US Entertainment Industry To Congress: Make It Legal For Us To Deploy Rootkits

An anonymous reader writes “The hilariously named ‘Commission on the Theft of American Intellectual Property’ has finally released its report, an 84-page tome that’s pretty bonkers. But there’s a bit that stands out as particularly crazy: a proposal to legalize the use of malware in order to punish people believed to be copying illegally. The report proposes that software would be loaded on computers that would somehow figure out if you were a pirate, and if you were, it would lock your computer up and take all your files hostage until you call the police and confess your crime. This is the mechanism that crooks use when they deploy ransomware.”

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot

Court Says Stores Can Be Sued Over Questionable “Discounts”

(dno1967b)

(dno1967b)

We’ve written before — most recently about JCPenney — about retailers who mark up the original price of an item in order to make the “sale” price look better than it is. Some may say this is harmless marketing, as the retailer is going to charge that price regardless. Others say it’s a deliberately deceptive act intended to lure consumers into thinking they are getting a deal.

A few years back, a Kohl’s shopper in California filed suit against the retailer, saying that items he’d purchased at the store were labeled as “on sale,” but were really just being sold at the same price as they usually were.

Among the items listed in the suit are Samsonite luggage advertised at 50% off; Chaps polo shirts listed as 39% off, and a variety of shirts that were supposedly marked down anywhere from 32% to 40% off their original retail prices. However, the plaintiff contends that those higher prices were fictional.

He filed suit, alleging violations of California’s Unfair Competition Law and Fair Advertising Law. In 2010, a U.S. District Court dismissed the case, saying that because the plaintiff didn’t actually lose any money or property, he had no standing to continue with his complaint.

However, earlier this week, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed, reversing the lower court’s ruling and allowing the lawsuit to continue.

In its ruling, the panel cited the following from the state’s Fair Advertising Law:

No price shall be advertised as a former price of any advertised thing, unless the alleged former price was the prevailing market price… within three months next immediately preceding the publication of the advertisement or unless the date when the alleged former price did prevail is clearly, exactly and conspicuously stated in this advertisement.

The panel believes that this would seem to encompass the allegations made against Kohl’s by the plaintiff.

Then there is the question of whether or not the plaintiff had suffered the requisite loss of money or property as a result of the allegedly false discounts. The panel cited the case of Kwikset v. Superior Court, which held that California consumers who had purchased items falsely labeled as “Made in the U.S.A.” had standing under these laws because the advertising induced them to purchase goods they would not have otherwise bought.

The district court had rejected the plaintiff’s assertion that the Kwikset case provided the precedent for his lawsuit. That court ruled that the Kwikset case only applied to false advertising of a product’s “composition, effects, origin, and substance.”

But the appeals court felt that this interpretation of Kwikset was too literal:

“The district court’s ‘composition, effects, origin, and substance’ test ignores the fact that, to other consumers, a product’s ‘regular’ or ‘original’ price matters; it provides important information about the product’s worth and the prestige that ownership of the product conveys…

“Misrepresentation about a product’s ‘normal’ price is, therefore, significant to many consumers in the same way as a false product label would be… That, of course, is why retailers like Kohl’s have an incentive to advertise false ‘sales.’… In fact, the deceived bargain hunter suffers a more obvious economic injury as a result of false advertising than the Kwikset consumer who was duped into buying foreign-made goods, because the bargain-hunger’s expectations about the product he just purchased is precisely that it has a higher perceived value and therefore a higher resale value.”

The appeals court ruling does not deal with the validity of the plaintiff’s claims against Kohl’s, only whether or not he has standing to bring the lawsuit.

Kohl’s Must Defend Claim It Falsely Advertised Sale [Courthouse News]

SOURCE Consumerist

Hollywood Studios Use DMCA To Censor Pirate Bay Documentary

First time accepted submitter Aaron B Lingwood writes “As reported by TorrentFreak, Viacom, Paramount, Fox and Lionsgate have all asked Google to take down links pointing to the Pirate Bay documentary ‘TPB-AFK.’ The film, created by Simon Klose, is available for no cost and has already been watched by millions of people. The public response to this free release model has been overwhelmingly positive, but it’s now meeting resistance from Hollywood, TPB’s arch rival. Pirate Party Australia opines ‘Hollywood is using takedown notices to censor Pirate Bay doco, is it incompetence or malice? Always hard to tell.’ Whichever the answer, the system is definitely broken.”

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot

Fed. Appeals Court Says Police Need Warrant to Search Phone

An anonymous reader writes “In a decision that’s almost certainly going to result in this issue heading up to the Supreme Court, the Federal 1st Circuit Court of Appeals [Friday] ruled that police can’t search your phone when they arrest you without a warrant. That’s contrary to most courts’ previous findings in these kinds of cases where judges have allowed warrantless searches through cell phones.” (But in line with the recently mentioned decision in Florida, and seemingly with common sense.)

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot

FBI Considers CALEA II: Mandatory Wiretapping On Every Device

Techmeology writes “In response to declining utility of CALEA mandated wiretapping backdoors due to more widespread use of cryptography, the FBI is considering a revamped version that would mandate wiretapping facilities in end users’ computers and software. Critics have argued that this would be bad for security (PDF), as such systems must be more complex and thus harder to secure. CALEA has also enabled criminals to wiretap conversations by hacking the infrastructure used by the authorities. I wonder how this could ever be implemented in FOSS.”

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot

Google+ Hangouts video chat won’t connect over AT&T

Google Hangouts video chat won't connect over AT&T

If you have a smartphone connected to AT&T, you just got a bit more incentive to hop over to WiFi whenever possible. The new Google+ Hangouts app group video chat feature appears to be disabled whenever you attempt to connect via the cellular network. We tested the feature using a Verizon handset as well — we were able to stream video just fine. It’s not entirely clear whether AT&T has specifically blocked access to the service, but regardless of the reason, we’re all too familiar with the carrier’s desire to keep video chat off the airwaves. We can only hope that we’ll be able to use Hangouts to its full potential soon, just as we can with Apple’s FaceTime.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: SlashGear

SOURCE Engadget RSS Feed

Records Labels Prepare Massive ‘Pirate Site’ Domain Blocking Blitz

An anonymous reader writes “In their ongoing battle against websites said to infringe music copyrights, record labels have initiated a fresh wave of actions aimed at forcing UK ISPs to carry out domain blocking. This third wave is set to be the biggest so far, affecting as many as 25 domains and including some of the world’s largest torrent sites and file-hosting search engines. Furthermore, the BPI – the entity coordinating the action – will ask courts to block U.S.-based music streaming operation, Grooveshark.”

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot

Obama Administration Secretly Obtains Phone Records of AP Journalists

Obama Administration Secretly Obtains Phone Records of AP Journalists

The Department of Justice secretly obtained phone records for reporters and editors who work for the Associated Press news agency, including records for the home phones and cell phones of individual journalists, apparently in an effort to uncover a leak.

SOURCE Threat Level

Yes, It’s Possible To Steal $45M From ATMs Around The World In Just A Few Hours

(kevindean)

(kevindean)

There are your everyday ATM skimming schemes, and then there are global hacking operations that allegedly siphoned $45 million from ATMs around the globe in just a few hours. It’s kind of like a flash mob, said one former prosecutor, and the ease with which it was apparently carried out has got those in the security world a little bit nervous.

So far seven people have been arrested in the U.S., reports the Associated Press, and stand accused of being the New York cell of a worldwide crime network. Authorities say thefts went down at ATMs in 27 countries from Canada to Russia, and it took law enforcement agencies from around the globe to pull off the investigation.

“Unfortunately these types of cybercrimes involving ATMs, where you’ve got a flash mob going out across the globe, are becoming more and more common,” a former federal prosecutor and regional director for the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission explains. ”I expect there will be many more” of these types of crimes, she added.

The good news is that no consumers apparently lost their cash, as the hackers pulled the money from the stashes banks have to back up pre-paid debit cards, and not individual or business accounts.

According to the authorities, hackers worked their way into bank databases and erased withdrawal limits on pre-paid debit cards and made up their own access codes. Then that data would be loaded onto any old plastic card with a magnetic stripe, even a hotel key card could work.

From then on it was an old-fashioned heist, with operatives spread around the world pulling out money in multiple cities, who would then take their cuts, and then launder the rest by buying expensive goods or shipping it to the head honchos in charge of the operation.

It almost seems like the group held a trial run first, with an attack in December that stole $5 million worldwide, and then the other in February that brought in the big haul of $40 million in 10 hours, with a whopping 36,000 transactions.

The weak spot the thieves exploited seems to be the magnetic strips on the back of the cards — most of the world has ditched those cards in favor of ones with built-in chips that are a lot harder to copy. Since U.S. banks still use them, however, merchants still accept them worldwide.

Global Network of Hackers Steal $45 Million From ATMs [Associated Press]

SOURCE Consumerist

Feds Drop CFAA Charges Against ‘Hacker’ Who Exploited Poker Machines

FuzzNugget writes “According to Wired, the two CFAA charges that were laid against the man who exploited a software bug on a video poker machine have been officially dismissed. Says Wired: ‘[U.S. District Judge Miranda] Du had asked prosecutors to defend their use of the federal anti-hacking law by Wednesday, in light of a recent 9th Circuit ruling that reigned in the scope of the CFAA. The dismissal leaves John Kane, 54, and Andre Nestor, 41, facing a single remaining charge of conspiracy to commit wire fraud.’ Kane’s lawyer agreed, stating, ‘The case never should have been filed under the CFAA, it should have been just a straight wire fraud case. And I’m not sure its even a wire fraud. I guess we’ll find out when we go to trial.'”

Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

SOURCE Slashdot