Head Of Dutch High Tech Crime Unit Pim Takkenberg Is Pleased With The Close Coop Between His Team And The Dutch Forensic Lab, Fox-IT And Leaseweb In The Fight Against Hackers

Takkenberg argues that the cooperation was particularly successful when conducting the Bredolab botnet investigation, because foreign judges have been making use of the evidence produced by all Dutch parties mentioned.

To some the cooperation was controversial however because:

1. The Dutch Police had sent every internet user who owned an infected PC (and had become a facilitator of the botnet itself) a warning message;

2. The High Tech Crime Unit worked closely with hosting provider Leaseweb and security company Fox-IT, both commercial enterprises;

3. The evidence produced by these Dutch entities resulted in an arrest in Armenia.

Dutch language news article:
http://www.nu.nl/internet/2820042/politie-blij-met-privaat-publieke-samenwerking-hackers.html

Previously:

4 Years In Prison For Armenian Bredolab Botnet Operator
http://vrritti.com/2012/05/22/4-years-in-prison-for-armenian-bredolab-botnet-operator/

‘Father of the Internet’ and Googler Vint Cerf calls out U.S. government on CISPA and called hacktivists groups like Anonymous “counterproductive”

Hacker collective becoming more and more ‘loosely-knit’

Oddly enough Cerf did not talk about Google’s silence on these new cybersecurity bills…

http://www.gamepolitics.com/2012/05/22/father-internet-calls-out-us-government-cispa

Judges Are Not Idiots: Change Of Domain Name Or IP Address Will Not Change Illegality Of Websites

Dutch ISPs just lost one of many court cases against BREIN and will now have to block the additional IP addresses or domain names of The Pirate Bay too. Lawyers are nonetheless looking forward to the next ‘circumvention method’ The Pirate Bay will try and use, only to have that method formally declared useless too.

Dutch language news article:
http://webwereld.nl/nieuws/110629/brein-wint-ex-parte-verbod-op-nieuw-tpb-adres.html

Previously:

Does A Change Of IP Address Change The Illegallity Of A Website? KPN And Tele2 Seem To Think So
http://vrritti.com/2012/05/23/does-a-change-of-ip-address-change-the-illegallity-of-a-website-kpn-and-tele2-seem-to-think-so/

The Dutch Are Helping Turkish Businesses In Dealing With EU Legislation And Policies Related To Privacy, Cyber Security And Copyright

Dutch Vice-prime Minister Maxime Verhagen:

“Since 2008, the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation and the EU have been supporting the Turkish Ministry of Justice with the harmonisation of Turkish law with the European E-commerce Directive and the European rules for privacy and data protection. This exchange of knowledge and experience contributed to a sound legal framework for e-commerce in Turkey (…) E-commerce in Turkey has great potential. To exploit the full potential of the Turkish online market, it is important to create a level playing field with the EU. Also, companies need to invest in creating trust in e-commerce by complying with the rules, respecting privacy of consumers and using adequate security measures. In our experience, sectors that invest in trust marks and dispute resolution mechanisms benefit most in the long run.”

Much more:
http://www.considerati.com/en/blog/blog-post/2012/05/25/stimulating-trust-in-turkish-e-commerce-through-eu-turkey-collaboration/

Film company Gaumont says Hadopi eradicated illegal downloads of French films

According to the ALPA and Gaumont, illegal downloads of movies (presumably only international films) saw a 50 percent reduction in the last year.

More:
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2012/05/film-company-gaumont-says-hadopi-eradicated-illegal-downloads-of-french-films/

Italian Court Orders All ISPs To Block KickAssTorrents

KickAssTorrents, one of the most popular BitTorrent websites on the Internet today, is facing a total blackout in Italy

http://torrentfreak.com/italian-court-orders-all-isps-to-block-kickasstorrents-120524/

Previously:

Italian ISP blocking of Pirate Bay leads to significantly fewer visitors – thepiratebay.org is now only the 673rd most visited site in Italy
http://vrritti.com/2011/01/05/italian-isp-blocking-of-pirate-bay-leads-to-significantly-fewer-visitors-thepiratebay-org-is-now-only-the-673th-most-visited-site-in-italy/

US government hacked al-Qaeda websites – Clinton

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the US was successful in hacking Yemeni tribal websites, replacing al-Qaeda propaganda with altered versions showing the damage the terrorist group has done to the Yemeni people.

­Speaking at a conference of US and international special commanders, Clinton said cyber intelligence experts were able to take down pages extolling the murder of Americans and substitute them with pages describing the toll al-Qaeda attacks have taken on Yemenis. She noted that the extremists responded by telling supporters not to believe everything they see on the Internet.

Clinton said it was all part of a larger, multi-pronged effort to combat the spread of extremist propaganda.

Together, they will work to pre-empt, discredit and outmaneuver extremist propaganda,” she stressed.

The cyber-attack was launched by the Center for Strategic Counter-Terrorism Communications, a group of specialists, diplomats and intelligence analysts from different agencies housed at the State Department. Their prime task is to prowl the Internet and social media to prevent al-Qaeda’s recruitment of new members.

More:
http://www.rt.com/news/us-al-qaeda-websites-clinton-063/

Govt lawyers red-faced after FBI spirits Dotcom evidence to US (MegaUpload)

The Government’s lawyers have been ordered to explain how the FBI left the country with evidence in the Kim Dotcom case meant to be kept in “secure custody” by New Zealand police.

High Court chief judge Helen Winkelmann has told the Attorney-General’s lawyer, Mike Ruffin, he has until Monday to explain why FBI agents were allowed to take 135 cloned computer and data storage devices to the United States.

At a legal challenge at the High Court in Auckland yesterday, Dotcom’s lawyer Paul Davison, QC, called the revelation “high-handed” at best and “at the worst misleading”.

Mr Davison and lawyers for Dotcom’s three co-accused want a judicial review into search warrants used during FBI-inspired raids on January 20. Dotcom, Finn Batato, Mathias Ortman and Bram van der Kolk were arrested over allegations of criminal copyright violation through their file-sharing website Megaupload.

Mr Davison said he asked for assurances in correspondence with Mr Ruffin’s predecessor, Anne Toohey, that no evidence would leave New Zealand shores unless on the back of a court decision.

More:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10808032

Dutch Justice Department Wants DNS Blockade For Gambling Sites – Even When Such A Blockade Will Have A ‘Limited’ Effectiveness

The department is also contemplating payment blocking. Webwereld.nl is reporting that Fox-IT’s Ronald Prins is of the opinion that DNS blocking will not be an effective solution both in relation to gambling sites and The Pirate Bay.

The Pirate Bay’s Alexa Rank did drop 15 places since the recent (partial) blockade in The Netherlands. The UK Alexa Rank of The Pirate Bay dropped 11 positions since the recent (partial) blockade in that country.

Dutch language news article:
http://webwereld.nl/nieuws/110581/justitie-wil-dns-blokkades-voor-goksites.html

See also:

Italian ISP blocking of Pirate Bay leads to significantly fewer visitors – thepiratebay.org is now only the 673rd most visited site in Italy
http://vrritti.com/2011/01/05/italian-isp-blocking-of-pirate-bay-leads-to-significantly-fewer-visitors-thepiratebay-org-is-now-only-the-673th-most-visited-site-in-italy/

Dutch Court: online marketplace Marktplaats not liable for copyright infringements

Dutch marketplace website Marktplaats, acquired by eBay, can’t be held liable for copyright infringements, the Dutch Court of Appeal of Leeuwarden ruled yesterday. Stokke, manufacturer of chairs for children, sued Marktplaats because it wouldn’t prevent sellers from placing infringing advertisements of counterfeit Stokke chairs and Marktplaats wouldn’t take enough measures to remove these advertisements.

The Court decided otherwise. Marktplaats offers a facility where every seller can advertise on equal terms. It doesn’t promote certain advertisements from certain sellers, so it doesn’t play an active role as a service provider. According to the Court this means Marktplaats is a hosting service according to the E-Commerce Directive (Directive 2000/31/EC) and the Dutch Civil Code (article 6:196c paragraph 4) and may therefore rely on the legal indemnity mentioned in these legal frameworks This indemnity provision states that – in short – under certain conditions hosting services are not liable for copyrighted content on their websites.

More:
http://www.futureofcopyright.com/home/blog-post/2012/05/23/dutch-court-online-marketplace-marktplaats-not-liable-for-copyright-infringements.html

Kazaa code rises from ashes to help ISPs block pirated material for profit. Can block child porn too! And replace Google’s Ads!

Talk about disruptive technologies. The article also suggests that there’s a commercial incentive needed if one wants ISPs to be dealing with piracy issues. It’s interesting how all these – very different – topics are being put in the same basket: it is probably all zeros and ones right? Pirated files, child abuse images, online advertising…just identify, replace and make some money while doing it…

The people behind a company once accused of being complicit in copyright infringement through peer-to-peer filesharing are now selling software that blocks pirated content—and gives Internet service providers a way to make cash in the process. And soon, a version of the same technology could be used by ISPs to inject their own advertisements into search results—a capability that is sure to raise the ire of proponents of network neutrality.

Global File Systems LLC, a subsidiary of Kazaa owners Brilliant Digital Entertainment Inc. (BDE), have developed software that combines a database of “known bad files” with Web filtering technology at the ISP’s firewall, allowing ISPs to intercept and change links in search results being passed back to a user’s PC—and sending searchers to sites where the user can pay for legitimate copies of the content.

“A number of trials have shown that, properly priced, it’s possible for the content owners and the ISP partners to take back customers from the pirate operation,” BDE’s Michael Speck, who manages the content management business, told Ars in an interview. He said that the software, called Global File Registry—advertised with the tag line, “What goes up can come down”—offers an opportunity to end “the friction between content owners and ISPs,” and to make content blocking a no-cost or profit-making capability for the ISPs themselves.

Speck said that the other solutions proposed by content owners and some ISPs to stop piracy (such as those that were part of drafts of the failed SOPA and PIPA legislation) require fundamental changes to the way the Internet works. BDE’s approach, he said, “is a software platform integrated into the existing machinery of the Internet,” and doesn’t require changes to the Domain Name Service.

Ironically, Global File Registry is based on Truenames, a file identification technology that was originally part of the Kazaa filesharing service. “It’s the Truenames patents that allow individual items of content to be located within a peer-to-peer or cloud environment,” Speck said. BDE has pursued a number of cloud companies to get them to license the technology, and Speck says that many have bought in, including Skype, Level 3 Communications, and Google (which Speck called “one of our most enthusiastic licensees”).

In the case of Global File Registry, which BDE has worked with Cisco to develop over the past few years, a database of Truenames identifying information is combined with the existing content-filtering capability of firewalls to intercept links to infringing content being returned in search results. The software, which is embedded in the ISP’s firewall, then modifies the data to remove and replace the link. “ISPs already have equipment that can identify ‘bad data’,” Speck said. “We’re only asking the machinery that operates the Internet to do one more thing after it identifies bad data—and that is to convert it to a positive response.”

Speck added that the software doesn’t look at the source of the infringing content or the destination of the search results, so it doesn’t identify users trying to access the content. “It’s only a refinement of the data being delivered,” he said.

Global File Registry is already being deployed, and BDE is initially marketing the software to ISPs in Australia, New Zealand, and France. In addition to the anti-piracy version of the software, Global File Registry is also being packaged for law enforcement customers in a version the company plans to give away as a way to block access to child pornography sites, drawing from data collected by child protection organizations.

But what may be the most controversial version of the Global File Registry product is yet to come. Speck says Global File Systems is preparing a version for the US market that allows ISPs to intercept contextual ads in search results and inject their own advertisements in their place. “At the moment, ISP operators invest in the network, acquire customers, and just open the window to the Internet, allowing other people to push advertising down customers’s throats,” Speck said. “We believe it’s incongruous that ISPs should just open the window and allow them to force-feed advertising,” rather than getting their own advertising revenue, he explained.

Speck calls the software “an ISP packet-adjusted advertising platform,” and says it relies on the same technology as the anti-piracy software. “Relying on that same technology, we have been able to replace a search engine or website’s advertising with the ISP’s own advertising,” he said. But he added that “we’re not suggesting we can forensically remove and replace every advertisement from every webpage”—the technology is specifically targeted at search-based ads “of a certain category.”

When asked how Google would feel about the idea of ISPs swapping their own advertisements for Google’s paid ads, Speck said, “I think they’re excited about the prospect that someone can do that, which is why they’re one of the most enthusiastic licensees of our technology.” But he admits there may be some resistance. “Whenever there is a fundamental shift in a business model, the primary resistance is going to be from the established players.”

Google has not yet responded to an Ars inquiry on the level of the company’s enthusiasm for the interception of its main revenue stream.

http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2012/05/kazaa-code-rises-from-ashes-to-help-isps-profit-by-zapping-rogue-links/

Anti-Piracy Organization BREIN & Dutch Police Hunt Down eBook Uploader

A Dutch 21-year-old man has posted 4,900 Dutch eBooks and 10 seasons of a certain TV Show on The Pirate Bay.

Dutch anti-piracy organization BREIN has tracked down this uploader and filed a criminal complaint against the individual with the Dutch police.

The Dutch police has interrogated the suspect who has now confessed his crimes. He is risking a fine of 19,500 EUR or a prison sentence of 6 months.

Should the public prosecutor’s office decide not to prosecute the individual, BREIN will go and start a civil litigation procedure.

Not too long ago, Dutch internet service provider UPC told BREIN to go and prosecute uploaders.

Dutch language news article:
http://webwereld.nl/nieuws/110601/brein-stuurt-politie-af-op-uploader.html

Does A Change Of IP Address Change The Illegallity Of A Website? KPN And Tele2 Seem To Think So

And that’s why they refuse to block The Pirate Bay website (again) now that it has changed its IP address. The Dutch providers feel that BREIN just has to take them to court again.

Dutch language news article:
http://webwereld.nl/nieuws/110604/kpn-en-tele2–geen-blokkade-nieuw-pirate-bay-adres.html

4 Years In Prison For Armenian Bredolab Botnet Operator

In October last year the Dutch Team High Tech Crime pulled the plug on the Bredolab infrastructure which was hosted at Dutch hosting provider Leaseweb. Malware distribution, coordinated from that location, managed to infect millions of PCs worldwide.

The operator of the botnet, Georgy A. had leased 143 servers at a price of 20,000 EUR per month. He also allowed other criminals to make use of his infrastructure.

Georgy A. could be located via the Facebook account of his girlfriend. An Armenian Court has found Georgy A. guilty of computer sabotage as he also used the botnet network for Denial of Service attacks as well as spam rounds involving the distribution of billions of spam messages.

Dutch language news article:
http://www.security.nl/artikel/41590/1/Beheerder_Bredolab-botnet_krijgt_4_jaar_cel.html

Previously:
http://vrritti.com/?s=bredolab&submit=Search

12 children rescued in international abuse probe. 55 pedophiles arrested

The department said that in October 2010 its censorship compliance unit found significant amounts of child sexual abuse and exploitation pictures being exchanged via social network sites, including Facebook, Socialgo, and grou.ps.

It provided evidence of the illegal activities to 20 countries and worked with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations directorate, and Interpol.

“Our investigators and ICE identified a large number of groups on Facebook engaging in the display or distribution of objectionable child sexual material.”

The 20 countries with identified targets are Australia, Bosnia, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, England, Finland, France, Germany, Indonesia, Italy, Mexico, Norway, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, The Netherlands, Tunisia, Turkey, United States and Venezuela.

Much more:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/6966816/Children-rescued-in-international-abuse-probe

The data on Kim Dotcom’s personal computer is encrypted, and he will only hand over passwords if he can also access the data (MegaUpload)

Try “w0rldd0m1n4t10n”

And so it winds on further: in the latest installment to the Aotearoan legal battle, Kim Dotcom’s lawyer that he will only hand over his passwords as part of a “proper judicial process”.

Dotcom, head of Megaupload and accused by the FBI of racketeering and copyright infringement, is resisting extradition to the USA and seeking the return of computers and other property seized when his rented mansion in New Zealand was raided by the Feds and New Zealand police.

More:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/05/22/dotcom_password_court_fight/

MPAA’s Chris Dodd About Piracy: “We’re going to have to be more subtle and consumer-oriented. We’re on the wrong track if we describe this as thievery”

“We’re in a transformative period with an explosion of technology that’s going to need content,” he said.

But Internet companies such as Google, Facebook and Twitter campaigned effectively against the legislation, mobilizing users on grounds that the new rules would impede the free flow of information on the Internet.

“Google chose wisely by making Hollywood the enemy,” Dodd said ruefully.

He said Saturday that the industry will need to take a far more nuanced approach to promoting future antipiracy legislation.

More:
http://www.variety.com/article/VR1118054314

See also:

MPAA Head Thinks Piracy Shouldn’t Be Called “Theft”
http://gizmodo.com/5912057/mpaa-head-thinks-piracy-shouldnt-be-called-theft

DNA privacy is a fine example of law-making failing to keep up with technology

An explosion in biological understanding and medical engineering makes it extremely easy to obtain genetic profiles, and old codgers in the law haven’t paid attention.

http://gizmodo.com/5911992/how-private-is-your-dna

Multimillionaire Software Exec Arrested in LEGO-Thieving Bar-Code Scam

Ah, power. You give a person too much and they will abuse it. Such is the case with Thomas Langenbach, a 47-year-old VP at Palo Alto-based software company SAP Labs, who has been arrested for the nerdiest crime in recent memory. His abuse of power: computer skill-based.

It is reported that Langenbach had been using his computer savvy to reproduce bar code stickers, the kind Target uses to price their items, which he placed over the original bar codes so he could purchase LEGOs at a lower cost.

The multimillionaire software exec sold the LEGO sets on eBay, under the username TomsBrickYard. (For whatever it’s worth, he is a top-rated seller with excellent feedback.) His seller page shows 1,475 completed sales in all, with the most recent feedback left today and the earliest dating back to May 1, 2011.

More:
http://gizmodo.com/5912141/multimillionaire-software-exec-arrested-in-lego+thieving-bar+code-scam

The Supreme Court won’t reduce the US$675,000 verdict against a Boston University student who illegally downloaded 30 songs and shared them on the Internet

The high court on Monday refused to hear an appeal from Joel Tenenbaum, of Providence, R.I., who was successfully sued by the Recording Industry Association of America for illegally sharing music on peer-to-peer networks. In 2009, a jury ordered Tenenbaum to pay $675,000, or $22,500 for each song he illegally downloaded and shared.

A federal judge called that unconstitutionally excessive, but the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reinstated the penalty at the request of Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Warner Brothers Records Inc. and other record labels represented by the RIAA.

http://calgary.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20120521/verdict-firm-for-student-who-downloaded-music-120521/20120521/?hub=CalgaryHome

Undercover MPAA Agents Expose Alleged Movie Pirates In What Hollywood Describes As The Largest Copyright Related Fraud Case In UK History

A British couple are facing life imprisonment after an MPAA sting operation revealed they were the owners of streaming links site SurfTheChannel. Aside from the use of an undercover agent who gained access to the defendants’ house under false pretenses, the case also involves an unprecedented cooperation between the US and UK governments, in which a defendant in the US was offered a deal after agreeing to cooperate and testify in a UK trial.

For years the US movie industry has tried to bring streaming links site SurfTheChannel.com to its knees.

After a chain of events that reads like a Hollywood blockbuster script, the case is now on trial with husband and wife team Anton and Kelly Vickerman as the defendants.

Much more:
http://torrentfreak.com/undercover-mpaa-agents-expose-alleged-movie-pirates-120521/

See also:

Hollywood sting lands “pirate” pair in the brig

A Gateshead couple are accused of running a site that enabled a billion illegal film and TV viewings a year
http://www.scribd.com/doc/94186395/Vickerman-Piracy-Case-Sunday-Times

18 Years In Prison And Involuntary Commitment For Dutch Pedophile Robert Mikelsons

Mikelsons lost his ‘cool’ today when the verdict was read. He threw water at the judge and started shouting that “it was all nonsense” and told the judge “to shut his mouth”. When the judge announced the actual sentence, Mikelsons showed him the well-known middle finger.

Dutch language news article:
http://www.nu.nl/binnenland/2815182/robert-m-krijgt-18-jaar-cel-en-tbs.html

Previously:

Public Prosecutor Discloses More Information About Pedophile Robert Mikelsons. He May Have Abused More Children Than The 87 Currently Identified
http://vrritti.com/2012/04/05/public-prosecutor-discloses-more-information-about-pedophile-robert-mikelsons-he-may-have-abused-more-children-than-the-87-currently-identified/

Breivik And Mikelsons: Two Well-Articulated, Sympathetic And Hyper-Intelligent Nut Cases?
http://vrritti.com/2012/04/04/breivik-and-mikelsons-two-well-articulated-sympathetic-and-hyper-intelligent-nut-cases/

Do You Know Why Some Children Can Not Recall Being Sexually Abused By Robert Mikelsons? Because They Were 19 Days Old
http://vrritti.com/2012/03/20/do-you-know-why-some-children-can-not-recall-being-sexually-abused-by-robert-mikelsons-because-they-were-19-days-old/

Dutch Pedophile Robert Mikelsons Was Teaching Peers How To Abuse Toddlers And Babies Without Parents Noticing
http://vrritti.com/2012/03/14/dutch-pedophile-robert-mikelsons-was-teaching-peers-how-to-abuse-toddlers-and-babies-without-parents-noticing/

The investigation into the Dutch pedophile Robert Mikelsons, who has abused 87 toddlers and babies, produced 46,803 pictures and 3,672 videos (8 Terabytes of data)
http://vrritti.com/2012/03/12/the-investigation-into-the-dutch-pedophile-robert-mikelsons-who-has-abused-87-toddlers-and-babies-produced-46803-pictures-and-3672-videos-8-terabytes-of-data/

Dutch Law Enforcement Hacks Into Computer Systems Of Suspected Child Abusers, Finds 220,000 Child Abuse Images, Videos And Manuals On “How To Kidnap, Abuse And Kill Children” – All Tied To Robert Mikelsons Case Who Abused 87 Toddlers While Working At A DayCare Center in Amsterdam
http://vrritti.com/2011/08/31/dutch-law-enforcement-hacks-into-computer-systems-of-suspected-child-abusers-finds-220000-child-abuse-images-videos-and-manuals-on-how-to-kidnap-abuse-and-kill-children-all-tied-to-robert/

U.S. European Command, NATO Boost Cyber Defenses

Preparing a good defense to deter cyber attacks ranks among his top concerns, Navy Adm. James G. Stavridis, the commander of U.S. European Command, told the Pentagon Channel and American Forces Press Service.

“In many ways, cyber is the threat I worry about most going forward over the long-term,” said Stavridis, who also serves as NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe. “And the reason is, the potential for damage to our fundamental, societal way of life … compared to our level of preparation.”

“In the world of cyber, we are on the beach at Kitty Hawk, [N.C.],” Stavridis said, referring to the Wright Brothers’ famous first flight that heralded the birth of aviation. “We are just at the beginning.”

But he insisted that the United States and its friends and partners dealing with cyber threats don’t have the luxury of time the aviation industry enjoyed as it was being advanced.

“We don’t have 100 years in cyber,” he said. “We are so vulnerable. We have to take steps today to bring order to the chaotic world of cyber. And I think that is going to be not only a security challenge, but also a societal challenge.”

More:
http://www.defpro.com/news/details/35583/?SID=e1895d3b7b1b55161ee73aa84fb8d69a

And:

Chicago NATO Summit: declaration on defence capabilities

We are putting in place a new, leaner and more effective command structure.

We have made steady progress in developing a number of capabilities we identified in Lisbon as critical to the successful conduct of our operations, including: improving our defences against cyber attacks; extending NATO’s air command and control system; and augmenting our capabilities in Afghanistan for exchanging intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance data and countering improvised explosive devices.

In the light of this progress, we have confidently set ourselves the goal of NATO Forces 2020: modern, tightly connected forces equipped, trained, exercised and commanded so that they can operate together and with partners in any environment”

http://www.avionews.com/index.php?corpo=see_news_home.php&news_id=1140935&pagina_chiamante=index.php

Greek Court Orders ISP Blockades of ‘Pirate’ Music Sites

Following in the footsteps of other courts around Europe, a Greek court has ordered the country’s ISPs to start censoring sites that allegedly infringe copyright. The blockades, which were requested by music rights organizations against two specific sites, will be implemented by DNS record tampering and IP address filtering.

2012 is proving to be momentous year for those looking to censor the Internet on copyright grounds. With nationwide blockades of The Pirate Bay biting in many countries including both the Netherlands and the UK, it was only a question of time before the phenomenon spread further still.

Much more:
http://torrentfreak.com/greek-court-orders-isp-blockades-of-pirate-music-sites-120521/

Google must answer EU antitrust concerns over search, copyright, advertising and how it deals with competitors

An investigation by Europe’s antitrust head Joaquin Almunia looked at whether Google gave preferential treatment to its own services in its search results.

Mr Almunia said the company must now “offer remedies” swiftly.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-18143812

and:

“I offer Google the possibility to come up in a matter of weeks with remedies,” said Almunia. “If Google comes up with an outline of remedies which are capable of addressing our concerns, I will instruct my staff to initiate the discussions in order to finalize a remedies package.”

Google wasn’t immediately available to comment.

The EU’s anti-trust chief said it was in the interest of all those involved in the case to reach a “quick resolution” to the four areas of concern he has identified.

The first concern relates to how Google displays links to its own vertical searches for services such as restaurants or news differently to the way it does for links to competitors.

“We are concerned that this may result in preferential treatment compared to those of competing services, which may be hurt as a consequence,” Almunia said.

The second part of the investigation, Almunia said, focused on how Google copies content from competing vertical search services and “uses it in its own offerings…using that material on its own sites without their prior authorization.”

Third, EU regulators want Google to change the deal it strikes with its partners, whereby Google dictates how websites deliver search advertisements. This obliges partners to “obtain all or most of their requirements of search advertisements from Google, thus shutting out competing providers”, and could potentially impact advertising services purchased for example by online stores, online magazines or broadcasters, Almunia said.

Finally, EU anti-trust regulators found that competitors were shut out of Google’s auction-based advertising platform, AdWords, on which advertisers can bid for the placement of search ads on search result pages provided by Google.

The Internet giant will now need to submit an outline of possible remedies to address regulators’ concerns.

More:
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20120521-705717.html

When Porn Is Even More Of A Cash Cow Than Piracy: Survey Finds UK Internet Users Oppose Mandatory ISP Adult Site Blocks

The results from 728 respondents to our latest monthly survey has revealed that the majority (83.9%) are against proposals designed to force home broadband ISPs into imposing mandatory adult website blocks by default. The introduction of such a system, which could be applied to all internet accounts in the UK, was recommended by the recent Parliamentary Inquiry into Online Child Protection (Claire Perry MP).

More:
http://www.ispreview.co.uk/index.php/2012/05/survey-finds-uk-internet-users-oppose-mandatory-isp-adult-site-blocks.html

See also the current popularity of sites such as xhamster, livejasmin, pornhub, xvideos and youporn:

http://www.alexa.com/topsites/countries;0/GB

Anti-Piracy Outfits Launch Attack on BitTorrent Protocol

In recent weeks alarm bells sounded at Poland’s Computer Emergency Response Team when it was discovered that an unknown entity is sending massive amounts of forged data packets and posing a threat to BitTorrent users worldwide. A detailed analysis reveals that anti-piracy outfits may be initiating these attacks to prevent movies from being downloaded. According to security experts, the legality of these attacks is doubtful.

The security researchers, who say these poisoning attacks are happening on a massive scale, observe that they are targeted at specific BitTorrent swarms sharing Russian movie releases.

One of the likely explanations for these poisoning attacks is that anti-piracy outfits are utilizing them to “protect” their clients’ movies. For example, these outfits could overload BitTorrent swarms with corrupt data or “disconnect” messages while masquerading as legitimate downloaders.

This is exactly what the Microsoft funded startup Pirate Pay appears to be doing although other companies may also use similar methods. A company called ICM is currently listed as “protecting” the Russian film that was the subject of the attacks identified by CERT.

The security researchers don’t make any conclusive claims about the origins of the attacks, but they do note that anti-piracy groups are a possible source.

More:
http://torrentfreak.com/anti-piracy-outfits-launch-attack-on-bittorrent-protocol-120519/