U.S senators will introduce legislation this year targeting websites that traffic in digital piracy or counterfeited goods, said the primary sponsor of a controversial bill proposed in 2010 that would give government agencies more authority to shut down those sites.. Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, promised Wednesday to introduce a bill targeting so-called rogue websites, although he did not say how closely the new legislation would mirror the Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA). COICA, which the Senate failed to act on, would have given the U.S. Department of Justice new authority to force domain name registrars to shut down websites that allegedly infringe copyright. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat, promised Wednesday to introduce a bill targeting so-calle. senators, introduce, legislation, targeting, websites, traffic, digital, piracy. . Alex
Countries negotiating a major cross-border agreement to crack down on intellectual property crimes have agreed to release previously secret draft language of the controversial accord this week.. The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) has confirmed plans to publish the draft text of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) this Wednesday, following a series of successful negotiations in the eighth round of talks on the agreement last week in New Zealand. USTR spokeswoman Nefterius McPherson said that the negotiating countries are very close to a final deal, though differences remain over the language concerning enforcement mechanisms for dealing with trademark counterfeiting and copyright piracy. "The agreement can be concluded soon if other participants make it a priority to achieve such progress now," McPherson said in a statement. The link for this article located at eSecurity Planet is no longer available. . The U.S. Trade Representative is set to unveil the preliminary version of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, as discussions continue.. Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, treaty negotiations, intellectual property rights, copyright protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In the popular imagination, a computer hacker is on the fringes of society -- either a brilliant but misguided teenager or a solitary, disaffected adult. He's more interested in showing off his skills than benefiting from them. He values havoc over money. . . .. In the popular imagination, a computer hacker is on the fringes of society -- either a brilliant but misguided teenager or a solitary, disaffected adult. He's more interested in showing off his skills than benefiting from them. He values havoc over money. Canal Plus Technologies, a leading maker of the so-called smart cards that control satellite-television signals in people's homes, went searching three years ago for just such a troublemaker. Millions of Europeans were buying counterfeit Canal Plus smart cards on the black market and inserting them into their set-top boxes, giving them free access to premium channels that carry soccer games and adult movies. In Italy, there were as many as three freeloaders for every legitimate customer. The link for this article located at Seattle Times is no longer available. . In the popular imagination, a computer hacker is on the fringes of society -- either a brilliant but. popular, imagination, computer, hacker, fringes, society, either, brilliant. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.