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346 lines
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Plaintext
Episode: 940
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Title: HPR0940: TGTM Tech News for 2012-03-07
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0940/hpr0940.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 05:14:12
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---
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Music
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You're listening to Toolkit 3 News, number 62, recorded for March 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.talkeaktme.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 dgatdeepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is www.talkeaktme.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 dgtgtm, as in DeepGeek TalkGeek to me.
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Before proceeding to the Tech Roundup, I want to announce here that I will be attending
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the Hope Conference, Hope Number 9 in Manhattan, New York City, and July.
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So if you want to catch up with me, I would love to break bread with each and every one
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of you who ever is going to be there.
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My contact information is in the Vital Statistics.
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Thank you.
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And now for the Tech Roundup.
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From perspectives.mvderona.com, by James Hamilton, did February 21, 2012, communicating
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data beyond the speed of light.
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In the past, I have written about the cost of latency and how reducing latency can drive
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more customer engagement and increase revenue.
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Two examples of this are the cost of latency and economic incentives applied to web latency.
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No where is latency reduction more valuable than in high frequency trading applications,
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because these trades can be incredibly valuable, the cost of the infrastructure on which
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they trade is more or less an afterthought.
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Not people at the major trading firms work hard to minimize costs, but if the cost of
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infrastructure was to double tomorrow, high frequency trading would continue unabated.
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High frequency trading is very sensitive to latency and is nearly insensitive to costs.
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That makes it an interesting application area.
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And it's one I watch reasonably closely.
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It's a great domain to test ideas that might not yet make economic sense more broadly.
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Some of these ideas will never see more general use, but many ideas get proved out in high
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frequency trading and can be applied to more cost sensitive application areas once the
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techniques have been refined or there is more value.
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One suggestion that comes to up and just on nearly every team upon which I have worked
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is the need to move bits faster than the speed of light.
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Faster than the speed of light communications would help cloud hosted applications and
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cloud computing in general, but physics blocks progress in this area resolutely.
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What if it really were possible to transmit data at roughly 33% faster than the speed
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of light?
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It turns out this is actually possible and may even make economic sense in high frequency
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trading.
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Before you cancel your RSS feed to this blog, let's look more deeply at what is being
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sped up, how much, and why it really is possible to substantially beat today's optical
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communication links.
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When you get into the details, every law is actually more complex than the simple statement
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that gets repeated over and over.
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This is one of the reasons I tell anyone who joins Amazon that the only engineering
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law around here is there are no unchallengable laws.
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It's all about understanding the details and applying good engineering judgment.
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For example, the speed of light is 186,000 miles per second, right?
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Absolutely.
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But the fine print is that the speed of light is 186,000 miles a second in a vacuum.
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The actual speed of light is dependent upon the medium in which the light is propagating.
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In an optical fiber, the speed of light is actually roughly 33% slower than in a vacuum.
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More specifically, the index of refraction of the most common optical fibers is 1.52.
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What this means is that the speed of light in a fiber is actually just over 122,000 miles
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a second.
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The index of refraction of light in air is very close to one, which is to say that the
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speed of light in air is just about the same as the speed of light in a vacuum.
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This means that free space optics.
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The use of light for data communications without a fiber wave guide is roughly 50% faster
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than the speed of light in a fiber.
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Unfortunately, this only makes matters over long distances, but it's only practical
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over short distances.
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There have been test deployments over metro area distances.
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We actually have one where I work, but generally it's a niche technology that has improved
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practical and widely applicable.
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In this approach, I'm not particularly excited.
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Continuing this search for low refraction index data communications, we find that microwaves
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transmitted in air are, again, have a refraction index near one, which is to say that microwave
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is around 50% faster than light in a fiber.
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As before, this is only of interest over longer distances, but unlike free space optics,
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microwave is very practical over longer distances.
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In longer runs, it needs to be received and retransmitted periodically, but this is
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practical, cost effective, and is fairly heavily used in the telecom industry.
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What hasn't been exploited in the past is that microwaves is actually faster than the speed
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of light in fiber.
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The 50% speed up of microwaves over fiber optics seems exploitable, and an enterprising set
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of entrepreneurs are doing exactly that.
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This plan was outlined in the giga-owned article from yesterday titled Wall Street Gains
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Edge Over Trading by Microwave, and this approach, McCabe Brothers, are planning on linking New
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York City with Chicago using microwave transmission.
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This is a 790-mile distance, but fiber seldom takes the most direct route.
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Let's assume a fiber-path distance of 850 miles, which will yield 6.9 millisecond propagation
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delay if there are no routers or other networking gear in the way.
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Give that both optical and microwave require repeaters.
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I'm not including their impact in the analysis.
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Covering the 790 miles using microwaves will require 4.2 milliseconds.
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Using these data, we would have the microwave link a full 2.7 milliseconds faster.
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That's a very substantial time difference, and in the world of high-frequency trading,
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a 2.7 millisecond is very monetizable.
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In fact, I've seen HFT customers extremely excited about the very small portions of
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a millisecond, getting 2.7 milliseconds back is potentially a very big deal.
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This article continues with a quote from the McCabe Brothers website to read that quote
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and examine all the links in the article, follow links in the show notes, to the article.
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From eff.org, date February 24, 2012, appeals court upholds constitutional right against
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forced decryption.
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San Francisco, a federal appeals court, has found a Florida man's constitutional rights
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were violated when he was imprisoned for refusing to decrypt data on several devices.
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This is the first time an appellate court has ruled the Fifth Amendment protects against
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forced decryption, a major victory for constitutional rights in the digital age.
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In this case, titled United States, Versed Do, FBI agencies, two laptops and five external
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hard drives, from a man they were investigating, but were unable to access encrypted data
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they believed were stored on the device via an encryption problem called True Crypt.
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When a grand jury ordered the man to produce the unencrypted contents of the drives, he
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invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and refused to do so.
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The court held him in contempt and sent him to jail.
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The electronic frontier foundation filed an amicus brief under seal, arguing that the man
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had a valid Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, and that the government's
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attempt to force him to decrypt the data was unconstitutional.
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The eleventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, ruling that the act of decrypting data
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is testimonial and therefore protected by the Fifth Amendment.
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Furthermore, the government's limited offer of immunity, in this case, was insufficient
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to protect his constitutional right because it did not extend to the government's use
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of the decrypted data as evidence against him in a prosecution to read the rest of
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the article, follow links in the show notes.
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From EFF.org, by Ketitsa Rodriguez, dead March 2, 2012, Mexico adopts a alarming surveillance
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legislation.
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The Mexican Legislature, today, adopted a surveillance legislation that will grant the
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police warrantless access to real-time use of location data.
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The bill was adopted almost unanimously with 315 votes in favor of six against and seven
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abstentions it has been sent to the President for his approval.
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There is significant potential for abuse of these new powers.
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The bill ignores the fact that most cellophones today constantly transmit detailed location
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data about every individual to their carriers.
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As all this location data is housed in one place with the telecommunication service provider,
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police will have access to more precise, more comprehensive and more pervasive data than
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would ever have been possible with the use of tracking devices.
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The Mexican government should be more sensitive to the fact that mobile companies are now
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recording detailed footprints of our daily lives.
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In response to the law's adoption, Mexican human rights lawyer, Luis Fernando Garcia,
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told EFF QUOTE, Mexican policy makers must understand that the adoption of board surveillance
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powers without adequate safeguard undermines the privacy and security of citizens and is
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therefore incompatible with the human rights obligations.
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Sensitive data of this nature warns stronger protection, not-and-all-access paths.
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Human rights advocates really evaluate all necessary legal options for challenging
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the legality of the measure.
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In the meantime, Mexican citizens should evaluate the possibility of requesting access to their
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own personal data, retained by the mobile company going to the Mexican data protection
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law.
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In Germany, the politician and privacy advocate, Malt Spitz, used a similar local privacy
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law, which, like laws in many European countries, give individuals a right to know what kinds
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of data private companies retain about them, to force his cell phone care to reveal what
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records it had on him.
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The result was 35,831 different facts about his cell phone use over the course of six months.
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Revealing vast amounts of personal information, to demonstrate just how intrusive this data
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is, Spitz chose to make it all available to the public, watched the remarkable interactive
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map of Spitz' location information if you haven't done so.
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It is time to educate all of our legislatures and the general public that sensitive data
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warns stronger protections, EFF will continue to report on mobile and online surveillance in
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Mexico.
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From torrentfreak.com, date February 20, 2012, by EnigmaX.
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Pirate Bay ISP block challenged for centering lawful content.
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During Bay 2011, the copyright information at Antipiracy Center, CRPAC, and the finished
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branch of the music industry group IFPI, filed a lawsuit at the District Court of Helsinki.
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The groups demanded that local ISP Elisa should start blocking the pirate bay in order to
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protect the copyrights of their members, while Elisa initially requested a subsequent court
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order in October 2011 for them to comply and last month it was initiated.
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The matter is currently under appeal, but in the meantime Elisa's block must remain,
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which means that no content indexed by the pirate bay illicit or fully authorised is
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available to the ISP's customers.
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For one, Elisa customer, that situation is unacceptable.
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Antilane says that the enforcement order head down to his ISP was unlawful, so he has
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responded by final complaint with the authority that sanctioned the block.
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His complaint states that under finished copyright law any injunction should avoid collateral
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damage.
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Such a wide block fails to consider this responsibility, Lane insists, adding that enforcement
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of the decision is based in an erroneous application of law.
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His complaint is being made on three grounds.
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One, Lane says he has been working on a project and the media created is being distributed
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via the pirate bay, due to the block distribution of the content is being affected.
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Two, as a client of Elisa himself, Lane says that due to the blockade he can no longer
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download or indeed upload any material that is deemed by creators to be free distribution.
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On the copyright law, this legal content cannot be a target of the injunction, but nevertheless
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its availability is being threatened.
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Three, Lane states that the injunction is based on an incorrect application of law.
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Service providers can only be ordered to block access to infringing files.
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But there are huge numbers of other works being affected by the blanket censorship.
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Furthermore, Lane says that the blockade also affects all legal content uploaded to the
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pirate bay after it was initiated, and such preemptive censorship is against Finland's Constitution.
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In respect to Iron 3, Lane attached a list of Creative Commons GPL and Public Domain
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material, affected, including content from dope stores and corporate titles such as Steel
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is Film, Lion's Share, and Zeig East from Jamie King's Vodo, Rep, a remix manifesto, Finland's
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own Star Trek parody series Star Rec, and many open source software applications.
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No blocking mechanism should block content that's available legally.
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Junus, a machinant of Finland's pirate party, tells Tornfreak, if the proposed methods
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can't reasonably differentiate between authorized and non-authorized content they should never
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be put into action.
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There is no reason to block even the pirate base website itself, as it texts and images
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there, a whopping 90 megabytes, are definitely not illegal for distribution per se, machinant
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ads.
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Lane seeks a correction to the existing injunctions so that it no longer breaches the copyright
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act and constitutional law.
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From Tornfreak.com, dated March 1, 2012 by Enigmex, Kim.com, US government is protecting
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an outdated monopolistic business model.
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After speaking with Tornfreak on Monday, Kim.com has elaborated on his situation and interview
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with three news, Campbell Live, which now gives us the opportunity to reveal a bit more detail
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about the current musings of the mega upload founder.
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Aside from the heavy head nature of the shutdown, the underlying shock in this case has its
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roots in the undermining of a previously presumed level of legal protection for service providers.
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Earlier this week, .com told us that in recent years, mega upload has spent millions of dollars
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seeking out the very best legal advice and the conclusions drawn or clear, providing the
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site did its part in tackling infringement, it would be protected on the DMCA and could
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not be held liable for the actions of its users.
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It's achieving this protection .com told us that the company had developed relationships
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with 180 takedown partners, companies authorized to directly remove infringing links for mega
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upload systems and between them they had taken down an axis of 15 million links.
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Those companies include the major studios of the MPAA who incidentally in seven years
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of the company's existence had never tried to sue mega upload for copyright infringement.
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On the advice of mega upload legal team, the company believed it had the same bright
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as YouTube in its case against entertainment giant Viacom and that 2010 case, the US
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District Judge Louis L. Stanton, said service providers cannot be held liable for infringement
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as long as they remove links upon copyright holder requests, even if the provider knows
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that parts of their service are being used to host illicit content.
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YouTube won their lawsuit and I'm sitting in jail.
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My house is being raided, all my assets are frozen without a trial, without a hearing.
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This is completely insane is what it is, said .com of his predicament.
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.com told Tornfreak that the indictment left out many key facts, not least that mega upload
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users enter into a binding legal agreement when they sign up to the file poster, which
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include promising not using the service to commit crimes or infringements, a point tackled
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again today by three news is John Campbell.
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Of course, that is a romantic notion though, isn't it?
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That's just because we tick the box accepting the terms of service that we're going to
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behave ourselves when we're in there, right?
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Question Campbell, adding that mega must have known that people would have inevitably
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agreed to the terms of service and then gone on and done whatever they liked.
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Well, there are other laws that protect users and those are privacy laws.
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For example, in the US it's the Electronic Communication Privacy Act, which prohibits
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us from looking into the accounts of users for actively and look for things, respawn.com.
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It's like mail, it's private, we cannot just go in there and police what these users
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are uploading.
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Although the company is clearly trying to distance themselves from comparisons to mega upload,
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Swiss based rapid share made the same point in a recent Tornfreak interview, the file
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hosted said that it would always respect customer privacy by never looking through their
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files without permission.
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Earlier this month, the EU court effectively banned the practice after music rights groups
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BAM, failed in its bid to force social networking site netlog to proactively scan upload user files
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for infringement.
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It's not unusual for huge figures to be punted around and copyright infringement cases,
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and in this one, in particular, mega upload is accused of costing copyright holders half
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a billion US dollars.
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That figure has been repeated dozens of times, but according to .com, it's just a tip
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of the iceberg.
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If you read the indictment, and if you hear what the prosecution has said in court, at
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least $500 million of damage would just music files, and it's within a two week time period,
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so they are actually talking about $13 billion damage within a year just for music downloads.
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The entire US music industry is less than $20 billion, he explained.
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So, with all of the file hosting services out to choose from, why would the authorities
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single out mega upload?
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We discussed this with .com on Monday and in common with the Campbell interview, the name
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media fire came up.
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Media fire is a huge file hosting operation, in July 2011 they were clocking up 34 million
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unique monthly visitors, and 3 million behind mega upload.
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In the previous month, the term media fire was even partially censored by Google as being
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a piracy related term.
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There can be little doubt that either Hollywood or the recording labels ask Google to take
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this action.
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But of course, what media fire doesn't have is the imagery generated by the figurehead
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like .com, and if there's one thing that Hollywood is all about after money, its image,
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and .com believes he presents their perfect watch enemy character.
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I'm an easy target, my flamboyance, my history as a hacker, you know, I'm not American,
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I'm living somewhere in New Zealand, around the world, I have funny number plates on
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my cause, you know, I'm an easy target, he told 3 news.
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I'm not Google, I don't have 50 million dollars in my account, and right now I'm not
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a penny on my account.
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All my lawyers currently are basically working without a penny, and they are all still
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on board and still doing their job because what they see here is unfair, is unreasonable,
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and it's not justice.
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But when one cuts through all the drama of the past couple of months, and even with
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the demise of mega upload, a service painted as the worst of the worst by Hollywood, and
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the authorities, piracy has not gone away, despite everything it continues, .com believes
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the reasons for that are obvious, it's a service issue with regional time delays providing
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a prime example.
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If the business model would be one where everyone has access to this content at the same time,
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you know, you wouldn't have a piracy problem, so it's really, in my opinion, the government
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of the United States protecting an out-did monopolistic business model that doesn't work
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anymore in the age of the internet, and that's what it all boils down to, he explains.
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Yesterday, at the behest of the U.S. government, a court in New Zealand considered revoking
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Kim.com's fail, in the event that attempt failed, with the mega upload found a continuing
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to insist that he's not going to flee the country, as the prosecution has suggested.
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For what it's worth, we believe .com's claim, he is full of fight, genuinely optimistic,
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that he can win this battle, and has exciting plans for the future, none of which appear
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to involve hiding in a cave or befriending Hugo Chavez.
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I'm no piracy king, he concludes, I offer it online storage and bandwidth to users.
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That's it.
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You can watch the full three news show here, and read our earlier articles here.
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Other headlines in the news, to read these news, follow links in the show notes to the
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article.
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Debate over non-GPL version of busy box supposedly settled.
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Gigabit internet for $70, the unlikely success of California's Sonic.net.
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News from Havana at times.org, and these times.com, the audio, moment of clarity number 121,
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Maggie McNeil.wordpress.com, perspectivesmvderona.com, and allgov.com, used under a range permission.
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News from EFF.org, and torrentfreak.com, used under permission of the Creative Commons
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by Attribution License.
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News from peoplesworld.org, used under permission of the Creative Commons by Attribution
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Non-Commercial Node-Driver's License.
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Audio-Inteludes, NSA, and Vogue Cursey YouTube user, Anani Ops, news sources retain their
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respective copyrights.
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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.
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Please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us.
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The web page 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 dgtgtm, 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 Shared
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Like 3.0 on Port 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, so long as you share alike 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, does our work.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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