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Google buys 'mood music' start-up

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 02 Juli 2014 | 23.58

2 July 2014 Last updated at 10:26

Google has acquired music start-up Songza, a company that says it is able to create playlists based on a person's mood.

No financial details were disclosed when the deal was announced.

The move is being seen as an attempt to bolster its Google Play streaming service in the face of competition from the likes of Apple and Spotify.

Apple made its largest ever acquisition in May when it bought rapper Dr Dre's Beats Music for $3bn (£1.8bn).

A major selling point of the Beats brand - which includes a streaming music service as well as the popular headphone line - was its personalised playlist offering.

Beats Music's users are provided with a service that mixes automated song recommendations with custom playlists created by respected musicians.

In a statement, Songza said: "We can't think of a better company to join in our quest to provide the perfect soundtrack for everything you do."

It is assumed that Google will incorporate Songza's technology into its Google Play offering, but perhaps also as part of its upcoming subscription service for video site YouTube.

Streaming is an increasingly popular way to listen to music. Instead of downloading and owning a track, it is instead played over the internet. Some services allow "syncing" for playback to take place offline, but this requires a subscription.

Last month it was announced that music streaming would count towards official charts in the UK.

To prevent over-eager fans from gaming the system to bump songs up the charts, only 10 listens per user will be counted.


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Router only allows net after chores

2 July 2014 Last updated at 16:28 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

A router that only allows internet access after household chores have been completed is being developed in the US.

Kudoso allows parents to set a list of tasks that unlock minutes to be used online.

The device's makers hope to eventually incorporate fitness apps into the system to reward children who regularly exercise.

One parenting expert told the BBC she thought the technology "seems a bit over the top".

Parenting author Judy Reith, who runs parentingpeople.co.uk, said concern was growing about internet use.

"I've interviewed a lot of parents," she said.

"The number one worry is technology, and that's not going to go away any time soon."

Continue reading the main story

The number one worry [for parents] is technology"

End Quote Judy Reith Parenting author

But she added: "The business of this special router doing that for you seems a bit over the top for me.

"A parent's voice does carry a lot of power even if the parents don't feel it does. They should set up firm but fair rules about all kind of things, including internet usage."

Mrs Reith said as well as monitoring children's internet use, it was important parents considered their own as well.

'Dilemma'

Developer Rob Irizarry is trying to raise money on crowdfunding site Kickstarter to support the project, which has been in development for 18 months.

"Parents today are faced with a dilemma about how to manage the amount of time their kids spend on the internet and the content they are exposed to," the Kickstarter appeal page says.

"Kudoso lets your children earn points - by doing chores, studying or even exercising - that allow them to access the internet sites you approve for blocks of time that you define."

By carrying out the chores, children will earn currency that can be "spent" accessing websites.

Parents can set which websites are more "expensive". For example, the same amount of currency could allow for 30 minutes on an educational site, but only 10 minutes on an entertainment page.

Mr Irizarry said his technology was more effective than current projects on the market due to the fact it blocked internet access into the home completely, rather than just using software that must be installed on each device - and could be circumvented by particularly enterprising children.

As well as being sold as a pre-installed router, Kudoso will also be available as software to be installed on a range of routers from other manufacturers.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Facebook faces UK probe over study

2 July 2014 Last updated at 03:51

A UK regulator is investigating whether Facebook broke data protection laws when it conducted a psychological study on users without their consent.

The test saw Facebook "manipulate" the news feeds of nearly 700,000 users to control which emotional expressions they were exposed to.

The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) said it planned to question Facebook over the study.

Facebook said it had taken "appropriate protections for people's information".

"We are happy to answer any questions regulators may have," Facebook's Richard Allen said in a statement.

The Financial Times and The Register quoted the ICO as saying that it would contact Ireland's data protection regulator over the issue.

Facebook's European headquarters are based in Dublin.

Emotion test
Continue reading the main story

It's clear that people were upset by this study and we take responsibility for it"

End Quote Richard Allen Facebook

The research was conducted in collaboration with Cornell University and the University of California at San Francisco on 689,000 Facebook users over a period of one week in 2012.

According to the report on the study: "The experiment manipulated the extent to which people were exposed to emotional expressions in their News Feed".

The study found that users who had fewer negative stories in their news feed were less likely to write a negative post, and vice versa.

The research was done to gauge if "exposure to emotions led people to change their own posting behaviours".

However, the research has been criticised because Facebook users were unaware they were taking part.

Labour MP Jim Sheridan, a member of the Commons media select committee, has called for an investigation into the matter.

'Improving our processes'

For its part, Facebook has defended the study and said that there was "no unnecessary collection of people's data".

"None of the data used was associated with a specific person's Facebook account," the social networking giant said at the time.

On Tuesday, Mr Allen said: "It's clear that people were upset by this study and we take responsibility for it."

"We want to do better in the future and are improving our process based on this feedback."

Meanwhile, Adam Kramer of Facebook, who co-authored the report on the research, has admitted the firm did not "clearly state our motivations in the paper".

"I can understand why some people have concerns about it, and my co-authors and I are very sorry for the way the paper described the research and any anxiety it caused," he said earlier this week.


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Energy firms hacked by 'Dragonfly'

1 July 2014 Last updated at 13:38

More than 1,000 energy companies in North America and Europe have been compromised in a huge malware attack unearthed by US security firm Symantec.

The hackers are thought to be part of an Eastern European collective known as Dragonfly, which has been in operation since at least 2011.

Targets included energy grid operators and industrial equipment providers.

"Its primary goal appears to be espionage," Symantec said.

Sabotage operations

Eighty four countries were affected, although most of the victims were located in the United States, Spain, France, Italy, Germany, Turkey, and Poland.

Since 2013 Dragonfly has been targeting organisations that use industrial control systems (ICS) to manage electrical, water, oil, gas and data systems.

Symantec said Dragonfly had accessed computers using a variety of techniques, including attaching malware to third-party programs, emails and websites, giving it "the capability to mount sabotage operations that could have disrupted energy supplies across a number of European countries".

It had used Backdoor.Oldrea to gather system information, including the computers' Outlook address book and a list of files and programs installed, and Trojan.Karagany to upload stolen data, download new files and run them on infected computers, Symantec said.

'Interesting and concerted'

"The way Dragonfly targeted the companies in question was - while not groundbreaking - interesting and concerted. It appears they clearly mapped out their intended plan of attack," said Rob Cotton, CEO at global information assurance firm NCC Group.

"The increasing frequency and sophistication of these attacks whilst concerning should not be a cause of alarm for the average consumer - yet. Government departments such as the CPNI (Centre for the Protection of National Infrastructure) provide sound advice to all key components of our society, ensuring the lights stay on and similar core services and functions critical to our way of life are available."

The attack is similar to the Stuxnet computer worm, which was designed to attack similar industrial controllers in 2010 and reportedly ruined almost 20% of Iran's nuclear power plants.

Symantec said Dragonfly "bears the hallmarks of a state-sponsored operation, displaying a high degree of technical capability".

Independent computer security analyst Graham Cluley told the BBC that the motivation for the attack was unclear, but agreed that many would suspect the attacks were sponsored by a foreign state, highlighting a new era of online crime:

"There is no doubt that we have entered a new era of cybercrime, where countries are not just fighting the threat - but are also exploiting the internet for their own interests using the same techniques as the criminals."

Dr Andrew Rogoyski, chair of techUK Cyber Security Group, told the BBC that "on the face of it, the attacks seem much more benign than Stuxnet but time and further analysis will tell."


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ISPs take legal action against GCHQ

2 July 2014 Last updated at 11:56

Seven internet service providers have filed a legal complaint against the UK's intelligence agency GCHQ.

ISPs from the US, UK, Netherlands and South Korea have joined forces with campaigners Privacy International to take the agency to task over alleged attacks on network infrastructure.

It is the first time that GCHQ has faced such action.

The move follows allegations about government snooping made by US whistleblower Edward Snowden.

'Infected with malware'

The ISPs claim that alleged network attacks, outlined in a series of articles in Der Spiegel and the Intercept, were illegal and "undermine the goodwill the organisations rely on".

The allegations that the legal actions are based on include:

  • claims that employees of Belgian telecommunications company Belgacom were targeted by GCHQ and infected with malware to gain access to network infrastructure
  • GCHQ and the US National Security Agency, where Mr Snowden worked, had a range of network exploitation and intrusion capabilities, including a "man-on-the-side" technique that covertly injects data into existing data streams to create connections that will enable the targeted infection of users
  • the intelligence agencies used an automated system, codenamed Turbine, that allowed them to scale up network implants
  • German internet exchange points were targeted, allowing agencies to spy on all internet traffic coming through those nodes

While the ISPs taking the action were not directly named in the leaked Snowden documents, Privacy International claims that "the type of surveillance being carried out allows them to challenge the practices... because they and their users are at threat of being targeted".

Privacy International has previously filed two other cases - the first against alleged mass surveillance programmes Tempora, Prism and Upstream, and the second against the deployment by GCHQ of computer intrusion capabilities and spyware.

'Strict framework'

Eric King, deputy director of Privacy International, said "These widespread attacks on providers and collectives undermine the trust we all place on the internet and greatly endangers the world's most powerful tool for democracy and free expression."

The ISPs involved in the action are UK-based GreenNet, Riseup (US), Greenhost (Netherlands), Mango (Zimbabwe), Jinbonet (South Korea), May First/People Link (US)and the Chaos Computer Club (Germany).

Cedric Knight, of ISP GreenNet, added: "Snowden's revelations have exposed GCHQ's view that independent operators like GreenNet are legitimate targets for internet surveillance, so we could be unknowingly used to collect data on our users. We say this is unlawful and utterly unacceptable in a democracy."

GCHQ maintains that all its work is conducted "in accordance with a strict legal and policy framework which ensures that our activities are authorised, necessary and proportionate".


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Call for Google Glass ban in cinemas

1 July 2014 Last updated at 14:24 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News
Rory Cellan-Jones wearing Google Glass

Please turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play.

Rory Cellan-Jones finds out if he is allowed in a cinema wearing Google Glass

Google Glass should be banned in UK cinemas, the head of an influential trade body has urged.

Phil Clap, head of the Cinema Exhibitors' Association (CEA), said it wanted the smart glasses removed "whether the film is playing or not".

The CEA has no power to enforce a ban, but instead makes recommendations to most of the country's cinema industry.

Google suggested cinemas "simply ask wearers to turn it off before the film starts".

In a statement the company said Google Glass - the smart eyewear device that can record video - should be treated like any small gadget such as mobile phones.

"Broadly speaking, we also think it's best to have direct and first-hand experience with Glass before creating policies around it," the company said.

"The fact that Glass is worn above the eyes and the screen lights up whenever it's activated makes it a fairly lousy device for recording things secretly."

The CEA represents about 90% of the cinema industry in the UK, and also pushes the interests of groups such as the Federation Against Copyright Theft (Fact).

The Independent quoted CEA chief executive Phil Clapp as saying: "Customers will be requested not to wear these into cinema auditoriums."

Knock-off DVDs

Cinema chains will still be free to make their own decisions on the hardware.

When asked by the BBC for its thoughts on Google Glass last week, Vue said it would ask people to remove the eyewear as "soon as the lights dim before a screening".

While Google Glass is a very mobile piece of hardware, it is not particularly inconspicuous - and recording time can only last for a maximum of 45 minutes.

Anyone recording a film using the device would need to keep their head very still throughout.

However, Stuart Hall, a member of CEA based in London, said pirates would always use new ways to evade detection - and that bans should apply to "any kind of wearable technology".

He added that the likelihood of a Google Glass recording being poor quality would not deter pirates from selling knock-off DVDs.

"You don't know the quality is bad until you've bought it," he told the BBC.

Google Glass was launched in the UK last week, but with a price tag of £1000, it is not expected to become a mainstream product.

Despite this, Google has issued guidance on how people should use the device.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Hotel site in 'appalling' data leak

1 July 2014 Last updated at 17:48 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

A hotel booking website that was leaking large amounts of customer information is being investigated by the UK data privacy watchdog.

HotelHippo.com, owned by HotelStayUK, had revealed booking information that had been a "gift for burglars", a security expert said.

The exposed data could allow the matching of hotel bookings with home addresses.

After being contacted by the BBC, HotelHippo.com was taken offline.

In a statement, the company said: "We confirm that we have taken down the HotelHippo.com website to take some urgent action to deal with a technical situation.

"Privacy of customer data is our prime concern, and we are committed to ensuring this safety."

Information security consultant Scott Helme said he had sent details of the vulnerability to the firm on 25 June, but no action was taken until Tuesday.

HotelHippo, based in St Albans, offered bookings with large chains including Marriott Hotels and Radisson. Other sites owned by HotelStayUK offer theatre tickets and other tourist experiences.

Mr Helme, who described the breach as "appalling", told the BBC that repeated emails and phone calls to HotelStayUK had been ignored.

However, managing director Chris Orrell said he was unaware of the issue.

"No-one's passed on any information to me," he said.

Address database

The UK's data privacy watchdog, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), opened an investigation on Tuesday.

"We will be looking into the matter to establish the full details," a spokesman said.

Despite the website displaying several messages and trust stamps stating it was "secure", Mr Helme said he had discovered the vulnerability with ease.

"I easily discovered a method of extracting the personal and sensitive data of thousands of customers that had used the site before me," he said.

The vulnerability centred on the use of unique web addresses to pull up customer data.

When placing a booking, a unique five-figure number would appear in the address bar of the web browser.

By simply altering this number, any user could pull up details of previous bookings.

The leaked data included the date, location and length of a hotel stay. On a separate page, the home address of the person who made the booking could also be found.

Mr Helme said a simple program could be written to pull the data from the site - essentially creating a database of addresses where the residents were staying at hotels, and for how long.

HotelHippo said any concerned customers should contact it on 08446 646 000.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Stuff magazine 'losing cover models'

By Amelia Butterly Newsbeat reporter

2 July 2014 Last updated at 13:14

Stuff magazine front cover

Stuff magazine has announced that it will no longer feature female models in underwear on its front cover.

From August, the tech monthly will be "radically different" and says it will go model-free "for good".

"Technology has changed, society has changed, and Stuff's audience has changed," said editor Will Findlater.

He said the changes were being made after focus groups and trial covers showed the audience wanted covers to reflect what was inside the magazine.

Lads mags

In a statement on the Stuff website, he added: "I hope that in making this change we'll remove any barriers to reaching the whole of Stuff's potential audience.

"Technology is universal, but pictures of models aren't universally appealing."

The changes come after smaller sales for so-called "lads' mags" like Nuts, with campaigns calling for them to be removed from supermarket shelves.

The Co-op supermarket challenged the publication to put issues into "modesty bags".

Nuts refused and Co-op stopped selling it.

Magazines on Co-op's shelves

Readership of lads' mags has dropped by as much as 70% in recent years.

Groups such as No More Page 3 have been targeting publications such as the Sun, demanding that they stop publishing images of topless women.

They say the pictures are sexist and outdated and "mock and disrespect women".

Speaking about the changes to Stuff, No More Page 3 campaigner Lucy Holmes said: "They showed semi naked pictures of women in a magazine about gadgets, something that managed to brilliantly insult both men and women.

"Women by implying that they couldn't possibly be interested in gadgets and men by assuming they were incapable of getting through an entire magazine without seeing a woman's bare bottom or breasts."

She added: "It's great news that they've seen how society has moved on from the sexist lads' mags era of the 90s. Definitely progress!"

Oasis in front of the Loaded magazine logo
Oasis are on the front cover of the relaunched Loaded magazine in a Brit music retrospective edition

The changes come as Loaded magazine, famous for featuring "scantily-clad" women on its pages, publishes its own relaunched issue.

The cover features Oasis, while they have new columnists including Ricky Hatton and Peter Crouch.

Follow @BBCNewsbeat on Twitter and Radio1Newsbeat on YouTube


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Call to go further on 'revenge porn'

2 July 2014 Last updated at 14:34

Ministers must outlaw all forms of psychological abuse if attempts to tackle so-called "revenge porn" are to be meaningful, campaigners say.

Justice Secretary Chris Grayling has said the government is "very open" to the idea of changing the law to tackle what he said was a "growing problem".

But charity Women's Aid urged the government to go further and support victims through the justice system.

Lib Dem peers are attempting to make the practice a criminal offence.

Ministers may take "appropriate action" in the autumn, the justice secretary has said.

'Serious discussion'

The term "revenge porn" is used to describe the phenomenon of people posting explicit images of former partners online - either obtained consensually or stolen - to humiliate them following a break up.

Mr Grayling told MPs the practice was becoming a more significant problem in the UK.

He was responding to a question from fellow Conservative Maria Miller.

The former culture secretary has called for a change in the law to tackle the "appalling" practice, saying the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill could be used to toughen up the necessary legislation.

Continue reading the main story

We need to make a criminal sanction available when people share indecent images in the knowledge that consent would not have been given"

End Quote Julian Huppert Lib Dem MP

Mr Grayling said Mrs Miller had "done a very important job in raising this issue".

"It's clearly becoming a bigger problem in our society," he told her.

"What I'd say to you today is the government is very open to having a serious discussion about this with a view to taking appropriate action in the autumn if we can identify the best way of doing so."

'Criminalise abuse'

But Polly Neate, chief executive of the Women's Aid charity said: "To be meaningful, any attempt to tackle revenge porn must also take account of all other kinds of psychological abuse and controlling behaviour, and revenge porn is just another form of coercive control.

"That control is central to domestic violence, which is why we're campaigning for all psychological abuse and coercive control to be criminalised. We urge Mr Grayling and the Home Office to go further, and ensure victims can get the support of the criminal justice system for all the abuse they experience."

She said it was "hard to know how many people are affected" but that anecdotally it was thought those "experiencing domestic violence will face the threat or reality of revenge porn".

Laura Higgins, of the UK Safer Internet Centre, said she supported the suggestion of criminalising "revenge porn" and that the organisation was frustrated with the current lack of cohesion surrounding the issue.

But she pointed out that there were already laws in place that had failed to prevent abuse because of how they are applied.

Sarah Green, of the End Violence Against Women Coalition, said: "The impacts of revenge porn can be devastating, from the impact on your everyday life of work and relationships, to the feeling of violation and abuse.

She said it was critical that victims were able to "access support services whether or not they report to the police".

The issue demonstrated how schoolchildren should be educated in issues such as respect, equality and consent in relationships, through compulsory sex and relationships education - she added.

Lawyer Rupinder Bains told BBC Radio 5 live there are provisions within existing legislation to tackle images posted online.

"If the police are onside - and this is where a big issue currently lies, the education for the police in recognising this is a real issue - they can proceed under harassment legislation.

"We have things in place that control electronic images being used for a purpose to cause alarm and distress.

She said it was possible to take out injunctions to get images removed from the web but that this was costly and time consuming.

Hannah, 21, told BBC's Newsbeat how her ex-boyfriend posted explicit photographs of her on Tumblr.

She said that when she went to the police about it she was told "the most they could do was file a domestic incident report in case his behaviour escalated".

'Failed relationships'

Two peers, Lord Marks and Baroness Grender, have put forward an amendment to the Criminal Justice and Courts Bill which would allow for a one-year jail term for publishing these kinds of images.

The proposal follows a campaign by Lib Dem MP Julian Huppert who has highlighted the issue in the Commons.

He said: "We need to make a criminal sanction available when people share indecent images in the knowledge that consent would not have been given."

Lord Marks said he and Baroness Grender hoped to work closely with the Ministry of Justice "to ensure that this offence reaches the statute book".

But Gabrielle Guillemin, legal officer of international free speech campaign Article 19, has cautioned against "revenge porn" legislation.

She told the Lords Communications Committee: "We have seen a lot of legislation, for example in the United States, to address this particular issue, but you would question whether it is for the criminal law to get involved in what is very often, ultimately, the fallout of failed relationships.

She questioned whether "civil remedies" were not "more appropriate to deal with these kinds of issues".

Legislation criminalising the practice has been introduced in the US states of Texas, Utah, Wisconsin, New York, Maryland, California and New Jersey.

However, the laws in California do not cover self-taken shots, which some campaigners claim may represent up to 80% of all revenge porn.

Have you been a victim of revenge porn? Should the law be changed to tackle the problem? If you are happy to speak to a BBC journalist about these issues please email us at haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk with the words 'Revenge porn' in the subject heading.


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Why has Google cast me into oblivion?

2 July 2014 Last updated at 17:25

This morning the BBC received the following notification from Google:

Notice of removal from Google Search: we regret to inform you that we are no longer able to show the following pages from your website in response to certain searches on European versions of Google:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/legacy/thereporters/ robertpeston/2007/10/merrills_mess.html

What it means is that a blog I wrote in 2007 will no longer be findable when searching on Google in Europe.

Which means that to all intents and purposes the article has been removed from the public record, given that Google is the route to information and stories for most people.

So why has Google killed this example of my journalism?

Well it has responded to someone exercising his or her new "right to be forgotten", following a ruling in May by the European Court of Justice that Google must delete "inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant" data from its results when a member of the public requests it.

Track record

The ruling stemmed from a case brought by Mario Costeja González after he failed to secure the deletion of a 1998 auction notice of his repossessed home that was reported in a Spanish newspaper.

Now in my blog, only one individual is named. He is Stan O'Neal, the former boss of the investment bank Merrill Lynch.

My column describes how O'Neal was forced out of Merrill after the investment bank suffered colossal losses on reckless investments it had made.

Is the data in it "inadequate, irrelevant or no longer relevant"?

Hmmm.

Most people would argue that it is highly relevant for the track record, good or bad, of a business leader to remain on the public record - especially someone widely seen as having played an important role in the worst financial crisis in living memory (Merrill went to the brink of collapse the following year, and was rescued by Bank of America).

Public interest

So there is an argument that in removing the blog, Google is confirming the fears of many in the industry that the "right to be forgotten" will be abused to curb freedom of expression and to suppress legitimate journalism that is in the public interest.

To be fair to Google, it opposed the European court ruling.

But its implementation of it looks odd, perhaps clumsy.

Maybe I am a victim of teething problems. It is only a few days since the ruling has been implemented - and Google tells me that since then it has received a staggering 50,000 requests for articles to be removed from European searches.

It has hired what it calls "an army of para legals" to process these requests.

I asked Google if I can appeal against the casting of my article into the oblivion of unsearchable internet data.

Google is getting back to me.

PS Although the BBC has had the notice from Google that my article will not show up in some searches, it doesn't appear to have implemented this yet.


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