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Thread: You Could Be Liable for $150k in Penalties Per Downloaded Song

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  1. #1

    You Could Be Liable for $150k in Penalties Per Downloaded Song

    US anti-piracy group Rightscorp has been awarded a patent by the Australian Patent Office for a method of tracking internet piracy.

    Rightscorp is known for its investigations of BitTorrent and other peer to peer networks. It sends notices to internet services providers (ISPs), threatening penalties of up to $150,000 for copyright violations, hoping the notices are passed onto consumers.

    It works like this: users accused by Rightscorp are found via IP addresses appearing in BitTorrent download swarms. If ISPs agree to forward Rightscorp's notices—and an increasing number of them are doing so—the users get notices that they could be liable for $150,000 in damages. Unless, that is, they click on a provided link and agree to settle their case at a low, low price. Typically, it's $20 per song infringed.

    A good example is the recent case of the producers of movie Dallas Buyers Club, who won the right to send letters to Australians who had illegally downloaded the movie. The court will review the letters to make sure there is no “speculative invoicing” – claiming that individuals could face penalties far in excess of the cost to the company.



    ExtraTorrent recommends using VPN to hide your real location while torernting and downloading the files. Anonymous VPN changes your IP address with IP address of the VPN server and keep you anonymous on the Internet, so, it hides your real location and your online identity.

    With a VPN you will never receive copyright infringement notices from your ISP or government agencies because your real location is hidden.

    Keep in mind that the safest VPN services don't log online activity of the users. They accept anonymous payments via BitCoin. Anoymous VPN services are usually located in the countries which have no mandatory data retention laws like Seychelles, Cyprus and other small island countries.

    Posted by: spectator
    Date: Monday, December 14th, 2015

  2. #2

    Anonymous Hacked Isis Twitter Accounts

    Anonymous Hacked Isis Twitter Accounts
    Added: Sunday, June 19th, 2016

    The hacking collective has launched another wave of attacks against Islamic State: the group took over its social media accounts and gave them a rainbow makeover.



    Anonymous announced its war on Isis last year, when the group first took control of about 100 Twitter accounts after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris. Today, after the murder in a gay club in Orlando, a hacker named WauchulaGhost said he had taken control of nearly 200 accounts belonging to Isis supporters. Instead of locking the users out of the accounts or reporting them to Twitter, the hacker has given them an LGBT-flavored makeover.

    Twitter has already suspended some of the hacked accounts, but some remained online longer than others, still under the control of the hacker. WauchulaGhost explained his motivation as a protest against the Islamic State to defend Orlando victims. First of all, the hacker posted explicit gay porn and rainbow flags, but he dialed back after hearing from users who supported the idea but not the practice.

    It is not quite clear whether such actions can help the wider fight against terrorism online. Supporters of Isis usually rapidly switch accounts after being suspended by social networks. They also have well-designed systems that allow to share the names of new accounts with old followers. In most cases, the suspended user emerge back online shortly after with a new digit added to the end of their username.

    Anyway, it might appear more useful than the last online operation of the hacking group against Isis. At the time, Anonymous was spamming Isis-related hashtags with videos of Rick Astley’s song Never Gonna Give You Up.

    Posted by: SaM

    Date: Sunday, June 19th, 2016

  3. #3

    FBI Uses Public Photo Database to Find Criminals

    FBI Uses Public Photo Database to Find Criminals
    Added: Friday, June 17th, 2016


    The recent study revealed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation maintains a huge database of over 410m photos compiled from such sources as driver’s licenses, passport applications and visa applications. The FBI cross-references them with photos of criminal suspects using questionable facial recognition software.

    The Government Accountability Office (GAO) revealed that the FBI did not appropriately disclose the database’s impact on public privacy until the FBI was audited last month. As a result, GAO recommended the attorney general to determine why the bureau failed to obey the disclosure requirements and to determine whether the software is correctly cross-referencing collected photos with images of criminal suspects.

    The problem is that images of faces are protected personal data, according to the Privacy Act of 1974, which limits the collection, disclosure and use of personal data and requires agencies to disclose its kinds and ways of using it. However, the FBI did not publish such disclosures.

    It is known that the FBI’s system searches not just its own database, but also other photo databases maintained by other agencies.

    Initial queries about the program referred to the system that allows the bureau and some other agencies to cross-reference surveillance camera footage and other pictures with its collection of candidate photos. However, the recent report found a much larger program, run by the FBI, which conducts face recognition searches and is able to access external partners’ face recognition systems to support FBI active investigations.

    Aside from privacy concerns, there is the question of the accuracy of the comparisons between photos of suspects and law-abiding citizens. Apparently, the results guaranteed 80-85% accuracy if the candidate is in the top 50 responses. In other words, it’s highly inaccurate. And as the database expands, the accuracy declines.

    The state governments currently keep detailed facial recognition databases from driver’s licenses in order to stymie identity theft and other crimes, but the FBI uses this data for a very different purpose. In response, the FBI claimed it believed previous disclosures were adequate and its searches were in compliance with the US law.

    Posted by: SaM

  4. #4

    Russian Hackers Stole Files on Donald Trump

    Russian Hackers Stole Files on Donald Trump
    Thursday, June 16th, 2016

    Hackers reportedly linked to the Russian government managed to steal research files on Donald Trump from the Democratic National Committee (DNC). It turned out that they had been lurking in the systems since at least summer 2015, i.e. well before Donald Trump sealed the Republican nomination.



    These research files are usually used by political parties for attack ads and leaking story ideas to journalists. As for spy agencies, they normally maintain dossiers on world leaders to better understand their thinking and habits.

    The cybersecurity firm hired by the DNC to investigate the breach said that it found two different hacking groups hunting the Trump files. Those who got in last summer might be linked to Russian federal security service, while another team is probably linked to Russian military intelligence. The firm spent a few days removing the hackers from the party’s computers.

    In such cases, cybersecurity companies act as both IT help and private intelligence service – while they are hired to clean up the mess and get the system working again, the firms also try to figure out who was behind the hack. This particular firm employs people who have worked for or close to the US government and has a particular specialty in tracking hacking teams for foreign governments. It turned out that some of the hackers found inside the DNC’s computers have previously been linked to espionage campaigns against Nato and Germany’s Bundestag.

    It must be said that foreign cyberspies often target US political campaigns: for example, China was accused of hacking Barack Obama’s and John McCain’s presidential campaigns in 2008. In the meantime, US spies also regularly target national party systems in other countries.

    In this particular case, it is unclear whether the DNC would have too much of an issue with people stealing Trump files. Political parties ostensibly collect and maintain opposition research to spread negative stories. The cybersecurity company said there was no evidence of any other data being stolen from the party.

    It is also unclear what Donald Trump will make of the breach. It is known that in the past he has boasted that President of Russia has called him “bright and talented.” In response, Trump praised Putin as a “strong leader.”


    Posted by: SaM

  5. #5

    Donald Trump Claimed DNC Masterminded Hack of His Files

    Donald Trump Claimed DNC Masterminded Hack of His Files
    Added: Friday, June 17th, 2016

    Donald Trump claimed that his political adversaries, not Russian hackers, were responsible for hacking his dossier containing important information from files belonging to the Democratic National Committee (DNC).



    A cybersecurity firm hired to investigate the hack of the DNC server attributed it to Russian intelligence. The hack gave outsiders access to internal emails, chat messages and a 200-page book of opposition research compiled on Donald Trump. Gawker and the Smoking Gun published the files received from an anonymous source claiming to be linked to the hack. Trump claimed that much of the information in the dossier was false or entirely inaccurate. He believes that the DNC simulated the “hacking” in order to distract from their flawed candidate and failed party leader.

    In the meantime, cybersecurity experts and former US officials believe it was possible that hackers linked to the Russian government would spread intelligence to American press as part of an “information warfare” campaign. The cybersecurity company investigating the breach was first to suggest that the hackers inside the DNC’s computer system were linked to the Russian military intelligence or the Federal Security Service.

    The breach came in a midst of Donald Trump’s worst weeks of the political campaign. At the moment, republican lawmakers in the capital continue to back away from their party’s nominee. Some refuse to even mention his name. According to recent polling, Trump viewed unfavorably by 70% of voters, losing to presumptive Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton by a double digit margin in a general election matchup.

    Posted by: SaM

  6. #6

    1,200 Yards w/5.56 AR-15 – AXTS MI-T556 SPR Range Report

    1,200 Yards w/5.56 AR-15 – AXTS MI-T556 SPR Range Report
    by Dave Bahde on June 16, 2016





    The new AXTS SPR is a 5.56mm rifle designed for extreme long-range shooting. The author was able to engage targets out to 1,286 yards without missing a beat. Shown equipped with a Silencerco suppressor and Atlas bi-pod.

    Although a relatively young company, AXTS Weapon Systems has earned a reputation for producing top-quality firearms designed to achieve very specific missions. And its newest, the AXTS MI-T556 SPR, continues that tradition.
    The rifle is based on the Special Purpose Rifle (SPR) that was brought into U.S. military service as the MK12 in 2002. It was designed as an accurized version of the M16 chambered in 5.56mm. It used an 18” barrel designed to stabilize the heavier 77 grain bullets (MK262) for longer-range applications. Hand guards were free floated, tolerances a bit tighter, and iron sights more precise. Original models were equipped with a muzzle attachment that would accept a suppressor.


    the AXTS SPR delivers long-range 5.56mm performance. Engaging steel at extreme distances, the AXTS SPR was stable and accurate, even when used from improvised positions.

    Still in service today, the original design concept has really caught on both within and outside the military market. And, improvements in design and manufacture since 2002 have made building a rifle like this with the precision needed even more within reach. Barrels are better, receivers stronger, accuracy improved and operation consistent.
    It’s not uncommon to see an SPR that will rival precision rifles for accuracy at ranges extending to 1,000 yards. Bullets are better, ammunition more effective and optics vastly improved. Whether you are a hunter, officer, target shooter, or just plain enthusiast, the SPR-style platform offers all you will ever need in a semi-auto rifle chambered in 5.56mm.

    Long Range with the Mouse Gun?

    For most of my career, “experts” have been telling me the .223/5.56mm is a 500-meter rifle, prevailing thought being it was ineffective beyond that range and lacked the accuracy necessary to get consistent hits any farther out. That may have been true in the 1980s when rifle and bullet technology was lacking. Given a rifle shooting into 4” at 100 yards on its best day and ammunition to match, 500 meters would be a stretch.
    Well, it’s not 1980 anymore, at least for a couple decades! Rifles today are different, shooters are better, and ammunition has improved by leaps and bounds. Factory rifles shoot twice as well as most early ARs. Purpose-built precision ARs can be astoundingly accurate. As to effectiveness, while many are willing to decry the 5.56mm’s limitations at “range,” few are willing to test them in person.
    The terminal effectiveness of the new 77-grain TMK is substantially different than the FMJ of the day. It and similar bullets are proving devastating at ranges as far as 700 yards on small game. Accuracy potential on steel or paper reaches out to 1,000 yards given the correct combination. There is little doubt the sweet spot is the 100-700 yard range, but that is not the extent of its range. It’s a new world, and there are lots of new rifles to match.

    Training at Range



    The author employed Spuhr’s ISMS mount. He feels it is super strong and accommodates a number of accessories for long-range shooting.

    I had been experimenting with longer ranges using the 5.56mm with a couple custom built ARs. Able to reach 700 yards at my range, it was pretty easy with 77 Grain OTM (Open Tipped Match) bullets. Given a custom barrel, solid build, and steady position, I could hold 1 MOA at that range, even beyond. Of late many factory rifles were more than capable.
    While enlightening, it took some serious training with Buck Doyle from Follow Through Consulting to really open my eyes. Buck is a combat Marine with 22 years of service, much of it as a Force Recon Marine. Having used accurized ARs at range in combat gives him credibility. Several years of contracting afterwards added to his “been there done that” reputation. More importantly, he provided a means to learn how to do it yourself at his Scoped Carbine Class.
    Held on his range at The Lodge at Red River Ranch in Teasdale, Utah, it’s a long-distance shooters dream. Targets are placed mostly from 300-1,100 meters amongst the beautiful red cliffs of Capitol Reef, Utah. It’s windy, dusty, and can be harsh, making it challenging. Targets are generally 12” circles with nothing bigger than a silhouette. Buck believes in “aim small, shoot small,” and practices that consistently.
    Designed around a scoped 5.56mm carbine and the Horus TreMoR reticles, it’s all about ranging and getting on target fast. No knob turning; you use the reticle, and once dialed in you seldom see prone. It’s mostly from barricades, making the effectiveness of the SPR more surprising. It’s an eye opener. Having attended or assisted with several classes, students are hitting steel at 800 meters in stiff winds by day three. In at least a couple cases, students having never used an AR accomplish this. It rather quickly dispels any remaining mythology as to the ability of the 5.56mm cartridge to reach out.

    AXTS MI-T556



    Using just the Silencerco ASR flash hider, the AXTS SPR remains easy to maneuver, lightweight and well balanced.

    During several classes AXTS provided their MI-T556 for use. Built to exacting standards, they were impressive. Over time a relationship developed between AXTS and Buck Doyle, resulting in his consultation on their rifles. Most of their previous rifles used pinned 14.5 or 16” barrels. While they worked great, they did not take full advantage of the latest loads like the Black Hills Ammunition 77-grain TMK.
    Using one of my personal builds with an 18” barrel, the differences were obvious. Holds with the 77-grain TMK were often 10-20% less at the same range given muzzle velocities in the 2,750 feet per second range. It only proved what we both knew, that the 18” barrel was the ticket for taking complete advantage of modern ammunition without sacrificing usability. It prompted AXTS’s latest rifle based on Buck’s design input and extensive testing.
    Buck Doyle’s dream AR, the SPR, was designed for practical application out to the limits of the 5.56mm cartridge. It started with an MI-T556, adding a few touches including a 17.5” barrel and full-length, custom hand guard to match. The results are impressive, to say the least.


    The SPR features hand-fit, CNC-machined receivers. Controls are truly ambidextrous and the proper size for easy application.

    The MI-T556 starts with hand-fit, CNC-machined receivers using a proprietary configuration. Designed for use in harsh conditions, they are as light as possible without sacrificing strength. Controls in the A-DAC lower are completely ambidextrous, recessed, and strong. The forward assist is moved forward so it does not interfere with the charging handle. Made of titanium, it is DLC coated. The company’s Talon 45/90 degree safety sits on either side. The lines on these receivers are perfectly matched and tight.
    For the SPR, a custom handguard using M-Lok is mated to the receiver ending just at the flash hider, covering most of the barrel. It protects the 17.5” barrel capped with a Silencerco ASR flash hider. Starting with a Shilen 416R blank, the barrels are profiled using a 1:8” twist rate. Each crown is hand polished. The highest quality barrel extensions are used with polished feed ramps and .223 Wylde chambers. An AXTS Black Nitrided bolt carrier group is utilized. Manufactured from case-hardened 8620 steel, the 4130 steel gas key is properly staked. The bolt is 9310 steel, MPI tested and CNC-ground following heat treatment for a perfect fit. It’s all coated in Black Nitride for the best possible operation under any condition. Charging is accomplished with an AXTS Raptor ambidextrous handle.


    The rifle features an AR Gold trigger. Having a right-side bolt release makes reloads fast and keeps you locked into the gun.

    Each MI-T556 uses a custom American Trigger Corporation AR Gold Trigger nestled into the oversized trigger guard. Designed to be operational over the long term, it provides a crisp single-action pull with a predictable take-up. AR Gold triggers have proven reliable under the harshest conditions with design features that insure operation in dusty and dirty conditions. Magpul’s STR stock covers a mil-spec sized buffer tube with an H2 buffer. This rifle was coated in a very nice green Cerakote. Pistol grip is a Magpul. Each is shipped in a Grey Ghost soft case with a single magazine.
    SPECS
    Chambering: .223 Wylde
    Barrel: 17.5 Inches
    OA Length: 34 inches (collapsed)
    Weight: 6.5 pounds (bare rifle)
    Sights: Optics rail
    Stocks/Grips: Magpul MOE grip/AXTS M-Lok Hand Guard/Magpul STR Stock
    Action: Semi-automatic/rotating bolt/gas impingement
    Finish: Cerakote
    Capacity: Accepts standard AR-15/M16 magazines
    Price: $3,000

    Finishing the Rifle Out

    My Leupold Mark 6 3-18X scope using a Horus TreMoR 3 reticle was mounted in a Spuhr ISMS mount and covered with Adamount lens protection. It keeps the scope low to the rail. The built-in level keeps you square at range. A Trijicon RMR was added at one o’ clock using Spuhr’s mount. An Angle Cosign Indicator was attached to the left side of the mount, keeping everything compact and solid. SLR provided an M-Lok rail for the Atlas bi-pod. Dueck Defense offset sights were mounted for close quarters work. Testing was completed using the ASR along with Silencerco’s Omega .30-caliber suppressor.


    The author equipped the AXTS with Leupold’s Mark 6 using a T3 reticle. It allowed him to get hits on target quickly and accurately.



    Silencerco’s Omega suppressor is lightweight, quiet and versatile and can be used on several calibers in different configurations.


    Accuracy



    The Shilen barrel really liked 77-grain bullets, including Remington’s Premier Match. It produced this sub half-inch group at 100 yards.

    Shooting itty-bitty groups with an AR can be a chore with varying success, mostly attributed to the shooter. Group testing occurred over two days using several bullet weights. Overall it seemed to favor the 77-grain ammunition, with Remington Ammunition 77-grain Premier Match taking the day at .47 inches. Black Hills 77-grain TMK was very close behind at .56 inches. Days were always windy, so many groups were in the .75 range, but when I was squared away it clovered most of the time. Overall this is a half minute gun at 100 yards with the right shooter and ammunition.

    However, that’s not where the accuracy story ends. Buck is fond of expressing his lack of interest in what a rifle does at 100 yards. The real question is will it hold that group at range, say 300 yards minimally, even better 700 yards or more. Black Hills 69 grain TMK was a perfect example. Struggling to shoot under .75 inches at 100 yards, it printed a nice 5-inch group on 12 inch steel at 669 yards. Overall it created a 6-inch clump at that range over 10 rounds. Moving out to 887 yards, the 77-grain TMK and 77-grain Remington both held under 1 MOA vertically. Even my group at 1,236 yards measured just over a foot vertically, staying around that 1 MOA range. Bottom line, this rifle is about as good as it gets in a semi and better than my capability most of the time.

    Practical Application


    ]
    The author found the AXTS SPR to be a true, long-range performer. This one can really reach out when needed.

    This rifle really shines working in the field, and that is how Buck designed it. Given the time spent on the road or in my FJ, much of my training occurs in and around it. Setting up on the hood and bumper, 12” steel was engaged at 200 to 400 yards using a bag for a rest or the Atlas Bi-pod. Working different positions, it remained “point, hold, and shoot” out to 300 yards. The only time the knobs were touched were at 1,200 yards; everything else was completed using the T3, and it is fast.
    With the Silencerco Omega installed it was easy to use under the truck, by the tires, or even next to the bumper. No concussion, minimal recoil, and plenty quiet for use without hearing protection. The MI-T556 remained balanced and the extended hand guard insured the barrel was never resting on cover. Using a GG&G barricade stop, it locked into barricades, trees, and the bench. Getting hits on 12 inch or smaller targets out to 400 was a no brainer; stretching it out to 800 took some solid wind reads, but this rifle is practical to 800 with ease and capable of hits at 1,000 with skill.

    Other Considerations

    Bullet impact shift was less than an inch when the suppressor was added, and was consistent. Return to zero was within half an inch when it was removed and reattached. Brass ejection was all but unaffected. With the suppressor attached or not it sent brass at roughly 4:00, just a bit farther with the suppressor. Gas in the face was almost unnoticeable, and over 100 rounds the magazine was still pretty clean. Given the lack of an adjustable gas block, this surprised me. It was pleasant enough that the Omega will stay on there for most training.
    Working inside the truck and shoot house took some work, but after 10 years running an 18.5” shotgun it’s not hard. Certainly not what its best at, but no worse than a 16” gun, and it will do things a 10” AR won’t. My conversion to this barrel length for a scoped carbine is complete and will not change. I like a short gun for dedicated work across the parking lot using a red dot sight; for everything else this rifle is the ticket. This may be Buck’s dream rifle, but we clearly share the same vision.

    Final Thoughts

    Retail on this SPR is in the 3K range, so you expect it to work. Still, the attention to detail is superb, rivaling only my hand-built custom rifles. Everything is smooth, mates perfectly, and operates flawlessly. Only the best possible parts are used, making mil-spec rifles look like toys. It’s like a custom 1911 that has been hand fit and contoured.
    This is the first production SPR off the line (not a prototype, but rather a full production model), but they are a few weeks out when it comes to ramping up the website to reflect the new product. AXTS prides themselves on a delivery time measured in weeks, not months, so give them a call to put in your order.
    While you can certainly pay more you will not get much for it; it just does not get much better. At the same time it is a working rifle designed by a combat Marine with the sole purpose of using it, not hanging it in a safe. I test a lot of ARs, hundreds over the years. Nothing has come across my path any better, many less so at a higher cost. If you are in the market for a custom grade AR designed and tested for real world use this one needs to be at the top of your list, it may be your only choice!


    Dueck Defense Rapid Transition sights operate like standard A2 sights allowing for use at any range as needed.



    The Talon 60 degree safety from AXTS is comfortable, easy to access and ambidextrous.



    A custom-made hand guard from AXTS locks up tight, providing one of the most solid ARs on the market.



    Designed to match the barrel, the AXTS custom hand guard extends all the way to the base of the flash hider, completely protecting the barrel.


    Coated in Cerakote, the SPR is striking in certain light with a solid look that is useful in any environment.

    For more information, visit https://www.axtsweapons.com/.

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