Court Order Seeks Email Data of WikiLeaks Volunteer Jacob Appelbaum

The US government has obtained a controversial type of secret court order to force Google Inc and small Internet provider Sonic.net Inc to turn over information from the email accounts of WikiLeaks volunteer Jacob Appelbaum, according to documents reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Sonic said it fought the government’s order and lost, and was forced to turn over information. Challenging the order was rather expensive, but we felt it was the right thing to do, said Sonic’s chief executive, Dane Jasper. The government’s request included the email addresses of people Mr Appelbaum corresponded with the past two years, but not the full emails.

Both Google and Sonic pressed for the right to inform Mr Appelbaum of the secret court orders, according to people familiar with the investigation. Google declined to comment. Mr Appelbaum, 28 years old, hasn’t been charged with wrongdoing — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Chaos Computer Club analyses government malware

The largest European hacker club, Chaos Computer Club (CCC), has reverse engineered and analysed a lawful interception malware program used by German police forces. It has been found in the wild and submitted to the CCC anonymously. The malware can not only siphon away intimate data but also offers a remote control or backdoor functionality for uploading and executing arbitrary other programs. Significant design and implementation flaws make all of the functionality available to anyone on the internet.

Even before the German constitutional court (Bundesverfassungsgericht) on 27 February 2008 forbade the use of malware to manipulate German citizen’s PCs, the German government introduced a less conspicuous newspeak variant of the term spy software: Quellen-TKÜ (the term means source wiretapping or lawful interception at the source). This Quellen-TKÜ can by definition only be used for wiretapping internet telephony. The court also said that this has to be enforced through technical and legal means.

The CCC now published the extracted binary files [0] of the government malware that was used for Quellen-TKÜ, together with a report about the functionality found and our conclusions about these findings. During this analysis, the CCC wrote its own remote control software for the trojan — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Forced labour investigations across Wales by Soca

Factories, farms and hotels could be forcing hundreds of people across Wales to work against their will.

The Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) is conducting several investigations into forced labour across Wales, the BBC understands.

These businesses could be breaking new anti-slavery laws and employers may end up in prison — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Legal brothels linked to international sex trafficking rings

Legal brothels in NSW and Victoria are operating unchecked despite police investigations implicating them in human trafficking, sex slavery and organised crime.

Two federal police investigations, Operations Elixation and Raspberry, have identified at least two Sydney brothels and three Melbourne ones linked to an international human trafficking and sex slavery ring. The syndicate allegedly convinces Asian women to come to Australia to study. They are then forced to work as sex slaves in brothels.

But the state and local authorities responsible for approving legal brothels have taken no action, despite court documents in August detailing federal police allegations of the brothels’ — or their managers’ — involvement in organised crime — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Young, unpaid and angry: interns go online to campaign for a wage

Famous high street businesses, including Topshop and the recruitment specialist Reed, are being named and shamed by an internet campaign targeting the rise of unpaid and very low paid internships that, it is claimed, is undermining the link between pay and work.

Topshop, the star performer in Sir Philip Green’s £2.7bn Arcadia retail empire, is exposed for paying graduates on month-long work experience secondments just £3.50 a day plus limited travel expenses.

Urban Outfitters, the American clothier with stores in a dozen cities around the UK, has been attacked for advertising a nine-month unpaid internship in their merchandising department for people who are hardworking, organised [and] able to multi-task.

And Reed, one of the country’s largest job agencies, has been nicknamed Greedy Reed for having advertised 46 unpaid internships within its company, variously described as intern receptionist, intern executive assistant and secretarial admin internship. The adverts were recently taken down after the company was reminded by the campaign of the obligations of the national minimum wage legislation introduced in 1999. There is no legal definition of an “intern”, and the law says that anybody who qualifies as a worker must be paid at least £6.08 an hour if aged 21 — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Eureka! Ditching DRM Decreases Piracy

DRM only hurts legitimate customers.

The phrase above has been written a few dozen times here on TorrentFreak, and it’s now supported by an academic report.

Researchers from Rice and Duke University looked into the effect of digital restrictions on music piracy. In their paper Music Downloads and the Flip Side of Digital Rights Management Protection they conclude that DRM doesn’t prevent piracy at all. Quite the opposite.

Only the legal users pay the price and suffer from the restrictions. Illegal users are not affected because the pirated product does not have DRM restrictions, the researchers write in their report — via redwolf.newsvine.com

EU Parliament Group Opposes Long Copyrights and Oppressive DRM

Apparently there are some politicians who get it. At least it seems that way after reading an entry on the blog of Rick Falkvinge (founder of the Swedish Pirate Party). He says the Green party group, fifth largest in the European Parliament, has officially adopted several of the Pirate Party’s stances in a new position paper (PDF). The Greens say, the copyright monopoly does not extend to what an ordinary person can do with ordinary equipment in their home and spare time, adding that a 20-year protection term is more reasonable than 70 years. They go on to say, Net Neutrality must be guaranteed, and also mention DRM: It must always be legal to circumvent DRM restrictions, and we should consider introducing a ban in the consumer rights legislation on DRM technologies that restrict legal uses of a work

— via Slashdot

Suing downloaders won’t solve piracy: expert

A copyright law expert says there is nothing stopping film companies from suing illegal downloaders in Australia, but he does not think the approach offers a solution to the problem of film piracy.

In the US and Europe, film companies have long pursued illegal downloaders individually; finding their details, sending out letters of demand, and settling for a sum of money, usually somewhere between a few hundred and a few thousand dollars.

So far this approach hasn’t been taken in Australia, where copyright owners have instead focused their legal action against internet service providers (ISPs) themselves for facilitating the illegal activity, as in the ongoing legal battle between the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT) and iiNet.

But that could all be about to change — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Who’s afraid of multiculturalism? Mythical Muslims and moral panic in the West

Fictional news stories ought to be exceedingly rare. But they are not – and where Muslims are concerned, they represent something of an emerging genre.

British journalists Peter Oborne and James Jones catalogue several examples of such stories, drawing on a study performed by the Cardiff School of Journalism, Media and Cultural Studies. Here are a couple of examples from an edited summary published in The Independent — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Belgian ISPs Ordered To Block The Pirate Bay

A court has overturned a 2010 ruling which said that blocking The Pirate Bay at the ISP level was disproportionate. The Antwerp Court of Appeal sided with the Belgian Anti-Piracy Federation in their quest to force two ISPs to block subscriber access to the world’s most famous torrent site. Belgacom and Telenet must now implement a DNS blockade of the site within 14 days or face fines.

After the founders of The Pirate Bay lost their 2009 trial, the Belgian Anti-Piracy Foundation (BAF) began pushing two ISPs — Belgacom and Telenet — to block subscriber access to the famous torrent site — via redwolf.newsvine.com

GPS Inventor Joins EFF in Fight Against Warrantless GPS Tracking

The principal inventor of the Global Positioning System (GPS) and other leading technologists have joined the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) in urging the US Supreme Court to block the government from using GPS tracking without first getting a warrant, arguing that the massive collection of sensitive location data should require court oversight — via redwolf.newsvine.com

How Andrew Bolt should be punished

The messages started early. Some on Twitter. Some emails. A couple of phone calls. All of them sourced back to one news item. The conviction of Andrew Bolt under racial vilification laws. Everyone assumed, rightly, I’d be champing at the bit to hook into the issue of m’unlearned colleague. But probably not in the way you’d expect.

I don’t see the conviction of Bolt as a triumph.

Why?

Because Bolt is the sort of oxygen thief I revel in vilifying. Nothing gives me greater pleasure than to wake up and find out that once again the champion of the overdog has disgraced himself in public and that Whacking Day is upon us.

Bolt is a gift to likes of me; a self parodying buffoon who rushed to blame the recent massacre in Norway on jihadi extremists, hours before the real perp was revealed to be the sort of unhinged, Aryan culture warrior who’d probably find Bolt’s columns about jihadi extremists to be a jolly engaging read.

People like Bolt do not need to be suppressed. They need — they desperately need — to be mocked. Mocked for their ignorance. Mocked for their paranoia. Mocked for their delusions of adequacy — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Mass BitTorrent Lawsuits Set To Plague Australia

After reaching more than 3.6 million targeted individuals in Germany, in excess of 200,000 in the United States and having planted the seeds of further extortion-like activities in Canada, Australia is the next target for the file-sharing settlement lawyers. According to a report from one of the country’s leading ISPs, thousands of Australians will soon be receiving pay-up-or-else letters for allegedly sharing movies using BitTorrent — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Bolt’s columns did not deserve to see the light of day. End of story

When I was editor of The Age, I thought about hiring Andrew Bolt as a columnist. Indeed, I think I even met with him to see whether he had any interest in coming back to the Age. (Bolt was on the Age staff when I joined the paper in the early 80s.) I thought Bolt might add … how should put it … a certainly unpredictability to The Age oped page. As it was, I don’t think Bolt had any interest in joining the red rag I edited and looking back, I’m glad it never happened. That’s because inevitably, sooner or later, Bolt would write a column that I would refuse to publish. And then I’d have a martyr to free speech on my hands.

I would not have published the two columns for which Bolt was found to have contravened the Racial Discrimination Act. I would not have published them firstly because (I hope) in the editing process, there would have been questions raised — by me, by the oped page editor, by our lawyers perhaps — about the facts on which Bolt built his pieces which basically argued that some people had chosen to identify themselves as Aborigines to reap material rewards of one kind or another. I would not have published them even if the columns were factually accurate because I thought the tone of the columns was nasty and demeaned the people he was writing about.

There’s a lot of nonsense talked about free speech, especially by people who are in a position — and who do so daily if not hourly — to make decisions on what is acceptable speech and what isn’t in the public sphere. Editors, news directors, executive producers of current affairs and news programs, even the esteemed editor of The Drum, decide the limits of free speech all the time and they do so, not merely on the basis of what is legally safe. Often they make this decision on gut feeling, on their understanding of their readership or their audience, of the traditions and history of the organization that they are fortunate enough to run for a period of time.

Of course, I am not talking about the blogosphere here, where mad people and sane people, people consumed with hatred and bile and people who want only to serve the public good — and all those in between — feel like they have a licence to say anything and damn the consequences. Still, while the media revolution may be upon us and the old media gatekeepers of what is acceptable speech and what isn’t might be, Canute like, holding back an irresistible tide, at the moment, the old media still delivers mass audiences and for that mass audience, public speech is not free and never has been — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Australia should know better on asylum seekers: Amnesty chief

The chief of Amnesty International says Australia’s treatment of asylum seekers and Indigenous people is deeply disturbing and an international embarrassment.

In his first interview while in Australia, Amnesty secretary-general Salil Shetty told ABC’s Lateline that Western nations, including Australia, are rapidly losing credibility when it comes to human rights.

He says the Federal Government’s stymied Malaysia Solution is not in line with international refugee laws — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Girl, 16, gets court to halt marriage

A court has placed a 16-year-old girl on the airport watch list to prevent an arranged marriage taking place in Lebanon.

The girl, who cannot be named for legal reasons, applied to the Federal Magistrates Court for an order to restrain her parents from taking her out of Australia to marry a man she had met only once.

The girl, given the pseudonym Ms Madley by the court, approached the Legal Aid Commission after her parents organised the wedding despite her telling them that she did not want to go to Lebanon and did not want to marry the man — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Bolt found guilty of discrimination

Journalist and political commentator Andrew Bolt has been found guilty of breaching the Racial Discrimination Act over a series of articles he wrote two years ago.

Bolt was being sued in the Federal Court by nine Aboriginal people including former ATSIC chairman Geoff Clark, academic Professor Larissa Behrendt, activist Pat Eatock, photographer Bindi Cole, author Anita Heiss, health worker Leeanne Enoch, native title expert Graham Atkinson, academic Wayne Atkinson and lawyer Mark McMillan.

They alleged a series of articles written by Bolt two years ago implied light-skinned people who identified as Aboriginal did so for personal gain — via redwolf.newsvine.com

ACTA will be signed Saturday, US and Japan say

A controversial trade agreement targeting counterfeiters and copyright infringers is scheduled to be signed this Saturday in Tokyo, the Office of the US Trade Representative has announced.

Representatives of the US, Japan, Australia, Canada, the EU, South Korea, Mexico, Morocco, New Zealand, Singapore and Switzerland will be at the signing ceremony for the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), according to Japan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Countries that have completed relevant domestic processes will sign ACTA, the ministry said in a press release. The agreement, which would create international standards for protecting intellectual property, will be open for signature until 1 May 2013, the ministry said.

Public Knowledge, a digital rights group, said the latest version of ACTA contains more protections for consumers than previous versions. Still, the group urged US President Barack Obama’s administration to make it clear that ACTA does not change US law, including provisions in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act protecting ISPs and websites from copyright enforcement — via redwolf.newsvine.com

Spotify adds Facebook requirement, angering users

New Spotify subscribers can only sign up if they have a Facebook account, a move that suggests that the online streaming music service is fully embracing its new Facebook partnership.

Spotify has ditched its old business plan, but about 300 people at the consumer advocacy website GetSatisfaction don’t think that decision was a good one — via redwolf.newsvine.com