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Episode: 1095
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Title: HPR1095: TGTM Newscast for 2012/10/07
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1095/hpr1095.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-17 18:51:39
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---
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You're listening to Talk Geek To Me News, number 78, record for Sunday, October 7, 2012.
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You're listening to the Tech Only Hacker Public Radio Edition to get the full podcast,
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including political, commentary, and other controversial topics.
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Please visit www.talkgeektme.us.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me.
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Please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is at www.talkgeektme.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the username DeepGeek.
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Or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is dgtgtm, as in DeepGeek Talk Geek to me.
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And now the tech roundup from torrentfreak.com by NIGMAX, date October 3, 2012.
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PRQ Ray Talkets revealed Pirate Bay Party Get Boost Plot Thickens.
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Police carried out a raid against Swedish hosting company PRQ on Monday, and the searches
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were finally completed today.
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The immediate effect was that all sites hosted on the 80.88.slash19net went down, including
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the torrent sites at torrentound.com, linkomaneja.net, and tankofetates.nu.
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Release blog rlslog.net, and sports streaming sites atdhenet.tv, ha ha sport.com, sportlemone.tv,
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stopstream.tv, and all dozens were affected.
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The individual sites listed above are now back online with one notable exception, tankofetest.
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As reported earlier this year, tankofetest was once Sweden's second largest torrent site,
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but in February decided to call it quits.
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The closure was prompted by a Supreme Court decision that would not be granting leave to
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appeal in the long-running Pirate Bay case and subsequent warnings of a file-sharing
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site crackdown from Hollywood, lawyer Monique Watts-dead, and anti-pired Byron lawyer, Henrik
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Pontein.
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Despite the announcement, tankofetest had remained online until this week, but as confirmed
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by PRQ-Ona, BKL V-Borg, this morning the police took the site's server on Monday.
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They took three servers, and I know two of the sites that were targets of the raid.
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The first is tankofetest.com, or tankofet.com.
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They are different names for the same site, he said.
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The other is a site called appbucket.com, it has not been on since April when they stopped
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paying their bills, so no other customer has taken over the server, V-Borg added.
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Although V-Borg is quoted as referencing appbucket.com, that site has zero traffic and is owned
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by photo-bucket incorporated a seemingly unlikely target for police operation.
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However, switch to appbucket.net and things get a whole lot more interesting.
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This site was the subject of a legal action in August, when the FBI seized its domain
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and the crackdown against Android app piracy.
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It was also hosted by PRQ.
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The site currently diverts to the familiar seized server notice, but it's who is entry
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reveals that it is still registered to PRQ itself, care of none other than the pirate
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pay co-founder and former PRQ-Ona Gottfried Swathom.
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Current freak is currently awaiting further information from Mikhail V-Borg.
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Overall the rates this week generate a lot of interest from web users, particularly
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as they coincide with the pirate pay being offline.
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The site has now returned, but it's interesting to see how many electronic sites we see to
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boost as a result of its downtime.
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As can be seen from the member graph below, another direct beneficiary of the rate is
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the Swedish pirate party after having its server seized this week.
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Think of a test redirected its domain to the party's Facebook page.
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This resulted in a very welcome onslaught of new members, explains pirate party leader
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Anna Trollberg.
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Last time I checked, we had about 1,000 new members and 12,000 new likes on Facebook in
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a day.
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My theories are currently refusing to discuss the rates, but anti-piracy group anti-pirate
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buy-in confirms that on Monday, 50 illegal sites went offline as a result of the action
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at PRQ.
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From EFF.org, date October 1, 2012, by Handy Fakuri, Governor Brown vetoes California
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electronic privacy protection.
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Again, location privacy took a hit in California yesterday when Governor Jerry Brown vetoed
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SB1434 and EFF and ACLU sub-ponsored bill that would have required law enforcement
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to apply for a search warrant in order to obtain the location tracking information, despite
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the bill's passing through the state legislature, with overwhelming bipartisan support, despite
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local newspaper editorials in favor of the bill, and despite more than 1,300 concerned
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Californians, using our action-centered to urge him to sign the bill into law, Governor
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Brown instead decided to sell out privacy rights to law enforcement.
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It's not the first time either.
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Last year, he did the same thing with SB914, a bill that would have required police to
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obtain a search warrant before searching an arrested individual's cell phone incident
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to arrest.
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To read the rest of this article, follow links in the show notes.
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From TechDirt.com, by Mike Masnick, dated Friday, October 5, 2012, while the MPAA can't
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win the hearts and minds of the public, file sharing is mainstream.
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A few weeks ago, we wrote about the new digital music index from London-based music metrics,
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looking at the popularity of file sharing by location in the UK.
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The results showed that the active file sharing was mainstream rather than a limited activity.
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The same group has now released a US version of its report, which more or less shows the
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same thing.
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Black quote, Americans downloaded more than 97 million albums and singles using BitTorrent
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during the first half of 2012, with Gainesville, Florida named as the country's pirate capital
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in an influential new report of the 97 million Torrents download across the USA around 78%
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or albums in 22% singles, assuming an album contains 10 tracks the total number of songs
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downloaded would have surpassed 759 million in six months.
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The report admits that not all of the songs being downloaded were unauthorized, but
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suggests that since many of them are, the characterizations are fair, of course, just
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as we saw in the UK, all this really seems to show is how widespread file sharing is.
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It's not a marginalized effort hidden away from society as some would have you believe,
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but something that a very large percentage of the population engages in on a regular basis.
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A much more interesting and relevant report comes from Joe Carriganis, who is teasing a
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larger new report that's about to be released concerning copy culture in both the US and
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Germany.
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The first tease discusses the attitudes of file shares in the US about whether or not
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it's reasonable to do certain types of file sharing, and the results suggest that the
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MPAAs and many politicians believe that all they need to do is educate people is based
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on very little evidence.
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The key point is that contrary to the assertions of some, the moral questions around file sharing
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are rarely black and white.
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A total comment and served here in the news report is a fascinating graph you would probably
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want to view that breaks down by age the answer to this survey question for the questions
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shared with family members, shared with friends, upload two websites where people can download
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them, post links to unauthorized files, and sell copies.
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Carriganis explains that some seem to think there are just two views of file sharing.
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Black quote, let's recall that there are two conventional ways of talking about the ethics
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of copying, both in relation to the theft of material property, first that copying is
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not like theft because it is non-rivalorous, making a copy does not deprive the owner
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of the use of the good.
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For short, call this the paley position, the defense of digital culture as a culture
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of abundance, second that copying is like theft because it deprive the owner of potential
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economic benefit from the sale of that good, in the case of downloading to the copier,
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call that the MPAA position, the defense of culture as a market, that depends on the
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scarcity or controlled distribution of digital goods, and black quote.
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Then he notes that copyright laws were really built up around the specific type of copying,
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commercial copying rather than personal copying, and the data above certainly suggests that
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the views of people on any sort of moral question change depending on the context, but also
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and this is important based on age.
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The younger generation just seems to believe that basic sharing with fans and family should
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be seen as perfectly reasonable, the different ways of slicing the data certainly suggest
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that a blanket argument that piracy as theft is going to completely miss its mark in
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educational campaigns, people just don't buy it.
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To read the rest of the saw call, follow links in the show notes.
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From TechDirt.com by Ben Zevenberger did October 4, 2012.
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Report on internet freedom shows were saying less and less of it.
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Following the revolutions in the ab world since December 2010, standing governments'
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fates were determined partly by the ability of their people to communicate via online
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tools and mobile phones.
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Whenever an uprising started a new territory dictators and government officials scrambled
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to halt the ability for protesters to communicate in many different ways, other governments
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looked on fearfully at how their colleagues were coping or failing to address the challenge
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posed by the internet, hoping to maybe learn a best practice or two in the digital repression.
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The US government and European Union were quick to respond with all sorts of plans to help
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the people fighting for reform.
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In speech after speech, the US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announced large funds
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to be made available for online dissidents, resulting in projects such as digital-definished
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partnership.
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The EU sponsored with its own plan a no disconnect strategy, both approaches share the idea that
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supplying activists and bloggers with the tools to circumvent repression by governments.
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Another common feature is to engage US and EU companies to support the internet freedom
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efforts and to discourage the sale of surveillance technology to foreign villains.
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These initiatives may well end up in a cat and mouse game, though where equipment or
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code developed to increase online freedom of dissidents only prompts concerning governments
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to react in more aggressive ways to silence dissent.
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A total comment is important to note that while the US has supported dissidents in other
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countries, the US applies the same repression techniques to its own dissidents and a total
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comment.
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Unfortunately, these well-maned efforts are viewed skeptically and with little credibility
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by many, considering that efforts against work elites continue to intensify, people
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are increasingly under threat of being disconnected, citizens are being illegally arrested, and
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more and more public funds are being spent on such unreasonable restraints at home.
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To get an overview of these developments in the world is worth reading the recent
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theme of the net 2012 report by Freedom House, a watchdog dedicated to freedom and democracy
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in the world.
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The report studies the reactions of 47 nations to challenges posed by the internet and
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is written by more than 50 researchers.
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Based on the countries that were analyzed, it has been reported widely that out of these
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countries, Estonia and the US score the best in the internet freedom rankings.
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To read the rest is article, follow links in the show notes.
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This article includes a enumerated list of trends in internet surveillance, which is
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most enlightening.
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From torrentfreak.com by NIGMAX data, October 5, 2012, mega uploads, these data case will
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get a hearing, court rules.
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In a couple of weeks time, it will be exactly 10 months since mega uploads, servers were
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rated by US authorities.
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Now and after considerable legal wrangling, it finally appears that the fate of the user's
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data on those machines is set to be decided.
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The data currently sitting inside 113 servers at Corpatia hosting in the United States has
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been the subject of extended negotiations between mega uploads legal theme and the Department
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of Justice and other parties.
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The upload wanted to form our users to regain access, but the authorities and the MPAA,
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who say the machines are filled with pirate movies, TV shows and music, aren't so keen.
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In May, and after initial requests months earlier, Ohio-based businessman Kyle Goodwin, a former
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mega upload user who lost access to his personal videos, filed a motion with the support of
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the EFF, asking the courts to find a solution for the return of his data, and that of other
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mega upload users.
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Although Judge Liam O'Grady didn't make a direct decision, he did order the original
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parties back to the table to negotiate, and July, they limped on for a couple of months
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only to fail again in September.
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This prompted the EFF to put more pressure on Judge O'Grady.
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Now, according to the EFF, things are moving forward at last.
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The courts say today that it will hold a hearing to find out the details about Mr. Goodwin's
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property, where it is, what happened when the government denied him access to it, and
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whether, and how, he can get it back, unquote, says EFF Attorney Julie Samuels.
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Goodwin and the U.S. government have been asked to sum up with a format for the hearing
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to take place on a currently unscheduled date sometime in the future, describing the
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good news as long overdue, Samuels says the hearing will represent another step for
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innocent users to have their rightful property returned.
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We are glad that Mr. Goodwin will finally get to make his case in court, and we will
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look forward to helping the Judge fashion a procedure to make all of Mega Uploads consumers
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whole again, by granting them access to what is legally theirs, Samuels concludes.
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Mega Upload lawyer Ira Rothkin, who previously told Torrent Freak that the seizing of all
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user data by the U.S. government amount to a violation of due process, says the hearing
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will give Mega Upload the opportunity to call U.S. officials to testify.
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Quote, Mega Upload will be filing papers with the court to specially intervene, unquote,
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he told CNET, quote, considering that it is the only internet service provided that
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under applicable privacy laws is the only party that can access the data and coordinate
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return to consumers, unquote.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me, please send your comments to DG at deepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is at www.talkgeektoMe.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the username DeepGeek or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is DG-T-G-T-M, as in DeepGeek Talk Geek To Me.
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This episode of Talk Geek To Me is licensed under the Creative Commons attribution share
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like 3.0 on-board license.
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This license allows commercial reuse of the work as well as allowing you to modify the
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work as long as you share a like the same rights you have received under this license.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever consider recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dark Pound and the Infonomicom Computer
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Club.
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