimony. From traffic stops to fatal force, these cases reveal how cops are incentivized to lie — and why they get away with it.
  20. In not-too-distant future, brain hackers could steal your deepest secrets: Religious beliefs, political leanings, and medical conditions are up for grabs.

jon