• chevron_right

      Twitter revient au retweet normal, après l’échec du « tweet cité »

      Julien Cadot · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Thursday, 17 December, 2020 - 08:38

    L'expérience du « retweet avec citation » fortement incité sur Twitter n'a pas eu les effets attendus. [Lire la suite]

    Abonnez-vous à notre chaîne YouTube pour ne manquer aucune vidéo !

    L'article Twitter revient au retweet normal, après l’échec du « tweet cité » est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

    • chevron_right

      RIAA: Twitter Does Nothing to Stop the Industrial Scale Piracy on Its Service

      Ernesto Van der Sar · news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Wednesday, 16 December, 2020 - 21:01 · 4 minutes

    Twitter Pirate The US Senate’s Judiciary Subcommittee on Intellectual Property is looking for better ways to tackle the ever-present threat of online piracy.

    Specifically, it’s working with various stakeholders to see if the DMCA can be improved to better suit today’s online environment.

    During a hearing yesterday , Senators received input from various stakeholders on the role of voluntary agreements and existing anti-piracy technologies. YouTube, for example, explained its Content-ID system and Facebook showed how its Rights Manager tool helps copyright holders.

    Twitter Refused to Attend

    Twitter was also invited to testify but the company refused to attend . This frustrated lawmakers, including Senator Thom Tillis, who repeatedly asked Twitter to join the discussion. When that didn’t happen Tillis sent a series of written questions, but the “non-answers” the company sent back only appear to have made things worse.

    The lawmakers are not alone in their critique of Twitter. As expected, they were fully supported by the RIAA, which was present to represent the music industry. RIAA chairman and CEO Mitch Glazier specifically mentioned the social media platform in his opening statement.

    Glazier argued that the current takedown system is highly ineffective and he used Twitter as an example. Over the past year, the RIAA has tried to keep a single music track off Twitter, but despite thousands of notices, it kept reappearing.

    “As a result, over a 10-month period, RIAA had to send notices for nearly 9,000 infringements of that same track – let me repeat that. We had to send 9,000 notices over a 10-month period for the same exact track. Unfortunately, we must do this all the time for hundreds of tracks on many different services,” Glazier said.

    Hiding Behind the Safe Harbor

    The RIAA would like Twitter and other platforms to keep infringing files offline indefinitely. A so-called takedown and staydown policy. In addition, copyright holders should be allowed to effectively monitor and report infringements. However, companies such as Twitter prefer to do very little and hide behind their safe harbor protection, Glazier said.

    “They could solve the piracy problem voluntarily tomorrow if they had the will and incentive to do so. Unfortunately, the DMCA safe harbors have been interpreted to apply so broadly that platforms do not have the business incentive to participate in a balanced system.”

    RIAA CEO Mitch Glazier

    mitch glazier riaa

    The Twitter-bashing continued during the questioning round. Senator Mazie Hirono stressed that Twitter hasn’t shown to be a “willing partner” for copyright holders and asked Glazier to elaborate.

    RIAA’s CEO gladly complied and said that the music industry has sent more than three million notices to Twitter over the past two years, identifying 20,000 works. That’s an average of 150 notices per track, and things aren’t improving.

    Industrial Scale Piracy

    “This is piracy on an industrial massive scale. This is not some small problem,” Glazier said. “Unlike Facebook and YouTube, they have done nothing to at least try to build tools, or to help prevent what is by its nature a viral system where piracy can spread literally in microseconds.”

    The takedown efforts are complicated because the RIAA and its members don’t have an effective system to search Twitter for copyright infringements. The social media platform is willing to offer this, but not for free.

    “They really don’t offer us the ability to search their universe for infringements. We have asked for it many many times and they want to charge us,” Glazier said.

    “And then when we send them notices it can take anywhere between four hours and four days to take one thing down while we’ve got millions of pieces spreading at the same time. It’s a huge problem,” he adds.

    Twitter was not the only company to be called out. Senator Mazie Hirono also asked RIAA’s CEO about the role of domain name registrars, which offer services to pirate sites. Again, Glazier said that this is a huge problem.

    Domain Registrars Protect Pirates

    “Domain name registrars and their role in allowing piracy to happen through their systems is a huge problem. Very few domain name registrars are doing very little. Both at the registrar and at the registry level.”

    Glazier notes that there are voluntary agreements with a select group of domain registrars. However, most simply do nothing. They simply keep pirate domains online. And when copyright holders ask them to help identify bad actors, they refuse to cooperate.

    “When we go to them and say: ‘help us to find the pirates’ so we can go against them directly, they won’t give the name of the pirate. They hide their identity and help them become anonymous and they say that it’s because of privacy laws. That they need to protect the criminals. Which is ridiculous.”

    “Privacy laws are meant to protect consumers, they are not meant to protect criminals,” Glazier adds.

    If Not Voluntary, Then…

    The RIAA would like the law to make it clear that intermediaries, including domain registrars and registries, have to do more. The same is true for services that host content. The current takedown process simply doesn’t cut it, it’s a sham.

    While the hearing was supposed to be about voluntary and private agreements to help fight piracy, the threat of stricter regulation may be needed.

    The RIAA applauded the work of Facebook and YouTube but, reading between the lines, Glazier suggests that Twitter and other companies may need a bigger push from lawmakers to come to the table.

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

    • chevron_right

      Twitter coule Periscope : « Laisser l’application dans son état actuel n’est pas une bonne chose »

      Julien Lausson · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Wednesday, 16 December, 2020 - 10:10

    L'application mobile Periscope sera retirée de l'App Store et de Google Play en mars 2021. L'équipe a considéré être dans une impasse. Mais ses fonctionnalités demeureront dans Twitter. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article Twitter coule Periscope : « Laisser l’application dans son état actuel n’est pas une bonne chose » est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

    • chevron_right

      Hacker says he correctly guessed Trump’s Twitter password—it was “maga2020!”

      Jon Brodkin · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 22 October, 2020 - 17:59

    Illustration that includes a Twitter logo, President Trump

    Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

    A security researcher reportedly logged in to President Trump's Twitter account last week by guessing the password—it was "maga2020!"—and then alerted the US government that Trump needed to upgrade his Twitter security practices.

    Security researcher Victor Gevers reportedly guessed Trump's password on the fifth attempt and was dismayed that the president had not enabled two-step authentication. The news was reported today by de Volkskrant , a Dutch newspaper, and the magazine Vrij Nederland . Both reports had quotes from Gevers, while Vrij Nederland also published a screenshot that Gevers says he took when he had access to the @realdonaldtrump account.

    Gevers reportedly gained access to Trump's Twitter account on Friday last week. He says he tried passwords such as "MakeAmericaGreatAgain" and "Maga2020" before hitting on the correct password of "maga2020!" Gevers is a well-known security researcher and has been quoted in several Ars articles on other security topics going back to 2017 . He is a researcher at the nonprofit GDI Foundation and chair of the Dutch Institute for Vulnerability Disclosure .

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    index?i=qSIYE6btp3k:lIK6_D3_81A:V_sGLiPBpWUindex?i=qSIYE6btp3k:lIK6_D3_81A:F7zBnMyn0Loindex?d=qj6IDK7rITsindex?d=yIl2AUoC8zA
    • chevron_right

      Un hacker réputé affirme s'être connecté au compte Twitter de Donald Trump

      Julien Cadot · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Thursday, 22 October, 2020 - 17:19

    Le journal néerlandais De Volkskrant se fait l'écho d'un chercheur en cybersécurité indépendant, qui serait parvenu à deviner le mot de passe de Donald Trump, et à se connecter à son compte. Des doutes planent sur cette affirmation. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article Un hacker réputé affirme s’être connecté au compte Twitter de Donald Trump est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

    • chevron_right

      Twitter lifts ban on sharing hacked materials after blocking NY Post story

      Jon Brodkin · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 16 October, 2020 - 17:01 · 1 minute

    A computer keyboard with the word

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Peter Dazeley)

    Twitter has changed its policy on sharing hacked materials after facing criticism of its decision to block users from tweeting links to a New York Post article that contained Hunter Biden emails allegedly retrieved from a computer left at a repair shop.

    On Wednesday, Twitter said it blocked links to the Post story because it included private information and violated Twitter's hacked materials policy , which prohibits sharing links to or images of hacked content. But on late Thursday night, Twitter legal executive Vijaya Gadde wrote in a thread that the company has "decided to make changes to the [hacked materials] policy and how we enforce it" after receiving "significant feedback."

    Twitter enacted the policy in 2018 "to discourage and mitigate harms associated with hacks and unauthorized exposure of private information," Gadde wrote. "We tried to find the right balance between people's privacy and the right of free expression, but we can do better." Twitter will thus change its hacked materials policy to "no longer remove hacked content unless it is directly shared by hackers or those acting in concert with them." Twitter will also "label Tweets to provide context instead of blocking links from being shared on Twitter."

    Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    index?i=6D_uZ80uM5w:OFXFBKEqQZU:V_sGLiPBpWUindex?i=6D_uZ80uM5w:OFXFBKEqQZU:F7zBnMyn0Loindex?d=qj6IDK7rITsindex?d=yIl2AUoC8zA
    • chevron_right

      Facebook, Twitter limit controversial story about Joe Biden’s son

      Kate Cox · news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 14 October, 2020 - 22:36

    Facebook, Twitter limit controversial story about Joe Biden’s son

    Enlarge (credit: Thomas Trutschel / Getty Images )

    Facebook and Twitter today are facing criticism from all sides after taking rare action to suppress an apparent attempt at blatant disinformation being spread three weeks before the election.

    Both social media platforms are deprecating or outright blocking the sharing of a link to a story the New York Post published this morning about Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden. Although Twitter and Facebook have both acted in the past to deplatform fringe actors, today's action marks one of the extremely rare times either has taken action against a story from a relatively mainstream outlet.

    The story

    The story at the root of all the drama appears to be an attempt to duplicate the effect the Comey memo had on the 2016 presidential election by suggesting there's a scandal in the Biden camp. The New York Post claimed to have received copies of emails that were obtained from a laptop that Biden's son Hunter dropped off at a Delaware computer repair shop in 2019. These emails, which the Post called a "smoking gun," allegedly indicate that Hunter Biden connected his father with Ukrainian energy firm Burisma in 2014.

    Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    index?i=c7eHJm8iQPQ:8qzhHKlZPYk:V_sGLiPBpWUindex?i=c7eHJm8iQPQ:8qzhHKlZPYk:F7zBnMyn0Loindex?d=qj6IDK7rITsindex?d=yIl2AUoC8zA
    • chevron_right

      À un mois des élections US, Twitter recrute enfin une directrice de la sécurité

      Marie Turcan · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Wednesday, 30 September, 2020 - 09:24

    Rinki Sethi, figure respectée du secteur, vient d'être nommée RSSI de Twitter. Elle aura pour objectif de rassurer après l'incident de cet été, alors que l'élection présidentielle américaine arrive à grands pas. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article À un mois des élections US, Twitter recrute enfin une directrice de la sécurité est apparu en premier sur Numerama .

    • chevron_right

      Twitter peut-il empêcher un autre piratage de son réseau à l'approche de l'élection US ?

      Marie Turcan · news.movim.eu / Numerama · Friday, 25 September, 2020 - 13:46

    Twitter ne peut se permettre de subir un autre piratage de grande ampleur alors que l'élection américaine approche. L'entreprise s'attèle à corriger les lacunes évidentes de sa sécurité, exposées lors du piratage du 15 juillet. [Lire la suite]

    Voitures, vélos, scooters... : la mobilité de demain se lit sur Vroom ! https://www.numerama.com/vroom/vroom//

    L'article Twitter peut-il empêcher un autre piratage de son réseau à l’approche de l’élection US ? est apparu en premier sur Numerama .