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Posted Wednesday, 28 May 2008
Paul Ohm, a law professor at the University of Colorado, is arguing that ISP content filtering is a violation of the Federal Wiretap Statute. That’s a five-year felony sentence for the ISP, and perhaps for any ISP network administrators who actually set up and performed the monitoring, because the statute personal and corporate responsibility.
This seems like a steep price to pay for monitoring traffic, throttling P2P apps and serving up highly targeted advertisements on web pages, but AT&T, Charter and Comcast seem willing to take the risk. Perhaps they are betting on amnesty from President McCain.
Verizon hasn’t implemented content filtering because of the legal issues. Read this article on Wired for more information.
Will video kill broadband?
According to another Wired article, ISPs and telecoms are growing more concerned about IPTV - television over the internet - as a potential showstopper. Content filtering a la Charter and Comcast is a good example of bad blocking by ISPs. Demand for Internet video keeps rising while bandwidth growth hasn’t kept pace.
If ISPs do get to use deep packet inspection (DPI) to insert their own ads in web pages, Google and other web advertisers may retaliate by using SSL to encrypt their web pages. That prevents content filtering, but the cost in the server farm may be worth the effort for Google.
The rank-and-file residential user may not like a slower, encrypted search engine, however. Jakob Nielsen pointed out in this BBC article that Internet users are becoming more aware of latency and search accuracy. Users want faster, more relevant search results so they can go straight to a web page without visiting the target site’s home page first. Users have alredy learned to ignore banner ads, according to Nielsen’s discussion in this 20 June 2007 Wall Street Journal article. Content filtering won’t help matters.
Image courtesy of bryankennedy through a Creative Commons license.
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at&t,
broadband,
cable,
Google,
ISP,
P2P,
search,
security,
usability
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Posted Thursday, 15 May 2008
County politicians in Los Angeles have passed legislation championed by the RIAA and MPAA that lets authorities confiscate property from anyone convicted of IP theft or piracy. See Wired for more information.
The RIAA uses automated methods for collecting information fom LimeWire and other peer-to-peer programs. Data including the IP address and the files offered for trade are collected. The trade organization also has an automated takedown notice and settlement system that targets universities and students. The RIAA uses a manual process when investigating commercial ISPs. This article from the Chronicle of Higher Education has some details.
Meanwhile, BoingBoing reports that the US House of Representatives has passed a similar measure (HR 4279, PRO-IP (Prioritizing Resources and Organization for Intellectual Property Act of 2008). The bill may not get through the US Senate this year.
See Ars Technica and TechDirt for more information on this ridiculous piece of legislation.
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Tags:
audio,
BitTorrent,
congress,
copyright,
crime,
government,
MP3,
mpaa,
P2P,
piracy,
RIAA,
student,
university,
video
ism tech
Posted Sunday, 27 January 2008
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From Wired: developers are launching a beta version of QTrax, after reaching deals with the major music labels to allow free music downloads.
QTrax is an ad-supported P2P application that works within the Firefox web browser on Windows computers. Internet Explorer and Safari are not supported. Macs will be supported on 18 March, according to this article from New York’s Silicon Allwy Insider.
That article also reveals that Universal was the final of the 4 major labels to sign with QTrax.
The music files use Windows Media DRM, so they probably won’t work on iPods. A QTrax spokesmen claims iPod compatibility is high on the service’s list, and this Associated Press article says that QTrax has developed a workaround for iTunes compatibility. Apple has released patches to break previous iTunes workarounds by other companies.
QTrax has signed over most of the music revenues to the labels, so the service will earn the bulk of its margin by selling highly targeted web advertising. Of course, it is trivial to block ads in Firefox web pages by using an extension like AdBlock Plus. Whether AdBlock will work with the QTrax Songbird engine is another question. OpenDNS should block the ads, as I mentioned on 3 September 2007.
When I checked QTrax.com a few minutes ago, I saw a single image that claimed the service was overwhelmed by demand - check in tomorrow.
Tags:
advertising,
Apple,
business_model,
DNS,
Firefox,
free,
hack,
Internet,
iPod,
marketing,
media,
Microsoft,
mobile,
MP3,
music,
network,
opendns,
P2P
imported
Posted Wednesday, 25 August 2004
Tech: Kids are becoming more adept with computers, but sometimes they turn into bullies. When I was a child, you had to insult someone to their face. Children who have grown up with technology may be more likely to launch craven and cowardly attacks through weblogs, IM and anonymous postings. They distribute pictures and videos of each other on P2P networks.
Beware the forward button, people. Once you send a message, you’ll never stop it.
Users sign and forward petitions though e-mail. Adults like “King” Peter Chung of the Carlyle Group and Trevor Luxton of Credit Lyonnais thought they could brag about anything and everything in an e-mail message. It all just makes me wonder sometimes.
Tags:
adult,
blog,
bullying,
carlyle,
computer,
crime,
education,
email,
france,
Hong-Kong,
Korea,
network,
P2P,
technology,
UK,
USA,
video
imported
Posted Tuesday, 10 August 2004
Tech: If you’re desperate to download Windows XP Service Pack 2, you can try this link to Microsoft. You can turn on Automatic Update and just wait a couple of weeks to get the service pack.
There are other ways to get your 272391 KB of update goodness, including FileMirrors and BitTorrent. Here’s some background on the P2P efforts and Microsoft’s response.
Tags:
BitTorrent,
Microsoft,
P2P,
patch,
pda,
search,
software,
Windows