media defender takes down revision3


May 29th, 2008

So let’s see, MediaDefender admitted to using revision3’s bit torrent tracker illegitimately (by exploiting it to deliver something that it was not meant to do) and then they admitted to SYN flooding it over 3 days, yet all they can come up with is “sorry”. 8000 connection attempts per second is hard to attribute to an errant application.

Please, revision3, sue the crap out of these guys. Considering MediaDefender’s track-record and previous behaviour, the only way the world can be rid of them is for a judge to order their ISP to pull the plug completely.



e-publishing and the law


April 4th, 2008

I have recently attended a talk given by Michael Geist on the subject of “E-Publishing and the Law” through the Canadian Journalism Foundation. Here are some of the things that Dr. Geist spoke about, as well as some of my observations.

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CRTC to be ordered to get involved in the Bell BitTorrent throttling case


April 4th, 2008

Inside scoop: News later on today will reveal that the CRTC has been asked to intervene in the affair of Bell’s throttling of BitTorrent traffic. It will be interesting to see if they do it, but it’s a step in the right direction.

Thanks to Dr. Geist for the scoop yesterday1. I have not posted it when originally heard2 as per his request, though I don’t know who else respected that.

UPDATE: Michael Geist’s story on the topic is here.

  1. Directed at the about 100 people attending the event I was at []
  2. Check the time-stamp on the post []

how pushing ISPs will backfire


February 19th, 2008

Considering that recent1 news keep hinting at how the MAFIAA and company want to push responsibility for file sharing onto ISPs, let’s muse over a few possible outcomes.

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  1. Well, they were far more recent when I drafted this entry []

paulo coelho is a pirate


January 24th, 2008

I am no literary critic. I have enjoyed some of Coelho’s novels, although admittedly they are a bit too optimistic for my liking. But this is not a literary blog either, so you know there’s a catch. Paulo Coelho is happy that his work is available online ‘for free’1

Whether Coelho himself published most of his novels online himself or not is debatable. But as quite a few outlets have reported today, he is both endorsing this method of distribution and openly stating that it has helped him sell more books. Because people are more likely to buy things that they have already read  and enjoyed. I think this confuses content owners to some extent, that people would actually buy their content after they’ve already digested it. But they must know - think of how many different versions of “Collector’s Edition” movies and “Greatest Hits” albums come out!

Slowly we see the artists themselves beginning to let their creations flow freely on the Internet. Certainly they do enjoy the revenue, but many admit they prefer to know that people disseminate their work even if it is by ‘illegal’ means. The poorer acts - those that rely on copycat status to drive some album sales before they fade out - are the ones to really shiver at the news - and doubly so their masters, the MAFIAA.

  1. read: pirated, for whatever definition of the term you choose []

bittorrent DoS problems = busy night for the RIAA


January 17th, 2008

Since news hit the wire today that some versions of µTorrent and the official BitTorrent clients are vulnerable to DoS attacks, I’m sure the RIAA and their lackeys have launched a massive campaign to try and turn off users’ clients, even if only for a little while. Since many people run seedboxes, this could pose a problem.

This could pose a problem in the long run, too. Am I the only one to believe the RIAA will eventually start trying to corrupt trackers and/or clients? Since they seem to be losing legal battles, at some they might decide it’s more effective to find vulnerabilities and other problems and so disrupt the usage of p2p software altogether.


the brief


December 11th, 2007

My world is largely at peace right now, but that doesn’t mean all is well on this western front. Welcome to the brief! «Continue Reading»


dozier


October 30th, 2007

I’ve made a quick note before about Dozier law firm. What I thought to be just some ridiculous claim by some random attention-seeker seems to be far worse. tdaxp reports on the adventures of this colourful bunch of morons regularly, so I won’t reiterate here all of that. But in terms of the complete and utter lack of sense their ‘view source’ claim is, we have a quick and dirty ‘source mirror‘ script on Freesome, showing just how easy it is to legally circumvent. To this, I would add the following short points:

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the brief


October 18th, 2007

A few of the new and old, coming right up:

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