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Technologies Canada - Reporting on the war on your digital rights.

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app store bans

LinkedIn halts Sell Hack plugin revealing email addresses

By | April 9, 2014

By Warwick Ashford
Computer Weekly

Browser plugin Sell Hack has suspended functionality to reveal LinkedIn members’ email addresses after the professional networking firm issued a cease-and-desist order. The plugin, which is available for Safari, Firefox and Chrome, features a Hack In button designed to help salespeople uncover hidden email addresses on social profiles. “Anytime you go to a Social profile page, you’ll see a Hack In button.  If you click the button, we’ll start to run the profile against our data sources,” explains the Sell Hack website. Despite Sell Hack claims that all data is publicly available and that it was not doing anything malicious, LinkedIn decided to take legal action. The professional networking firm has been quick to take action on privacy issues since stolen passwords were revealed after a data breach in June 2012 that cost more than $1m to investigate and remediate.

U.S. Court Orders Seizure of “DVD Ripping” Software Domains and Funds

How The Pirate Bay Plans to Beat Censorship For Good

OPPO N1: The first CyanogenMod Android smartphone is on its way

New Zealand bans software patents

Canada

  • Bill C-10 is a ‘Full-blown assault’ on free expression

    BY TRISTIN HOPPER THE VANCOUVER SUN After more than 25 years of Canadian governments pursuing a hands-off approach to the online world, the government of Justin Trudeau is now pushing Bill C-10, a law that would see Canadians subjected to the most regulated internet in the free world. Although pitched as a way to expand Canadian content provisions to the online sphere, the powers of Bill C-10 have expanded considerably in committee, including a provision introduced last week that could conceivably allow the federal government to order the deletion of any Facebook, YouTube, Instagram or Twitter upload made by a Canadian.

  • Law prohibiting election misinformation struck down

    By Elizabeth Thompson CBC Politics A key section of Canada's elections law designed to curb misinformation during elections has been struck down and declared unconstitutional. In a 15-page decision, Ontario Superior Court Justice Breese Davies ruled that the section is an unjustifiable restriction on Canadians' right to free speech.

Analysis

  • Decentralization Matters: But Why?

    BY MIKE MASNICK TECHDIRT About a year ago, the Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web asked if I would help edit and compile a “magazine” talking about decentralization and why it’s important. It was a fun and interesting challenge, and now the final product is out, the D-Web Digest.

  • The Growing Threat to Free Speech Online

    BY DAVID FRENCH TIME MAGAZINE There are times when vitally important stories lurk behind the headlines. Yes, impeachment is historic and worth significant coverage, but it’s not the only important story.

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