A Domain Registrar Is Starting a Fiber ISP To Compete With Comcast

Jason Koebler writes: Tucows Inc., an internet company that’s been around since the early 90s — it’s generally known for being in the shareware business and for registering and selling premium domain names — announced that it’s becoming an internet service provider. Tucows will offer fiber internet to customers in Charlottesville, Virginia — which is served by Comcast and CenturyLink — in early 2015 and eventually wants to expand to other markets all over the country. “Everyone who has built a well-run gigabit network has had demand exceeding their expectations, ” Elliot Noss, Tucows’ CEO said. “We think there’s space in the market for businesses like us and smaller.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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A Domain Registrar Is Starting a Fiber ISP To Compete With Comcast

Cops illegally nailed webcam to utility pole for 6 weeks to spy on house

A federal judge on Monday tossed evidence that was gathered by a webcam—turned on for six weeks—that the authorities nailed to a utility pole 100 yards from a suspected drug dealer’s rural Washington state house. The Justice Department contended that the webcam, with pan-and-zoom capabilities that were operated from afar—was no different from a police officer’s observation from the public right-of-way. The government argued  (PDF): Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Cops illegally nailed webcam to utility pole for 6 weeks to spy on house

The Pirate Bay shutdown: the whole story (so far)

For the past decade, if you wanted to download copyrighted material and didn’t want to pay for it, it’s likely you turned to The Pirate Bay . Up until a police raid took it offline last week , it was the most popular place to grab Sunday’s episode of The Newsroom or Gone Girl months before the Blu-ray hits stores. You didn’t have to log in to some arcane message board or know someone to get an invite — the anonymous file-sharing site was open to everybody and made piracy as simple as a Google search. That’s what scared Hollywood. The movie industry claimed that in 2006 alone , piracy cost it some $6.1 billion dollars. Naturally, it went after the biggest target to exact its revenge: the Sweden-based Pirate Bay. Given Sweden’s lax laws regarding copyrighted materials, Hollywood had to enlist the United States government for help cracking down on the site. The US threatened that unless something was done to take the site offline, it’d impose trade sanctions against Sweden by way of The World Trade Organization. That led to Swedish police raiding the outfit in 2006 , confiscating enough servers and computer equipment to fill three trucks and making two arrests. Three days later, the site was back up and running and more popular than ever before thanks to a swell of mainstream media coverage. WHAT IS IT? The Pirate Bay was the 97th most-visited website on the entire internet in 2008, according to Alexa data. During the 2009 trial that saw cofounders Fredrik Neij, Peter Sunde and Gottfrid Svartholm charged with $3.6 million in fines, along with time behind bars for aiding in copyright infringement, it was reported that The Pirate Bay had some 22 million users — roughly the population of Texas. We tried finding more recent information, but the official blog is offline too, and, even then, the outfit keeps current usage statistics incredibly close to its chest. The best we could come by was a graph showing an uptick in usage , sans any actual numbers to go with the jagged, but rising, horizontal line. Because the site had to change domains a number of times before this last raid, in part to insulate itself from copyright laws , it’s hard to gauge just how popular The Pirate Bay was before last week’s shutdown. More information will likely surface in the coming weeks, as this latest raid is part of an ongoing investigation as well. TBP AFK: The Pirate Bay Away From Keyboard is a documentary chronicling the 2009 court case against The Pirate Bay’s founders HOW IT WORKED Instead of hosting the copyrighted material itself, The Pirate Bay maintained a database of the tracker files needed for users to download the “torrents” — not the actual copyrighted content. Because you need a separate piece of software to actually use the torrent file and illegally download the content, The Pirate Bay saying it personally doesn’t break copyright law is technically accurate. Let’s back up a moment: for the uninitiated, a torrent file is basically a set of instructions that tells your computer how to reassemble a large file from the relatively small pieces it downloads from however many hosts are sharing it at a given moment. It’s faster than a 1:1 transfer because, unlike how Napster worked, no one user’s bandwidth supports the entire transfer. Well, that and everyone is only providing a minuscule portion of what you’re downloading. It’s “distributed” file sharing, and it subsequently distributes the blame when those files being shared are pirated material. For example: Let’s say that you wanted to watch the season finale of True Detective the night it aired, but HBO Go’s servers broke and you couldn’t. If you’re impatient, the simple solution is hitting The Pirate Bay, searching for “true detective episode eight” and grabbing the torrent file with the most “seeders” (people hosting the file). Depending on a few factors, you could have had an HD version of the hour-long show in roughly 15 minutes or less. It was incredibly fast and easy enough for just about anyone to do, which made it especially dangerous. THE SHUTDOWN The raid from eight years ago took The Pirate Bay offline briefly and forced the site to change its operations a bit. As a result, it moved to cloud-hosting in two separate countries running several virtual machine setups. In an interview with TorrentFreak , an unnamed Pirate Bay representative ( Neij, Sunde and Svartholm sold the site to a possible shell company in 2006) boasted that the move made the site raid-proof and that there wouldn’t be any servers to take, only a transit router — one of the pieces of equipment used to hide the location of the cloud provider. “If the police decide to raid us again there are no servers to take, just a transit router. If they follow the trail to the next country and find the load balancer, there is just a disk-less server there. In case they find out where the cloud provider is, all they can get are encrypted disk-images, ” The Pirate Bay says. “They have to be quick about it too, if the servers have been out of communication with the load balancer for 8 hours they automatically shut down. When the servers are booted up, access is only granted to those who have the encryption password, ” they add. Last Tuesday morning , Swedish police raided a Stockholm-area server room and left with “several” servers and computers, with official counts unavailable. This took not only The Pirate Bay down, but also related sites bayimg.com, pastebay.net and The Pirate Bay’s message board, suprbay.org. A handful of other torrent sites went down at the same time, with the Rights Alliance — a Swedish anti-piracy group — claiming that it made the complaint resulting in the Stockholm County Police’s raid. Mirror (and impostor) sites have sprung up in the meantime, but for now The Pirate Bay proper remains offline. It’s hard to say whether that’s a result of the website’s raid-countermeasures or police success. In an interview with TorrentFreak that posted recently, one of The Pirate Bay’s associates said they weren’t surprised by the shut-down, and that it’s something that goes with the territory. “We couldn’t care less, really, ” Mr. 10100100000 said. “We have however taken this opportunity to give ourselves a break. How long are we supposed to keep going? To what end? We were a bit curious to see how the public would react. Will we reboot? We don’t know yet. But if and when we do, it’ll be with a bang.” The Pirate Bay’s closure does have one unexpected supporter , though: co-founder Peter Sunde. He took to his blog last week lamenting what the site had become, chastising its reliance on ads for porn and Viagra, while relying on old and buggy code. Sund wrote that the technology wasn’t being taken further and the site had essentially lost its soul while the new owners clamored after cash, going so far as charging admission for The Pirate Bay’s tenth birthday party. “The party had a set line-up with artists, scenes and so on, instead of just asking the people coming to bring the content. Everything went against the ideals that I worked for during my time as part of TPB, ” Sunde said. Pirate Bay co-founder Peter Sunde WHAT IT MEANS That all depends on who you ask. Variety reports that the day before the shutdown almost 102 million IP addresses were downloading torrented movies and TV shows. That dropped to 95 million on December 9th, but by last Friday pirate traffic was back up to just over 100 million IP addresses performing peer-to-peer downloads. A decrease? Sure, but nothing all that dramatic; this is a direct result of the hydra-like nature of piracy outfits in general. More or less, a series of shutdowns led to The Pirate Bay’s rise to prominence anyway. Napster got shut down and Limewire quickly took its place. Limewire was replaced by uTorrent, and uTorrent is the current go-to for torrenting. Perhaps, though, the anti-piracy measures we’ve seen are working. After all, Google has said that it gets over a million Digital Millenium Copyright Act take-down requests per day . A recent PC Pro report notes that US BitTorrent traffic had dropped by 20 percent over the course of six months last year. What’s more, it says that unique visitors to The Pirate Bay dropped dramatically between 2012 and 2013, from five million to 900, 000 by last year’s end. This can likely be attributed to how easy it’s become as of late to access content legally. It’s no mistake that Netflix offered UK customers episodes of Breaking Bad ‘s final season the day after they aired in the US. Or, that it’s pushing to stream movies the same day they arrive in theaters. Same goes for Hulu Plus’ entire business model of streaming shows the day after they air. Sure, you’re going to have a minority of folks who’ll pirate anything and everything as their own means of anarchy, but for the most part, by offering an all-around better legal experience (not having to worry about downloading a virus; better video quality) most people aren’t going to bother pirating in the first place. Much like it did with the music industry, piracy has forced the Hollywood to examine why we were circumventing their protocols in the first place and adjust as such. [Image credits: Shutterstock (lead), AFP/Getty Images (Peter Sunde)] Filed under: Cellphones , Internet , Software Comments

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The Pirate Bay shutdown: the whole story (so far)

Feds used Adobe Flash to identify Tor users visiting child porn sites

A little more than 16 months ago, word emerged that the FBI exploited a recently patched Firefox vulnerability to unmask Tor users visiting a notorious child pornography site. It turns out that the feds had waged an even broader uncloaking campaign a year earlier by using a long-abandoned part of the open source Metasploit exploit framework to identify Tor-using suspects. According to Wired , “Operation Torpedo,” as the FBI sting operation was dubbed, targeted users of three darknet child porn sites. It came to light only after Omaha defense attorney Joseph Gross challenged the accuracy of evidence it uncovered against a Rochester, New York-based IT worker who claims he was falsely implicated in the campaign. Operation Torpedo used the Metasploit Decloaking Engine to identify careless suspects who were hiding behind Tor, a free service used by good and bad guys alike to shield their point of entry to the Internet. The Decloaking Engine went live in 2006 and used five separate methods to break anonymization systems. One method was an Adobe Flash application that initiated a direct connection with the end user, bypassing Tor protections and giving up the user’s IP address. Tor Project officials have long been aware of the vulnerability and strenuously advise against installing Flash. According to Wired: Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Feds used Adobe Flash to identify Tor users visiting child porn sites

A Little Lead Can Make Graphene Magnetic

Graphene has very many strengths , but there is one thing it isn’t and that is magnetic. Now, a team of researchers has found that the insertion of a little lead into the planar graphene structure can change that. Read more…

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A Little Lead Can Make Graphene Magnetic

Microsoft "Arcadia" Could Stream All Kinds of Games and Apps to Windows

Microsoft boss Satya Nadella loves cloud computing , and a new, rumored Microsoft service could be putting all that computing power to better use than every. A project codenamed “Arcadia” (yes, another Halo reference) could soon stream games and apps to Windows devices, phones and tablets and computers alike. Read more…

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Microsoft "Arcadia" Could Stream All Kinds of Games and Apps to Windows

Oakland cops disciplined 24 times for failing to turn on body-worn cameras

OAKLAND, Calif.—Over the last two years, the Oakland Police Department (OPD) has disciplined police officers on 24 occasions  for disabling or failing to activate body-worn cameras, newly released public records show. The City of Oakland did not provide any records prior to 2013, and the OPD did not immediately respond to Ars’ request for comment. The records show that on November 8, 2013 one officer was terminated after failing to activate his camera. Less than two weeks later, another resigned for improperly removing the camera from his or her uniform. However, most officers received minor discipline in comparison. The OPD has used Portable Digital Recording Devices (PDRDs) since late 2010 . According to the department’s  own policy , patrol officers are required to wear the cameras during a number of outlined situations, including detentions, arrests, and serving a warrant. At present, the city has about 700 officers . Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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Oakland cops disciplined 24 times for failing to turn on body-worn cameras

The Pirate Bay Responds To Raid

An anonymous reader writes The Pirate Bay’s crew have remained awfully quiet on the recent raid in public, but today Mr 10100100000 breaks the silence in order to get a message out to the world. In a nutshell, he says that they couldn’t care less, are going to remain on hiatus, and a comeback is possible. In recent days mirrors of The Pirate Bay appeared online and many of these have now started to add new content as well. According to TPB this is a positive development, but people should be wary of scams. Mr 10100100000 says that they would open source the engine of the site, if the code “wouldn’t be so s****y”. In any case, they recommend people keeping the Kopimi spirit alive, as TPB is much more than some hardware stored in a dusty datacenter. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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The Pirate Bay Responds To Raid