Techdirt Podcast Episode 405: Regulating Speech In An Age Of Fake News [Techdirt]
We’ve got another cross-post for you this week, and this time it’s also a live panel recording. Recently, Mike joined a panel at Boston University Questrom School of Business which was recorded for WBUR’s Is Business Broken? podcast, alongside professors Marshall Van Alstyne and Nadine Strossen, and moderated by host Curt Nickisch. The discussion is all about Section 230 specifically and the regulation of speech more broadly, and you can listen to the whole thing here on this week’s episode.
You can also download this episode directly in MP3 format.
Follow the Techdirt Podcast on Soundcloud, subscribe via Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or grab the RSS feed. You can also keep up with all the latest episodes right here on Techdirt.
It’s Perfectly Fine To Patent Inventions Obtained By Immoral Means Says European Patent Office [Techdirt]
Despite widespread beliefs to the contrary, patents are not a measure of innovation, nor are they needed for companies to thrive — something even Elon Musk understands. But one aspect of patents that is rarely considered is their morality. The European Patent Office’s Board of Appeal wrestled with this issue in an interesting case involving the plant extract simalikalactone E and its use to treat malaria. As the patent admits: “simalikalactone E (SkE) was isolated from Quassia amara (Simaroubaceae), a medicinal plant widely used in the Amazon for the treatment of malaria.” In other words, the use of the plant extract to treat malaria was already known among Amazonian peoples, who naturally did not try to patent it. Related to this, an objection was raised to the patent, on the grounds that it was contrary to “morality”, as defined by Article 53 of the European Patent Convention:
European patents shall not be granted in respect of:
(a) inventions the commercial exploitation of which would be contrary to “ordre public” or morality; such exploitation shall not be deemed to be so contrary merely because it is prohibited by law or regulation in some or all of the Contracting States;
The IPKat has a good explanation of the reasoning behind the objection:
the Opponent argued that the invention represented “biopiracy” on behalf of the patentee against the indigenous people involved in the original research. Specifically, the Opponent submitted that the interactions with the indigenous communities had been conducted in an immoral fashion, involving deception and an abuse of trust. According to the Opponent, the members of the communities involved had not been fully and transparently informed of the nature of the research project, its objectives, the filing of the patent, and other risks and benefits of the project to community members and their knowledge. As such, the Opponent argued, the IP rights of the communities over their traditional knowledge had been violated. The Opponent submitted that the deception and breach of trust displayed was contrary to ordre public and would jeopardize relations between indigenous and local communities and researchers.
However, the EPO’s Board of Appeal rejected this argument for an interesting reason:
The exclusion to patentability provided for in Article 53(a) EPC requires the stated offense to morality to reside in the “commercial exploitation” of the claimed invention. The claims of the patent were directed to the formula of the antimalarial, a process of manufacturing the antimalarial and its use in therapy. Given the dire need for effective antimalarial medication, the Board of Appeal found that the commercial exploitation of these inventions would not be contrary to public morality (on the contrary, they would be beneficial to society). Specifically, the Board of Appeal made a clear distinction between the morality of the commercial exploitation of an invention, and the morality of how the invention itself occurred (r.2.14).
That is, patents can be excluded if their commercial exploitation would be immoral, but it doesn’t matter if the way the invention claimed in the patent was made turned out to be immoral. European patent law simply doesn’t care about that aspect. Fortunately, that’s not the end of this particular story, as the IPKat post explains:
Questions over the morality of scientific discovery must therefore be dealt with in a different forum than the patent office. In this case, despite the decision of the Board of Appeal, the European patent in question appears to have lapsed on all member states due to failure to pay renewal fees. The US case has similarly been abandoned. It thus appears that the substantial political pressures on the [patent-holder, the French Institute for Development Research] outside the patent system have impacted their desire and/or ability to commercialise the invention.
It’s good that this kind of pressure works, but it would be better if the patent world cared more about the morality of inventors’ actions in the first place.
Z-Library Helps Students to Overcome Academic Poverty, Study Finds [TorrentFreak]
Z-Library is one of the largest shadow libraries on the Internet, hosting millions of books and academic articles that can be downloaded for free.
The site defied all odds over the past two years. It continued to operate despite a full-fledged criminal prosecution by the United States, which resulted in the arrest of two alleged operators in Argentina.
These two Russian defendants are wanted by the United States and earlier this year a judge approved their extradition. However, according to the most recent information we have, the defendants escaped house arrest and vanished into thin air.
The roles of the two Russians remain unclear, but they were not vital to the site’s survival. Z-Library continued to expand its reach despite their legal troubles.
Z-Library users don’t seem to be hindered by the criminal prosecution either, as they continue to support and use the site. For many, Z-Library is simply a convenient portal to download free books. For others, however, it’s a vital resource to further an academic career.
A recent study published in the Journal of University Teaching & Learning Practice sheds light on the latter. It looks at the ‘piracy’ motivations of Redditors and students in higher education, specifically when it comes to Z-Library.
The paper, published by Dr. Michael Day of the University of Greenwich, labels the use of Z-Library as ‘Academic Cybercrime’. The findings, however, suggest that students are more likely to draw comparisons with “Robin Hood”.
The research looks at the motivations of two groups; Reddit users and Chinese postgraduate students. Despite the vast differences between these groups, their views on Z-Library are quite similar.
The 134 Reddit responses were sampled from the Zlibrary subreddit, which is obviously biased in favor of the site. However, the reasoning goes well beyond a simple “I want free stuff” arguments.
Many commenters highlighted that they were drawn to the site out of poverty, for example, or they highlighted that Z-Library was an essential tool to fulfill their academic goals.
“Living in a 3rd world country, 1 book would cost like 50%- 80% already of my daily wage,” one Redditor wrote.
The idea that Z-Library is a ‘necessary evil’ was also highlighted by other commenters. This includes a student who can barely make ends meet, and a homeless person, who has neither the money nor the space for physical books.
The lack of free access to all study materials, including academic journal subscriptions at university libraries, was also a key motivator. Paired with the notion that journal publishers make billions of dollars, without compensating authors, justification is found for ‘pirate’ alternatives.
“They make massive profits. So stealing from them doesn’t hurt the authors nor reviewers, just the rich greedy publishers who make millions just to design a cover and click ‘publish’,” one Redditor wrote.
The second part of the study is conducted in a more structured format among 103 postgraduate students in China. This group joined a seminar where Z-Library and the crackdown were discussed. In addition, the students participated in follow-up focus group discussions, while also completing a survey.
Despite not all being users of the shadow library, 41% of the students agreed that the site’s (temporary) shutdown affected their ability to study and find resources for degree learning.
In general, the students have a favorable view toward Z-Library and similar sites, and 71% admit that they have used a shadow library in the past. In line with China’s socialist values, the overwhelming majority of the students agreed that access to knowledge should be free for everyone.
While the students are aware of copyright law, they believe that the need to access knowledge outweighs rightsholders’ concerns. This is also reflected in the following responses, among others.
– Z-Library, or a similar website, is helpful to students living in poverty (82% agree).
– Academic textbooks are too expensive, so I can’t afford to buy them as a student (67% agree).
– I have limited access to English medium academic books in my country (63% agree)
– I prefer to download books without restrictions, like [paywalls etc.], as it is difficult (77% agree).
All in all, Z-Library and other shadow libraries are seen as a viable option for expensive or inaccessible books, despite potential copyright concerns.
This research sheds an intriguing light on key motivations to use shadow libraries. However, the small sample sizes, selection bias, and specific characteristics of the groups, means that these findings should be interpreted with caution.
Dr. Michael Day, nonetheless, notes that the responses show clear signs of a Robin Hood mentality. Z-Library users evade the publishers’ ‘tax’ on knowledge by downloading works for free.
Overall, the paper suggests that universities and publishers may want to reconsider the status quo and consider making more content freely accessible, taking a page from Z-Library.
“There is need for universities to re-consider the digital divides faced by socioeconomically and digitally disadvantaged students, alongside publishers, who must rethink their approach by making open access research more commonplace and thus pro-human,” the author concludes.
The paper provides a good example, as it is published under a Creative Commons license and is freely accessible to all.
—
Day, M.J. (2024). Digital Piracy in Higher Education: Exploring Social Media Users and Chinese Postgraduate Students Motivations for Supporting ‘Academic Cybercrime’ by Shelving ebooks from Z-Library. Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Fifth Circuit Tells MAGA Hat-Wearing Student That Counterspeech Isn’t ‘Racial Harassment’ [Techdirt]
It should be clear by now that being a fan of one particular politician doesn’t make you a member of a “protected” group. It’s just a stupid as cops claiming they should be given more rights and protections because people just don’t seem to be showering them with unconditional love in recent years. Wearing clothing that you’re hoping will provoke a response (either supportive or otherwise) doesn’t make you a victim of actionable harassment just because it didn’t trigger the responses you hoped it would.
Triggered MAGA fan B.W. (a minor, hence the initials) sued the Austin, Texas Independent School District (AISD) after his MAGA gear provoked completely expected responses, like other students (and even some faculty members) calling him a bigot and a racist and suggesting he might be a fan of the KKK. B.W.’s parents ultimately pulled him from the school after belatedly discovering that their son’s attempted owning of the libs had backfired.
The lawsuit was brought under Title VI, a legal authority that forbids “harassment based on the victim’s race, color, or national origin.” The complaint (now in its fourth amended version) tried to claim B.W. was being “harassed” because he was white, rather than because of his repeated displays of support for Donald Trump.
This obviously wasn’t pleasant for B.W., but one can assume he hoped to trigger some libs, and the libs were indeed triggered, leading to this sort of thing. From the decision [PDF], which is written by Judge Priscilla Richman, whose judicial record would seem to indicate people might have expected her to come down on the other side of this issue.
B.W.’s operative Complaint alleged that a math class aide “repeatedly called B.W. ‘Whitey,’” and a group of students shouted at him and other Cross Country teammates, “here are all the white boys!” A teacher asked him if he “enjoyed his White Gospel Music.” A substitute teacher told B.W., “I will not have a white man talk to me about gender issues!” A teacher told B.W. that she was “getting concerned about how many white people there are.” A student told B.W., “America is only for white people,” and another student “repeat[ed] the evils of the white race in American history” to B.W.
While this probably wasn’t pleasant for B.W., it really doesn’t sound like the sort of harassment that would result in a lawsuit. This is actually pretty mild, at least in terms of what’s recounted at the beginning of the decision. (There’s more in the lengthy dissent, which involves the back nine (judges) participating in this en banc hearing, who disagreed with the majority decision written by Richman.) It doesn’t matter that one student created a meme that made B.W. look like a KKK member. Nor does it matter that B.W. was regularly called a “racist” by other students (who also allegedly repeatedly “flicked him off” and “cussed at him).
What matters here is what the law says, in terms of harassment under Title VI. And B.W.’s attempt to secure a victory under this legal statute was immediately undercut by his own lawsuit. (Emphasis in the original.)
B.W.’s own pleadings, which we “must accept as true,” assert that the meme was motivated by politics and not race. B.W.’s complaint specifically alleges that “D.K. admitted to the school that he made the KKK meme about B.W. because D.K.’s father told him not [to] be friends with anyone who was a Conservative.”
[…]
Being called a racist is not the equivalent of being harassed based on the harassment victim’s race. Being accused of racism says nothing about the race of the accused. A racist or alleged racist could be a person of virtually any color. The pejorative term is used because of the accused’s own alleged views about race, not because of the accused’s race. The “flicking off” and “cussed at” allegations, read in context, were alleged to have been motivated by B.W.’s “Conservative and Republican political opinions” and his support for Donald Trump. The complaint does not allege they were racially motivated.
As awful as this is (I mean, at least in terms of faculty members participating in the dogpiling), this simply isn’t actionable. MAGA is not a race, color, or religion, even though it definitely draws more people of one specific race and color and whose acolytes often act as though supporting Donald Trump is an expression of Christian faith.
The majority opinion affirming the lower court’s dismissal of the suit is five pages. The dissents are nearly five times a long (24 pages). And even if I don’t agree harassing someone over their MAGA gear is actionable under Title VI, the dissenting opinions make some decent points about how MAGA could be a stand-in for “white,” especially when applied in this fashion to other races and competing political beliefs.
First, the dissent says there’s at least some evidence hateful acts were directed at B.K. because of his race, especially when his pleadings are “accepted as true” during this stage of the legal proceedings.
In his complaint, B.W. includes recurrent incidents of harassment that explicitly reference his race. He alleges that students repeatedly recited the “evils of the white race” to B.W.; that students ran into the locker room and proclaimed (with B.W. present) “here are all the white boys!”; and that students daily abused B.W. both physically and verbally. Worst of all, B.W. alleges that another student beat him bloody and then bragged to the school that he had done so “because B.W. was white.” B.W. alleges that he was subjected to daily harassment from his classmates following that public pronouncement of racial animus. Adding insult to B.W.’s obvious physical injuries, much of the harassment came from school teachers.
Then there’s the KKK meme, which likely would not have been created if B.K. was not white. And that’s problematic, because it seems the majority might have sided with B.K. if he hadn’t been white and subject to similar harassment due to perceived race.
The KKK meme is further evidence of race-based harassment. Groups like the KKK and the Nazis are white-supremacist organizations that generally have a racial association tied to membership. Thus, a meme depicting B.W. as a member of the KKK has a racial component, particularly in the context of the other overtly race-based harassment that B.W. alleges occurred here. When an individual is accused of membership in a politically odious organization associated with that individual’s protected characteristic, such an accusation amounts to stereotyping based on that protected characteristic. Suppose instead that a student made a meme of an Afghan classmate as a member of the Taliban or Al Qaeda. Such a meme obviously implicates the student’s protected characteristics.
But, ultimately, there’s another factor in play here — elements admitted in B.K.’s own pleadings: he wore MAGA gear, something that closely aligned him with the views expressed by MAGA figureheads, many of which are racists, bigots, and — in far too many cases — closely aligned with white nationalists. In my opinion, that’s the wild card. It would be far easier to prove the harassment was solely linked to B.K. being white if he hadn’t chose to repeatedly wear shirts and hats that linked him with a bunch of other (similarly white) bigots. If the harassment had occurred without this factor in play, it would clearly have been solely racially-motivated. But B.K. wore stuff he knew would inevitably provoke negative responses. And then he sued when this gambit paid off.
It is inexcusable that staff members participated in the alleged bullying, and perhaps there’s still something under state law that might earn B.K. a win, but under Title VI, it’s just not going to work because the plaintiff’s admitted “political beliefs” don’t make him part of a protected group.
Dear Senators Klobuchar & Lujan: Now Do You See Why Letting HHS Censor “Misinformation” Is A Terrible Idea? [Techdirt]
You have likely heard that Donald Trump has nominated conspiracy theorist Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to be his next Secretary of Health and Human Services. This is dangerous and cruel for a very long list of reasons, but his nomination also exposes the critical flaws in a bill proposed by Senators Amy Klobuchar and Ben Ray Lujan just a few years ago.
In 2021, Senators Klobuchar and Lujan introduced a bill that would have given the Secretary of Health and Human Services the power to unilaterally declare what constitutes “health misinformation” online. Under the proposed law, a new exemption to Section 230 would be created for any content deemed misinformation by the HHS Secretary, which could open tech platforms up to lawsuits, creating immense pressure to block such content.
At the time, the bill seemed misguided and unconstitutional. In the hands of an anti-science zealot like RFK Jr. as HHS Secretary, it would be catastrophic.
From the bill:
Not later than 30 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, in consultation with the heads of other relevant Federal agencies and outside experts determined appropriate by the Secretary, shall issue guidance regarding what constitutes health misinformation…
And then, any site hosting content so designated would be “treated as a publisher or speaker” of such “health misinformation,” effectively opening them up to lawsuits.
If that bill had become law, RFK Jr. could declare that factual information debunking his anti-vaccine conspiracy theories is “misinformation.” He could threaten lawsuits, or just unleash others to sue, to force social media platforms to silence anyone who corrects his dangerous nonsense about vaccines and autism.
Thankfully, Klobuchar and Lujan’s bill went nowhere, and for good reason. Giving a single political official the power to define “misinformation” runs counter to core First Amendment principles. What’s deemed “misinformation” could change radically from one administration to the next, creating a censorship regime beholden to electoral whims.
The RFK Jr. nomination illustrates exactly why we continually call out these kinds of bills. Because this is not the kind of power you want to give to the government (nor should you be able to under the First Amendment).
And if you don’t think that RFK Jr. wouldn’t take advantage of such a law had it been passed, you haven’t been paying attention. While RFK Jr. has been cosplaying as a “free speech” supporter of late, the reality is that he has a long and problematic history of trying to suppress speech and to punish people for their speech.
Even his latest “free speech crusade” is really a series of censorial failed lawsuits against social media companies for using their free speech rights to moderate his conspiracy theory nonsense. Even the very Trumpist Fifth Circuit just laughed one of his cases out of court a couple weeks ago.
But there’s an even longer, more disturbing history as well. A decade ago, he talked about how he believes his political opponents should be jailed for their speech, even calling them war criminals and accusing them of “treason.” Somewhat hilariously, at the time, he was talking about those who denied climate change and billionaires “impoverishing the rest of us.”
“They are enjoying making themselves billionaires by impoverishing the rest of us. Do I think they should be in jail, I think they should be enjoying three hots and a cot at the Hague with all the other war criminals,” Kennedy declared.
He might want to take a look at his new boss and the crew he’s hanging around with, given that Donald Trump has repeatedly denied climate change exists and promised to ramp up fossil fuel production in the country. And if we’re talking about billionaires impoverishing the rest of us, just take a look around you, Bobby.
Either way, the point is that RFK Jr. has a long history of deeply authoritarian and censorial instincts. He’s not a free speech supporter by any means. If Klobuchar and Lujan’s bill had been law, we would have just handed him the ability to censor any pushback to his dangerous views.
So, next time, can people actually listen to us when we raise the alarm about how problematic censorial bills are, and how they would be abused in the wrong hands?
Press Glosses Over Fact Trump’s FCC Pick Will Decimate Consumer Protection, Media Consolidation Limits [Techdirt]
We noted earlier this week how Trump had unsurprisingly picked Brendan Carr to head the FCC. We also pointed out how Carr’s “policies” are utterly indistinguishable from the interests of unpopular telecom and media giants like Comcast and AT&T. He’s going to demolish whatever’s left of the FCC’s consumer protection standards and media consolidation limits, and he’s not going to be subtle about it.
Carr is the dictionary definition of “regulatory capture.” He’s going to deliver the final killing blow to net neutrality (if the Trump-stacked courts don’t get to it first). He’s also going to take a hatchet to the FCC’s recent inquiry into shitty broadband usage caps, efforts to stop broadband “redlining” (read: racism in fiber deployment), good faith efforts to help the poor afford broadband, and efforts to stop your cable, phone, wireless, or broadband provider from ripping you off with shitty fees.
But as I dug through the mainstream reporting on Carr’s appointment, very few outlets seemed interested in making any of that clear to readers. The New York Times and Washington Post, for example, kept the focus largely on Carr’s animosity toward “big tech” companies for their “censorship of Conservatives” (read: doing the absolute bare minimum to thwart racist assholes and right wing propaganda on the internet).
The fact that Carr’s primary function at the FCC will be to coddle unpopular telecom and media giants in about thirty different ways barely warrants a mention. Over at the Cox Communications owned Atlanta Journal Constitution (whose owners will benefit from a Carr appointment in several different ways), Carr’s appointment is framed like this:
We’re a decade into Trumpism, and major outlets are still putting false claims unchallenged in headlines. Why do you think that is, exactly? Readers told me the Atlanta Journal Constitution just reprinted the already soft WAPO story on Carr’s appointment, but cut off much of the second half where consumer groups illustrate that the headline they chose is demonstrably false.
Most of the rest of the mainstream coverage wasn’t much better. Fox News, of course, chose to focus on the exciting new racist potential of the Carr pick, but they screwed up the sub-headline to make it sound like he actually supports diversity and inclusion initiatives:
USAToday parrots claims that Carr is “fighting for free speech,” but can’t be bothered to mention that that (1) isn’t fucking true, and (2) that his primary role will be to gut consumer protections like net neutrality. Reuters similarly can’t be bothered to mention the risk Carr poses to consumer protection. In Politico, Carr’s looming assault on telecom consumer protection warrants one sad paragraph.
I’m sure there was some selective editing at play, but several major telecom and media consumer rights folks went out of their way to help media outlets highlight how Carr is a “nice guy” (see, in order, NPR, CNN, NYT), which I’m sure will be helpful as he happily demolishes twenty-five years of consumer advocacy policy work and threatens media giants for criticizing authoritarian leadership:
If the public doesn’t sense adequate alarm from experts whose entire careers have been in consumer and media market protection, they’re not going to be alarmed. I understand the desire for some civility, but this is not an ordinary administration. These are fascists who are going to steadily disassemble the entirety of federal consumer protection and corporate oversight over drinks and giggles.
Meanwhile, yes, Carr’s mindless authoritarian animosity to “big tech” is absolutely worth discussing, as are his threats to pull the broadcast licenses of companies that criticize Trump (even though that will be no easy feat, even with a Trump-stocked court and muted FCC authority). But his primary goal at the FCC will be to be as errand boy to historically unpopular media and telecom giants, and downplaying (or ignoring) that fact does Carr and his industry buddies no shortage of favors.
Meanwhile if you thought mainstream press coverage during this last election season was feckless, authoritarian-normalizing mush, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.
The nature of traps [Seth Godin's Blog on marketing, tribes and respect]
Our culture is filled with man-made traps, situations worth avoiding. They have three elements:
Because of the third element, the organizer or beneficiaries of a trap can spend time and money to make it ever more seductive and to conceal the nature of what you’re actually signing up for. They’re taking a long term view, but humans, particularly humans in a jam, tend to look for only the short-term relief a trap offers.
Begin by identifying the traps that are set for other people, traps they don’t see but you learn to notice. Soon, you’ll start seeing the traps that are being set for you.
Hackathon Winners ‘Remote Brick’ Pirate IPTV Box Using Scalable Technique [TorrentFreak]
Early September, Brazil’s telecom regulator Anatel announced that it would team up with the Hackathon Brazil Community to stage the first ever ‘TV Box Hackathon’.
The two-day event, tabled for September 28 and 29, would see teams of hackers develop “innovative solutions” to block or disable non-certified set-top boxes, typically piracy-configured Android devices installed in people’s homes.
So the challenge is this: by understanding how these non-approved devices work, you must develop an approach that is capable of interrupting the exchange of data that occurs between the devices and their users.
The task ahead was no walk in the park, but if anyone did manage to pull it off, the anti-piracy implications for the entertainment industries would be absolutely enormous.
“Hackathon Brasil and Anatel have successfully concluded the Hackathon TV Box 2024, awarding innovative solutions to end the use of illegal TV Box devices in Brazil,” an announcement on the official site now reads.
“The event brought together experts in technology, network security and hardware, focusing on creative and effective alternatives to protect consumers from digital threats, such as malware and spying.”
The winning team, revealed as Juarez J., Aline A., Henrique A., Eduarda L., Daniel S. and Theo W., picked up first prize after their solution demonstrated an “ability to directly impact the fight against TV Boxes not approved by Anatel, ensuring greater security and privacy for users.”
The competitors were judged on how closely they adhered to the details of the challenge, innovation, and ultimately the potential impact of their solution.
Anatel has repeatedly warned that many set-top devices currently in use have poor security, some at the operating system level. The winning team isn’t giving much away, but exploiting these weaknesses may have formed part of the successful strategy.
Exactly how much team leader/spokesman Daniel Lima is allowed to say in public is unclear, but the details revealed so far seem generally plausible.
In comments to Globo, Lima said the team’s solution is to render set-top devices useless through a software update controlled by them, rather than the manufacturer or whichever entity typically handles that. Ordinarily the first steps would’ve been much more difficult but in Brazil, systems are already in place to provide a helping hand.
In common with many counterparts elsewhere in the world, ISPs in Brazil already hijack DNS requests for the purpose of blocking access to pirate sites. Typically, that involves an internet user attempting to access ‘Blocked Site A’ in their browser, and ISPs’ DNS servers directing the user to a blocking page instead. Assuming that a set-top box tries to access a particular domain name to receive an update, those requests can also be diverted to a different server.
“We were able to add code that completely disables [a device]. Our solution uses advanced networking capabilities to allow the software on the box to be altered, and the user would be unable to access protected content,” Daniel says.
“Since Anatel controls the ISPs, it can force them to implement advanced network features that make it possible for the box to receive a modified package.”
These hacks are often more easily said than done, but having the ability to meddle with ISP DNS records to divert a device to a rogue server is a great start. If the devices had stronger security by default, even this would face challenges. If a technique regularly seen in ‘pirate’ Android apps was in place, that could’ve really upset the party.
Known as certificate pinning, this networking practice provides much greater certainty that the destination server requested by the host is that to which it connects; certainly not a rogue server carrying a potentially ruinous software update.
Claims in earlier reports have portrayed device security as extremely weak, so updates may not always be delivered via https; if they arrive via unsecured http, that would amount to another big plus. That doesn’t necessarily mean the rest of the process would be easy, or that any number of countermeasures couldn’t be deployed to stop the scheme in its tracks. Details on the security of these devices could make all the difference, or not much at all, it’s hard to say.
Whatever the details, Daniel seems very confident that something big is on the horizon.
“When Anatel implements the solution, there will be a general failure in most of the irregular boxes that are in use,” he insists.
Anatel seems reluctant to say much and its official statement doesn’t say anything about possible use. However, a comment that does catch the eye relates to something we mentioned in our earlier article.
A genuine and workable solution to the pirate set-top box problem could make those behind it impossibly rich, but only if supported by a robust attitude towards their all-important IP rights.
Courtesy of Globo, Anatel’s comments seem to imply that while useful, any solutions should be seen as an extension of Anatel’s existing work, including methods it’s familiar with already.
Anatel is holding meetings with the Hackathon participants in addition to the winners, as all the teams presented solutions that were seen as opportunities for improvement in the process carried out by the Agency. The objective of the discussions has been to adapt the solutions presented to the methodologies already used by the Agency.
Many of the proposals are in line with what Anatel already does. In this way, the Agency has considered all the concepts and ideas that were presented as improvements to the Agency’s internal and external processes, which will allow for the optimization of the security of the telecommunications infrastructure and users.
The process is already underway, as it is continuous, with Anatel working together with the participants.
Meanwhile, the victorious six-person team picked up a cash prize of R$7,000 for taking first place; that’s around US$1,200 or US$200 each after the split.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 13 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Lightning strikes over the Presidential Palace, in Brasília. After the terrorist attacks of ISIS on different cities in France, Brazil expresses its sympathy by displaying the colors of the French flag on the Palácio da Alvorada. Nov 13, 2015.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 14 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Olive-bellied sunbird (Cinnyris chloropygius) flying from a flower to another at Kibale forest National Park, Uganda. The bird is looking at the flower on the right to choose it before landing on it.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 15 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Entrance to the Shazdeh Garden (meaning the Prince`s Garden in Mahan), a historical garden near Mahan, Iran. The 5.5 hectares big garden was built for Mohammad Hassan Khan Sardari Iravani ca. 1850 and was entirely remodeled and extended around 1870 during the eleven years of his governorship in the Qajar dynasty.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 16 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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Sparassis crispa in natural habitat. Focus stack of 20 photos.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 19 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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A solitary mangrove tree on the emerald tropical beach. Havelock Island (Swaraj Dweep), Andaman and Nicobar Islands, Andaman Sea, Indian Ocean.
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Wikimedia Commons picture of the day for November 20 [Wikimedia Commons picture of the day feed]
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A man in a boat at Ratargul Swamp Forest, Bangladesh
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Federal Court Says Qualified Immunity Can’t Shield Cop Who Tased Suicidal Man Soaked In Gasoline [Techdirt]
If this sounds familiar, sadly, it is.
Three years ago, the Fifth Circuit Appeals Court somehow arrived at the conclusion that tasing someone soaked in gasoline — an act of escalation that not only killed the suicidal person officers were supposed to rescuing but also burned the entire residence to the ground — was not excessive force. It was supposedly justified by the gasoline-soaked man’s threats that he would burn himself and the house down if officers kept advancing on him.
Robbing him of his life and his remaining autonomy, Arlington, Texas police officer Officer Guadrama discharged his Taser and made the man’s threats a reality. And it was still just considered to be the sort of thing cops should be doing by the Fifth Circuit court.
It went the other way here. In a California court, a federal judge has arrived at the opposite conclusion in a nearly identical incident. (via Courthouse News Service)
In this case, Paul Hall was despondent because his family refused to interact with him, apparently “fed up with him” for reasons that go unexplained. Feeling abandoned, Hall soaked himself in gasoline, sat on the floor in the middle of the house, and threatened to light himself on fire.
Officer John Gale of the Weed, California police department responded to the call. His actions, as well as those of Paul Hall, were captured by the officer’s body camera. To his credit, Officer Gale at least made some effort to defuse the situation by talking to Hall, who repeatedly reminded him he was covered in gasoline and ready to take his own life by igniting the lighter he held in one of his hands.
When that didn’t work, Gale tried to take the lighter by force by attempting to wrestle it out of Hall’s hands. When that didn’t work, Gale went back to his first tactic: yelling repeatedly for Hall to drop the lighter. This tactic didn’t work the first few dozen times, but according to the footage, Gale did this same thing more than 50 times, perhaps expecting he was due for a win.
Right before he set Hall on fire with his Taser, Officer Gale again ordered Hall to “drop the lighter” and to “put it down.” And right before his fired at Hall, Hall dropped his hands to his sides, possibly on his way to complying. But he never got a chance. That’s when Gale fired and that’s when Hall caught on fire.
Gale first insisted this wasn’t excessive force. The court says in some cases, these actions might not have been. But in this case, at best, that’s still an open question. And the reason it’s still a set of disputed facts is because the officer’s own body cam footage (arguably) contradicts his assertions. From the decision [PDF]:
Defendant Gale’s repeated assertion that Plaintiff Hall “appeared to be flicking the lighter to start” at the time Defendant Gale shot his taser is disputed by Plaintiff and arguably
contradicted by the body camera footage […] Upon review of the body camera footage, it is not undisputedly apparent to the Court that Plaintiff Hall appeared to be flicking the lighter to start. Thus, a reasonable jury could conclude, during his interactions with Defendant Gale, Plaintiff Hall did not attempt to ignite the lighter such that he posed an immediate threat that warranted intermediate force.
Then there’s the fact it appears Hall was finally attempting to comply with Gale’s demands moments before Gale decided to deploy his Taser.
Second, Plaintiff Hall alleges he complied with Defendant Gale’s commands to put down the lighter by moving his hands down by his side, including the one holding the lighter. The body camera footage confirms, shortly before Defendant Gale tased Plaintiff Hall, Plaintiff Hall had dropped both hands, including the one holding the lighter. The body camera footage also shows Defendant Gale shot Plaintiff Hall with the taser after Plaintiff Hall had dropped both of his hands. A reasonable jury could conclude any threat related to the lighter dissipated the moment Plaintiff Hall put his hands down.
That’s strike two. Strike three is the undeniable fact Hall wasn’t threatening anyone other than himself. And there’s plenty of evidence on the record that Officer Gale couldn’t have reasonably believed he was a threat to others because the officer made no attempt to remove other people from the house, didn’t even bother to bring in the fire extinguisher he had in his squad car, or hold off on taking any action until the fire department arrived. If he really thought he needed to save others from the immediate threat of a fire, he would have taken those actions. In the end, he was the one to ignite the fire that threatened others, all while claiming this was the only way to prevent the man he set on fire from harming other people.
And here’s where the decision referenced in the opening of this post comes into play. Completely ridiculously, Officer Gale cited that decision in support of his qualified immunity request despite (1) the case was handled by a different circuit, (2) the decision issued by the Fifth was non-precedential, and (most importantly) (3) had been issued two years after he set Paul Hall on fire. As any plaintiff knows and every cop defendant should know, you can’t cite something as precedent when it happens after the incidents in dispute. The clue is in the goddamn word, which requires something to precede something else to be relevant, not arrive after the fact.
Immunity is denied because even if the court were inclined to treat a non-binding decision issued two years after Officer Gale set Paul Hall on fire with his taser, the facts of the cases are different enough Officer Gale couldn’t reasonably believe non-binding non-precedent put him in the clear for deciding setting someone on fire for the crime of threatening to set themselves on fire was justified.
It’s bad enough the body cam footage contradicted the officer’s claims. It’s even worse that his lawyer thought he could get some QI for his client by time-traveling to the future (so to speak) to find cases supporting his client’s actions.
New publication: Language teachers with ADHD: self-efficacy and framings [Marc Jones]
Two posts in a day! I must be ill or something.
Anyway, as with the post about teaching using duoethnography to foster critical multiliteracies, this also bears the influence of Robert Lowe, my friend and old supervisor when I worked at Tokyo Kasei University. Rob has written entire books on/using frame analysis, and so, having discussed things with each other when nerding out about research, it was probably inevitable that I would end up using frame analysis eventually.
This article is in a special issue of Fremdsprachen Lehren und Lernen on neurodiversity edited by the frankly wonderful Jules Bündgens-Kosten and my PhD supervisor Carolyn Blume. My co-author, Gretchen Clark and I conducted a questionnaire study into language teachers’ experiences and this article reports our quantitative findings and some qualitative analysis using some framing as mentioned above, although a combination of Goffman’s frame analysis and how Rob used frame analysis.
The most obvious way that our work matters is that there is hardly anything out there written about neurodiverse language teachers, and certainly not much in ELT (although I wrote a duoethnography with Matthew Noble that got published last year about English teachers with ADHD), and basically nothing on teachers with ADHD. This is despite the fact that people with ADHD are not necessarily underachievers, can go on to professional careers, but are likely to seek out new and novel situations which ELT overseas can dole out in spadefuls.
We give a platform to a lot of different ADHD teachers to share their experiences, beliefs and opinions about living with the condition, and it actually spurred us on to further work. In the pipeline are a paper reporting a much deeper analysis of the qualitative data that our participants shared with us and also an article about interviews conducted with a selection of the participants.
Both Gretchen and I would love to extend our thanks to the participants, because the work would not have been possible without them. Additionally, they rose their voices to talk about their experiences when maybe it would have been easier to just keep their head down and pretend everything is alright.
Kanji of the Day: 処 [Kanji of the Day]
処
✍5
小6
dispose, manage, deal with, sentence, condemn, act, behave, place
ショ
ところ -こ お.る
処分 (しょぶん) — disposal
処理 (しょり) — processing
対処 (たいしょ) — dealing with
処方 (しょほう) — prescription
処する (しょする) — to manage
処置 (しょち) — measure
懲戒処分 (ちょうかいしょぶん) — disciplinary measures
対処法 (たいしょほう) — coping method
処遇 (しょぐう) — treatment (of a person)
会計処理 (かいけいしょり) — accounting
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
Kanji of the Day: 婆 [Kanji of the Day]
婆
✍11
中学
old woman, grandma, wet nurse
バ
ばば ばあ
お婆ちゃん (おばあちゃん) — granny
老婆心 (ろうばしん) — solicitude
老婆 (ろうば) — old woman
お婆さん (おばあさん) — grandmother
婆さん (ばあさん) — grandmother
麻婆豆腐 (マーボーどうふ) — mapo tofu (spicy Sichuan dish of tofu and minced meat) (chi:)
卒塔婆 (そとうば) — stupa
塔婆 (とうば) — stupa
娑婆 (しゃば) — this world
鬼婆 (おにばば) — hag
Generated with kanjioftheday by Douglas Perkins.
OsmAnd 4.9 (Android) [OsmAnd Blog]
Great news for OsmAnd users!
We are thrilled to announce the release of OsmAnd version 4.9 for Android, packed with powerful updates to make your navigation even smoother. Now available on Google Play, this release includes new features like a customizable Main Navigation widget, full-screen Wikimedia image galleries, and a Vehicle Metrics plugin that lets you monitor your vehicle’s performance via OBD-II. We have also enhanced track management, introduced dirt bike trails, added more quick actions, and ensured a consistent system font across the interface.
Get the update today and explore the latest improvements to elevate your experience. Safe travels!
We are excited to introduce a new set of route guidance widgets to the Top/Bottom widget panels in OsmAnd's Configure screen menu. These widgets give you real-time navigation information, including the distance to the next turn, second next turn, lane guidance, road name, and current street name. Perfect for keeping track of your route at every step of your journey. The widgets are active during navigation, ensuring you never miss a turn!
Find them in: Menu → Configure screen → Top panel / Bottom panel → Route guidance: Next turn, Second next turn, Lanes
Introducing a full-screen gallery viewer for Wikimedia images in the map context menu. The image block has been redesigned for easier browsing, allowing you to view and swipe through all images associated with a location.
A dedicated screen displays a list of all available images, making it easier to explore related media. Tapping on an image opens it in a full-screen mode for a detailed view of the place or POI.
The new Vehicle Metrics plugin has been added to the Plugins menu, enabling the monitoring of key vehicle performance data using the OBD-II protocol. This plugin offers real-time metrics, such as engine speed, fuel consumption, and coolant temperature, with dedicated widgets for easy access to this data.
Whether you are tracking fuel efficiency or ensuring engine health, the Vehicle Metrics plugin brings valuable insights directly to your device.
A new feature allows you to assign Activity types (such as hiking or cycling) to your recorded GPX tracks, enhancing track management and organization. You can now easily filter tracks by activity, making it more convenient to organize and analyze your trips. This enhancement streamlines your experience by making sorting and accessing specific activities in your track history far more efficient.
Enhance your map screen with fully customizable Quick Action and Default buttons, including changes to icon, size, corner radius, and background opacity. Through the new grid layout, you can position buttons precisely for easy access.
Button appearance settings can be adjusted via Menu → Configure screen → Custom buttons or Default buttons → three-dot menu → Appearance. Additionally, you can now export and import your custom button configurations, ensuring seamless transitions between devices.
The Widget Context menu allows you to manage and configure widgets directly from the map screen, providing a quick way to organize panels. You can access this menu by long tapping on any widget to customize the layout of widgets without leaving the map.
We have added a convenient Reset average speed action directly in the widget context menu. With just a long tap on the widget, you can instantly reset the average speed value during your trip.
This feature makes it easier to track real-time performance on the go without navigating through multiple menus, giving you more control over your trip statistics with minimal effort.
We have added a Touch screen lock feature, similar to Garmin devices, allowing you to lock your screen while navigating, preventing accidental taps. This update also brings new quick actions for trip recording and managing the visibility of OSM edits, enhancing your navigation experience.
Lock/Unlock screen. This option can be accessed using the Custom buttons:
Menu → Configure screen → Custom buttons → + → Add acton → Inteface.
Trip recording actions. Start, pause, or finish your trip seamlessly:
Menu → Configure screen → Custom buttons → + → Add acton → My Places.
Show/Hide OSM edits and add an OSM note with one tap:
Menu → Configure screen → Custom buttons → + → Add acton → Configure Map or My Places.
We are excited to introduced Dirt bike trails to improve your off-road adventures! Now you can activate colored overlays for dirt bike routes, based on the dirtbike, just like mountain biking routes.
These updates enhance Polygon Information by making data about surrounding areas accessible from the map context menu in OsmAnd.
Now, after a long tap on the map or a single tap a POI, you can view detailed information on nearby polygons, including type and name, sorted by size from smallest to largest. This feature is helpful for quickly identifying geographic or administrative areas within your location.
To access: Map context menu → Details → Within.
When using OsmAnd, you can now interact with access-related icons such as Barrier, Steps, or Gate directly on the map. A simple tap on these icons will bring up detailed information, including the name of the POI, its type, and the address.
This functionality enhances quick access to important navigation data for objects on your route, helping you understand restrictions or attributes of paths and roads at a glance. You can explore this via the map context menu.
By tapping on icons for Barrier, Steps, or Gate, the context menu reveals additional details, including the name (POI type) and address associated with these features, or displays object type, if a name is not available.
We have renamed Difficulty classification to Hiking Trails Difficulty Grade for better clarity and ease of use.
This feature highlights trail difficulty for mountain routes, using either the SAC or CAI scales, ensuring you are well-prepared for your adventure. Both systems help identify the necessary skills and equipment for safe travel.
Find the setting in Configure map → Routes → Hiking trails difficulty grade: SAC or CAI.
We have enhanced the graph toggle for recorded tracks, allowing you to select specific data types, such as heart rate or other available options, and display them directly on the graph.
This update lets you select any available data on the Trip recording screen, making it easier to view critical information during or after your trip, improving your overall analysis of recorded GPX data.
If you have suggestions for improving the Android version of the app, please get in touch with us. We appreciate and welcome your contribution to the further development of OsmAnd.
I first started to notice my BIL in a way that surprised me when we went on a family vacation together. by Dan Savage I might be falling in love with my husband’s identical twin brother. My husband and I have been in a traditional monogamous cishet straight marriage for twelve years. It wasn’t until the last few years that I started catching feelings for my brother-in-law, who is also married. I first started to notice my BIL in a way that surprised me when we went on a family vacation together. He’s just so empathetic, compassionate, and articulate. He also has the same body my husband does (obviously), although my BIL is little fitter. What is really hard to understand is that my feelings for my husband haven’t changed. Do I love them both? Is that possible? Our sex life isn’t suffering. I’ve never been someone who can have orgasms without a vibrator assist, and I’m fine with that. Sometimes though, I find myself thinking about my BIL and feel extremely turned on.…
[ Read more ]
OK State Superintendent Ryan Walters Wants Even More Bibles, Prayers For The Dear Leader [Techdirt]
Whatever your politics, there can be no arguing that the election of Donald Trump once more to the highest office in the land has served as a permission slip for some of the worst people in the country to behave badly. We’re already seeing this in all sorts of ways, from incel fuckwits telling women that it’s “Your body, my choice, forever“, to obviously racist and antisemetic public displays, and so on. Note that I am not laying these occurrences squarely at the feet of Donald Trump as though he specifically ordered that any of this occur, but it is a simple, inconvenient fact that these assholes pulling this crap are his fans and voters. And until the man specifically decries these horrible things, he tacitly endorses them.
The same would be true of Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters’ actions. We last discussed Walters over his plans to use taxpayer money to buy 55,000 bibles for the state’s public schools. Notably, the initial ask included a very specific set of specs for these bibles, with which essentially only Trump’s perverse God Bless The U.S.A. Bible complied. After a bipartisan backlash, which Walters of course blamed on “leftists,” the spec list was changed so that more bibles would fit the bill. But if you thought that this signaled that Walters would stop treating Trump’s boots like a lollipop, you were wrong.
The most recent news is that Walters has announced that 500 bibles have already been purchased for public schools, specifically for AP courses on government. This comes with language that attempts to couch the purchase as being for historical purposes, which is absolutely absurd.
In a news release, Walters said the Bibles would be used in Advanced Placement government classrooms across the state. He said the move represented “the first in the nation Bible purchase explicitly for use in schools as an academic and literary resource,” and described the purchase as “the first step toward providing Bibles for every classroom in the state.”
“We are focused on ensuring we get Bibles available in every classroom in our state as quickly as we can,” Walters said in a news release.
Notably absent from the announcement was any indication of how many copies of other religious texts had been purchased for schools as well. No mention of any purchases of the Qur’an, the Hadith, the Torah, the Talmud, the Vedas, the Adi Granth, the Avesta, nor even the Gospel of the Flying Spaghetti Monster. And that’s sort of a big problem when it comes to what Walters is attempting here, given the collision course he is currently on with the First Amendment. The government is to take no stance on matters of religion and forcing exactly one very specific religious text into classrooms is as naked a violation of the First Amendment as I can recall.
And Walters can attempt to portray this as necessary in order to teach the foundational history of America, but that is plainly bullshit. One does not need the full copy of a religious text, to which not all founding fathers subscribed mind you, in order to learn about the importance of religion to the history of the country. You can find evidence of its importance in the same fucking First Amendment that Walters is currently attempting to violate. That amendment’s inspiration, Jefferson’s Virginia Statute of Religious Freedom, was specifically designed to uncouple his state’s government from the Church of England, with a primary aim to protect other religions in the state, such as Catholicism and those of Jewish faith. Hell, at least some number of the founding fathers weren’t Christian at all, but rather Deists. So where the hell are the Deist texts in Oklahoma classrooms? You know, for historical purposes and such?
Conversations on the historical nature of religion in America are perfectly valid and fun, frankly, but they would also be entirely wasted calories when it comes to Walters. He’s not interested in any of this. And if you think he is, that is belied by his other demand of the public schools under his care.
State Superintendent Ryan Walters sent superintendents an email Thursday afternoon mandating districts show students a video of him announcing the new Office of Religious Liberty and Patriotism and inviting students into a prayer for President-elect Donald Trump, among other topics.
In the video, Walters says the “radical left” is attacking religious liberty in schools, patriotism is being “mocked,” and there is “a hatred for this country pushed by woke teachers’ unions.”
He invites the students to pray with him, clarifying they don’t have to join in.
“I pray for our leaders to make the right decisions,” Walters said. “I pray in particular for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change to the country.”
Nothing like a little newspeak mixed in with a healthy dose of hypocrisy, apparently. The name of his manufactured office is negated by his own actions. This isn’t practicing religious liberty; that’s what Jefferson did. This is the state government favoring one specific religious text as the expense of every other religious text. That’s the opposite of religious freedom.
And to demand, nay, mandate what is essentially the indoctrination of school-aged children into the political opinions of one man, from one party, with not a care in the world for the 32% of voters who didn’t vote for Walters’ preferred candidate or party, is bonkers. And before we get comments about how “Wah, the left has been indoctrinating kids in schools for years,” please show me where a member of the left mandated the viewing of a video by school children that specifically negatively portrays the other political side as hating the country, or attacking religious liberty. Go ahead, I’ll wait.
All the worse is subjecting these same children to a call for prayer for a man who is quite plainly as un-Christian a person as we’ve ever had serve in the Oval Office. This is pure boot-licking behavior from a person whom everyone agrees is merely vying of a position in Trump’s government.
Republican President-elect Donald Trump is quickly filling out his incoming Cabinet, and Walters’ name has been mentioned by some national news outlets as a potential pick for education secretary or adviser.
Exactly correct. Walters is using both the real religious beliefs of those within his state and freaking children in order to advance his own political career.
Somehow, it strains the mind to imagine Christ approving of any of this. Regardless of that, all of this should be struck down as violating the Constitution.
Daily Deal: The Learn to Paint Course [Techdirt]
Alfred Robert (A.R.) Quinton was an English watercolor artist, famed for his stunning paintings of British landscapes and villages. Following along a professional artist with more than 35 years of experience, the Learn to Paint Course will guide you through painting A.R. Quinton’s Scenes with watercolor and enhancing them using pastel pencils. From the sky and trees to foliage and brickwork, you’ll learn how to paint a variety of different elements and make them even more vibrant and stunning with pastel pencils. It’s on sale for $30.
Note: The Techdirt Deals Store is powered and curated by StackCommerce. A portion of all sales from Techdirt Deals helps support Techdirt. The products featured do not reflect endorsements by our editorial team.
Connecting the Fascist Dots [The Status Kuo]
I’m writing today for The Big Picture with a piece out later this afternoon that compiles the latest warnings from fascism expert Prof. Ruth Ben-Ghiat. It connects her observations to, and expands upon them in connection with, some of the incoming administration’s latest scary moves.
As defenders of democracy, our first responsibility is to become educated about the dangers of authoritarianism and how it actually might look and take shape in America. I hope my piece helps close the gap.
Some of you have asked why you need to subscribe to another newsletter to receive my work. Great question! Think of it as if I’m normally on my channel here at The Status Kuo, but once a week I guest host on another. To see me there, you just need to have access to that channel, too!
To receive my piece later today in your inbox, be sure you’re subscribed to The Big Picture newsletter. It’s absolutely free to sign up for, but we do love our voluntary paid supporters who make all our work possible.
Thanks, and I’ll see many of you in a bit.
Jay
ExTwitter’s New Lawsuit Accurately Argues California Deepfake Law Violates First Amendment, Section 230 [Techdirt]
Elon Musk’s ExTwitter has filed an important First Amendment lawsuit against California over its unconstitutional law regulating deepfakes. This follows Musk’s earlier successful challenge to the state’s social media “transparency” law. Yes, sometimes Elon Musk actually does file good First Amendment cases that help protect free speech. I’m just as amazed as anyone, but it’s worth calling it out when he does the right thing.
It’s true of his newest lawsuit against California for yet another bogus First Amendment-ignoring law, this one having to do with deepfakes.
We similarly cheered on Elon Musk’s earlier lawsuit against California over its unconstitutional social media transparency law and were vindicated when the Ninth Circuit said the law violated the First Amendment.
The complaint filed by ExTwitter makes a compelling case that AB 2655 is unconstitutional on multiple fronts:
Like in that first lawsuit, ExTwitter has hired Floyd Abrams, one of the most well-known First Amendment lawyers out there, protesting one of California’s new anti-deepfake laws:
AB 2655 requires large online platforms like X, the platform owned by X Corp. (collectively, the “covered platforms”), to remove and alter (with a label) — and to create a reporting mechanism to facilitate the removal and alteration of — certain content about candidates for elective office, elections officials, and elected officials, of which the State of California disapproves and deems to be “materially deceptive.” It has the effect of impermissibly replacing the judgments of covered platforms about what content belongs on their platforms with the judgments of the State. And it imposes liability on the covered platforms to the extent that their judgments about content moderation are inconsistent with those imposed by the State. AB 2655 thus violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution; the free speech protections of Article I, Section 2, of the California Constitution; and the immunity provided to “interactive computer services” under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, 47 U.S.C. § 230(c).
Worse yet, AB 2655 creates an enforcement system that incentivizes covered platforms to err on the side of removing and/or labeling any content that presents even a close call as to whether it is “materially deceptive” and otherwise meets the statute’s requirements. This system will inevitably result in the censorship of wide swaths of valuable political speech and commentary and will limit the type of “uninhibited, robust, and wide-open” “debate on public issues” that core First Amendment protections are designed to ensure. New York Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964). As the United States Supreme Court has recognized, our strong First Amendment protections for such speech are based on our nation’s “profound national commitment” to protecting such debate, even if it often “include[s] vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”
The complaint is strong and presents a clear explanation of the myriad problems with this law.
AB 2655 suffers from a compendium of serious First Amendment infirmities. Primary among them is that AB 2655 imposes a system of prior restraint on speech, which is the “most serious and the least tolerable infringement on First Amendment rights.” Nebraska Press Ass’n v. Stuart, 427 U.S. 539, 559 (1976). The statute mandates the creation of a system designed to allow for expedited “take downs” of speech that the State has targeted for removal from covered platforms in advance of publication. The government is involved in every step of that system: it dictates the rules for reporting, defining, and identifying the speech targeted for removal; it authorizes state officials (including Defendants here) to bring actions seeking removal; and, through the courts, it makes the ultimate determination of what speech is permissible. Rather than allow covered platforms to make their own decisions about moderation of the content at issue here, it authorizes the government to substitute its judgment for those of the platforms.
It is difficult to imagine a statute more in conflict with core First Amendment principles. As the United States Supreme Court has held, “it is a central tenet of the First Amendment that the government must remain neutral in the marketplace of ideas.” Hustler Magazine, Inc. v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46, 56 (1988). Even worse, AB 2655’s system of prior restraint censors speech about “public issues and debate on the qualifications of candidates,” to which the “First Amendment affords the broadest protection” to ensure the “unfettered interchange of ideas for the bringing about of political and social changes desired by the people.” McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n, 514 U.S. 334, 346 (1995).
If challenging these deepfake laws sounds familiar, there already was one challenge to AB 2655 from a user whom California Governor Gavin Newsom directly called out as someone the law was designed to silence. In that case, two of the laws were challenged, and the court (very, very quickly) issued an injunction against the other one, AB 2839, which was set to go into effect immediately. The challenge to 2655 was put on the backburner, since it wasn’t set to go into effect until January 1st of next year.
Now ExTwitter is jumping in to challenge it as well, and hopefully it succeeds. The complaint is well done and makes good points, and I’m happy that Elon is challenging the law in this way. One hopes that perhaps the legal team representing him could do more to explain to him how the First Amendment actually works so he stops misrepresenting it in other contexts.
It’s also good to see that the complaint makes a big deal of how Section 230 protects ExTwitter from such laws, especially given how Elon’s best buddy, Donald Trump, has made noises about stripping Section 230 protections from websites.
AB 2655 directly contravenes the immunity provided to the covered platforms by 47 U.S.C. § 230(c)(1), which prohibits treating interactive computer service providers as the “publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.”
AB 2655’s Enforcement Provisions violate Section 230(c)(1) because they provide causes of action for “injunctive or other equitable relief against” the covered platform to remove or (by adding a disclaimer) alter certain content posted on the platform by its users. See §§ 20515(b), 20516. AB 2655 thus treats covered platforms “as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.” 47 U.S.C. § 230(c)(1).
Section 230(c)(1) bars such liability where the alleged duty violated derives from an entity’s conduct as a “publisher,” including “reviewing, editing, and deciding whether to publish or withdraw from publication third-party content.” See, e.g., Barnes v. Yahoo!, Inc., 570 F.3d 1096, 1102 (9th Cir. 2009) (finding that Yahoo! was entitled to immunity under Section 230(c)(1) from claims concerning failure to remove offending profile), as amended (Sept. 28, 2009); Calise v. Meta Platforms, Inc., 103 F.4th 732, 744 (9th Cir. 2024) (finding that Meta was immune under Section 230(c)(1) from claims that would require Meta to “actively vet and evaluate third-party ads” in order to remove them).
The complaint also praises the Supreme Court’s good ruling in the Moody case about how social media sites have a First Amendment right to present content how they want:
Even if AB 2655 were not a prior restraint, it still violates the First Amendment because it runs counter to the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, in which the Court held, in no uncertain terms, that when a social media platform “present[s] a curated and ‘edited compilation of [third party] speech,’” that presentation “is itself protected speech.” 144 S. Ct. 2383, 2409 (2024) (quoting Hurley v. IrishAm. Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Grp. of Boston, 515 U.S. 557, 570 (1995)); see also id. at 2401 (“A private party’s collection of third-party content into a single speech product (the operators’ ‘repertoire’ of programming) is itself expressive, and intrusion into that activity must be specially justified under the First Amendment.”); id. at 2405 (quoting Miami Herald Pub. Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241, 258 (1974)) (“‘The choice of material,’ the ‘decisions made [as to] content,’ the ‘treatment of public issues’ — ‘whether fair or unfair’ — all these ‘constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment.’ . . . For a paper, and for a platform too.”). Because AB 2655 impermissibly replaces the judgments of the covered platforms about what speech may be permitted on their platforms with those of the government, it cannot be reconciled with the Supreme Court’s decision in Moody.
AB 2655 disregards numerous significant First Amendment holdings by the Supreme Court in Moody — specifically, that (i) it is not a “valid, let alone substantial” interest for a state to seek “to correct the mix of speech” that “social-media platforms present,” id. at 2407; (ii) a “State ‘cannot advance some points of view by burdening the expression of others,’” id. at 2409 (quoting Pac. Gas & Elec. Co. v. Pub. Utilities Comm’n of California, 475 U.S. 1, 20 (1986)); (iii) the “government may not, in supposed pursuit of better expressive balance, alter a private speaker’s own editorial choices about the mix of speech it wants to convey,” id. at 2403; (iv) “it is no job for government to decide what counts as the right balance of private expression — to ‘un-bias’ what it thinks biased, rather than to leave such judgments to speakers and their audiences. That principle works for social-media platforms as it does for others,” id. at 2394; and (v) “[h]owever imperfect the private marketplace of ideas,” a “worse proposal” is “the government itself deciding when speech [is] imbalanced, and then coercing speakers to provide more of some views or less of others,” id. at 2403.
Again, this seems important, given that the ruling in Moody was shooting down problematic GOP-pushed bills to force social media companies to host speech they didn’t want to host.
All in all, this is a strong complaint that is completely consistent with strong First Amendment principles. I’m glad that Elon was willing to have ExTwitter step up and bring it, even if he’s doing so for purely selfish reasons.
Brazil Blocks Another 250+ Pirate Domains, Milestone #15,000 Just Ahead [TorrentFreak]
Brazil’s enthusiasm for blocking piracy-linked domains and IP addresses is showing no signs of slowing down.
Despite being a relative newcomer to mass blockades on copyright grounds, Brazil’s ISPs will soon find themselves blocking the 15,000th resource since restrictions began in earnest just a couple of years ago.
That the cycle is guaranteed to continue next year, and at minimum a few years after that, celebrating the blocking of the 30,000th domain or IP address is no longer the impossible dream it once was. Whether the constant requirement for more and more blocking is a sign of success, or more like a dream turning into a nightmare, is hard to say. Pirates don’t appear to be deterred by it, that much as obvious.
In a recent interview, a departing board member of telecoms regulator Anatel said that site-blocking is paying off. Artur Coimbra said that customer satisfaction with pirate set-top boxes is in decline and if that continues, one day people won’t want to use piracy services at all.
It’s hard to fault the theory that people dislike spending money on things that fail to perform. Whether that’s how things will actually play out remains to be seen because history has shown that the opposite generally holds true. But Coimbra also had some controversial news up his sleeve about a new piracy countermeasure; he revealed that blocking tests are already underway at the internet’s core routers.
The implications of blocking blunders at the infrastructure level go beyond anything considered thus far. But what if mistakes and the risk to society could be eliminated? What if there was accuracy and transparency and accountability, all at the same time? Given that showing accuracy is largely reliant on full transparency which rarely exists, accountability isn’t a concept closely associated with site-blocking regimes anywhere.
That being said, wherever possible we always try to find out for ourselves and since an unexpected surge of blocking orders covering 250+ domains went live yesterday, now seems a good time to take a closer look.
Brazil’s blocklist isn’t available to the public but since ISPs are required to comply and the effects should in theory be visible, various means allow for a decent overview. Right now the list contains over 13,100 domains and around 1,500 IP addresses, most of them piracy-related but not exclusively so.
Blocked gambling sites also feature quite strongly, as do sites selling vapes, although at least for now, relatively sparingly. Even Elon Musk’s X appeared on the list recently; after the entrepreneur irritated a judge, the convenience of having a blocking mechanism to hand made the consequences very predictable.
Having been heavily targeted previously, stream-ripping platforms deserve a mention, but largely they get to sit this wave out. The list still contains lots of related domains, including around 50 ytmp3 variants, 24 featuring the term y2mate, and another 50 with conv/convert/converter somewhere in their domain, but the new batch is all about streaming.
The new domains added Monday follow directly after a batch of familiar piracy domains including 123movieswatch4k.com, 123movieslane.com, 123movieses.net, 123moviesking.com, and 123movieszfree.me.
With that naming convention offering no surprises, the same holds true for several recently added bflix domains, accompanied by even more 123movies domains, because why not? They’ll be useless by the end of the week anyway.
The list of new additions is initially dominated by variants of multicanais, a popular live sports streaming platform that refuses to stay blocked. Less easy to explain is the domain highlighted in yellow – danielgarcialeilao.org.
While hiding pirate sites within innocent-looking platforms isn’t unheard of, the site shown above appears to be an auction site for recovered and wrecked vehicles, and we haven’t see anything like that before.
Alternatively, if reports elsewhere are to be believed, this may be a fake site impersonating the real Daniel Garcia Auctions. According to reports, the difference is that while one is a business that actually exists, the other takes customers’ money and heads for the hills.
While there will be few complaints if the authorities protect citizens from an alleged scam at the hands of a fake Dan, there’s another Dan on the blocklist that is 100% genuine. Domain sales platform Dan.com is owned by GoDaddy and may not be performing quite as well in Brazil as previously hoped.
The URL https://t.co/rtG5bJ3jkz is also blocked, presumably because it previously linked to FilmesTorrents.net. Today that domain is up for sale on GoDaddy but if anyone from Brazil is interested in it, using a VPN or similar circumvention tool comes with its own risks. We’re informed that circumvention of blockades can be considered an offense in Brazil although under what circumstances isn’t completely clear.
FilmesTorrent fans, meanwhile, must’ve had fun keeping up with domain changes; at the time of writing there are 34 domains on the blocklist with a similar format.
Trying to keep track of domain changes for streaming site Cuevana and its many namesakes would’ve been exponentially more tricky. At the time of writing there are more than 500 variants on the list, including icuevana4.pro, cuevana3z.autos, cuevana3.supply, and the aptly named, cuevanaa.help, which throws in an extra ‘a’ at the end, just to keep things interesting.
Just scrolling through 10,000+ domains is pretty exhausting so detailed checking will likely take us quite a few hours. There’s only so much automated tools can achieve on their own so if other obviously legitimate domains also appear on the list, we’ll report that in due course.
What we can confirm is that after scanning every domain recently added to the list, attempting to take a screenshot, scraping a small amount of text from each, and carrying out some automated security checks, 22 domains had issues related to some type of malware. At least 30 indicated a risk of phishing. In both cases this may relate to a new domain in the event redirects are already in place.
We certainly aren’t recommending that people visit any of the sites but for those who can’t resist, basic anti-virus software is unlikely to detect these types of threats.
That being said, common sense says that Dan.com shouldn’t be on this list. There might be a reason, but it’s unlikely to be viewed in a positive light back in the United States. It’s possible that GoDaddy doesn’t even know that it’s being blocked, but that’s no surprise when transparency becomes a thing of the past.
Brazil: ISP Site Blocking Orders (Online Piracy) [2023-06-28 to 2024-11-18] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Order Date | Legal Authority/Agency | Site/Piracy Type | Transparency |
2024-11-18 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-11-14 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-11-13 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-11-12 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-11-12 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-11-06 | Tribunal de Justiça do Distrito Federal e dos Territórios | Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-30 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-10-29 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-10-28 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-25 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-25 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-10-25 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-22 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-22 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-17 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-15 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-09 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-10-07 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-02 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-10-02 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-09-30 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-30 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-25 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-25 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-09-23 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-18 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-17 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-16 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-16 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-09-13 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-06 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-09-03 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-30 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV)) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-29 | Tribunal de Justiça de Santa Catarina | Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-29 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-08-27 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-26 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-16 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-15 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-13 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-12 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-08-07 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-08-07 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-07 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-08-02 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-29 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-24 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-24 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-23 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-22 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-07-16 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-07-04 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-07-01 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-06-27 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-06-26 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-06-24 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-06-21 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-06-20 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-06-19 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-06-04 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-05-29 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-05-24 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-05-22 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-05-17 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-05-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-05-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-05-07 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-04-22 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-04-19 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-04-10 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming Piracy | Restricted |
2024-04-09 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-03-24 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-03-21 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-03-20 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-03-14 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2024-03-12 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-03-01 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / ABTA (TV) | IPTV / Movie Piracy | Restricted |
2024-02-26 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Streaming | Open |
2024-02-23 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo | IPTV | Open |
2024-02-19 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco | IPTV / Stream-Ripping | Restricted |
2023-12-18 | Tribunal de Justiça de São Paulo / CyberGaeco | Stream-Ripping | Open |
2023-12-06 | Tribunal de Justiça de Pernambuco / Policia Civil de Pernambuco | IPTV | Open |
2023-08-31 | Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações (Anatel) | Restricted | |
2023-08-10 | Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações (Anatel) | Restricted | |
2023-07-28 | Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações (Anatel) | Restricted | |
2023-06-28 | Agência Nacional de Telecomunicações (Anatel) | Restricted |
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
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