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      Dutch cargo bike firm Babboe recalls 22,000 cycles over safety fears

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 2 April - 13:53


    First bikes will be collected in the Netherlands and Germany in mid-April, with other countries following afterwards

    Dutch cargo bike firm Babboe is recalling 22,000 of its popular cycles over safety fears, around one-third of its bikes on the road.

    Babboe had already announced a recall of two models in February but said five more models were now a concern.

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      ‘Not even water?’: Ramadan radio show demystifies Dutch Muslim life

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 2 April - 04:00

    All-female lineup of presenters hope to break harmful Islamic stereotypes after Geert Wilders’ election victory

    An hour before dawn in a nondescript building in Hilversum, a sleepy town half an hour south of Amsterdam, Nora Akachar grabs the microphone. There is nothing unique about a radio host summoning the nation out of its slumber. But this is, in her own words, “a big deal”.

    The Dutch Moroccan actor turned radio host is live on air presenting Suhoor Stories, a talk radio show presented by seven Dutch Muslim women, inviting Muslim guests to demystify Ramadan for the wider public. The programme is believed to be Europe’s only daily Ramadan radio and television show aired by a national public broadcaster.

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      I understand why people are wary about assisted dying, but it gave my mother a dignified end | Renate van der Zee

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 06:00

    The Dutch legalisation spared her further misery. We don’t take euthanasia lightly; we’re just grateful to have the option

    My mother, Jannèt, was 90 years old when she ended her life by means of euthanasia. For years she had been suffering from numerous serious and painful conditions that, although not fatal, did make her life miserable. She always worried about her health and was terrified of what the future undeniably held in store for her: more pain, more dependence on others, more suffering, more desperation.

    On 20 June 2022 at 2pm she was visited by a doctor and a nurse. They had a last conversation with her, during which the doctor asked her if euthanasia was still what she wanted. My mother said yes. She had already decided that she would take the drink herself instead of being injected. She didn’t want to mentally burden the doctor more than necessary.

    Renate van der Zee is a Dutch writer and journalist

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      Opening of Europe’s longest hyperloop track rekindles hype over futuristic trains

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 13:57


    Operators hope Dutch test track will help prove feasibility of high-speed tube transport system

    The longest hyperloop test track in Europe has opened, raising faint hopes once more that the maglev meets vacuum tube transport technology could be the future.

    Operators said the facility would help prove the hyperloop’s feasibility, saying it could allow a 10,000km (6,200-mile) network of high-speed tubes to be in place around the continent by 2050.

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      These angry Dutch farmers really hate Microsoft

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 31 March, 2023 - 13:46

    Microsoft sign

    Enlarge (credit: Jeremy Moeller/Getty Images )

    As soon as Lars Ruiter steps out of his car, he is confronted by a Microsoft security guard, who is already seething with anger. Ruiter, a local councillor, has parked in the rain outside a half-finished Microsoft data center that rises out of the flat North Holland farmland. He wants to see the construction site. The guard, who recognizes Ruiter from a previous visit when he brought a TV crew here, says that’s not allowed. Within minutes, the argument has escalated, and the guard has his hand around Ruiter’s throat.

    The security guard lets go of Ruiter within a few seconds, and the councillor escapes with a red mark across his neck. Back in his car, Ruiter insists he’s fine. But his hands shake when he tries to change gears. He says the altercation—which he will later report to the police—shows the fog of secrecy that surrounds the Netherlands’ expanding data center business.

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      Dutch Insider Attack on COVID-19 Data

      Bruce Schneier · news.movim.eu / Schneier · Wednesday, 27 January, 2021 - 14:59

    Insider data theft :

    Dutch police have arrested two individuals on Friday for allegedly selling data from the Dutch health ministry’s COVID-19 systems on the criminal underground.

    […]

    According to Verlaan, the two suspects worked in DDG call centers, where they had access to official Dutch government COVID-19 systems and databases.

    They were working from home:

    “Because people are working from home, they can easily take photos of their screens. This is one of the issues when your administrative staff is working from home,” Victor Gevers, Chair of the Dutch Institute for Vulnerability Disclosure, told ZDNet in an interview today.

    All of this remote call-center work brings with it additional risks.

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      Dutch Government Did Not Induce Online Piracy, Appeals Court Rules

      Ernesto Van der Sar · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Monday, 14 September, 2020 - 18:27 · 2 minutes

    cassette tape The Netherlands has long been a relatively safe haven for pirating consumers.

    Downloading movies without permission, regardless of the source, was not punishable by law according to Government officials.

    This eventually changed in 2014 when the European Court of Justice ruled that this tolerant stance was not in accordance with EU law . As a result, the Dutch Government quickly outlawed downloading from unauthorized sources.

    Despite this radical shift, in reality, not much changed for pirates. Sharing pirated material via torrents was already outlawed since it involved uploading. Also, copyright holders were and are not suing casual file-sharers in court.

    Filmmaker Sue Dutch State over Piracy Messaging

    Instead of going after pirates, copyright holders pointed their finger at the Dutch state. In 2015, Dutch filmmakers’ association SEKAM lodged a legal claim against the state , demanding compensation for the piracy losses they claimed to have suffered.

    The filmmakers highlighted statements that were made by Government officials which clearly indicated that downloading pirated material was allowed. These statements were made prior to the downloading ban.

    One of those statements was made in a 2010 press release by former state Secretary for Security and Justice Fred Teeven. Looking ahead at future policy, he noted that “downloading of copyright-protected works from evidently illegal sources will become unlawful, but not punishable.”

    Dutch State Held Liable

    In 2018, the Court of The Hague partially sided with the filmmakers . It ruled that the statements indeed confirmed that downloading pirated material was allowed and that the Dutch state can be held liable for the resulting damage.

    “Based on this message, expressed by the responsible Government official in the public domain and in the media, there will have been downloaders who assumed that downloading from illegal sources was permitted, whereas this was generally known to be forbidden in other EU member states,” the Court wrote.

    The Dutch state was not happy with this conclusion and appealed the matter, with success. A recent verdict by the Appeal Court finds that the state did not induce piracy and is therefore not liable for any damages.

    Appeals Court: State Did Not Induce Piracy

    The Appeals Court agreed that the Government’s messaging indeed suggested that downloading pirated material was not unlawful. That’s not unusual, since this was also the Government’s perception at the time.

    According to the Appeals Court, these statements were factually correct. While the European Court later ruled that this policy ran contrary to EU law, that wasn’t known at the time.

    Also, unlike the lower court, the Appeals Court does not believe that these statements encouraged any people to pirate. On the contrary, the same press release mentioned that this type of piracy would be outlawed in the future.

    “It cannot be seen that the Statements made in 2010 induced persons to illegally download, especially when taken into account the Government’s incorrect conviction that downloading from illegal sources was allowed, had already been advocated since 2002/2003,” the verdict reads.

    “So there was no expected disadvantage from these statements for rightsholders such as SEKAM,” The Hague’s Appeals Court adds.

    The verdict is a clear win for the Dutch state, which doesn’t have to pay any piracy damages based on the statements that were made in the past. SEKAM doesn’t have to pay anything either. As IPKAT notes, the Dutch state agreed not to claim legal costs if the filmmakers association agreed not to argue the appeal.

    A copy of The Hague’s Appeals Court ruling is available in Dutch here (pdf)

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.