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Content Moderation Case Study: Using Hashes And Scanning To Stop Cloud Storage From Being Used For Infringement (2014)


Wed, Jan 20th 2021 3:53pm
Copia Institute
Summary: Since the rise of the internet, the recording industry has been particularly concerned about how the internet can and will be used to share infringing content. Over time, the focus of that concern has shifted as the technology (as well as copyright laws) have shifted. In the early 2000s, most of the concern was around file sharing applications, services and sites, such as Napster, Limewire, and The Pirate Bay. However, after 2010, much of the emphasis switched to so-called “cyberlockers.”
Unlike file sharing apps, that involved person-to-person sharing directly from their own computers via intermediary technologies, a cyberlocker was more of a hard drive on the internet. The issue was that some would store large quantities of music files, and then make them available for unlicensed downloading. ....

Safety Foundation , Techdirt Team , Copia Institute , Content Moderation Case Study , Cloud Storage , Private Storage , பாதுகாப்பு அடித்தளம் , சோபியா நிறுவனம் , மேகம் சேமிப்பு , ப்ரைவேட் சேமிப்பு ,

Google removed malicious apps from the Play Store that tricked users into seeing unexpected ads


Google removed malicious apps from the Play Store that tricked users into seeing unexpected ads
January 19, 2021
Dropbox and Evernote were victims of the operation
Cybersecurity researchers from WhiteOps’ Satori Threat Intelligence and Research team have found a number of malicious apps on the Google Play Store that trick users into seeing unexpected ads.
The investigation by the security team dubbed “CopyCatz” found 164 apps on the Play Store that were masquerading as popular apps to garner downloads and trick users into seeing “whole bunch of unexpected ads,” according to a blog post by the firm.
The apps had over 10 million downloads. However, these apps have been removed from the Play Store, according to the post. ....

Google Play , Whiteop Satori Threat Intelligence , Google Play Store , Play Store , Javascript Object Notation , Malicious Apps , Cyber Security , Whiteops Satori Threat Intelligence And Research , கூகிள் விளையாடு , கூகிள் விளையாடு கடை , விளையாடு கடை , தீங்கிழைக்கும் பயன்பாடுகள் , சைபர் பாதுகாப்பு ,

They can't leave the Bay Area fast enough


You start to feel stupid : Tech workers can t leave SF fast enough
Nellie Bowles, New York Times
Jan. 16, 2021
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From left: Laura Thompson, Gillian Morris, the founder of the travel app Hitlist who recently fled San Francisco, and Wren Dougherty, who all share a home, in Ocean Park, San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Dec. 15, 2020. As a tech era draws to an end, more workers and companies are packing up. What comes next? (Gabriella N. Baez/The New York Times)Gabriella N. Bez/NYT
SAN FRANCISCO The Bay Area struck a hard bargain with its tech workers.
Rent was astronomical. Taxes were high. Your neighbors didn’t like you. If you lived in San Francisco, you might have commuted an hour south to your job at Apple or Google or Facebook. Or if your office was in the city, maybe it was in a neighborhood with too much street crime, open drug use and $5 coffees. ....

New York , United States , San Diego , Savannah Economic Development Authority , Johnson City , University Of Texas , San Francisco , Puerto Rico , Marin County , Pacific Heights , Miami Beach , Costa Rica , Jennifer Bonnett , John Gardner , Nikil Viswanathan , Joe Lonsdale , Gillian Morris , Lucas Foglia , Terry Gilliam , Justin Kan , Ryan Holiday , Ilana Panich Linsman , Keyan Karimi , Ed Zaydelman , Sahin Boydas , John Francis Peters ,

Dropbox axes 315 staff from global workforce


Dropbox axes 315 staff from global workforce
Dropbox axes 315 staff from global workforce
Co-founder and CEO Drew Houston calls it “toughest decision” in 14 years
Credit: Dropbox
Cloud storage vendor Dropbox is to cull 11 per cent of its global workforce in order to “create a healthy and thriving business” for 2021. 
The cuts will amount to 315 employees and will include the vendor’s global chief operating officer Olivia Nottebohm, who will leave on 5 February. 
Announcing the move to staff, co-founder and CEO Drew Houston said it was the “toughest decision” that he had to make in Dropbox’s 14 years of existence. 
“Last spring I made a commitment to all of you to preserve job security through 2020, and it was important to me that we honored that promise,” he said. “But looking ahead at 2021 and beyond, it’s clear that we need to make changes in order to create a healthy and thriving business for the fut ....

New South Wales , United Kingdom , Drew Houston , Olivia Nottebohm , Amazon Web Services , Ingram Micro , October Dropbox , Covid 19 , புதியது தெற்கு வேல்ஸ் , ஒன்றுபட்டது கிஂக்டம் , ஈர்த்தது ஹூஸ்டன் , அமேசான் வலை சேவைகள் , இஂக்ரம் மைக்ரோ ,