MEDIA, COMMUNICATIONS & NET NEUTRALITY
- Cable TV companies can charge higher prices thanks to new court ruling: Court upholds FCC decision that said cable TV faces competition nationwide.
- Television Station Challenging the Denial of Public Access to an Official Court Recording
- Microsoft Unveils Plan To Deliver Broadband To 2 Million, NAB Immediately Craps All Over The Announcement
- Microsoft wants all of rural America to get high-speed broadband: Microsoft invests in white space networks, offers royalty-free access to patents.
- AT&T Claims Forced Arbitration Isn’t Forced… Because You Can Choose Not To Have Broadband
- Trump Hopes To Use AT&T Time Warner Merger As ‘Leverage’ Over CNN
- White House could use AT&T/Time Warner deal as “leverage” against CNN: AT&T seemingly on track to buy Time Warner despite Trump’s anger at CNN.
- If FCC gets its way, we’ll lose a lot more than net neutrality: Beyond no-blocking rules, Title II plays big role in overall consumer protection.
- Cable lobby conducts survey, finds that Americans want net neutrality: NCTA touts opposition to price caps—which don’t exist for home Internet.
- AT&T Pretends To Love Net Neutrality, Joins Tomorrow’s Protest With A Straight Face
- AT&T joins net neutrality protest—despite suing to block neutrality rules: AT&T joins net neutrality “Day of Action” but wants to overturn Title II rules.
- Telecom Industry Feebly Tries To Deflate Net Neutrality Protest With Its Own, Lame ‘Unlock The Net’ Think Tank Campaign
- Facebook, Google to join net neutrality demonstration
- Facebook, Google Wake Up From Their Coma On The Subject, Join Wednesday’s Massive Net Neutrality Protest
- How Facebook, Google, Netflix, and others supported net neutrality today: See how websites, advocacy groups, and even some ISPs defended net neutrality
- The Who’s Who Of Net Neutrality’s ‘Day Of Action’
- Day Of Action: Sen. Wyden Leads The Battle For Net Neutrality
- How The Internet Showed Up For Net Neutrality Today, From Reddit To Google
- The FCC Insists It Can’t Stop Impostors From Lying About My Views On Net Neutrality
- AMC To Charge Cable Customers $5 More To Avoid Advertisements
- Cable TV companies can charge higher prices thanks to new court ruling: Court upholds FCC decision that said cable TV faces competition nationwide.
- TCPA Jury Award Trebled to $61.3 Million Against Dish Network For Failure to Monitor its Telemarketing Vendor
- NAB Details Radio Stations that Could be Affected by Repacking of the TV Band
- Changes in FCC Rules on Third-Party Fundraising By Noncommercial Stations Effective Now – Except for the New Disclosure and Paperwork Obligations
- Toward an Open and Innovative Internet: What Lies Behind Canada’s Net Neutrality Success Story (Michael Geist)
- Ofcom spectrum auction caps are “kick in the teeth” for consumers—Three UK: Regulator insists new airwaves rules will drive competition in mobile market.
DIGITAL
- Over many objections, W3C approves DRM for HTML5: Contentious feature is added, without mandate to protect security researchers.
- Global Web standard for integrating DRM into browsers hits a snag – EFF: Protections needed to “engage in lawful activity that DRM gets in the way of.”
- Tim Berners-Lee Sells Out His Creation: Officially Supports DRM In HTML
- EFF Officially Appeals Tim Berners-Lee Decision On DRM In HTML
- People Would Pay A Hell Of A Lot More If DRM Were Gone
- Head of Mt Gox bitcoin exchange on trial for embezzlement and loss of millions: Mark Karpelès faces up to five years in jail as Japanese authorities press charges in bankruptcy case that lost 850,000 bitcoins and $28m of user money
- Vizio sues Chinese tech giant LeEco over failed merger
- Vizio sues LeEco in the wake of their failed $2 billion deal: It filed two lawsuits seeking $110 million in damages.
- Vizio’s Tolerance for LeEco’s B.S. Has Come to an End
- Court Refuses to Dismiss Photojournalist’s Complaint Against Clothing Company for DMCA Violation
- Court Says DMCA Safe Harbors Disappear Once Infringing Images Are Printed On Physical Items
- Here’s the brutal reality of online hate: Death threats. Mutilated animals. Damnation. The victims of online hatred share their experiences.
- Why Protecting The Free Press Requires Protecting Trump’s Tweets
- The Great Firewall Of China Grows Stronger As China Forces App Stores To Remove VPNs
- China’s Surveillance Plans Include 600 Million CCTV Cameras Nationwide, And Pervasive Facial Recognition
- China Bans Online Videos Showing Homosexuality And Activists & Communist Youth League Are Outraged
- Yelp, Twitter and Facebook Aren’t State Actors–Quigley v. Yelp (Eric Goldman)
- News industry decries Facebook’s “digital duopoly,” wants government help: Newspapers “forced to surrender their content” want to team up and negotiate.
- Free Speech Fans Sue Donald Trump for Blocking Them on Twitter
- Twitter users blocked by Trump sue, claim @realDonaldTrump is public forum: Lawsuit adopts a unique constitutional theory about social media rights.
- Social media driving risky behaviour in Lynn Canyon, North Shore mountains
- Supreme Court of Canada Upholds Order for Google to Block Search Results Globally
- No, The Canadian Supreme Court Did Not Ruin the Internet
- Court Won’t Let Patent Troll Dismiss Its Way Out Of A Lawsuit, Orders It To Pay Legal Fees
- Study: Dutch Piracy Rates In Free Fall Due Mostly To The Availability Of Legal Alternatives
- Pirate Bay Re-enters List of 100 Most Popular Sites on the Internet
- There Is An Easy Answer To Whether Machines Should Get Copyright Rights And It Comes Down To Copyright’s Purpose
- Could a Robot Be President?: Yes, it sounds nuts. But some techno-optimists really believe a computer could make better decisions for the country—without the drama and shortsightedness we accept from our human leaders.
- Waymo drops most of its patent case against Uber: Judge questioned whether Waymo’s patent case is “worth the salt.”
- Waymo v. Uber: Alphabet CEO Larry Page will be deposed – Also, Uber’s attempt to get documents from competitor Lyft gets squashed.
- Responding to the “Campaign for Accountability” report on academic research
- Setting the record straight on WSJ Google “Paying Professors” Article
- You should be outraged at Google’s anti-competitive behavior
- There Are Only a Few Possibilities for the Future of News
- Press Association wins Google grant to run news service written by computers: News agency gets €706,000 to use AI for creation of up to 30,000 local stories a month in partnership with Urbs Media
- A Blueprint For Coexistence With Artificial Intelligence
- Latest experiments reveal AI is still terrible at naming paint colors: Or maybe Janelle Shane’s neural network is secretly making fun of humanity?
- Prince’s Music Videos Hit YouTube
- Wiz Khalifa’s See You Again is now the most-viewed YouTube video of all time
- Valuable Branded Posts Make Stephen Curry Top NBA Player On Social
- Native Advertising, Influencers, And Endorsements: Where Is the Line Between Integrated Content And Deceptively Formatted Advertising?
- Facebook, Snapchat could pay millions for World Cup 2018 highlight rights: Where will you watch clips from the biggest soccer tournament next year?
- Nothing Bums Me Out Like Scott Walker’s Instagram Feed
- Microsoft to Lay Off an Estimated 3,000 Employees
- Disney Feels The Heat As Children Lead The Cord Cutting Revolution
- Disney Invests in 11 Tech and Media Companies for 2017 Accelerator Program
- Struggling for survival, SoundCloud closes San Francisco, London offices: Audio startup has lost over $150M from 2010 through 2015.
- Insights: In The Digital Future, What Do Studios Look Like (If Anything At All)?
- The Technology That Will Make It Impossible for You to Believe What You See: With these techniques, it’s difficult to discern between videos of real people and computerized impostors that can be programmed to say anything.
- Scientists Upload A Galloping Horse Gif Into Bacteria With CRISPR
- Online Harassment 2017: Roughly four-in-ten Americans have personally experienced online harassment, and 62% consider it a major problem. Many want technology firms to do more, but they are divided on how to balance free speech and safety issues online (Pew Research Center)
CREATIVITY
- York University Loses On “Mandatory” Issue And Fair Dealing (Howard Knopf)
- CAUT disappointed with Federal Court copyright ruling against York University
- Did you hear the one about a monkey suing a photographer for infringement?: “Monkey see, monkey sue is not good law.”
- Law banning filming Utah slaughterhouses ruled unconstitutional: “Were the law otherwise,” judge says, Utah could outlaw “creating music videos.”
- The Supreme Court just totally, brilliantly fixed Canada’s long-running patent fiasco
- What’s Next For The Founder Of The Slants, And The Fight Over Racial Slurs
- Three Questions from the Supreme Court’s Decision on “Offensive” Trademarks
- New York State Fails to Extend the Scope of its Right to Publicity Statute
- Bob Murray Demands John Oliver Be Silenced… While HBO Moves Case To Federal Court
- Don’t Let The Alt-Right Fool You: Journalism Isn’t Doxing
- The Guerrilla Journalists Defying Isis One Video At A Time
- House Appropriation Committee Demolishes Hollywood’s Excuses For Moving Copyright Office Out Of Library Of Congress
- State Department concocting “fake” intellectual property “Twitter feud”: “Our public diplomacy office is still settling on a hashtag,” State Department says.
- How “fake news” could get even worse
- Two Wangs Of Ireland Battle Over Trademarks Nobody Will Confuse
- Brooklyn Coffee Shop Locks Unicorn Horns With Starbucks
The diplomatic crisis of Qatar and Gulf Cooperation Council’s IP - Possibly most intense Star Wars v. Star Trek argument ever ends in arrest
- 20 years after ‘Contact’ came out, the rest of pop culture still hasn’t caught up
- Donald Trump Jr.’s Free Speech Defense: It’s as bogus as it sounds.
SURVEILLANCE & PRIVACY
- Federal Appeals Court Rules that There is a First Amendment Right to Record the Police
- Third Circuit Appeals Court Establishes First Amendment Right To Record Police
- Judge denies DOJ effort to halt Twitter lawsuit over national security orders: Twitter wants to be able to say precisely how many secret orders it received.
- Judge Says Twitter Can Move Forward With First Amendment Lawsuit Over NSL Reporting Limitations
- Facebook Back In Court Challenging More Law Enforcement Gag Orders
- FBI didn’t need warrant for stingray in attempted murder case, DOJ says – Prosecutors: “signals emitted from a phone are… not by their nature private.”
- Your Guide To Russia’s Infrastructure Hacking Teams
- Kaspersky under scrutiny after Bloomberg story claims close links to FSB
- Wait, what? Trump proposed a joint “cyber security unit” with Russia: “It’s not the dumbest idea I have ever heard, but it’s pretty close.”
- Trump’s Voter Data Haul Tests the Privacy of Public Records: Just because information is “publicly available” does not mean it is, or should be, widely available.
- Six major US airports now scan Americans’ faces when they leave country – House testimony: “It is important to note that CBP is committed to privacy.”
- China Uses Facial Recognition To Combat Jaywalking
- Apple Opens Data Center in China to Comply With Cybersecurity Law
- Virgin’s CCTV images of Corbyn on “ram-packed” train didn’t break data law: But firm did breach law by exposing faces of passengers travelling on same service.
- Former Head Of GCHQ Says Don’t Backdoor End-To-End Encryption, Attack The End Points
- Comcast, AT&T, WhatsApp all score low on new “Who Has Your Back?” list: EFF’s annual ratings show that the industry’s biggest names have a ways to go.
- Sorry, But You Need To Care About Blac Chyna And Rob Kardashian
- Google Home Breaks Up Domestic Dispute By Calling the Police
- Did an Echo Call 911 During a Domestic Assault? Amazon Says No.
- The Petya Plague Exposes The Threat Of Evil Software Updates
- I Gave Mattel My Email Address to Keep My Child Safe. They Used It to Send Me Spam.
- How to Protect Your Digital Self
- How I learned to stop worrying (mostly) and love my threat model: Reducing privacy and security risks starts with knowing what the threats really are.
- With Bill C-58, the federal government has left the heavy lifting on access to information reform for another day/year/government.
- Personal Liability Under Canada’s Anti-Spam Law
- The Trudeau government redacted the details of its own transparency plan
- Whose Speech Is Chilled by Surveillance?: Women and young people are more likely to self-censor if they think they’re being monitored. (Jonathon Penney)
- The Hidden Force That Will Drive GDPR Privacy Compliance (Daniel Solove)
- ATIA reform Bill creates new relationship between Information and Privacy Commissioners over “personal information” (Teresa Scasa)
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