Posts Tagged ‘freedom’

Symantec targets ’spyware’ P2P app Kazaa

// February 6th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Freedom | P2P:- Disgraced P2P file sharing application Kazaa, owned by Australia’s Sharman Networks, has absolutely nothing to be proud of. It was one of, if not the , first companies to introduce spyware , and it’s front and centre in the vast majority of phony copyright infringement cases brought by Vivendi Universal, EMI, Warner Music and Sony Music’s RIAA against the Big 4’s own customers. Now a “Symantec security program apparently identified the Kazaa desktop client as high-risk, flagging the software as adware”, says TechCrunch , going on, “This prompted Brilliant Digital Entertainment, the company that operates Kazaa, to issue a special notice / consumer alert to its customers.” In the ‘alert’ Kazaa says it’s “been compelled to issue a Global Consumer Alert and special notice to its own customers” thanks to Symantec identifying it as “high risk,” going on > > > As a result some Kazaa users with Symantec software installed were unable to use their music service because Symantec’s security software flagged the Kazaa software as adware. While users of the service had never seen advertising on Kazaa, some of those who contacted us with their concerns were sufficiently spooked by Symantec’s unilateral action that they followed Symantec’s advice to remove the software. Kazaa is a licensed music download and streaming service with over one million tracks licensed from the major record companies available to customers. Symantec had justified turning off the music for some of Kazaa customers by flagging files in the Kazaa music plug in application as high risk due to the files being used for serving advertisements. As a result Kazaa customers or subscribers running Norton AV are having these files stripped from the application which prevents them from using the service. StopBadware.org once said Sharman’s Kazaa, “ misleadingly advertises itself as spyware-free,” and didn’t, “completely remove all components during the uninstall process, interferes with computer use, and makes undisclosed modifications to other software”. The company’s claim that it’s “one of the world’s fastest growing digital music services” is open to considerable doubt. ‘95% of the cases have to do with Kazaa’ Below is a re-run of p2pnet’s Kazaa, the RIAA and Jammie Thomas feature > > > Vivendi Universal (France), Sony BMG (Japan and Germany), EMI (Britain), and Warner Music (US) and their RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) can be quite properly described as hate organisations. They hate anything which even looks remotely like competition. They hate independents and independence. They hate anything which interferes with what they see as their God-given right to control how, and by whom, music is distributed online. They even hate the people who keep them in drugs and booze and who pay their bills. But there’s one commercial outfit that’s central to the vast majority of the RIAA hate lawsuits, but which has nonetheless escaped virtually unscathed: Australia’s Sharman Networks, owner of Kazaa, the P2P file sharing application used by almost every RIAA victim. Currently, the highest profile Kazaa case centres on Jammie Thomas , the Minnesota mother ordered to pay the corporate music industry almost a quarter of a million dollars for allegedly infringing music copyrights. Vivendi Universal, EMI, Warner Music and Sony BMG’s RIAA thought they’d finally scored when judge Michael Davis told jurors that simply making songs available in a shared folder written to her computer hard drive by Kazaa amounted to infringement, even if actual distribution hadn’t been proved. Davis has since admitted his instructions were wrong and as things stand, the RIAA is desperately trying to salvage the only case it’s ever managed to bring to court. Meanwhile, thousands of people continue to use the application. “Its presence in these cases is ubiquitous,” says Ray Beckerman, the New York lawyer who runs Recording Industry vs The People , the famous online archive of RIAA cases and associated documents, and who himself represents people singled out as RIAA targets. “It’s shameful.” The question is – when will Sharman Networks share the same fate as the people who, having used its software, wound up on the wrong end of a lawsuit? ‘95% of the cases have to do with Kazaa’ Sharman Networks, Kazaa’s owner, boasts it’s ‘Fast, safe’. Fast it may be, but safe it isn’t, as many thousands of people who’ve used it in all innocence have found to their cost. They’re named in RIAA subpoenas with threats of court cases they can’t possibly afford to adequately defend hanging over their heads. There are no statistics detailing exactly how many Big 4 victims were identified because they were using Kazaa. But it’s safe to bet the vast bulk would fall into that category. “Anecdotally, I would guess that 95% of the cases have to do with Kazaa,” Beckerman told p2pnet. “It’s rather suspicious. “Kazaa made a deal for itself which left its customers to hang in the wind.” He’s referring to the agreement to secretly settle a class action brought against Kazaa owner Sharman Networks by former user Catherine Lewan. However, before the deal was struck — and it included, presumably, a requirement that details wouldn’t be disclosed — a court document outlining her claim had already been made public. Named in it are »»» Sharman Networks Ltd aka Sharman Networks Ltd, Sharman License Holdings Ltd, Geoffrey R.Gee, Global Nominees and Credit Facilities Ltd Kazaa designed its software, “in such a manner as to create a shared files folder and make that folder available to anyone using Kazaa, while at the same time failing to make the user aware that it had done so,” said Lewan, going on »»» The Sharman Defendants marketed KaZaA as the P2P service that allowed individuals to share files. The Sharman Defendants deceptively marketed the KaZaA Product as allowing ‘free’ downloads. The Sharman Defendants deceptively marketed the use of the KaZaA Product as legal. The Sharman Defendants deceptively knew that most users of the KaZaA Product would use the KaZaA Product to catalog and store digital copies of copyrighted sound recordings and films. The Sharman Defendants encouraged, invited and solicited such conduct from the public, its customers, and users of the KaZaA Product. Kazaa FastTrack network Niklas Zennström, Janus Friis and Priit Kasesalu launched the Kazaa FastTrack network through their Dutch firm, Consumer Empowerment, aka Kazaa BV, in March, 2001, soon after Napster, which had paved the way for online music distribution, was shut down by the corporate music companies who, instead of embracing peer-to-peer as the means of distributing products in the 21st digital century, fearfully condemned it. Napster had used centralised servers to hold lists of systems plugged into the network, together with their files. What made it peer-to-peer was: traffic moved directly computer to computer, allowing users to share with each other quickly and efficiently. Kazaa BV — decentralised – and KaZaA.com were bought by Australia’s Sharman Networks for an undisclosed sum. It became one of the first – if not the first – software applications to arrive on users’ systems loaded to the gills with spyware and other forms of badware. It was impossible for the average person to remove it without expert help. “The company seemingly came out of nowhere,” said CNET News at the time, going on: “After a silent first month, Sharman has emerged as a key player in an increasingly bizarre triangle with Morpheus’ parent company, StreamCast Networks, and Kazaa BV, in which accusations of unpaid bills, user-poaching and technical sabotage are flying back and forth.” Morpheus had the users — millions of them — and Kazaa had the network. The two arrived at what was supposed to have been a mutually beneficial deal, but it fell through and Kazaa ultimately cut Morpheus out of the loop, accusing it of having failed to pay licensing fees. The dispute lead to a long and bitter legal battle. Australian watchdogs Initially, Sharman’s only contact with the outside world was through a press agent in California, “ who would not comment on the company,”said CNET, adding: “The management at Sharman also raises questions. Nikki Hemming (right), the CEO, was formerly chief executive of failed Sydney theme park ‘Sega World’. ‘Sega World’ had been billed as Australia’s first indoor theme park, with a massive facility, but customers did not appear, and the business flopped . “Hemming’s move to buy KaZaA has caught the attention of Australian watchdogs. The Australian Performing Right Association Limited (APRA), which monitors that country’s copyrights for musicians has begun to investigate Sharman.” What made you decide to buy Kazaa? – CNET asked Hemming in another story . “What are your plans for Sharman?” “I’ve been around the technology of entertainment for quite a bit of time,” she answered. “Basically, the opportunity was initially put to me by (Brilliant Digital Entertainment CEO) Kevin Bermeister, who I’d known for quite awhile.” Under Hemming, Kazaa purported to be one with P2P community. But in fact, it cynically did everything it could to persuade the corporate music industry to pick it up as a distribution vehicle. Not all incidentally, associate company Altnet was simultaneously trying to make its way in the corporate entertainment world as the supplier of a DRM (Digital Restrictions Management) consumer control application. However, the companies shunned Sharman and Kazaa and eventually launched a massive copyright infringement lawsuit against them in Australia with Michael Speck, the ex-detective sergeant who used to run the Big Four’s Australian MIPI (Music Industry Piracy Investigations) but who the last we heard was working for Altnet, leading the way. In 2005, “Will Mark Dyne Step Forward as Owner of Sharman, FastTrack?” – asked an Online Reporter headline , going on »»» Speculation continues about who is the ultimate owner of Sharman Networks and who actually owns the FastTrack network that Sharman’s Kazaa software uses for file swapping. The latest rumbling is that a shadowy figure named Mark Dyne (right) owns both Sharman the company and FastTrack the network. Mark Dyne was once a partner in the —- operation with Kevin Burmeister who operates Brilliant Digital and Altnet and is a defendant in the Sydney trial against Sharman Networks. Nikki Hemming calls herself the Sharman CEO but there have been suspicions that another power pulls Hemming’s strings because of Sharman’s complex legal incorporation in the remote South Sea island of Vanuatu. Sharman lawyers have fought tooth-and-nail in the Sydney case to keep hidden the actual identity of Sharman’s owner. Dyne’s public facing these days seems to be his California-based companies EuroCapital and EuroPlay. Dyne owns over 25 million shares of Bermeister’s Brilliant Digital and was issued eight million options for his service as Brilliant’s CEO. The US-based Brilliant was formed by merging the Australian-based Brilliant Interactive Ideas and Sega Australia New Developments.” [Our paragraph breaks.] Nuisance score well into the red Ultimately, Sharman ’settled’ with the corporate music industry for a reported $115 million and Kazaa made the transition from one side of the tracks to the other to become an approved corporate good guy, with Hemming still at the controls, and NO SPYWARE displayed prominently on its Net ad. But that’s not the way it is, says McAfee SiteAdvisor , although it must be said its services aren’t of the best . With a nuisance score well into the red, “Kazaa (kazaa_setup.exe) installed the following programs on our PC,” says McAfee, to wit: Adware-RXBar Search Threat Library Adware-Instafinder Search Threat Library Adware-Need2Find Search Threat Library Adware-P2PNet Search Threat Library ( othing to do with - ) Adware-TopSearch Search Threat Library Adware-Altnet Search Threat Library Adware-FlashGet Search Threat Library Adware-BDE Search Threat Library McAfee goes on, “When we installed and ran Kazaa (kazaa_setup.exe), the following network servers which may may be associated with spyware, adware, or other unwanted programs were contacted. 64.93.77.208 instafinder.com r.instafinder.com qklinkserver.com tss.altnet.com “When we installed and ran Kazaa (kazaa_setup.exe), the following network servers were contacted. 64.93.77.208 instafinder.com barcfg.need2find.com r.instafinder.com qklinkserver.com tss.altnet.com 24-205-175-95.dhcp.wsco.ca.charter.com c-24-23-2-85.hsd1.mn.comcast.net cable-84-44-252-55.netcologne.de cm18196.red91-117.mundo-r.com cetn-04-0641.dsl.iowatelecom.net static-17-12-224-77.ipcom.comunitel.net a207093.upc-a.chello.nl VA1-RAS-2-u-0019.du.onolab.com ool-4355e615.dyn.optonline.net cpe-24-195-106-40.nycap.res.rr.com static-62-233-185-82.devs.futuro.pl 165.194.147.211 20129078172.user.veloxzone.com.br rommel.gate.uni-erlangen.de ‘Kazaa … misleadingly advertises itself as spywarefree’ If McAfee’s SiteAdvisor might leave something to be desired, you can’t say the same about StopBadware.org . It’s coordinated by Harvard Law School’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, and supported by companies including AOL, Google, Lenovo, PayPal, Trend Micro and VeriSign, and Consumer Reports WebWatch serves as an unpaid special advisor. StopBadware.org is directed by Harvard Law School professors and Berkman Center for Internet & Society co-directors Jonathan Zittrain and John Palfrey, with the support of a policy-oriented advisory board and a technical working group, which is composed of top experts in the field like Internet pioneers Esther Dyson and Vint Cerf. So it’s opinions are gold and Kazaa has been continually on its BadWare list since at least 2006 . Now, in 2008, StopBadware states unequivocally, “We find that Kazaa is badware because it misleadingly advertises itself as spywarefree, does not completely remove all components during the uninstall process, interferes with computer use, and makes undisclosed modifications to other software,” says StopBadware, going on: One bundled application cannot be closed. (Interferes with Computer Use) Claims to have “no spyware”, but is bundled with software that is considered spyware. (Deceptive Installation) Fails to uninstall certain executables and system components. (Unacceptable Uninstallation) Adds new links to the Windows Desktop. (Modifies Other Software) Changes the default 404 and DNS error pages in Internet Explorer (Modifies Other Software) Installs programs that modify Internet Explorer (Deceptive installation, Modifies other software) High-security peer-to-peer network Meanwhile, said an August, 2006, p2pnet story »»» 1) Bermeister heralds his plan for world Consumer Control on a page hosted by no lesser body than Big Four ‘trade’ organization the IFPI (International Federation of the Phonographic Industries) ; 2) Speck joins Altnet, claiming I’d be working away from my moral position if I didn’t support a technology that I believe is a quantum leap forward against unauthorised infringing activity, says ZDNet Australia . 3) With indecent haste after Sharman’s ‘defeat’ by the cartels, BDE disinters a plan first mooted in 2003 under which Kazaa and Altnet jointly released a bundle of file-swapping software apps, complete with a new high-security peer-to-peer network and a program that will pay users to be a part of it, as CNET News wrote at the time. Bermeister was instrumental in creating the modern version of Kazaa, introducing Sharman Networks CEO Nicola Hemming to the original creators of Kazaa in the Netherlands, it said. Hemming’s original plan for the file-swapping service was long intertwined with Bermeister’s vision of using it to distribute authorized conent [sic], although Bermeister denies being one of Sharman’s as-yet-undisclosed investors. The Altnet CEO has spent a year talking to executives at the large content companies and claims to have won some friendly ears among new media executives. However, concerns about litigation and Kazaa’s ultimate legality blocked any deals. Not any more. Altnet says its Global File Registry , stands ready to provide online content management and protection for all responsible participants in the digital marketplace. And the company’s newest employee, Michael Speck, states, Global File Registry will improve online distribution channels for content owners, while empowering consumers by increasing the number of legitimate access points to the content they choose. Empowering consumers? Not while Sharman and the cartels are on the earth. According to Altnet [read Sharman], Global File Registry is the cornerstone of its, online content protection and digital crime prevention strategy. Developed by experts in online distribution, content protection and anti piracy activity, Global File Registry (GFR) is a giant leap forward for content owners and law enforcement agencies to control piracy and criminal activity on the Internet, Anti-piracy? GFR is a consolidator of infringing file intelligence, enabling co-operating participants to electronically defend the legal rights of copyright owners and law enforcement authorities without impacting the privacy of users, says Altnet, going on, GFR leverages the Altnet TrueNames patent portfolio by locating TrueNames (unique identifiers) in a centralized database so that known infringing files can be acted upon. TruenNames was once described by Freenet creator Ian Clarke as a lame duck . GFR will work its magic by protecting users from inadvertent or spontaneous criminal or civil digital infringements by preventing downloading of known illicit files. This is extremely interesting given that most of the approximately 19,000 men, women and children currently being victimized by the Big Four’s RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) were Kazaa users. And many of them say they had no idea that, when they were using Kazaa, they were also enabling the inadvertent or spontaneous criminal or civil digital infringements because they hadn’t closed off the Kazaa download directory. And they hadn’t done that, they say, because Sharman/Kazaa failed to provide clear information that this was essential to prevent inadvertent infringement. Nor did Sharman/Kazaa provide clear, easily understandable instructions on how to take the directory offline. Be that as it may, even with the corporate entertainment cartels implicitly backing Sharman and Altnet’s most recent lame duck, GFR, the chances of it and/or and Kazaa suddenly gaining credibility are zero. And with Sharman and its friends now close to the cartels, which have been single-mindedly attacking their own customers, we haven’t seen reports, anywhere, of what will happen to the huge amount of personal and other information Kazaa holds on its users and former users. Kazaa in 2008 Said Catherine Lewan’s now disenfranchised court document »»» To use the KaZaA Product, an individual user would download the KaZaA software and install it on their computer. The user could then use the KaZaA Product to catalog files on the individual’s computer. These files would be contained within a ’share folder’. To increase the sound recordings and films available on the KaZaA network, the Sharman Defendants designed the KaZaA software to create the shared folder and make the share folder accessible to anyone using the KaZaA software on the KaZaA network. They did so such that neither the KaZaA software nor the individual user’s computer would inform the user that this had occurred. In other words, the Sharman Defendants designed the KaZaA software to share the contents of the individual users ’share folder’ without letting the user of the KaZaA software know that he or she made such content available to others on the KaZaA network. Further on, the class action document says »»» The Sharman defendants designed the KaZaA software to install a number of additional programmes (’spyware’) on an individual user’s computer for nefarious purposes. They did so such that neither the KaZaA software nor the individual user’s computer would inform the user had this had occurred. The spyware employed by the KaZaA software affected computers adversely. The Sharman Defendants designed the KaZaA software to be nearly impossible to fully eradicate from a user’s computer. [Our emphasis.] Consequently, an individual’s shared folder would remain accessible to the KaZaA Network after the KaZaA software had been removed from the individual’s computer. By automatically sharing files in the shared folder, KaZaA exposed its users to claims of copyright infringement by making such files accessible to other users of the KaZaA network to download. The Sharman Defendants knew and continue to know that the use of the KaZaA Product exposes its users to claims of copyright infringement. Kevin Bermeister – the ’secret weapon’ Sharman can never suffer the anguish experienced by 40,000 or so American men women and children who became RIAA victims because they’d used Kazaa. But fair play demands the company and its executives in some way be held accountable. Meanwhile, “Financed by a controversial Sydney businessman, the Israeli computer game designer Yaron Dotan will this month launch what he believes could be the war to end all wars in the Middle East,” says the Sydney Morning Herald , going on: “Set in the Palestinian territory of Gaza in the year 2040, the game is called Rising Eagle – Gaza and simulates an infantry battle between the elite Israeli Golani Brigade and the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Or, as Mr Dotan prefers to call them, ‘the Waffen SS of today’.” The key to future success, the story has Dotan saying, “is that high quality games can be produced in Israel at a fraction of what it would cost in the US or Europe. “The other secret weapon, he said, is the company’s financial backer – the Sydney businessman Kevin Burmeister [sic], who made a fortune during the 1980s and 1990s through his company Sega-OziSoft and was Australia’s biggest distributor of video games titles. In recent years Mr Burmeister has made news as the man behind the internet song-swapping program Kazaa, which made him the target of several lawsuits brought by the global music industry.” Jon Newton – p2pnet - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi TechCrunch – Kazaa Takes A Swing At Symantec After Adware Accusations, February 6, 2010 Kazaa – Kazaa Consumer Alert – Symantec Gets It Wrong Again, February 6, 2010 misleadingly advertises itself – Spyware Kazaa slammed, March 22, 2006 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? - Login User Name: password: Archives 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code Spyware Kazaa slammed

Olympics bosses tangle with boxing kangaroo

// February 6th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Politics | Freedom:- The 2010 winter olympics are being staged in Vancouver, British  Columbia. And ’staged’ is the right word. Because the games are turning into  a farcical embarrassment. Check out > > > Olympic blogs OK for Vancouver – May 15, 2009 Olympics bosses get nasty over Flickr pix – October 9, 2009 Liberties group condemns Olympics ‘jail’ law – October 12, 2009 Border guards grill Goodman on 2010 Olympics – November 28, 2009 Vancouver censors anti-Olympic art – December 12, 2009 2010 Olympics. Watching the watchers – December 14, 2009 Vancouver’s latest Olympics debacle – December 17, 2009 Now, “Wha’tcha doin’ to me Canada?” – asks Andrew aka Comeoncomcast in an email. “I was excited about Vancouver 2010 but this has dampened the Start ” – he says. Andrew lives in Oz. There’s a huge flag hanging down for two storeys in the building where Australian athletes are staying. “The IOC believed the flag represented an inappropriate commercial trademark,” the Sydney Morning Herald has Australian Olympic Committee spokesman Mike Tancred stating. ”We put it up about three days ago and the next morning the IOC told us to take it down”, he says. The flag became famous in 1983 “when used by Alan Bond and his crew when they won the America’s Cup, although in his new book Great Moments in Australian History , historian Jonathan King says the image first graced RAAF P40 Kittyhawk fighters in Africa in World War II,” says the story. “The AOC bought the registered trademark of the flag from Bond when he later got into financial trouble.” But, ”If the IOC send us a formal letter telling us to take it down, then we probably will,” says Tancred in the story. - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi Sydney Morning Herald – Australians defy IOC request over boxing kangaroo, February 6, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Amazing, fail-safe indexing site!

// February 6th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- The pic on the right went with my last post on the world’s only sacrosanct indexing site. And it’s great for movies. Music. Anything else. You name it. If you can’t find something on The Pirate Bay or isoHunt, or some of the other smaller sites, give it a whirl. It’s Google the Untouchable. “The Pirate Bay guys may soon be on their uppers , and the feral entertainment cartels are also going after … indexing sites like there’s no tomorrow,” I said last time around “, going on: “Which for them, of course, is true.  Indexing sites are exactly that. Sites that index. They don’t actually host anything.  They merely point to where something may be.  Or not. “But it doesn’t really matter because the P2P networks are only where it’s at only for a limited number of file sharers, although Hollywood and the Big 4 record labels would like the world to believe they believe that’s the whole ballgame as they try to pretend the Light Nets, as I’m going to call darknets from now on, don’t exist.” She Began to Lie I was was re-watching The General’s Daughter, a thriller, last night and I’d forgotten I really liked a couple of tunes from Carter Burwell’s soundtrack — in particular Sea Lion Woman at the front end and She Began to Lie at the back, and Rachel Rocket and Gonna Rise and Fly in between. And other pieces. I live in Canada where it’s safe  to download music as long as it’s for your own use. I couldn’t find the soundtrack in any of the usual places — or, rather, I could only find one example, and it was totally static. So I tried Google and Lo! as I write this I’m listening to Rachel Rocket. Vivendi Universal, EMI, Warner Music and Sony Music, and Disney, News Corp, Time Warner, Viacom, NBC Universal and Sony Pictures take no prisoners when it comes to indexing sites. The money they’ve spent destroying search sites which specialised in entertainment would keep Somalia, or similar nations, supplied with food for years. And yet somehow, Google is ignored. No need to stay tuned. Jon Newton – p2pnet - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi last time around – Cartel-proof P2P indexing site, July 29, 2009 February, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

New p2pnet advertiser

// February 6th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- As I’ve said a couple of times, I have no problem with advertising per se. I just don’t like the kind of garbage purpose-built to hijack user information. Can you says Fa$ebook? And can you think of any other names? To keep on keeping on, sites such as p2pnet have to find advertising which fits — nothing tricky, no spyware, easy to install and uninstall, all of which apply to Platrium Games which makes ad-supported – note ad supported — playware. Whenever a p2pnet reader installs one of the games (the first advertised in the banner above) s/he helps me. I get $1.45 for the US; $0.75 for Canada, France, Germany, Netherlands; and, $0.24 for Australia, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland. It works like this. People can play games and earn jacks, which they accumulate to buy stuff. Or if they want, they can choose a charity and donate their winnings to it. Currently, 1,000 jacks are equivalent to about $1.00 and Platrium has donated about $1,000 to it’s four charities, Ryan Webb, my contact, tells me. “Perhaps it doesn’t sound like much, but Platrium was only launched in late November 2009 and is still growing,” he says. In its Best Practices section, Platrium promises users can > > > … safely install our software in order to get access to thousands of pieces of free content – games, emoticons, avatars, and more. As a result of our commitment to best practices, our users are able to make the informed choice of accepting or declining our offer of relevant advertising in exchange for free access to our constantly growing catalog of premium content. The foremost concern of our customers is their own privacy. Recognizing that concern, we are committed to protecting the privacy of our users. Steps we take to notify consumers as to what our software does and how it works: Before installing Platrium, users are provided with a plain language disclosure as to what Platrium is and how it works; users also are provided a link to our Privacy Policy and our complete End User License Agreement. Our policy is that the user must opt-in (consent) to the download before the install of our software will initiate At the conclusion of the install process, users are shown the Platrium reaffirmation window. This reaffirmation message displays visual examples of Platrium advertising formats and uninstall instructions prior to a user receiving an ad Upon install, Platrium provides a system tray icon from which the user can access program information, customer support and uninstall instructions The user can access further information about Platrium through the “Start / All Programs” menu, including direct links to customer support and uninstall instructions The Platrium Playbar (toolbar) provides links for users to access and play Platrium’s hundreds of games and also to access emoticons, avatars and more; in addition, the Playbar contains a messaging section to alert the user when new games are available Slider ads are labeled as coming from our programs and provide a link to further program information and uninstall instructions In any instance where we suspect that a partner channel has been compromised, we will provide every user within the compromised channel appropriate messaging. This messaging provides one-click removal of the fraudulently installed software as well as an opportunity for the user to explicitly opt-in if they wish to keep the software Uninstallation of Platrium can always be done through the Add or Remove Programs function. Slider ads are labeled as coming from our programs and provide a link to further program information and uninstall instructions In any instance where we suspect that a partner channel has been compromised, we will provide every user within the compromised channel appropriate messaging. This messaging provides one-click removal of the fraudulently installed software as well as an opportunity for the user to explicitly opt-in if they wish to keep the software Uninstallation of Platrium can always be done through the Add or Remove Programs function. And here’s the FAQ . Cheers! And thanks … Jon - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi February, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

CBC’s amazing new US licensing plan

// February 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Freedom | P2P:- Jesse Brown and Michael Geist have “briefly tweeted about CBC’s new licencing plan,” writes Cameron McMaster on Canadian Media Policy Portal . “I checked it out, and thought: well, if the government is going to continue to slash budgets, CBC needs to try to get revenue somehow,” he says, going on: ” However, Rupert Murdoch .. I mean .. Bono .. I mean Richard Stursberg has gone a bit far by using an American company, iCopyright (Copyright operates out of Issaquah, Washington), to outsource its licencing. It doesn’t follow Canadian copyright rules, and it doesn’t seem to act in the best interests of a public broadcaster. This is only the tip of the iceberg though.” Interesting. On its site , iCopyright seems to offer THE solution to the copyright problem that’s occupying so much valuable time not only with Rupert Murdoch and Bono,  but also the wise auld grey heads who run the corporate music  and movie industries. “We invented instant licensing of digital content”, iCopyright boasts modestly, stating > > > If you are a Creator or Publisher of content, iCopyright provides you with a web-based system that communicates what others can and can not do with your content. iCopyright grants the license, delivers the content in the format desired by the user, and tracks compliance — no matter where the content goes. If someone takes your content without permission, iCopyright notifies them to buy a license or cease using the content. If you are a User of content at your place of work, iCopyright provides you and your company with a web-based system for obtaining rights and permissions with ONE click. Copyright infringement, even unintentional infringement, can be embarrassing and costly to your company. iCopyright makes it easy to legally get the content your company wants to use. You can even use iCopyright to protect your company’s intellectual property and track where your content is posted on the web. Tracks compliance — no matter where the content goes? Amazing! Just what everyone’s been looking for! But sadly, there is a problem. Or two. “Quite honestly”, it’s the “creators and the publishers themselves,” says the company on its blog , going on > > > They whine about infringement of their content, but many do nothing about it. They don’t implement the solutions that are available to them. Every piece of content that is published and distributed without an instant license mechanism attached to it, is another example of how people become indifferent about the rights of all content creators. I hope 2010 is a better year for content owners. I hope more of them stand up for their rights and for copyright as a constitutional principle afforded to all creators. By buying into iCopyright, of course. ‘They’re really only a hindrance … ‘ When I asked Cam if it’d be OK to re-run his article here, “You should also read Torontoist article,” he suggested. So I did and here, in part, is what Stephen Michalowicz has to say > > > iCopyright’s website trumpets its service as a non-invasive source of revenue and as an anti-piracy tool, but as Torontoist learned, its clients are more interested in the system’s money-making potential than its ability to protect copyright. “It’s not so much a piracy issue as it is a recognition of the fact that we’ve got financial issues,” Jeff Keay, the CBC’s head of media relations, told Torontoist. “The fact of the matter is that our subsidy hasn’t changed over the years—it has eroded in an inflationary environment—and we’ve got to come up with creative revenue streams to help fund some of the things we do, particularly CBC.ca, which has grown enormously.” Robin Graham, the managing director of Torstar Syndication Services, also views the service as a revenue stream, but has been a tad disappointed with its performance so far. “iCopyright had approached the Toronto Star and they had told us about their service, and they said that they could help us earn revenue with online licences,” Graham told us. “It hasn’t produced as much revenue as we thought it might.” News sites have a right to protect their copyrighted materials, but these licensing schemes are unlikely to dissuade pirates or generate much profit, and in an age where information usually travels fast and freely, they’re really only a hindrance that limits a site’s potential reach. Back on Canadian Media Policy Portal, “Let’s look through how one licences an article and how much it costs,” Cam says, continuing > > > How much does it cost to post the article in its entirity to my blog? $250 a month or upto $500 a year! Thanks for that discount! Now for embedded PDF prices: $300 for one month and up to $550 for the year. I have to pay by the month for a licence  starting at $350, but what if I’m a non-profit? $150. You’re too kind. Thanks! For making your news less friendly to share through blogs and pdfs. I’m sure everyone will pay what your asking for, and not copy and paste it and use it as sources for their own news reporting. After all, you can use parts or the entirety of a work for news, comment, critique, or private research under Fair Dealing. But ohh…I forgot, Washington is in the US and they use Fair Use (which covers almost all the same kinds of dealings), and not only that, they interpret it in a very narrow sense. Let’s learn more: Did you just see what I saw? I may be eligible for a $1M dollar reward! This is amazing. It’s also amazing that there are people called digital rights bounty hunters. Seriously, this is really screwed up. Our public broadcaster  is using an American company that follows American laws of Fair Use (and probably not the most liberal interpretations of it) to control its content and also inciting everyone to turn eachother in and for everyone be on the look out for digital rights bounty hunters?  It’s a good thing we’re in Canada where we don’t have the DMCA and we have a Supreme Court ruling that stops Big Media from getting information about our IPs from ISPs. Because even if you share the story, even if you print it, you could be tracked down and fined. Check this out: They want us to pay if we send to 6 or more recipients! And… here’s the kicker: We have to pay to print off more than 6 copies!!! I assume that there are DRM present in every single file that send information back to iCopyright. If you email or print it more than the licenced amount of times, you will be tracked down and prosecuted. Well, non-commercial private use is kind of compromised here. So much for an informed public… Thanks CBC! You serve your public well by outsourcing your DRM enforcement to an American company, which allows for money that could be invested in a Canadian company to be spent abroad. This company creates an atmosphere of self-censorship and fear. Because most Canadians don’t know the difference between Canadian copyright law and American, the users of your website, mainly Canadians, will be afraid to do anything – the digital rights bounty police will come after them. This  company that limits non digital uses of your information and also disables the sharing of information, and most likely, subject your website viewers to all sorts of DRM tracking devices. Way to foster a public sphere! Adds Cam: “My question is why would anyone even click that licence button at all, when they can copy and paste and printscreen? Are those actions trackable? Or is implementing this system futile and a waste of money? Does the CBC really endorse this kind of self-censoring society in favour of recouping lost budget allocations? Please tell me it doesn’t. I’m a concerned citizen, and I want to support you CBC, but you make it so hard!” Jon Newton – p2pnet - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi Canadian Media Policy Portal – CBC’s new licencing plan, January 29, 2010 Torontoist – A Licence to Print Money For Canadian News Sites, January 28, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Homophobia, classism, the politics of rape

// February 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Freedom | P2P:- Jenna McWilliams tells p2pnet she’s been attending the 2010 LGBTQ Film Festival in Bloomington, Indiana. “It was dedicated to the memory of Don Belton (right),” she says. He was a professor of English and the author or Almost Midnight. “I recently had a conversation about Belton’s murder with someone who argued that  when someone identifies as a rape victim, we must side with the accuser no matter what,” says Jenna. “But in this situation, people rallied around Belton, whose killer has said that he was sexually assaulted by Belton.” Now, in a post on her sleeping alone and starting out early blog , “I want to talk about Don Belton,” she says, going on > > > Belton, you may remember, was the Indiana University professor who was found stabbed to death in his home on Christmas day. He was the gay Indiana University professor; his killer, ex-Marine Michael Griffin, has not only confessed but has explained his motive for stabbing Belton: The former military man told police that Belton, who was openly gay, sexually assaulted him in front of his girlfriend, while they were both intoxicated on Christmas Day. And because the assistant professor of English refused to “show remorse,” Griffin stabbed him to death, according to court documents. Bloomington’s LGBTQ community was hit fairly hard by the news of Belton’s death. In part, this is because Belton was well liked; and in part, this is because the killing repeats the old message that nobody wants to be reminded of: It’s (still) not safe to be gay in America. A web site was built and called “Justice for Don Belton.” Vigils were held. Press releases ( here, here ) were circulated mourning Belton’s death and noting the loss to the IU community. And this year’s Pride Film Festival, an annual LGBTQ event held in downtown Bloomington, has been dedicated to Belton’s memory. All of this for someone who has officially been identified as a perpetrator of sexual assault. If this were a hetero situation, and the killer were a woman who claimed to have killed a man after two incidents of sexual assault, there would be no vigils. There would be no websites. There would be no film festival dedicated to the dead man’s memory. And rightly so: After centuries of struggle, we have finally started to evolve into a society that does its best to side with the alleged victim in cases of sexual assault. We aren’t a society that does its very Rape is not about sex. It’s about power. And women who accuse a man of literal rape have been subjected to metaphorical rape by a court system that embraces a blame-the-victim mentality. And so on. But we’re trying, and we’re getting better at having these conversations. best, of course, and you know, we sort of keep having to have the same conversation every time it comes up: And of course this isn’t a hetero situation, and the gender, power, and sex issues don’t map. We pretty much don’t believe that Belton was a rapist or that Griffin was a victim; we believe — and, to be clear, I believe — that Belton was brutally murdered, and that the motive was homophobia. Homosexuality is a deep threat to heteronormative culture, to the status quo. It’s dangerous and terrifying and the most insecure among us believe it must be blotted out. With violence, if needs be. Belton’s death is a reminder that no matter how far we’ve come, we’re still a society that cannot guarantee the safety of its marginalized members. Bloomington was recently named America’s 4th gayest city by the Advocate, which confuses me but let’s go with it for now. And this year’s Pride Festival , which is deploying at the Buskirk-Chumley theater, has drawn hundreds, if not thousands, of beautiful, joyous, and celebratory LGBTQ and LGBTQ-friendly community members. But all it takes is misreading one person, or showing up at the wrong bar at the wrong time, or acting a little too gay, or even just holding your partner’s hand in public; and the Great Lie starts to unravel. It’s not safe to be gay in America. It’s not even always acceptable to be gay in America. This isn’t to say the reaction of the LGBTQ community to Belton’s death is completely ick-free. There is the issue of classism. Part of the reason we don’t believe Griffin is that Belton was so cultured. He was well educated. He was a writer. He was a professor , for godsake. He couldn’t have possibly raped someone … Leaving aside issues of race — not because I think we should leave those issues aside, but because I’m not qualified to talk about race — we craft a narrative around Belton and Griffin, and it’s a narrative that points to deep class assumptions that hover above issues of gender and sexual orientation. It’s the same sort of narrative that frames, for example, the story of Tiger Woods and his multiple mistresses (”Cocktail waitresses! Pancake servers! Why’s Tiger rooting around in the trash?!?”), our attitudes toward celebrities (”Britney Spears — you can take the girl out of Hicksville, but …”), and the political decisions that undergird our social structure. “It’s easier and simpler to use Belton’s murder as a touchstone for conversations about the state of gay rights in America,” says Jenna, adding: “In fact, this story, like all stories worth telling, is far more complicated and multithreaded. Like all stories worth telling, the work of interpreting the details is far less clearcut than it seems upon first blush.” - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi sleeping alone and starting out early blog – on homophobia, classism, and the politics of rape: Don Belton and Bloomington’s Pride Film Festival, January 20, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? - sleeping alone and starting out early blog

Is Michael Bublé a pot head?

// February 1st, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Music:- Is Canadian singer Michael Bublé a casual toker? Or a serious smoker? Lots of people use marijuana. Lots of people drink alcohol. And they do it without obvious harmful effect. Others can’t do either without losing control. According to Britain’s News of the World, Canadian singer Michael Bublé regularly smokes up and then gets the munchies, a phenomenon well-known to anyone who’s indulged in the weed, to any extent. Use dope and you get a major craving for tasty foods, which is why some people undergoing chemotherapy for cancer, and who lose their appetite as a result, are sometimes prescribed marijuana. The newspaper is quoted by :::Nine News which has “ex-model turned hairpiece maker Tiffany Bromley” stating, “Michael smoked up to three joints a day when I was with him.” She goes on, “It was part of Michael’s routine to smoke late at night. Then he always got hungry. He’d raid the hotel mini-bar and eat three or four Snickers bars in one go — plus pistachios, peanuts, sweets and liquorice. He had an enormous appetite. “When I flew to see him in Los Angeles he made a point of making me bring a box of Canadian chocolate cream May West cakes for the band. But after a smoke he munched his way through most of them like someone who hadn’t eaten for months.” His “embittered ex-girlfriend” also had a few things to say about her love life with Bublé which are “at odds with his clean-cut image”. He’s a favourite to “win the Brit award for best International Male Solo Artist next month and is engaged to Argentine soap star Luisana Loreley Lopilato de la Torre,” adds :::Nine News He and Bromley dated on and off for a decade, according to News of the World. (Cheers, Andrew aka Comeonecomcast) - … .. … and identi.ca More :::Nine News – Michael Bublé ‘craved cannabis, sex’, January 31, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

ACTA: speaking out

// January 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view Freedom | P2P:- The 7th round of ACTA negotiations will conclude around lunch time today in Mexico. If past meetings are any indication, a few hours later the participating countries will issue a bland statement thanking the host Mexican government, discussing the progress on civil enforcement, border measures, and the Internet as well as noting the transparency discussions and the continued desire to address the issue.  The release will then conclude by looking forward to the next meeting in Wellington, New Zealand in April. As this five part series ( Part One on substance, Part Two on leaks, Part Three on transparency, and Part Four on local implementations) demonstrates, however, there are ongoing concerns with both the process and substance of ACTA.  From a process perspective, the negotiations remain far more secretive than other international agreements. From a substantive viewpoint, ACTA could result in dramatic reforms in many participating countries.  Countering the momentum behind ACTA will require many to speak out.  This admittedly feels like a daunting task given the powerful interests that are committed to seeing ACTA through.  That said, many have begun to speak out. This last post starts with links to a sampling of the politicians and groups that have already made ACTA one of their issues: Elected Officials Senator Ron Wyden, United States Senators Bernie Sanders and Sherrod Brown, United States Senators Pat Leahy and Arlen Specter, United States Rep. Mike Doyle, United States Rep. Zoe Lofgren, United States Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, France MP Tom Watson, United Kingdom UK Liberal Democrats party Minister Åsa Torstensson, Sweden European Parliament Resolution MEP Jens Holms, Sweden MP Clare Curran, New Zealand ( second time ) ( third time ) Peter Dunne, New Zealand MP Charlie Angus, Canada ( editorial ) Public Interest Group Letters Library Content Alliance Oxfam EFF, Essential Action, KEI, PK, Salud y Farmacos, TACD, UAEM, PIRG Worldwide NGO Coalition European Telecommunications Network Operators’ Association KEI and PK KEI So what can the general public do?  One thing is to learn more and work together with groups already active on ACTA.  These include: ACTA.net.nz (New Zealand) EFF Public Knowledge FFII KEI OpenACTA IP Justice ACTAActionNow! CIPPIC (Canada) Electronic Frontiers Australia (Australia) La Quadrature Du Net (France) Movimento ScambioEtico (Italy) Bits of Freedom (Netherlands) Every individual concerned with ACTA can also speak out.  Write to your local MP or national leader or participate in the specific activities sponsored by some of the organizations listed above.  These include the EFF ACTA Action Alert , the effort to encourage UK MPs to support the cross-party motion for ACTA transparency, and the signing of the A2K ACTA Petition . Michael Geist – Michael Geist’s Blog [Geist is the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa. He can be reached by email at mgeist @ uottawa dot ca ] - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi January, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Indian authors go after Google

// January 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P | Advertising:- On the heels of claims by Chinese authors that online advertising company Google published their works without permission , writers in India  are leveling the same charge. The Indian Reprographic Rights Organisation (IRRO) and Federation of Indian Publishers (FIP) “moved a US court against the Google Book Settlement’s (GBS 2.0) alleging copyright violation for scanning several books in Indian languages without notifying the authors,” says the Economic Times of India . “Google’s unilateral conduct is a brazen attempt to turn copyright law on its head, by usurping the exclusive rights of the copyright holder”, thje story has IRRO lawyer Siddharth Arya stating, going on: “In the name of innovation, Google has scanned several thousands of copyrighted books with no permission from the authors – whether for free or for value. They have also scanned books in India vernacular languages. “This is a clear violation of Indian and international copyright laws.” Under the Google Library Project, it’s scanned millions of books under copyright protection “by reaching an agreement with several universities in the US,” says the story, quoting Arya as saying, “The outcome of all of this was GBS 2.0 that incorporates minor cosmetic changes but continues to violate basic copyright laws. It retains several fundamental issues in the original settlement such as a mechanism known as ‘opt out’.” “This implies that if a person is silent, he is deemed to have consented to an agreement, thus fundamentally altering his rights, a concept inherently unfair and contrary to existing legal principles,” he added. The ‘Opt Out’ scheme is probably Google’s most successful ploys. It wires people into products such as Street View without telling them, and without their permission, and then asks them to ‘Opt Out’ if they don’t like it. In China, “Google is willing to apologise to Chinese authors” the China Daily said, quoting Yang Chengzhi, secretary of the Chinese Writers Association (CWA), as stating: “We will have a serious study of the apology and hear the authors’ opinions before we decide whether or not to accept Google’s apology.” - … .. … and identi.ca More First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win ~ Mahatma Gandhi without permission – Google says ‘Sorry’ to Chinese authors, January 11, 2010 Economic Times of India – Indian publishers move court against Google, January 28, 2010 China Daily – Google apologizes to Chinese writers, January 11, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -

Hansenet, Telefónica O2 merger

// January 29th, 2010 // No Comments » // p2p

p2pnet view P2P:- German ISP Hansenet and Telefónica O2 are to become one. It’s OK for Telefónica Deutschland GmbH to buy Hansenet Telekommunikation GmbH and “an indirectly wholly-owned subsidiary of Telefónica S.A. of Spain”, says the European Commission . The concentration wouldn’t “significantly impede effective competition in the European Economic Area (EEA) or any substantial part of it,” says the EU. Telefónica Deutschland belongs to the Telefónica Group, which operates fixed and mobile telephony networks in Spain, the Czech Republic, Germany, the UK, Ireland and Slovakia, as well as Latin America. Hansenet provides broadband internet access and various telecommunications services, including fixed and data connections in Germany. “The Commission examined the effects of the proposed transaction on the provision of broadband internet access as well as on mobile and fixed telephony,” says the EU, adding: “The Commission found that in view of their different business focusses, Telefónica and Hansenet are not major competitors for each other in any of the relevant markets. Moreover, both the horizontal and the vertical relationships between the activities of Hansenet and Telefonica in Germany are limited and the combined firm would continue to face a number of strong, effective competitors, including the incumbent operator Deutsche Telekom.” - … .. … and identi.ca More European Commission – Commission clears proposed acquisition of German internet provider Hansenet by Telefónica O2, January 29, 2010 Use free p2pnet newsfeeds for your site. Subscribe to - | | rss feed: http://-/feed -? -



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