Month: August 2023

Porn age verification law is unconstitutional, says judge

Image: James Bareham / The Verge

A federal judge has blocked a Texas law that would require age verification and health warnings for pornographic websites, calling it unconstitutional and poorly defined. In a preliminary injunction decision released today, Judge David Ezra ruled in favor of the Free Speech Coalition, an adult industry trade association. The ruling prevents Texas from enforcing HB 1181, one of multiple state-level bills that would require age verification for accessing adult content online.
Ezra, a Ronald Reagan-appointed district judge, said HB 1181 had numerous problems that could limit internet users and adult content creators’ First Amendment rights. “The restriction is constitutionally problematic because it deters adults’ access to legal sexually explicit material, far beyond the interest of protecting minors,” Ezra’s ruling says. It cites previous decisions blocking the Child Online Protection Act, a 1990s law that was similarly intended to block minors from adult content online. It also draws on the Supreme Court’s ruling in Reno v. ACLU, which struck down most of the Communications Decency Act, a federal law regulating online pornography.
The injunction repeats frequent criticisms of online age verification, particularly the chilling effects of asking people to identify themselves through potentially insecure verification systems.
“People will be particularly concerned about accessing controversial speech when the state government can log and track that access. By verifying information through government identification, the law will allow the government to peer into the most intimate and personal aspects of people’s lives. It runs the risk that the state can monitor when an adult views sexually explicit materials and what kind of websites they visit. In effect, the law risks forcing individuals to divulge specific details of their sexuality to the state government to gain access to certain speech.”
As Ezra notes, Texas still hasn’t repealed a law against sodomy, making it particularly fraught to hand over identification for something like a gay porn site. “Given Texas’s ongoing criminalization of homosexual intercourse, it is apparent that people who wish to view homosexual material will be profoundly chilled from doing so if they must first affirmatively identify themselves to the state,” the ruling says.
HB 1181 applies restrictions to sites that are deemed to be composed of one-third pornographic content — a bar similar to that of other states like Louisiana, which has an age-gating rule that went into effect around the start of 2023. Ezra concludes the law was drafted in a way that simultaneously overlooks major places where minors are likely to access porn — like adult-oriented communities on Reddit, which likely doesn’t meet the bar for a “pornographic” site overall — and threatens age-appropriate resources for older minors, like sites with sexual health information. The risks, Ezra concludes, don’t justify using strict age verification when other options like parent-implemented content filters are available. “Content filtering allows parents to determine the level of access that their children should have, and it encourages those parents to have discussions with their children regarding safe online browsing,” the ruling says.
And finally, the ruling objects to Texas’ requirement that sites post factually debatable disclaimers about the alleged dangers of pornography, calling it unconstitutional compelled speech.
Texas will likely appeal the decision, kicking it up to a federal appeals court that could decide the fate of HB 1181. But for now, it’s a blow against a broad movement to lock down sites with sexual content — and a fairly scathing one at that.

Image: James Bareham / The Verge

A federal judge has blocked a Texas law that would require age verification and health warnings for pornographic websites, calling it unconstitutional and poorly defined. In a preliminary injunction decision released today, Judge David Ezra ruled in favor of the Free Speech Coalition, an adult industry trade association. The ruling prevents Texas from enforcing HB 1181, one of multiple state-level bills that would require age verification for accessing adult content online.

Ezra, a Ronald Reagan-appointed district judge, said HB 1181 had numerous problems that could limit internet users and adult content creators’ First Amendment rights. “The restriction is constitutionally problematic because it deters adults’ access to legal sexually explicit material, far beyond the interest of protecting minors,” Ezra’s ruling says. It cites previous decisions blocking the Child Online Protection Act, a 1990s law that was similarly intended to block minors from adult content online. It also draws on the Supreme Court’s ruling in Reno v. ACLU, which struck down most of the Communications Decency Act, a federal law regulating online pornography.

The injunction repeats frequent criticisms of online age verification, particularly the chilling effects of asking people to identify themselves through potentially insecure verification systems.

“People will be particularly concerned about accessing controversial speech when the state government can log and track that access. By verifying information through government identification, the law will allow the government to peer into the most intimate and personal aspects of people’s lives. It runs the risk that the state can monitor when an adult views sexually explicit materials and what kind of websites they visit. In effect, the law risks forcing individuals to divulge specific details of their sexuality to the state government to gain access to certain speech.”

As Ezra notes, Texas still hasn’t repealed a law against sodomy, making it particularly fraught to hand over identification for something like a gay porn site. “Given Texas’s ongoing criminalization of homosexual intercourse, it is apparent that people who wish to view homosexual material will be profoundly chilled from doing so if they must first affirmatively identify themselves to the state,” the ruling says.

HB 1181 applies restrictions to sites that are deemed to be composed of one-third pornographic content — a bar similar to that of other states like Louisiana, which has an age-gating rule that went into effect around the start of 2023. Ezra concludes the law was drafted in a way that simultaneously overlooks major places where minors are likely to access porn — like adult-oriented communities on Reddit, which likely doesn’t meet the bar for a “pornographic” site overall — and threatens age-appropriate resources for older minors, like sites with sexual health information. The risks, Ezra concludes, don’t justify using strict age verification when other options like parent-implemented content filters are available. “Content filtering allows parents to determine the level of access that their children should have, and it encourages those parents to have discussions with their children regarding safe online browsing,” the ruling says.

And finally, the ruling objects to Texas’ requirement that sites post factually debatable disclaimers about the alleged dangers of pornography, calling it unconstitutional compelled speech.

Texas will likely appeal the decision, kicking it up to a federal appeals court that could decide the fate of HB 1181. But for now, it’s a blow against a broad movement to lock down sites with sexual content — and a fairly scathing one at that.

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This Chrome Trick Could Replace Manual Video Screenshots – CNET

Google announced the new Copy Video Frame feature Thursday.

Google announced the new Copy Video Frame feature Thursday.

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Star Wars Chatter Back Chopper Hands-On: An Always-Listening Loudmouth – CNET

The droid from Star Wars Rebels and Ahsoka immediately gets chatty once its batteries are loaded in.

The droid from Star Wars Rebels and Ahsoka immediately gets chatty once its batteries are loaded in.

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Obscura Camera App Gets Major Update

Photography app Obscura was today updated to version 4, and developer Ben McCarthy says it’s a revamp that has been in the works for more than a year. Much of the app has been rebuilt from scratch to make the app more intuitive to use.

Aimed at photography enthusiasts, Obscura has a wide range of features, but it is also simple enough that it can be used casually. The updated design puts the camera controls that you need most front and center so they’re easily accessible, with additional tools packed into radial menus.

Exposure, focus, white balance, and other parameters can be dialed in using the control options, and haptic feedback makes it feel similar to using an actual camera. The new layout is meant to make it easy to reach controls one-handed, so a shot can be set up within a few seconds.

Videos, photos, Live Photos, and portraits are supported, so it has much of the same functionality that’s available in the built-in Camera app on the iPhone, plus there are multiple filters that can be applied before a shot is taken so you know exactly what your image will look like.

The newest version of Obscura works not only on the ‌iPhone‌, but also on the iPad. The camera controls on ‌iPad‌ are the same as the ‌iPhone‌, but it has a sidebar for navigating through albums.

Obscura has been updated with a subscription model. It can be downloaded for free from the App Store, but unlocking all of the features will require the Ultra upgrade that’s priced at $9.99 per year. Through September 11, the app can be purchased for $7.99 for the first year.

A free trial is available, and customers who already had Obscura 3 will have all of the features included in that update. New premium features will require an Ultra subscription going forward, however, and current users can upgrade for $4.99 for the first year.

Premium features available to existing Obscura 3 users and new Obscura 4 Ultra subscribers include RAW and ProRAW capture, Portrait and ‌Live Photos‌ capture, 48-megapixel images, image filters, manual exposure, and more, with more information available on the Obscura website.This article, “Obscura Camera App Gets Major Update” first appeared on MacRumors.comDiscuss this article in our forums

Photography app Obscura was today updated to version 4, and developer Ben McCarthy says it’s a revamp that has been in the works for more than a year. Much of the app has been rebuilt from scratch to make the app more intuitive to use.

Aimed at photography enthusiasts, Obscura has a wide range of features, but it is also simple enough that it can be used casually. The updated design puts the camera controls that you need most front and center so they’re easily accessible, with additional tools packed into radial menus.

Exposure, focus, white balance, and other parameters can be dialed in using the control options, and haptic feedback makes it feel similar to using an actual camera. The new layout is meant to make it easy to reach controls one-handed, so a shot can be set up within a few seconds.

Videos, photos, Live Photos, and portraits are supported, so it has much of the same functionality that’s available in the built-in Camera app on the iPhone, plus there are multiple filters that can be applied before a shot is taken so you know exactly what your image will look like.

The newest version of Obscura works not only on the ‌iPhone‌, but also on the iPad. The camera controls on ‌iPad‌ are the same as the ‌iPhone‌, but it has a sidebar for navigating through albums.

Obscura has been updated with a subscription model. It can be downloaded for free from the App Store, but unlocking all of the features will require the Ultra upgrade that’s priced at $9.99 per year. Through September 11, the app can be purchased for $7.99 for the first year.

A free trial is available, and customers who already had Obscura 3 will have all of the features included in that update. New premium features will require an Ultra subscription going forward, however, and current users can upgrade for $4.99 for the first year.

Premium features available to existing Obscura 3 users and new Obscura 4 Ultra subscribers include RAW and ProRAW capture, Portrait and ‌Live Photos‌ capture, 48-megapixel images, image filters, manual exposure, and more, with more information available on the Obscura website.
This article, “Obscura Camera App Gets Major Update” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

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Google Removes ‘Pirate’ URLs From Users’ Privately Saved Links

To date, Google has processed more than seven billion copyright takedown requests for its search engine. The majority of the reported links are purged from Google’s search index, as required by the DMCA. Recently, however, Google appears to gone a step further, using search takedowns to “moderate” users’ privately saved links collections. TorrentFreak: A few hours ago, Eddie Roosenmaallen shared an email from Google, notifying him that a link had been removed from his Google Saved collection because it violates Google’s policy. The reason cited for the removal is the “downstream impact,” as the URL in question is “blocked by Google Search.”

“The following saved item in one of your collections was determined to violate Google’s policy. As a result, the item will be moderated..,” Google writes, pointing out a defunct KickassTorrents domain as the problem. Initially, it was suggested that this removal impacted Google’s synched Chrome bookmarks but further research reveals that’s not the case. Instead, the removals apply to Google’s saved feature. This Google service allows users to save and organize links, similar to what Pinterest does. These link collections can be private or shared with third parties.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

To date, Google has processed more than seven billion copyright takedown requests for its search engine. The majority of the reported links are purged from Google’s search index, as required by the DMCA. Recently, however, Google appears to gone a step further, using search takedowns to “moderate” users’ privately saved links collections. TorrentFreak: A few hours ago, Eddie Roosenmaallen shared an email from Google, notifying him that a link had been removed from his Google Saved collection because it violates Google’s policy. The reason cited for the removal is the “downstream impact,” as the URL in question is “blocked by Google Search.”

“The following saved item in one of your collections was determined to violate Google’s policy. As a result, the item will be moderated..,” Google writes, pointing out a defunct KickassTorrents domain as the problem. Initially, it was suggested that this removal impacted Google’s synched Chrome bookmarks but further research reveals that’s not the case. Instead, the removals apply to Google’s saved feature. This Google service allows users to save and organize links, similar to what Pinterest does. These link collections can be private or shared with third parties.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Jitsi Meet ditches anonymity—here’s why

Users now need to use a Gmail, Facebook, or GitHub account to create a meeting room on meet.jit.si. What does this mean for their privacy?

A popular secure video-conferencing app has just ditched the main feature making it for a long time the go-to for activists, journalists, and whoever looking for extra privacy: its users’ anonymity.

Completely free to use, Jitsi Meet is an encrypted and open-source platform available for both web and mobile. Jitsi has increasingly become a privacy-first alternative to Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams for allowing people to use the service without an account. Until now, at least.

From August 24, 2023, users need to use a Gmail, Facebook, or GitHub account to create a meeting room on meet.jit.si. And, while the new authentication requirement isn’t extended to the invitees, people are now worried about how this change will affect Jitsi’s overall level of privacy and security.

Jitsi Meet’s new authentication requirements

“When we started the service back in 2013, our goal was to offer a meeting experience with as little friction and as much privacy as possible,” Jitsi noted in a blog post, describing Meet as a means to allow users to converse freely “without fear of expressing their views and opinions.”

“Our commitment to both goals remains as strong as ever but anonymity is no longer going to be one of the tools we use to achieve them.” 

A rise in the number of reports concerning violations of its terms of service is allegedly the reason why the team finally decided to make the change. Despite not specifying the types of violation, the provider ensured that these were not “about some people merely saying things that others disliked.”

We reached out to the company for further comments on this, but at the time of writing, we are still waiting for a response. Looking online, though, we found a couple of worrying reports: a user was lamenting about rooms playing videos of underage individuals, while another reported a third party joining the call without authorization.

Nevertheless, some users expressed their disappointment with the new authentication requirement.

Jitsi’s official instance now requires you to authenticate with Facebook, Google, or Microsoft to host a call from r/privacy

Yet, Jitsi confirmed that encryption will keep securing all users’ communications from data breaches and/or other snooping activities.

At the same time, according to the update of its privacy policy, the developer firm (8×8) may now “process and store third-party account credentials to authenticate meet.jit.si users” while using this information to “investigate fraud or abuse on the meet.jit.si service.”

Talking about additional ways to ensure users privacy, Jitsi said: “We are still very much committed to holding user privacy in the highest regard and we still have no tools that would allow us to compromise the privacy of the actual audio or video content of a meeting, nor do we intend to create any.”

The provider also invites whoever feels uncomfortable using an account to access the service to check the tutorial to host their own secure deployment of Jitsi Meet. 

While Facebook, Google, and GitHub are the only accounts available to set up new meetings, the Jitsi team said the list may be extended to other services in the future. 

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