Bonum Certa Men Certa

Leftover Links 19/07/2023: Smartphone Sales Plunge Again



  • Leftovers

    • The AtlanticIn Praise of Phone Numbers

      Still, it’s worth considering what we lose if our area codes, prefixes, and line numbers are slowly washed away by the sands of time. If nothing more, it’s worth appreciating these digits—an impersonal series of semi-random numbers that, once they’re yours, take on a new life. When shared, a phone number is the most intimate of invitations, offering boundless possibilities of connection. It moors and orients us. That alone is a small miracle worth celebrating.

    • Michael West MediaCommonwealth Games could head back to the UK

      The Commonwealth Games could return to the United Kingdom, with Scotland weighing up the cost after Victoria dumped the event because it was too expensive.

      State Premier Daniel Andrews put the price tag to run the 2026 event in regional Victoria at up to $7 billion, more than double the initial estimate of $2.6b.

    • Hardware

      • IT WireUS chip lobby group urges govt to go easy on additional China curbs

        The Semiconductor Industry Association said in a statement on Monday: "Recognising that strong economic and national security require a strong US semiconductor industry, leaders in Washington took bold and historic action last year to enact the CHIPS and Science Act to strengthen our industry’s global competitiveness and de-risk supply chains.

        "Allowing the industry to have continued access to the China market, the world’s largest commercial market for commodity semiconductors, is important to avoid undermining the positive impact of this effort.

      • IT WireSmartphone shipments down again in 2Q23, 'but better times ahead'

        It said: "According to our Smartphone Inventory Tracker, the global smartphone inventory (sell-in vs sell-through) has been reaching healthy levels over the past four to five months, allowing OEMs some breathing room to launch and push newer models in the second half and attract consumers to upgrade, and accelerate the replacement cycle.

      • HackadayModern Software Brings Back The Timex Datalink

        As much as some people on the Internet might like to think — no, Apple did not come up with the idea of the smart watch. Even if you ignore the calculator watches that we imagine a full 60% of Hackaday readers wore at one time or another in their lives, the Timex Datalink was already syncing with computers and pulling down the user’s list of appointments back in 1994 by decoding the pulses of light produced by a CRT monitor. Hey, it sounded like a good idea at the time.

    • Health/Nutrition/Agriculture

    • Proprietary/Artificial Intelligence (AI)

      • The Register UKMicrosoft 'fesses to code blunder in Azure Container Apps ● The Register
      • Seattle Times Seattle-area workers’ paychecks shrank in 2022. Why? Tech
      • ForbesMicrosoft Cuts More Staff [Ed: It should say over 1000 and not repeat the lie about "10,000" earlier this year (it was vastly more)]

        Microsoft reportedly let go of 1,000 employees over the past week in addition to the 10,000 it cut earlier this year...

      • dwaves.deGNU Linux since kernel 5.x now fully supports NTFS (thanks a lot M$, it only took them approx a decade) but exFAT might be an option too

        NTFS (better file exchange since 2021) vs Open Source https://www.theregister.com/2021/10/13/how_ntfs_finally_made_it/ wow.

      • Cory DoctorowLet the Platforms Burn

        This is a vicious cycle: massive fire suppression efforts creates the illusion that people can safely live at the wildland–urban interface. Taken in by this illusion, more people move to this combustible zone. The presence of these people in the danger zone militates for more extreme fire-suppression, which makes the illusion all the more tempting. Yielding to temptation, more people move to the fire zone.

        But the opposite of controlled burns isn’t no burns, it’s out-of-control burns: wildfires.

      • New York TimesU.N. Officials Urge Regulation of Artificial Intelligence

        On Tuesday, diplomats and leading experts in the field of A.I. laid out for the Security Council the risks and threats — along with the scientific and social benefits — of the new emerging technology. Much remains unknown about the technology even as its development speeds ahead, they said.

        “It’s as though we are building engines without understanding the science of combustion,” said Jack Clark, co-founder of Anthropic, an A.I. safety research company. Private companies, he said, should not be the sole creators and regulators of A.I.

      • New York TimesWikipedia’s Moment of Truth

        Recently, when I asked this editor — he asked me to withhold his name because Wikipedia editors can be the targets of abuse — if he still worried about his encyclopedia’s fate, he told me that the newer versions made him more convinced that ChatGPT was a threat. “It wouldn’t surprise me if things are fine for the next three years,” he said of Wikipedia, “and then, all of a sudden, in Year 4 or 5, things drop off a cliff.”

      • DaemonFC (Ryan Farmer)I Found and Reported a Security Vulnerability on Discover Bank’s Mobile Web Site.

        I called 1-800-Discover to tell them how to reproduce it and expose the user’s account credentials to anyone with local access to the phone’s Web browser if that browser is Firefox or Fennec on Android.

        I’m also going to expose the issue here on my blog to motivate them to fix it since I noticed this problem several months ago and meant to say something and it still does it.

      • Vice Media Group‘Week of Cone’: Activist Group Is Protesting Driverless Cars by Disabling Them With Traffic Cones

        A group of anti-car activists in San Francisco have been disabling driverless cars owned by Waymo and Cruise by placing traffic cones on their hoods which appear to render the vehicles inoperable. Far from being a “prank” as others have described it, the group, which calls itself Safe Street Rebel, is reviving a century-old practice of U.S. urban residents protesting against more cars in cities.

        The protest event, dubbed by the group as the "Week of Cone," comes as a powerful state regulatory body will rule on whether the AV companies can rapidly expand both the number of cars they operate in San Francisco and expand the hours of operation from the middle of the night to 24/7, an expansion that is opposed not just by anti-car activists but also the city’s fire and police chiefs.

    • Pseudo-Open Source

      • Openwashing

        • GizmodoMeta and Microsoft Introduce Llama 2 AI and It's Open Source [sic]

          Meta announced the new open-access Llama, which stands for Large Language Model Meta AI, in a blog post today. The corporation explained that letting people peer under the hood of Llama was an important step in making the AI safer, as a “generation of developers and researchers can stress test [it].” Llama 2 is now available for free for research and commercial use—Meta touts that Llama 2 was trained on 40% more data than the first model. Meta also named Microsoft as a preferred partner in Llama 2, with the AI being available with Microsoft’s cloud computing platform Azure.

        • MIT Technology ReviewMeta’s latest AI model is free for all

          The company is actually releasing a suite of AI models, which include versions of LLaMA 2 in different sizes, as well as a version of the AI model that people can build into a chatbot, similar to ChatGPT. Unlike ChatGPT, which people can access through OpenAI’s website, the model must be downloaded from Meta’s launch partners Microsoft Azure, Amazon Web Services, and Hugging Face.

        • El PaísMeta makes public its ChatGPT rival, Llama

          The financial terms of that partnership were not disclosed.

    • Security

    • Defence/Aggression

    • Transparency/Investigative Reporting

      • Pro PublicaHow to Use the “Nursing Home Inspect” Database

        “Nursing Home Inspect” makes it fast and easy to search thousands of recent government inspection reports, find information about specific nursing homes and discover new serious issues found by inspectors. Below are some tips to help you make the most of our database.

        First, a little background.

      • Pro PublicaWe Updated “Nursing Home Inspect.” Here’s What Changed.

        ProPublica has updated “Nursing Home Inspect,” our database that helps you find problems that inspectors identified in more than 15,000 U.S. nursing homes, to make it easier to search government reports and browse serious issues. We’ve added new data, a redesigned user interface and advanced search features.

    • Environment

      • FAIRAs Skies Turn Orange, Media Still Hesitate to Mention What’s Changing Climate

        With a sepia hue and the smell of a campfire engulfing the East Coast, the immediate effects of human-caused climate change seemed as concrete as they had ever been. But on US TV news, viewers were more likely to hear climate denial than reporting that made the essential connection between fossil fuel consumption and worsening wildfires—if they heard mention of climate change at all.

      • GreeceCopernicus system activated to map burned areas

        The purpose of the activation is the production of maps and data of the affected region, to assist the work of agencies involved in dealing with emergencies and managing the consequences of the fire.

      • ANF NewsEcocide in Turkish-occupied Afrin continues

        In May alone, the mercenaries of the Turkish occupation cut down a total of 2,124 olive and pomegranate trees in the occupied Afrin region. Additionally, approximately 18,000 olive trees were burned. Furthermore, intentional fires destroyed numerous forest trees, according to a balance sheet published by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) on June 4.

        Afrin Canton was the westernmost canton of Rojava and North and East Syria, home to 200,000 ethnic Kurds. Though the population was overwhelmingly Kurdish, it was home to diverse religious groups including Yazidis, Alawites and Christians alongside Sunni Muslims.

      • Deutsche WelleHow do we fight wildfires as temperatures rise?

        Satellites managed by the likes of NASA are already helping firefighters keep track of moving fires across the planet. More recently, however, drones are becoming a more localized high-tech fire suppression gadget.

        A project underway in Finland, where 75% of the land is covered in forest, is making it easier to track emerging forest fires with the help of drones.

        "We're developing a new AI-based drone technology to quickly detect forest fires and provide situational awareness when extinguishing the fires," said Professor Eija Honkavaara from the Finnish Geospatial Research Institute (NLS) and a member of research group undertaking the project, the FireMan consortium.

      • AxiosThe Sun is defying forecasts

        The Sun's activity is defying forecasts and highlighting how difficult it is to predict the machinations of Earth's nearest star.

      • Energy/Transportation

        • YLEGerman bus firm Flixbus opens new Vaasa to Warsaw route

          According to the company's website, passengers can expect to pay between 60 and 80 euros — depending on the day of travel — for the estimated 30-hour journey from Vaasa to Warsaw.

        • David RosenthalNY Fed:

          Note in particular that traders don't actually believe that USDT is safe, it is just that its size makes it convenient for traders to use USDT unless, like Wile E. Coyote, they look down at it as they did last May.

      • Overpopulation

    • Finance

      • Michael West MediaProperty giant Lendlease to lay off 740 employees

        Lendlease is cutting 10 per cent of its global workforce as the real estate giant works to implement a five-year turnaround plan.

        A Lendlease spokesman on Tuesday confirmed the company will lay off about 740 people.

      • Democracy NowHistorian John Womack: Unions Need to Exploit “Choke Points” in Economy to Grow Working-Class Power

        As Hollywood actors enter their fifth day on the picket lines and some 340,000 Teamsters working at UPS prepare to carry out one of the largest single-employer strikes in U.S. history, we speak with historian and labor organizer John Womack Jr. about his new book, Labor Power and Strategy, focused on how to seize and build labor power and solidarity. Labor actions around the world are gaining headlines this week. In Italy, over 1,000 flights were disrupted as airport and airline workers went on a two-day strike for higher wages and better benefits. Members of the Union of Southern Service Workers at a South Carolina Waffle House participated in a three-day strike protesting safety and pay conditions.

      • Michael West MediaBritain's inflation rate slows sharply to 7.9 per cent

        British inflation has fallen by more than expected in June and was its slowest in more than a year at 7.9 per cent, according to official data that will ease some of the pressure on the Bank of England to keep on raising interest rates sharply.

        Sterling fell as the Office for National Statistics said on Wednesday the consumer price inflation growth rate was its lowest since March of last year but remained above the pace of price growth in many other big, rich economies.

      • Pro PublicaBehind the Scenes of a Deal With a “We Buy Ugly Houses” Franchise

        In the year since her husband died, Royanne McNair felt increasingly lonely in North Las Vegas. With most of her children and grandchildren in the Midwest, she decided to sell the house she and her husband had already paid off and move back to Ohio.

        Her goal was to be there by July 29, the anniversary of her husband’s death.

      • Security WeekNigerian Man Sentenced to 8 Years in US Prison for $8 Million BEC Scheme

        Olalekan Jacob Ponle, a Nigerian national living in the UAE, was sentenced to 8 years in a US prison for his role in an $8 million BEC scheme.

      • Security WeekBlack Hat Hacker Exposes Real Identity After Infecting Own Computer With Malware

        A threat actor’s real identity was uncovered after they infected their own computer with an information stealer.

    • AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics

      • The Register UKUS adds Euro spyware makers to export naughty list

        Adding Intellexa and Cytrox to the Entity List places export restrictions on the software vendors as part of the Biden administration's ongoing crackdown against commercial surveillance technology. It is now impossible for US organizations to do business legally with those placed on the list without special permission from Uncle Sam; the list effectively cuts off Intellexa et al from America.

        The move also follows warnings from cybersecurity researchers about abuses committed using the firms' snooping products.

      • New York TimesU.S. Blacklists Two Spyware Firms Run by an Israeli Former General

        Both Intellexa and Cytrox are controlled by Tal Dilian, a former general in the Israeli military intelligence who was forced to retire from the Israeli Defense Forces in 2003 after an internal investigation raised suspicions that he had been involved in funds mismanagement, according to three former senior officers in the Israeli military.

        He eventually moved to Cyprus, a European Union island nation that has become a favored destination in recent years for surveillance firms and cyberintelligence experts.

      • [Repeat] ZimbabweWhen govts and citizens wage Twitter wars – can we learn anything from Saudi Arabia?

        So, the Saudi people can use Twitter but so can the government and boy, does the government use Twitter.

        The government has taken steps to control the flow of information on the platform. For example, it has banned certain hashtags and accounts and has been accused and/or caught doing the following shady stuff: [...]

        ● creating fake accounts that pose as real people or organisations

        ● using bots to amplify pro-Saudi messages and drown out criticism

        ● paying people to spread pro-Saudi messages on Twitter

        ● targeting specific hashtags and conversations with pro-Saudi messages

      • [Old] Al JazeeraThe fake Twitter accounts influencing the Gulf crisis

        What many did not know is that some of the groundwork for the blockade had already been laid on social media platforms like Twitter.

        An online propaganda battle, which started in the months before the GCC Crisis, continues to this day, Al Jazeera has found.

      • Michael GeistWhat If It Isn’t a Bluff?!: The Consequences of the Government’s Epic Bill C-18 Miscalculation Begin to Set In

        As Bill C-18 made its way through the legislative process, the government and the media lobby groups supporting the bill insisted that Google and Meta were bluffing when they warned that legislation premised on mandated payments for links could lead the companies to stop Canadian news linking or sharing on their platforms. Proponents would point to the Australian experience or claim that links to Canadian news were simply too valuable for the platforms to walk away. Compromise amendments were ignored in favour of tough talk about not backing down, the platforms were investigated for daring to test link blocking, and MPs and Senators acted as stenographers for media lobby groups by introducing amendments that now leave the government with even less flexibility in the regulatory process.

      • ScheerpostHow Harlan Crow Slashed His Tax Bill by Taking Clarence Thomas on Superyacht Cruises

        In lavishing gifts on the Supreme Court justice, the billionaire GOP donor may have violated tax laws, according to tax experts.

      • Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda

        • The AtlanticHow to Redeem Social Media

          The slow collapse of Twitter has inspired a host of would-be successors. Millions of people are trying out new social-media platforms such as Meta’s Threads in a textbook triumph of enthusiasm over experience. I’m sure that creating free content for a social-media platform run by an unaccountable billionaire will turn out differently this time, we tell ourselves, as though we were all born yesterday.

        • Modern Diplomacy10 years later: The deceptive results of the ‘Arab Spring’

          Even a staunch American ally, Egyptian President Mubarak, found it necessary to declare that “the introduction of democracy into the Arab world in this way is a complete illusion that will lead to anarchy in the Middle East.” However, he paid the price for this and spent several years in prison, and in his state, as a result of the planned revolutions of the so-called “Arab Spring”, the extremist Muslim Brotherhood (banned in Russia) was forcibly brought to power. They came to power in ostensibly democratic elections held with sabers and machetes. Egypt was on the brink of civil war, chaos and the initial phase of genocide against eight million Egyptian Christians. Only thanks to the coup d’état of General Al-Sisi with the support of Saudi Arabia, it was possible to somewhat stabilize the situation in the state.

    • Censorship/Free Speech

      • RFERLIranian Singer Nyusha Qurbani Reportedly Taken From Stage By Security Agents

        Witnesses said Iranian singer Nyusha Qurbani was taken from the stage by plainclothed security agents while performing with her chamber music group Ataq Band on July 17.

      • ABCBelarus arrests a prominent journalist in continued crackdown on dissent

        Authorities in Belarus have arrested a prominent journalist working with the U.S.-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, the latest step in a yearslong crackdown on opposition figures, independent journalists and human rights activists

      • GizmodoReddit Just Deleted Every Message You Sent Before 2023

        When asked about the missing chats, a Reddit spokesperson pointed Gizmodo to an announcement the platform made last month, which confirmed that user chats made before January 1, 2023, would be deleted on June 30. Reddit did not immediately respond to Gizmodo’s questions about why those chats were deleted.

      • RFERLRussian Paratrooper Who Condemned War In Ukraine Gets Asylum In France
        Russian paratrooper Pavel Filatyev, who took part in Moscow’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, told Agenstvo Telegram channel on July 18 that he had obtained political asylum in France after writing a book about his experiences in the Kremlin's war against its neighbor.

        [...]

        Shortly after launching the full-scale aggression against Ukraine in late February last year, President Vladimir Putin signed a law that calls for lengthy prison terms for distributing "deliberately false information" about Russian military operations as the Kremlin seeks to control the narrative about the war.

        The France-based founder of the Gulagu.net human rights group, Vladimir Osechkin, helped Filatyev escape Russia for France in August 2022.

      • ShadowproofThey Tried To Censor The ‘Sound Of Freedom’ With An Air Horn

        There I was sitting in the movie theatre trying to watch “Sound of Freedom,” when I heard the sound of an air horn.

        Bwaam! Bom-bom-bom-bom-bwaam!€ 

      • Digital Music NewsWarner Music Group and TikTok Ink Expansive Partnership Deal — Including ‘Commercial Music Library’ Licensing and Forthcoming ‘Alternative Economic Models’ [Ed: A very dangerous surrender to ByteDance]
        TikTok and Robert Kyncl-led Warner Music Group (WMG) have inked a “first-of-its-kind” expanded agreement extending to TikTok Music as well as the short-form video-sharing app itself and its Commercial Music Library.

        [...]

        However, perhaps the most noteworthy component of the announcement message about the TikTok-WMG deal is the entities’ commitment to spearheading “the joint development of additional and alternative economic models.”

        Exactly what these “additional and alternative economic models” entail remains to be seen, but the commitment has arrived as the major labels are exploring streaming-compensation reform against the backdrop of AI’s quick-growing industry role.

      • Digital Music NewsTikTok Launches ‘Elevate’ Program to Provide Emerging Artists ‘With Meaningful Support Both In-App and Out in the World’ [Ed: Letting Beijing control art and culture intentionally is dangerous]

        Two months after expanding its “New Music” hashtag into “a global music discovery hub,” TikTok has debuted Elevate, which higher-ups are billing as the “first-ever program to identify, amplify and celebrate emerging artists.” The highly controversial video-sharing app announced the formal rollout of Elevate today.

    • Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press

      • EFFEFF Supports the PRESS Act to Protect Journalists

        Several Senators and Representatives, including Senator Ron Wyden, Sen. Mike Lee, Sen. Richard Durbin, Rep. Jamie Raskin and Rep. Kevin Kiley, re-introduced the bipartisan, bicameral legislation in June.€ 

        Journalists shouldn’t be forced to choose between protecting their confidential sources or going to prison. Law enforcement agencies under both Democratic and Republican administrations have secretly subpoenaed emails and phone records from reporters in order to determine their sources. The PRESS Act protects newsgathering and the free flow of information to the American people, since journalists often rely on confidential sources — who may fear being jailed, fired, or retaliated against for speaking to the press. This law is a necessary protection for journalists to report vital news stories in the national interest.

        The PRESS Act is the strongest federal shield bill for journalists we've ever seen. Its definition of journalist is appropriately broad, its exceptions are narrow and targeted, and it restricts subpoenas directed not only to journalists but to their phone and email providers.€ 

      • Hong Kong Free PressHong Kong mulls exempting national security TV, radio shows from impartiality requirement

        Hong Kong authorities have proposed that programmes about national education, national identity, and the “correct understanding” of the national security law be exempt from an impartiality clause requiring “even-handedness” when opposing points of view are presented.

      • Hong Kong Free PressHong Kong 47: Democrats gaining legislative majority ‘realistic’ had Beijing not intervened outside Basic Law, ex-journalist says

        It would have been realistic for the democrats to have gained a majority in the Legislative Council had Beijing not intervened with methods outside of the Basic Law, a defendant has testified at a landmark national security trial. Gwyneth Ho, a former journalist at the now-defunct Stand News, began her testimony on Tuesday.

      • ABCSeveral top editors at Penguin Random House accept buyout offers, layoffs also underway

        The buyouts and layoffs come amid a broader reorganization at Penguin Random House, which earlier this year overhauled its Random House and Crown divisions. The departures at the country's largest publishing house also follow numerous other high-profile changes. Global company CEO Markus Dohle and U.S. CEO Madeline McIntosh both left within months of PRH’s failed attempt to purchase rival publisher Simon & Schuster, a deal struck down last fall by a federal judge. In June, Robert Gottlieb, a former Knopf editor-in-chief who worked on all of Robert Caro’s Lyndon Johnson books, died at age 92. Knopf has not yet announced a new editor for the fifth volume.

      • Breach MediaNative Hawaiians take fight against Canadian-backed telescope to the UN

        At the blockade, Maile met up with other Native Hawaiian professors who were opposed to the project. They talked about “Kuleana and Kulana,” Maile recalled in an interview, referencing the ʻŌlelo Hawaii terms for “responsibilities and obligations.” As educators, they decided their fight wouldn’t be on the ground, but inside their institutions.

      • TruthdigJulian Assange Is ‘Dangerously Close’ to Extradition for Revealing US War Crimes

        Instead of protecting freedom of the press, to which he pledged allegiance at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner in April, Joe Biden is continuing Donald Trump’s prosecution of Assange under the infamous Espionage Act. James Ball is one of at least four journalists that the Department of Justice (DOJ) and FBI are pressuring to cooperate with the prosecution of Assange, Ball wrote in Rolling Stone.

      • ScheerpostJulian Assange Is ‘Dangerously Close’ to Extradition for Revealing US War Crimes

        This is the first time a publisher has been charged under the Espionage Act for disclosing government secrets.

      • Modern DiplomacyBurkina Faso suspends third French media outlet in under 8 months

        Burkinabè authorities should immediately reverse the suspension of French television news channel La Chaîne Info (LCI) and stop censoring local and foreign media coverage of the jihadist insurgency in Burkina Faso and the Sahel region, reports the Committee to Protect Journalists.

    • Civil Rights/Policing

      • TechdirtIf The Crime Rate Goes Down After Half A Cop Shop Quits, What Are We Even Paying For?

        Law enforcement agencies often command an outsized portion of city and county budgets. The argument for this expenditure is basically just Blue Line bullshit: without the police at full staff, surely every locality will descend into criminal anarchy.

      • TechdirtTop Court In Illinois Says Compelling Password Production Isn’t A Fifth Amendment Violation

        Well, this is an unfortunate turn of events. The last time we discussed this issue in this state (March 2019), a state appeals court came to the opposite conclusion: compelling password production is a violation of rights.

      • Jacobin MagazineAI Is Being Used to Attack the Working Poor

        Australian business and government have joined the global chorus warning about the risks artificial intelligence (AI) poses to humanity. But despite their fretful tone, the introduction of algorithms into Australian political life has been less apocalyptic and more business-as-usual. Changes to the Australian welfare system are a prime example. Punitive and difficult-to-access by design, the system is now best known for a disastrous algorithmic innovation nicknamed robodebt.

      • NBCSAG-AFTRA issues strike guidance specifically for influencers amid confusion

        Some influencers are members of SAG-AFTRA, but even those who aren’t are still beholden to the rules of the strike. They risk being blacklisted from the union if they “scab,” a term for someone who continues to work while unionized workers strike.

      • GizmodoWhat Can Fans Actually Do to Support the WGA and SAG-AFTRA Strikes?

        As SAG-AFTRA’s strike formally began this past Friday, July 14, many questions remained about how members and non-members could support the movement without going against the wishes of the union. But social media spent the weekend rife with confusion and misinformation, as people sought layers upon layers of clarification about how the strike impacted everyone from journalists working within the entertainment media landscape, to independent content creators and influencers, all the way down to members of the public who are simply just fans of the content being made by striking workers—past, present, and future. Discussions about reviewing or reacting to new and upcoming film and TV projects, to things as simple as cosplay or just talking about media at all online, as being equivalent to crossing a picket line came up for debate. So what can and can’t be done during either SAG-AFTRA or the WGA’s strike? Here’s a brief primer.

      • Jacobin MagazineMichigan Amazon Workers Staged a Walkout on Prime Day

        “We are demanding a safe work environment where we are not straining, pulling muscles from lifting heavy packages, or tripping over boxes falling off the conveyor belt,” said Alicia Ozier, one of the strikers at the delivery station.

        She and her coworkers walked out after Amazon retaliated by refusing to accommodate her when she sustained an injury on the job.

      • Jacobin MagazineHome Insurers Are Exploiting the Climate Crisis to Gut Consumer Protections

        Yet as insurers demand higher rates and cancel policies amidst intensifying climate risks, they’re actively contributing to those risks. The three groups planning to limit or cease new business in California — Farmers Insurance Group, State Farm, and Allstate — also hold nearly $40 billion in fossil fuel investments, according to a Lever review of the most recent data reported to state regulators.

        But instead of addressing their own role in the climate crisis, insurers are using the disaster to push for deregulation. In order to continue writing homeowner policies, insurers and their lobbying groups are now demanding that regulators relax the state’s landmark price-gouging protections, considered the most rigorous in the nation.

        Watchdogs warn that this amounts to an attempt to exploit a crisis that the industry profits from twice over, shifting the costs of climate-fueled disasters to consumers in the form of higher premiums while continuing to invest billions of those premium dollars in oil and gas.

      • TruthdigUN Report Reveals 165 Million People Plunged Into Poverty in the Past Three Years

        According to the report, it would cost just over $14 billion—approximately 0.009% of global gross domestic product in 2022—to “mitigate the current surge of poverty and lift out of poverty the 165 million people living on less than $3.65 a day.”

      • The NationHollywood Bosses Are Trying to Scare Striking Workers Into Folding. They Won’t Win.

        The SAG-AFTRA strike is a significant expansion of the scale and momentum of our struggle. But in a few key ways, things are the same for us as they were two-and-a-half months ago. Our members have continued to show up day after day on the picket lines. Our resolve to hold out for a fair contract, one that compensates writers fairly for the profits we generate and allows us to cultivate sustainable long-term careers and support our families (in whatever way we define them) has not wavered.

      • Site36“Itiot meeting”: Public Prosecutor wants racist and anti-Semitic police in Frankfurt to be punished
      • Michael West MediaCourts are vulnerable to foreign spies, inquiry told

        One of Australia’s top intelligence officers has warned foreign countries are using legal proceedings in Australia to gather sensitive information.

        Office of National Intelligence€ Director-General Andrew Shearer told an inquiry into laws allowing secret trials to take place to deal with national security matters, that a high proportion of such cases would involve foreign interference offences.

      • Michael West MediaIntelligence watchdog to examine secret trial laws

        The ability for courts to hold trials in secret to deal with national security matters will be scrutinised at a two-day hearing in Canberra.

        Grant Donaldson, Australia’s Independent National Security Legislation Monitor, will hear from government officials, intelligence bosses, prosecutors and human rights advocates.

    • Internet Policy/Net Neutrality

      • EFFYou Can Help Stop These Bad Internet Bills

        Below, you’ll find links to actions you can quickly take to contact your lawmaker...

        The Kids Online Safety Act would increase surveillance and restrict access to information under the guise of protecting children online. KOSA would put the tools of censorship in the hands of state attorneys general. It would greatly endanger the rights and safety of young people online. KOSA’s burdens will affect adults, too, who will likely face hurdles, like age verification, to access legal content online as a result of the bill.

      • Security WeekNetcraft Raises $100M, Hires New CEO for Global Expansion

        The British company secures $100 million in funding and announced the hiring of a new chief executive to pursue global expansion plans.

      • Ruben SchadeIf you care about it, archive it: take two

        When talking about personal storage, the traditional philosophy has been to slavishly backup anything irreplaceable, and not to worry too much about media like TV shows.

        This advice, which I’ve absolutely parroted in the past, presupposes that:

        Beating two eggs will eventually form stiff peaks.

      • [Repeat] APNICAdding ZONEMD protections to the root zone

        The Domain Name System (DNS) root zone will soon be getting a new record type, called ZONEMD, to further ensure the security, stability, and resiliency of the global DNS in the face of emerging new approaches to DNS operation. While this change will be unnoticeable for the vast majority of DNS operators (such as registrars, Internet Service Providers (ISPs), and organizations), it provides a valuable additional layer of cryptographic security to ensure the reliability of root zone data.

        In this blog post, we’ll discuss these new proposals, as well as ZONEMD. We’ll share deployment plans, how they may affect certain users, and what DNS operators need to be aware of beforehand to ensure little-to-no disruptions.

    • Monopolies

      • Cory DoctorowHow Amazon transformed the EU into a planned economy

        This flywheel creates a vicious cycle, starving local retail so that customers can’t get what they need from brick-and-mortar shops, which funnels sellers into offering their goods for sale on Amazon. The less choice customers and sellers have about where they shop, the more Amazon can abuse both to pad its own bottom line.

        There are 800,000 EU-based sellers on Amazon, and they have seen the junk-fees that Amazon charges them skyrocket, to the point where they have to raise prices or lose money on each sale. Amazon uses both tacit and explicit “Most Favored Nation” deals to hide these price-hikes. Under an MFN deal, sellers must not allow their goods to be sold at a lower price than Amazon’s — so when they raise prices to cover Amazon’s increasing fees, they raise them everywhere:

      • EFFA Broad Federal Publicity Right Is a Risky Answer to Generative AI Problems

        Despite the flurry of lawsuits, those new works and the training of the tool itself probably do not infringe the copyright in any work used in the training set – even if the person who used the tool to generate it asked for something in a particular artist’s “style.” And that’s probably a good thing on balance: given the scope and length of copyright, as well as the financial cost of violating those rights accidentally, it’s important to clearly demarcate what is and is not protected, and “style” does not lend itself to clear markers.€ 

        But that doesn’t mean the creator of the original work has no recourse. As the premise of at least one of those lawsuits shows, there’s an alternative legal theory: publicity rights. But that legal approach comes with its own risks – especially if, as some are proposing, it is enshrined as an expansive federal right.

        The right of publicity is an offshoot of state privacy law that gives a person the right to limit the public use of her name, likeness, or identity for commercial purposes. The original idea was to ensure that private individuals weren't drawn into the public sphere without their consent through such marketing efforts. A majority of states have some version of the right, and a limited version of it makes sense. For example, you should be able to prevent a company from running an advertisement that falsely claims that you endorse its products.€ 

      • Trademarks

        • TTAB BlogTTABlog Test: Is "LOCH MOOSE MONSTER" Confusable With "MONSTER ENERGY" for Clothing, Bags, Beverageware?

          Monster Energy opposed Tom & Martha LLC's application to register the mark LOCH MOOSE MONSTAH (in standard character form) for various gift shop-type goods and related services in four classes, claiming a likelihood of confusion with the mark MONSTER ENERGY and other MONSTER marks for energy drinks, beverageware, clothing, and bags, and related retails store services. Opposer argued that the proposed mark is “highly similar" to the MONSTER marks "in view of the respective terms MONSTER and MONSTAH which are phonetically similar" and further because "MONSTAH" is the dominant word in applicant's mark. How do you think this Section 2(d) opposition came out? Monster Energy Company v. Tom & Martha LLC, Opposition No. 91250710 (July 14, 2023) [not precedential] (Opinion by Judge Karen Kuhlke).

      • Copyrights

        • Torrent FreakAnti-Piracy Coalition Boasts Massive Sports Streaming Disruption Campaign

          The International Broadcaster Coalition Against Piracy is reporting the completion of a highly successful anti-piracy campaign to protect live cricket broadcasts of the Indian Premier League. The announcement is good news for rightsholders while standing in sharp contrast to comments from other stakeholders, who repeatedly argue that tougher legislation is required.

        • Torrent FreakInstagram Not Liable For Copyright Infringement Over Embedded Images

          Two photographers who filed a copyright lawsuit against Instagram after their images posted to the platform appeared on BuzzFeed News and Time via embedding, have lost their case. In an opinion handed down Monday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit referenced its 2007 'server test' precedent, noting that Instagram could not be liable for secondary copyright infringement because when content is embedded, no copy is made of the underlying content.



Recent Techrights' Posts

Technology: rights or responsibilities? - Part VII
By Dr. Andy Farnell
 
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Links for the day
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