News of the Week; May 17, 2017

MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY

  1. Internet, TV providers focus on new video packages as 1 million Canadians watch unlicensed content on Android boxes
  2. FCC Temporarily Stops Taking Net Neutrality Comments So FCC Can ‘Reflect’
  3. The FCC Spent Last Week Trying To Make Net Neutrality Supporters Seem Unreasonable, Racist & Unhinged
  4. Flooded with thoughtful net neutrality comments, FCC highlights “mean tweets”: Facing extensive net neutrality support, FCC is ready to gut open Internet rules.
  5. Ajit Pai accidentally supports utility rules and open-access networks: Pai praises Clinton, whose FCC enforced open networks and boosted competition.
  6. Title II hasn’t hurt network investment, according to the ISPs themselves: ISPs continue to invest and tell investors that net neutrality hasn’t hurt them.
  7. Cable lobby conducts survey, finds that Americans want net neutrality
  8. Cable Industry’s Own Survey Shows Majority Support Net Neutrality Rules
  9. It’s Time For The FCC To Actually Listen: The Vast Majority Of FCC Commenters Support Net Neutrality
  10. Cisco And Oracle Applaud The Looming Death Of Net Neutrality
  11. Sprint sues government over elimination of broadband price caps: Business Internet price caps were removed by FCC despite lack of competition.
  12. Verizon outbids AT&T for nationwide “5G” spectrum: Verizon to buy Straight Path and its millimeter-wave spectrum for $3.1 billion.
  13. PSA Leads to Threatened Criminal Investigation for Arizona Radio Station
  14. The Widening Blast Radius of the Fox News Scandal: The metastasizing Ailes affair is spilling over into the politics of New York, Virginia and the White House.
  15. Canada’s Anti-Spam Legislation (CASL): A Statistical Analysis from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) 

DIGITAL

  1. WannaCry Ransomware That’s Hitting World Right Now Uses NSA Windows Exploit
  2. An NSA-derived ransomware worm is shutting down computers worldwide: Wcry uses weapons-grade exploit published by the NSA-leaking Shadow Brokers.
  3. Leaked NSA Hacking Tool On Global Ransomware Rampage
  4. Massive ransomware attack hits UK hospitals, Spanish banks: Ransomware attack appears to be targeting institutions in several European countries.
  5. Massive cryptocurrency botnet used leaked NSA exploits weeks before WCry: Campaign that flew under the radar used hacked computers to mine Monero currency.
  6. Fearing Shadow Brokers leak, NSA reported critical flaw to Microsoft: WaPo confirms long-held suspicions as NSA cyberweapons crisis threatens to grow worse.
  7. Two days after WCry worm, Microsoft decries exploit stockpiling by governments: Company president specifically notes role of NSA code used by Ransomware worm.
  8. Microsoft Is P___ED OFF At The NSA Over WannaCry Attack
  9. Microsoft Says The NSA Shares Blame For Ransomware Attacks: The WannaCry authors used a stolen NSA vulnerability to hurt Windows users — should the NSA take responsibility?
  10. The Ransomware Meltdown Experts Warned About Is Here
  11. Today’s Massive Ransomware Attack Was Mostly Preventable—Here’s How To Avoid It
  12. Global Ransomware Attack ‘Accidentally’ Halted But It’s Probably Not Over
  13. ‘Accidental hero’ halts ransomware attack and warns: this is not over – Expert who stopped spread of attack by activating software’s ‘kill switch’ says criminals will ‘change the code and start again’
  14. Hackers Behind Massive Ransomware Attack Have Made an Embarrassingly Small Amount of Money
  15. WCry is so mean Microsoft issues patch for 3 unsupported Windows versions: Decommissioned for years, Windows XP, 8, and Server 2003 get emergency update.
  16. FBI Gives Hollywood Hacking Victims Surprising Advice: “Pay the Ransom” – Netflix isn’t alone – Agencies and others are balancing demands for money against the fears of stolen data ending up online.
  17. New Netflix DRM Blocks Rooted Phone Owners From Downloading The Netflix App
  18. Two days after WCry worm, Microsoft decries exploit stockpiling by governments: Company president specifically notes role of NSA code used by Ransomware worm.
  19. The WannaCry Ransomware Hackers Made Some Real Amateur Mistakes
  20. Microsoft Says The NSA Shares Blame For Ransomware Attacks: The WannaCry authors used a stolen NSA vulnerability to hurt Windows users — should the NSA take responsibility?
  21. The WannaCry Ransomware Has a Link to Suspected North Korean Hackers
  22. What the Rise of Russian Hackers Means for Your Business
  23. Thailand Demands More Proxy Censorship From Facebook
  24. Well, Duh: Facebook’s System To Stop ‘Fake News’ Isn’t Working — Because Facebook Isn’t The Problem
  25. Abortion Pill Organization Temporarily Booted Off Facebook
  26. Austrian Court’s ‘Hate Speech’ Ruling Says Facebook Must Remove Perfectly Legal Posts All Over The World
  27. US Court Upholds Enforceability Of GNU GPL As Both A License And A Contract
  28. “Genericide” legal assault to nullify the Google trademark fails: Google doesn’t lose trademark even if it is a generic term for searching the Web.
  29. Google Gets Big Ninth Circuit Win That Its Eponymous Trademark Isn’t Generic–Elliott v. Google (Eric Goldman)
  30. A focus on digital habits could help news publishers fight Facebook
  31. Facebook’s plan to disrupt TV advertising may have hit a wall
  32. Bleacher Report CEO Dave Finocchio Doesn’t Buy That Facebook Isn’t Avid About Securing Sports Rights
  33. Texas Court Orders Sports Streaming Sites To Be Blocked In Anticipation Of Piracy
  34. Facebook Warrant Case: Stark Debate and a Divided Court
  35. The MP3 Is About As ‘Dead’ As Pepe The Frog
  36. Recording Industry Claims Imaginary Value Gap As A Bigger Threat Than Piracy (EFF)
  37. SoundExchange Acquires CMRRA
  38. The Real Threat to Our Government Is Tech Illiteracy
  39. Cambridge Analytica Explained: Data and Elections
  40. Media Manipulation and Disinformation Online
  41. The Apophenic Machine: The conspiratorial mode and the internet’s data hoard were made for each other (Molly Sauter)
  42. Maybe the Internet Isn’t Tearing Us Apart After All
  43. Can These Apps Really Help You Escape Your Filter Bubble?: New tech products offer some tiny first steps toward shaking up our social networks
  44. We Recorded VCs’ Conversations and Analyzed How Differently They Talk About Female Entrepreneurs
  45. Cloudflare, sued by its first “patent troll,” hits back hard: Blackbird Technologies, owned by its own lawyers, has filed over 100 lawsuits.
  46. Patent Trolling Lawyers May Have Picked With The Wrong Company To Shake Down: Cloudflare Hits Back
  47. Dear Google, You Could Start Fixing Content ID By Taking Down Dozens Of YouTube Videos On How To Defeat It
  48. YouTube still has full albums on its platform, and that’s a problem
  49. When a Picture is Worth… Thousands of Dollars: Ontario Court decides Ground-breaking Online Copyright Case
  50. The Kardashians Can’t Keep up with Copyright Law 
  51. Now Canceled Crowdfunding Project Sent DMCA Notice Following Skeptical Review
  52. Story About Ex-Sony Pictures Boss Magically Disappears From Gawker; His Lawyer Tells Reporters Not To Talk About It
  53. Class action against computer manufacturer proceeds
  54. MySpace Tries To Play Dead To Avoid Lawsuits
  55. Trademarks in a “Social” World: A Canadian Perspective
  56. Snap Blows First Earnings—But That’s Not the Whole Story
  57. Magic Leap settles discrimination lawsuit with former exec
  58. Magic Leap settles sexual discrimination case: Terms of the out of court settlement with Tannen Campbell were not disclosed
  59. Magic Leap, and the Troubles In Sexism Valley
  60. Clashing With Second Circuit, Court Orders Google to Turn Over Foreign-Stored Data
  61. Internet providers ordered to block streaming of Premier League
  62. Google’s Fight Against Uber Takes a Turn for the Criminal
  63. Judge refers Waymo v. Uber lawsuit to criminal investigators: Also, Uber’s bid to move the case into arbitration fails.
  64. Judge’s order bars Uber engineer from Lidar work, demands return of stolen files: “Misuse of that treasure trove remains an ever-present danger wholly at his whim.”
  65. Waymo and Lyft team up against Uber: In the self-driving world, the enemy of my enemy is my friend.
  66. Uber not just a dumb app, must comply with EU transport rules—top law adviser: Taxi-hailing app faces a tough ride from regulators in Europe.
  67. Lawsuit: VR Company Had a ‘Kink Room,’ Pressured Female Employees to ‘Microdose’
  68. Judge Alsup Threatens To Block Malibu Media From Any More Copyright Trolling In Northern California
  69. A new tool to further deter smartphone theft: “Think of it as Carfax for phones.”
  70. Spotify and – no joke – iTunes are coming to the Windows Store: Apple’s music app is a major get for Microsoft and Windows 10 S.
  71. One More Thing: Inside Apple’s Insanely Great (Or Just Insane) New Mothership
  72. 15-second ads coming to Amazon’s Alexa: Ads at the start and end of Alexa conversations, thanks to third-party company.
  73. Twitter, NFL Announce New Multi-Year Partnership To Include Live Pre-Game Coverage
  74. Lululemon Turns To Vice Media For Big Ad Push
  75. Vice Media Said to Be Raising More Cash as Prelude to Possible IPO
  76. How Amazon Go (probably) makes “just walk out” groceries a reality: Amazon’s new age grocery likely wasn’t possible even five years ago.
  77. Can Ticketmaster’s Anti-Bot Assault Fix Its Most Infuriating Problem?: “Verified Fan” fights scalper bots to make those Harry Styles tickets easier to snag—but there’s still room for improvement.
  78. Google Rattles the Tech World With a New AI Chip for All
  79. The Surprising Repercussions of Making AI Assistants Sound Human
  80. AI, Deep Learning, and Machine Learning: A Primer
  81. Autonomous Systems — Is it time for empirical research?
  82. Scientists 3-D Print Mouse Ovaries That Actually Make Babies
  83. Fashion visionaries are using 3D printing to create mind-bending textiles that are nearly impossible to wear.
  84. Archive digitization: a coordinated effort by CBC/Radio-Canada to preserve and showcase our heritage
  85. Startup culture’s obsession with “side hustle” gets more unsettling the closer you look
  86. Google’s AI Invents Sounds Humans Have Never Heard Before
  87. Website Blocking, Injunctions and Beyond: View on the Harmonization from the Netherlands (Martin Husovec & Lisa Van Dongen)
  88. Digital copies, exhaustion, and blockchains: lack of legal clarity to be offset by technological advancement and evolving consumption patterns? (Eleonora Rosati)
  89. How 4 Agencies Are Using Artificial Intelligence as Part of the Creative Process: Can algorithms replace humans?
  90. Sorry, Westworld: We Should Be Able to Torture Robots
  91. Cristiano Ronaldo Goes Shirtless On Instagram Live To Celebrate Hitting 100 Million Followers
  92. French Theater Owners Freak Out; Get Netflix Booted From Cannes Film Festival

CREATIVITY

  1. Conan O’Brien Will Go to Court Over Joke Theft Allegations: A lawsuit claims that the late night host stole five monologue jokes from a comedy writer’s blog.
  2. Conan O’Brien Headed to Trial Over Claims of Stealing Jokes: Alex Kaseberg overcomes a summary judgment motion and moves forward on jokes about Caitlyn Jenner, Tom Brady and the Washington Monument.
  3. Here we laugh again! The eternal controversy over parody scope in Copyright law
  4. Latest Attack On A Free Press: Reporter Arrested For Asking Questions To Trump Administration Officials
  5. Does the Media Have a Right to Private Communications?
  6. Cartoonist who claimed to be Kung Fu Panda creator jailed for two years: Jayme Gordon also ordered to repay $3m in legal fees to DreamWorks Animation after filing spurious copyright lawsuit in 2011
  7. Court Finds Infringement of THE KRUSTY KRAB Mark
  8. Paul Levy Hoping To Wake Up Maryland Courts To The Numerous Fraudulent Libel Lawsuits Filed There
  9. Mathew v. The Walt Disney Co.
  10. ITN Flix, LLC v. Univision Television Group, Inc.
  11. Higher Costs Awards for the Winning Party in Federal Court IP Cases
  12. How Pixar Lost Its Way: For 15 years, the animation studio was the best on the planet. Then Disney bought it.
  13. A Candid Conversation About Rap Culture’s Pervasive Disrespect Against Black Women: How do you cope when your social feed reflects how much the world devalues you?
  14. Marvel’s Cancelling Black Panther & The Crew, One of Its Most Important Comics Right Now
  15. Why Drag Is the Ultimate Retort to Trump: RuPaul versus the White House
  16. Kentucky court rejects government attempt to punish printer for refusing to print ‘Lexington [Gay] Pride Festival’ T-shirt
  17. KitKat loses bid to copyright four-finger chocolate bars
  18. Why Photos of President Trump Are So Aggressively Boring
  19. How Amanda Palmer Gave The Music Industry The Finger With Crowdfunding
  20. As Cannes turns 70, must cinema adapt to survive in new digital era?: Festival bosses are welcoming TV shows but have banned Netflix films from the Palme d’Or
  21. Are Your Nails Gucci? Why the Breakout Trend of the Moment Is a Logo Manicure
  22. Revising Non-compete Law to Eliminate Unfair Competition
  23. How Noncompete Clauses Keep Workers Locked In
  24. New Copyright Law declared constitutional (Brazil)
  25. Legal Guide to Music Licensing Contracts
  26. Osgoode Hall Law School appoints two Journalists in Residence

SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY

  1. Latest FISA Court Order Details Why NSA Didn’t Get Any 702 Requests Approved Last Year
  2. NSA Boss: Section 702 Should Be Renewed Because It Helped Prove Russia Hacked Election
  3. Police Body Camera Giant Made Lawyers Sign Away Client Footage: Fearing for their clients, defense attorneys are refusing to hit ‘agree’ to access the company’s cloud-based body cam footage
  4. America Reloaded: The Bizarre Story Behind the FBI’s Fake Documentary About the Bundy Family
  5. Hollywood Helps China Set Up National Surveillance And Censorship System To Tackle Copyright Infringement
  6. Google collected NHS records of 1.6M patients on “inappropriate legal basis”: “We haven’t shared patient data with other Google products, services,” says DeepMind boss.
  7. Google Lens knows more about what’s in your photos than you do: What flower are you snapping a photo of? Google can tell you that.
  8. Here’s How Facebook Knows Who You Meet In Real Life: It may seem like Mark Zuckerburg is personally tracking your every move — but there’s another explanation for those creepy friend requests you’re getting
  9. Revisiting the Discoverability of Facebook Account Activity–Gordon v. TGR (Eric Goldman)
  10. HP laptops covertly log user keystrokes, researchers warn
  11. Cockpit access codes for United Airlines spill online: “The safety of our customers and crew is our top priority,” United says.
  12. Amazon’s Alexa Is Getting Smarter, But Potentially More Intrusive: Users will be able to opt-in to weather and news notifications with the A.I. home assistant
  13. EU regulators welcome stricter rules on cookies and direct marketing: The European Commission has published a draft Regulation regarding cookies and electronic direct marketing. EU regulators have publicly welcomed the proposal, which has potentially significant consequences for all businesses that engage in online commerce or electronic direct marketing.

Jon