Apple, Google, Microsoft, and Mozilla ban Kazakhstan's MitM HTTPS certificate

Found on ZD Net on Tuesday, 22 December 2020
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The certificate had been in use since December 6, 2020, when Kazakh officials forced local internet service providers to block Nur-Sultan residents from accessing foreign sites unless they had a specific digital certificate issued by the government installed on their devices.

While users were able to access most foreign-hosted sites, access was blocked to sites like Google, Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Netflix, unless they had the certificate installed.

Sorry, but snooping is not that easy.

Facing Massive Subscriber Defections AT&T Chooses: Rate Hikes & New, Bogus Fees

Found on Techdirt on Saturday, 19 December 2020
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Saddled by massive debt from its $200 billion Time Warner and DirecTV mergers in recent years, the company keeps deciding to recoup that debt from its subscribers in the form of relentless price hikes. That, in turn, has resulted in millions of subscribers heading for the exits.

Normally, a company hoping to make inroads in a sector like TV (traditional or streaming) would try and focus more on not pissing its subscribers off. But as a government pampered telecom monopoly unfamiliar with things like competition, this is all alien territory for many AT&T executives. So, relatively unsurprisingly, the company is imposing all manner of new rate hikes across its AT&T broadband, TV, and DirecTV service options.

Somehow it feels like this won't work out as smooth as AT&T hopes.

https://www.theverge.com/2020/11/25/21719396/amazon-web-services-aws-outage-down-internet

Found on The Verge on Monday, 07 December 2020
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Amazon Web Services (AWS), Amazon’s internet infrastructure service that is the backbone of many websites and apps, experienced a multi-hour outage on Wednesday that affected a large portion of the internet. The service has been nearly fully restored as of 4:18AM ET on Thursday morning, according to Amazon.

In an email to The Verge on Wednesday, Amazon noted that the issues are only affecting one of its 23 geographic AWS regions. But the problem was significant enough to take out a large number of internet services.

Here's (again) your regular reminder that going into the cloud does not imply more reliability.

Social media companies all starting to look the same

Found on Axios on Sunday, 06 December 2020
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Snapchat on Monday launched Spotlight, a video tab within its app that, like TikTok, distributes videos based more on how popular they are than on who created them. Facebook in August launched its TikTok competitor, called Reels.

Not only that, but the content there also seems to be the same junk.

YouTube adds ads but won't pay all content-makers

Found on BBC News on Saturday, 28 November 2020
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The company currently shares ad revenue with video-makers who are enrolled in its partnership scheme, when it shows ads before or during their content.

Changes to its terms of service mean YouTube will not share the revenue from those ads with the video-makers.

"It's another policy change that seems likely to rankle with ordinary creators, who have often felt aggrieved that YouTube capitalises on their content without properly compensating them - or recognising their contribution to the success of the platform."

People will get annoyed and shift towards other sites. Yes, Youtube is big, but that does not mean it cannot get into troubles if it abuses its position.

Comcast to enforce 1.2TB data cap in entire 39-state territory in early 2021

Found on Ars Technica on Friday, 27 November 2020
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The unpopular policy was already enforced in most of Comcast's 39-state US territory over the past few years, and the upcoming expansion will for the first time bring the cap to every market in Comcast's territory.

Comcast provides no way for customers to independently verify the meter readings, and there's no government regulation of broadband-data meters to ensure their accuracy.

Customers can avoid overage charges by spending an extra $30 a month on unlimited data or $25 for the "xFi Complete" plan that includes unlimited data and the rental cost for Comcast's xFi gateway modem and router.

In the past, plans were called unlimited too until users took it serious. In a few years, today's unlimited plans will most likely see caps too.

Simple Search is a browser extension that gives you Google circa 2010

Found on The Verge on Wednesday, 18 November 2020
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Built by The Markup, Simple Search strips out the information panels, shopping boxes, and search ads to show only the raw web search results. It’s a view of an older, simpler Google, one with surprising antitrust implications.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai defended the changes by saying they are meant to provide a better user experience within Google search. “When I run the company, I’m really focused on giving users what they want,” Pichai told Cicilline. “We conduct ourselves to the highest standard.”

Yeah. Sure. "Better user experience" and "highest standard". You're not fooling anybody here.

Google Photos is the latest “Unlimited” plan to impose hard limits

Found on Ars Technica on Wednesday, 11 November 2020
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The plan already came with significant caveats—unlimited storage was for the tier Google deems "High quality," which includes compressed media only, capped at 16 megapixels for photos and 1080p for videos. Uncompressed or higher-resolution photos and videos saved in original quality count against the 15GiB cap for the user's Google Drive account.

So much for promises in the cloud.

Movie Industry: VPNs and Tor Pose a Threat to Legitimate Streaming Platforms

Found on Torrentfreak on Friday, 06 November 2020
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The Motion Picture Association says that circumvention services such as VPNs, DNS masks and Tor networks can pose a direct threat to legitimate streaming services.

For example, if Netflix is not available in country X, people could use a VPN to make it appear they come from country Y, where the service is legally available. This is a problem, MPA notes, particularly in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

This is just a problem for MPA and people couldn't care less.

What it's like to get locked out of Google indefinitely

Found on Business Insider on Thursday, 05 November 2020
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Cleroth, a game developer who asked not to use his real name, woke up to see a message that all his Google accounts were disabled due to "serious violation of Google policies."

Google had determined he had broken their terms of service, though they didn't explain exactly what had happened, and his account wouldn't be reinstated.

Others professed to have been barred from using Microsoft services, while losing access to Facebook accounts can be equally damaging.

Everything you have not saved and backuped locally, totally under your control, can be considered deletable. Don't be so naive and assume that the big companies are there for you.