Tag Archives: Banned

Should California Have Banned Checking Smartphone Maps While Driving?

Nerval’s Lobster writes “According to an appellate court in California, checking your smartphone while driving your Volkswagen (or any other vehicle) is officially verboten. In January 2012, one Steven R. Spriggs was pulled over and cited for checking a map on his smartphone while driving. In a trial held four months later, Spriggs disputed that his action violated California’s Section 23123 subdivision (a), which states that a person can’t use a phone while driving unless ‘that telephone is specifically designed and configured to allow hands-free driving and talking, and is used in that manner while driving.’ In short, he argued that the statute was limited to those functions of listening and talking—things he insisted could have been followed to the letter of the law. But the judge ruled that operating a phone for GPS, calling, texting, or whatever else was still a distraction and allowed the conviction to stand. That leads to a big question: with everything from Google Glass to cars’ own dashboard screens offering visual ‘distractions’ like dynamic maps, can (and should) courts take a more active role in defining what people are allowed to do with technology behind the wheel? Or are statutes like California’s hopelessly outdated?”

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Unlocking new phones now banned under DMCA, but carriers are in the clear

It was great while it lasted, but the days of users legally unlocking their own phones is over. Back in October of last year, the Library of Congress added an exemption to the DMCA to allow folks to free their new phones for 90 days. That three month window has now closed. Of course, carriers are still free to offer unlocked handsets themselves, and some will also unlock them for you as long as certain conditions are met. “Legacy” or used handsets purchased before today can still be unlocked without any finger-wagging from federal courts.

So, what does this mean exactly? Well, Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Mitch Stoltz told us, “What’s happening is not that the Copyright Office is declaring unlocking to be illegal, but rather that they’re taking away a shield that unlockers could use in court if they get sued.” This does make lawsuits much more likely according to him, but it’s still up to the courts to decide the actual legality of phone unlocking. Indeed, it’s a grim day for those who want true freedom over their own devices. Stoltz said to us, “This shows just how absurd the Digital Millennium Copyright Act is: a law that was supposed to stop the breaking of digital locks on copyrighted materials has led to the Librarian of Congress trying to regulate the used cellphone market.”

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Via: Tech News Daily

Source: Library of Congress (Amazon)

Engadget

Call of Duty and Medal of Honor banned in Pakistan

It looks like Call of Duty: Black Ops II and Medal of Honor: Warfighter will both be selling in one less country now, as Pakistan has officially banned both games from being sold within its borders. The ban went into effect after residents complained about how Pakistan was portrayed in the two games. After the

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SlashGear

LG wants Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 banned in Korea

South Korea’s LG Display has filed an injunction trying to get sales of the 10.1-inch Note blocked in the country. [Read more]


CNET News

Hiring Smokers Banned In South Florida City



Penurious Penguin writes “On October 2, City Commissioners of Delray Beach finalized a policy which prohibits agencies from hiring employees who use tobacco products. Delray Beach isn’t alone though; other Florida cities such as Hollywood and Hallandale Beach, require prospective employees to sign affidavits declaring themselves tobacco-free for 12 months prior to the date of application. Throughout the states, both
government and businesses are moving to ban tobacco-use beyond working hours. Many medical facilities, e.g. hospitals, have implemented or intend to implement similar policies. In some more-aggressive environments referred to as nicotine-free, employee urine-samples can be taken and tested for any presence of nicotine, not excluding that from gum or patches. Employees testing positive can be terminated. Times do change, and adaptation is often a necessary burden. But have they changed so much that we’d now postpone the Manhattan project for 12 months because Oppenheimer had toked his pipe? Would we confine our vision to the Milky Way or snub the 1373 Cincinnati because Hubble smoked his? Would we shun relativity, or shelve the works of Tolkien because he and C. S. Lewis had done the same? If so, then where will it stop?”

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Slashdot

iPhone and iPad banned in South Korea with Samsung GSII

In one of the more extreme case endings we’ve seen thus far in the near-global mobile patent court battle between Apple and Samsung, South Korea has banned nearly every device up for trial. The Seoul Central District Court has ruled that both Samsung and Apple must remove major products such as the Galaxy S II

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SlashGear

Banned but better: Fly straight golf balls go extra distance

The original Ultimate Straight balls, designed for an estimated two of out of every three golfers that struggle with slice, seemed to do the impossible: They always flew straight.




FOXNews.com

3G hotspots banned at London Olympics

The Olympic Games kick off in London in just a few days, and while O2 and Virgin have covered the high and low ground throughout London, the organization behind the games doesn’t want any pesky hotspots infiltrating the stadium. The Olympic Committee has a long list of exactly what is prohibited from being taken into

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SlashGear

Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 banned in EU in fresh Apple patent twist

Mixed news for Samsung: while its redesigned Galaxy Tab 10.1N can go on sale, its smaller Galaxy Tab 7.7 will see a sales ban in Germany extend to the entire EU
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CNET News

Linux Users Banned From Diablo III Servers



dartttt writes with word that
“Blizzard has banned all Linux users who are playing Diablo III on Linux using Wine.” Reader caranha adds that these users have been flagged as “using cheating programs,” and that replies from Blizzard support staff so far have upheld these bans.

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Slashdot

Sale of Galaxy Nexus Banned in the US



New submitter busyqth writes “After the injunction against the Galaxy Tab 10.1 earlier in the week, A U.S. district court judge has now also granted an injunction against the sale of Google’s flagship ICS phone, the Galaxy Nexus. Is Steve Jobs laughing in the great beyond? Is this the beginning of the end for Android?”

Two blows to Samsung in one week, and now the FTC is investigating Google for misuse of Motorola Mobility patents in relation to RAND standards.

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Slashdot

Banned “Tax the Rich” TED Talk slides and text here

For those of you wondering if there’s ever a TED Talk that presents an idea too controversial for the group to publish it, there definitely is, and venture capitalist Nick Hanauer was the one to make it. What we’ve got here is the full text of the TED Talks presentation Hanauer made at the March

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SlashGear

Twitter says accounts hackers posted were mostly banned spammers

This week hackers claiming to be affiliated with Anonymous posted details from about 55,000 twitter accounts. The hackers claim to have broken into twitter servers to steal the data. Twitter is now claiming that most of those 55,000 accounts are bogus. In fact, twitter says that most of those accounts that were published were for

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SlashGear

Banned From Kickstarter For Being Cyberstalked



An anonymous reader writes “Rachel Marone has been a victim of cyberstalking for over 10 years. In 2011, she had a project on Kickstarter shut down because of the high volume of spam posted by the stalker in the comment section of the project. Recently, Marone’s manager spoke to Kickstarter again to see how she could avoid having a new project banned if the cyberstalker showed up again. They replied, ‘If there is any chance that Rachel will receive spam from a stalker on her project, she should not create one. We simply cannot allow a project to become a forum for rampant spam, as her past project became. If this happens again, we will need to discard the project and permanently suspend Rachel’s account.’ On her website, Marone sums up the situation thus: ‘I am being told that I cannot crowdfund because I am a stalking victim. … With so many women being stalking targets this does not seem reasonable to me.’”

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Slashdot

Egypt Banned Porn, But How Much of the Internet Is That?



pigrabbitbear writes “The recent web pornography ban in Egypt has raised questions about the evils of censorship (and porn) and the changing tide of popular attitude of Egyptians. It perhaps reflects the emerging influence of more conservative Muslim elements in government, a shift . Apparently the same ban was passed 3 years ago but was not enforced because their filtering system was not effective. But porn bans are nothing new. Other countries with strict censorship laws like China and Saudi Arabia have successfully implemented bans that restrict pornography along with anything else they deem inappropriate for public viewing. In 2010 the UK discussed a ban that would require users to specifically request access to pornographic material from their internet service providers. And porn-banning rhetoric has even stomped through the U.S. news media over the last few months, thanks to GOP also-ran Rick Santorum claiming President Obama is failing to enforce pornography laws. (There have also been some awesomely ridiculous pornography PSAs.)”

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Slashdot

The Pirate Bay On Track To Be Banned In the UK?



redletterdave writes with this excerpt fromthe International Business Times about the fate of the Pirate Bay in the UK: “Swedish filesharing website The Pirate Bay may soon be blocked in the UK after a London judge ruled that the site breaches copyright laws on a large scale, and that both the platform and its users illegally share copyrighted material like movies and music. In addition to finding legal fault with The Pirate Bay and its users, the British Phonographic Industry also wants all British ISPs to block access to The Pirate Bay in the UK.”

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Slashdot

Alternative Android Market To House Banned Apps



sl4shd0rk writes “In contrast to the Apple’s iron-fisted control over their App store, the Android Market is much more open. Google does, on occasion, remove apps it deems inappropriate, such as emulators, legally-questionable music services, tethering apps and one-click root apps. But if Koushik Dutta of CyanogenMod fame has his way, these heretic apps may have a home after all. Dutta plans an ‘underground’ Android Market complete with an approval process to weed out malicious applications; something Google doesn’t do. Ideally, this will give Android users a more trustable source from which to get applications without having to resort to dictatorial software control.”

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Slashdot

Paper On Super Flu Strain May Be Banned From Publication



Pierre Bezukhov writes with this excerpt from an article at Doctor Tipster: “A Dutch researcher has created a virus with the potential to kill half of the planet’s population. Now, researchers and experts in bioterrorism debate whether it is a good idea to publish the virus creation ‘recipe’. However, several voices argue that such research should have not happened in the first place. The virus is a strain of avian influenza H5N1 genetically modified to be extremely contagious … created by researcher Ron Fouchier of the Erasmus Medical Center Rotterdam, Netherlands. The work was first presented at a conference dedicated to influenza, that took place in September in Malta.”

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Slashdot

Battlefield 3 Banned In Iran



dotarray writes “Iranian gamers hoping to get their hands on Battlefield 3 will be sorely disappointed, as the country has officially banned EA’s latest shooter. Why? The game features an American war force launching an assault on Iranian capital city Tehran.”

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Slashdot

Apple Wins, Samsung Tablet Banned in Australia

Apple on Thursday won its legal bid to temporarily block the sale of Samsung’s flagship tablet computer Down Under.




FOXNews.com

NATO Exercise Banned From Jamming GPS

judgecorp writes “A major NATO exercise off the coast of Scotland has been ordered to stop using GPS jamming technology after complaints that to do so would endanger the lives of fishermen and disrupt civilian mobile phones. The exercise — called ‘Joint Warrior’ -planned to disrupt GPS for 20 miles around each warship”

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