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This, again, is like the local phone company being forced to block your ability to call people because of an assertion that the person being blocked has infringed on their copyright. It's clear that the phone company has nothing to do with the situation and it's a massive legal overreach to compel them to get involved.

But media megacorps have never cared about logic or sanity. They make their own reality with their piles of money and lawyers.

And yet is what they do in my country to “close” piracy sites: ask the national internet providers to block the resolution on that domains. Of course in most situations you can just change the DNS to 1.1.1.1, or if the provider redirects all DNS request to their server just use DNS over HTTPS…
Until Sony sues Cloudflare/Google etc
I'd love to see that for the entertainment value alone!
> in most situations you can just change the DNS to 1.1.1.1

Or maybe 9.9.9.9 (quad9)! :)

I mean.. technically is not "blocking your ability to call", but just unlisting them from their phonebook and phone-number-information-service.

But in the end, this means that people will start using the alternatives more.... hopefully.

No, actually, that was where things stood BEFORE this injunction. The phone company is an intermediary party, with a relationship to at least one of the parties to an alleged infringement. The whole point of this injunction is that it applies to us as a party with NO relationship to the alleged infringing parties. It relies upon a German law that says that uninvolved bystanders are also liable.
Caving in to Sony’s lawyers again. DNS resolution is not copyright infringement and someone needs to put Sony/BMG in their place and make them go after those who are actually infringing instead of those who are providing internet backbone services.
Not sure you read the article?

This isn't a case of caving to the lawyers. Those lawyers got a JUDGE to grant an INJUCTION. Once that happens, you're not caving to lawyers - you're going to follow the letter of that injunction while you appeal it, or throw up your hands and follow it forever.

Also FTA: "We have retained counsel, and we are in the process of filing an objection to the injunction, though we are required to comply with it."

So they're not throwing their hands up...

--edited for spacing

It's more that Sony has effectively bought "justice" (i.e. a court decision) favorable to its interests by bringing overwhelming legal resources to bear.
The corporations own all elected officials (executive, legislative, and judicial) and MSM except some ostensible, powerless dreamers who think they can make a difference nibbling on the ephemeral periphery. The most rational and bravest voices in media (Hedges, Chomsky, Nader, Maté, Blumenthal) are currently ostracized as effectively-mute dissidents, conflated with conspiracy theorists and religious zealots for their crimes of factual, professional reporting.

"It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it." ― Upton Sinclair

The prevailing filter bubble of the bourgeoisie and the rich is intent on remaining secure at all costs, assassinations included. Just look around the world where journalists are murdered most and then where they are deplatformed.

"And here on the left we see a perfect sample of how a good comment that most would likely agree with had it not been killed by communist speak."

Sorry, I totally agree with you but people have learned that anyone using words like bourgeoisie shouldn't be listened to.

People have learned that anyone who completely dismisses another for use of a word shouldn’t be listened to.
Yes, again I agree, but those people weren't saying anything. They just dismissed the comment and down voted it and went on their way. Nothing gained at all because of using words that everyone knows will cause this reaction. Shotgun meet foot.
1. Are you Carnak the Magnificent? Mind-reading much? What number am I thinking of?

2. You can't cure agendas, ignorance, or hate with a politically-correct dictionary.

3. You have no sense of humor. :)

You make generalizing statements like “everyone knows”.

I genuinely don’t understand what kind of reaction you think “everyone knows”. That some people will be inexplicably scared when the the name of Karl Marx is invoked?

It's more compact than saying:

- "middle- and upper-classes taken together"

- "people earning over $80k unless they're filing jointly or have 3+ kids"

- "let all the shallow people against the poor reveal their true colors if they really want to jump to conclusions"

I know, Sony went to a judge and bought their way to an injunction forcing Quad9 to blacklist DNS resolution. Same went for Homeland Sec here in the US some time ago. It’s still Sony’s lawyers, it’s still not right, and a judge should know the difference between telecom lines and operators and their users, as this is the same thing analogy wise. It’s like me getting you to not eat dairy by banning you from ice cream shops because I’m lactose intolerant. It’s a huge over reach and abuse of power.
> It’s a huge over reach and abuse of power.

Don't see anywhere I agued it wasn't, but I was responding to your comment which sounded like Quad9 was caving to Sony's lawyers, as opposed to the more specific accusations of judicial bribery in this follow-up post.

Is it common for German judges to be bought and/or specific judgements to be paid for in Germany?

No it isn't. While this is a bad thing saying it is bought is hyperbolic.
There is no bribery accusation. They said "sony bought their way". This is a vague statement that could include bribery, but also could mean "spent a lot of money on lawyers who found a judge that would side with them" or "sony spent a lot of money on lawsuits in many jurisdictions trying to find one that sided thier way" and a hundred other things.
The exact quote is “went to a judge and bought”. If that’s not a direct accusation of bribery, I don’t know what is.

None of the other options you listed come as close to describing what was stated as bribery does.

Here: “Sony went to a judge, and bought their way to an injunction”. Better? I’m not accusing them of bribery, though I wouldn’t put it past them. Scratch our backs kind of thing. I hate Sony.
While our donors appear to be happy to pay for us to contest this, it's very difficult for me to imagine anyone paying what it would cost to implement compliance.

We'll see what happens once the dust settles.

This is the equivalent of mandating that every freight company, shipping agent or port inspect every box for fakes or infringing materials.
No, it's more like mandating freight companies do not deliver to certain addresses.
No, it's more like mandating map companies do not even list certain addresses in an effort to thwart freight companies from servicing them. A DNS resolver like Quad9 just provides the addresses. There's no allegation here that any infringing content was served by or delivered through Quad9.
I could definitely imagine Google being ordered to remove listings for illegal brothels.
Meh. Some service or another will pop-up to list the fun stuff governments and their corporate crook masters try to squash.
"Will" ? It's already there. People simply aren't so interested in skirting the bans apparently.
Yep. "Offend our commercial legal monopoly for exploiting creators, and the laws and legal precedents we bought order all cartographers to damnatio memoriae your IP and/or location."
No, that's not what the injunction says. It says we have to pay because we were negligent in failing to inspect every web site on every domain that we answer for. To come to an informed determination about whether the web sites contain infringing content. Tens of millions of times per second.
The irony is, I’ve never experienced DNS problems with invite only piracy sites with quality and quantity 100x the public ones. And doubly so, because I’m sure a lot of Sony employees use them.
I wonder why companies like Sony only seem to be focusing on attacking small business. I remember if you wanted pirate content, Google itself was the best search engine for that. You could (and likely still can) find almost anything and yet these companies don't seem to be taking Google to court. Wonder why?
To add: this is not even a small business, but a non-profit with a security mission.
Google reportedly receives 2 million DMCA requests a day to take down content including pirate links on search.
It least at one point in the 2006-2010 range, Google would display a Chilling Effects link to the actual DMCA takedown request when some of your search results were censored by a DMCA takedown. The DMCA takedown request is required to specifically enumerate the censored URLs.

The end result was a DMCA takedown often resulted in an indirect "Certified by Sony" link to non-fake infringing copies.

The other two large recursive resolvers, Google and Cloudflare, are protected by the District Court of Northern California, and more generally, by US law. Although we didn't find out about it until last Friday, the court documents show that Sony got this attack underway just thirty-five days after we moved out from behind the shield of the US courts.
I think at least some of this may boil down to the fact that there are people employed in positions that require them to provide some results that justify them keeping their jobs. Sadly.
> I’m sure a lot of Sony employees use them.

Given enough time, we'll eventually see a case where a studio's master copy gets corrupted, backups are out of date, and the studio does its best by replacing a master with a high quality infringing copy.

I really, really don't like DNS censorship. I think that if a site is bad enough to warrant being taken down, it should be taken down by the authorities that host it.

OR, these governments should have a formal enforcement regime that monitors and sends takedown requests to DNS resolvers.

Then, high-tech people will either use .onion, or we will see again the popularity of alt-root DNS services.

So will the alt-root DNS website (whose domain is on the "official" root) be taken down, because it is a pointer to a pointer to potentially illegal stuff?

Where does it end? Or will the goal be simply to make it hard enough that only 1% of people know how to access it, vs. 20%?

Check out blockchain domains [1] which implement an NFT standard for domain names. So far Opera and Brave have added built-in support for .crypto and there are extensions for other browsers.

[1] https://unstoppabledomains.com

I've looked at blockchain based domains. There's also ENS (.eth) and HNS (namebase.io). The biggest problem with them is they're a huge pain to purchase. You need to buy their vBucks style coins first (ETH or HNS) and many western governments treat those like a security. That makes it tough for someone like me who wants to buy legit, brandable domains in those systems.

So the only people left are the ones mining coins and skirting KYC/AML laws and I think that leads to a scenario where they'll gain a reputation of being a "nefarious" technology even though there's _some_ merit in the idea.

DNS based censorship by western countries is a risky game IMO. That makes the system vulnerable to a developing country coming in, setting up alternate DNS roots, and refusing to filter / censor for copyright infringement. It won't take much for western users to learn they need to use a foreign search engine to find things the western countries want censored.

China's citizens will be using US search engines and US citizens will be using Chinese search engines. Lol.

> I've looked at blockchain based domains. There's also ENS (.eth) and HNS (namebase.io). The biggest problem with them is they're a huge pain to purchase. You need to buy their vBucks style coins first (ETH or HNS) and many western governments treat those like a security. That makes it tough for someone like me who wants to buy legit, brandable domains in those systems.

Yeah I don't know why any of these blockchain DNS systems don't have an easy fiat on-ramp. Most people don't care about holding a token, they just want their domain name. It's fairly easy these days too with all the stablecoins around.

Because then they need to do KYC and all kind of other regulatory stuff.
Namebase is pretty painless for getting Handshake names.
I signed up, but didn't do any of the verification. I'm from Canada and they're not in FINTRAC (our KYC/AML regulator), so I'm not willing to give them any personal information beyond what I'd use for a normal credit card transaction.

The thing is I wanted a brandable name that I could likely get for less than $.50, but I'd be willing to pay $50 via credit card to avoid dealing with HNS. I would literally pay 100x the market rate to avoid dealing with their crypto currency because, by the time I deal with the bookkeeping and taxes of a crypto purchase, it costs me more than $50 in time and effort.

> Most people don't care about holding a token

I definitely do NOT want the token/coin. As soon as I touch it the transaction becomes a taxable event for me. It's a nightmare. Imagine if every store in your city used a different foreign currency and the government made you track every transaction you make so you can report your foreign currency gains/losses on your taxes.

Thanks for the thoughtful response.

I imagine it will become easier to buy with checkouts that can take a credit card. It looks like some already have a Stripe checkout workflow.

One thing that is easier about owning a domain as an NFT is that it's not a subscription; you pay once and own it until you want to transfer it to someone else.

I don't like it either, but I think it's the lesser evil. Consider the fact that you don't even need DNS to put something on the internet; ergo, removing a DNS entry only increases the friction to accessing the resource. I think the approach the MPAA is taking is indeed to just make it harder for the 20%, and probably have a realistic understanding that they'll never get to 0 and approach a low asymptote, and have to be satisfied with that.

Or, to put it another way, the MPAA is attacking discovery not hosting. Which I think is pretty smart - its good bang for the buck. The people who have legit binaries to share can do so pretty easily (e.g. torrent a linux distro). It would step over the line if they tried to, I don't know, outlaw the bittorrent protocol. But taking down freemoviesXXX.com doesn't exactly raise my hackles.

Also, making illegal sites slightly harder to visit by blocking certain domains is really a rather mild form of copyright enforcement.

I'd much rather have that then companies suing some kid who downloaded a torrent.

That's not the point here. The music companies all know that they make way more money on music that gets pirated than music that doesn't; lots of studies have borne that out. The point of this ruling is that it lets them extract money from people who DON'T have a relationship with an infringing party. The neighbor of the kid who downloaded the torrent.
That's what they want.

If they sued the kids downloading this shit they'd be demolished by society.

This way they get what they want and we pay the cost because nobody cares enough.

Taking down freemoviesXXX.com in the court of the nation where it is hosted is materially different from making a DNS provider fail to resolve a valid address hosted elsewhere. If you want to be heard you must both fight for the legal right to host content in one county and the right to be read in every other country.

This creates both a concept of there being a censorship list one can be added to and incentivizes escalating attempts to control what can be viewed.

DNS is extremely easy to bypass which is really only half the problem. The other half is the complexity of bypassing blocking can trivially be outsourced to devs of sharing apps who can both implement search and DNS or even vpn.

Technical barriers that are basically boxes for clients to tick are entirely useless your citizens may manage limited complexity budgets but they can outsource those to developers.

The logical path this leads you to are technical and restrictions on what content applications are allowed to display, what applications one is allowed to install based on their compliance with point one, restrictions on what OS one is allowed to install based on compliance with point two.

Then you can control ability to access network resources based on compliance with point three.

This was all speced out decades ago and the technology embedded in your motherboard and somewhat in play on mobile platforms.

Once you have this you will actually have effective censorship tools and now have to worry about how they might be misused when previously we might be reassured by our ability to bypass censorship at need.

When you come down to it the entire content producing industry is of only modest value compared to say science and technology and has more resources than it's ever had before and freemoviesxxx.com is little actual threat to it's existence. It mostly prevents useless people without a creative bone in their body who have never contributed to society in any fashion from maximizing their revenue sufficient to afford a second yacht.

Twisting consumer tech the necessary gateway for all modern communication and culture to increase their revenue slightly is the tail wagging the dog.

Any attempt to take one step down the road ought to result in the offenders being nuked from orbit because their entire destruction would be better end result for society than their success.

How would you feel about javajosh.com being taken down for linking to unlicensed content at some point in the past? This is a great example of the “first they came for…” scenario.
Its a great example of a slippery slope fallacy. I agree it's troubling, in general, to attack the mechanisms used to commit crime. On those grounds you could legitimately outlaw cars ("get-away vehicles!") the post office ("a conduit for illegal drugs, porn, etc!"), computers, ("an essential tool for hackers!").

I'm just saying, taking down the DNS entry for "obviously" criminal domains doesn't bother me. And yes, when it's not obvious, or worse, is maliciously abused by power to silence dissent, then yes, it's worth being upset about. The slippery slope fallacy is all about extrapolating how power could be abused, leaving the only response to take away power entirely. But that's impossible, because power exists. So let's have an adult conversation about how to use it for the good of all.

Your argument seems entirely contradictory. If you agree on the slippery slope, blocking at the DNS level is a perfect example of it.
> I think that if a site is bad enough to warrant being taken down, it should be taken down by the authorities that host it.

That is essentially saying that nothing is bad enough to warrant being taken down ever.

People shouldn't have to tour every possible jurisdiction on earth to have something taken down in the jurisdiction they live in.

> People shouldn't have to tour every possible jurisdiction on earth to have something taken down in the jurisdiction they live in.

Yes, they should. Or they can save a lot of effort and just block it locally.

One sovereign people shouldn't be prevented by another sovereign people from conducting their lives as they see fit. Global rules are incompatible with respecting the vast diversity of humans on this planet.

Hopefully, 9.9.9.9 can apply this ruling specifically to German CIDRs and be done with it.

> Or they can save a lot of effort and just block it locally.

That's essentially the purpose of DNS bans. They are enforced by a given jurisdiction, but they let you solve the root problem rather than running around host providers in foreign jurisdictions.

No, that doesn't work. If anybody could say what should happen globally, and nobody would argue about it, then we wouldn't need courts and borders. The whole point of courts and borders and jurisdictions is to resolve disputes. We wouldn't have copyright law if there weren't copyright disputes. So you can't just say "if any court anywhere decides something, it should apply globally." Because the next court over, in the next jurisdiction, can rule the opposite way. What then?
You seem to believe that my comment implies that laws should apply worldwide, while it simply states that DNS bans are by construction localized.
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Unfortunately .onion is not a permanent address. All .onion addresses are transient and The Tor Project reserves the right to completely remove support for addresses whenever they feel it might impact the privacy/security of the tor network.

For example, on October 15th of this year all Tor addresses from the last 15 years of Tor v2 will stop being supported and will vanish into thin air.

That's in part because it's become feasible to brute force v2 Onion addresses, hence enforcing the use of v3.
I wish they hadn't complied. It wouldn't be the first time a tech company stood up to this kind of thing. (Github and youtube-dl, Digg and HDDVD key, etc).

Not familiar with German law. What would happen if they simply ignored the injunction?

The police might come take their DNS servers.
probably impossible since they are sitting in switzerland and are not subjected to this directly.
The organization is in Switzerland, but the DNS servers are all over the world - including in Germany (for now).
That would have been really nice, but I can't blame them. If I were in their position, I would save my company and employees first. Making noise about it comes after their wellbeing.
That's not how activism works. No one will pay attention and writing White House online petitions doesn't do anything either.
We don't have any staff based in Germany, and none of us are traveling to Germany until this is settled.
Neither Digg nor GitHub stood up to a court order in either of these cases. A DMCA notice was used with no court involvement in both cases.
I'm pretty sure it would be the first time. Normally they fight it in court, they don't disobey court orders after the fact. Neither of your examples did. If they did their hardware would be confiscated by the police.
Yes, it's unfortunate, but it's still a far superior position than, say, Google or GoDaddy.

In this case, Quad9 is being compelled by a court, with the force of law, to do so.

GoDaddy and Google will yank your entire domain if enough anonymous communists complain on Twitter that your content is undesirable.

Are you unable to resolve domain names?
Fun fact: The same court ruled in 2008 that access providers may not be forced to block DNS: https://www.telemedicus.info/lg-hamburg-bestaetigt-wirkungsl...

This Hamburg court in particular has produced hundreds of scandalous injunctions over the years, many of which were overturned later.

Unfortunately Germany has a Civil Law system, so precedents aren't binding.
Can you explain what you mean by that? I know precedent law in the US doesn’t guarantee a verdict but it vastly speeds up the appeals process.
See:

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_law

vs

* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_law_(legal_system)

"The civil law system is often contrasted with the common law system, which originated in medieval England, whose intellectual framework historically came from uncodified judge-made case law, and gives precedential authority to prior court decisions."

There are precedents in civil law too. It's just that judges have less leeway in "creating" law than in the common law systems and thus precedents are not as binding because the law is supposed to be already laid our precisely.

And civil law systems are not all tuned the same way.

>because the law is supposed to be already laid our precisely

Well that's the problem right there. Some times the laws are stupid or out of date so you end up getting screwed by some unscrupulous megacorp willing to abuse said outdated laws.

Sure, the right sollution is to change the laws but you're in court right NOW and the process of changing laws is slow and the lawmakers heavily influenced by lobbyists and powerful interest groups to resist changes that affect them.

I am not defending any system here.

And the common law system has also many shortcomings, especially when judges are basically political appointees.

Quite a lot of these lawsuits happening in Germany against local businesses. But can a German court really order a company located in Switzerland to comply? I thought that was the main selling point of Swiss-based companies.
> But can a German court really order a company located in Switzerland to comply?

They sure can! It's just one of the many "perks" of the EU.

Switzerland isn't in the EU. In this case it is a separate treaty which allows it.
DNS is distributed, you can always run your own resolver https://openwrt.org/docs/guide-user/services/dns/unbound
Have there been any attempts/successes to issue injunctions against roots?
I wonder if any legislation can make the root servers block things
It could make the root server hosted in one country do so, at which point hopefully the other roots would simply de-list that faulty root server (and start seeking to establish another root server elsewhere).
The root servers (ICANN) are still under the remit of the US department of commerce, so it’s theoretically possible for US legislation at least.
I might be misunderstanding something since I've never been a DNS expert, but wouldn't root servers only be able to block at the level of entire TLDs? Not to say that governments couldn't be interested in doing that, but the flexibility seems limited (without e.g. requiring the root server to return government-approved servers and implementing the blocking on those servers).
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Unless they wanted to delist an entire country for some reason it's the TLD servers they would need to go after, not the root servers. And yes, they could attempt to go after the TLD itself and not just the ISP's caching recursive resolver. This is why distributed, censorship-resistant domain resolution is so important. The Internet may be distributed and capable of routing around censorship, but the current DNS system is relatively centralized and thus vulnerable to attack.
I have run my own DNS resolver since that time when VeriSign decided to hijack all unregistered .com and .net domains (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Site_Finder); by running your own recursive DNS resolver, it could detect the hijacked responses and turn them back into the correct NXDOMAIN response.
The entire point of this injunction is that it can be applied to people running their own resolvers.
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"The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it".

- John Gilmore

Worked so well for Parler, Damore, or even Trump.
We're in a very dark period where people are fine with censoring viewpoints that they don't agree with, especially around political boundaries. It's very unfortunate - censorship is censorship, plain and simple.
Yup. I gave up arguing with the posters and even founder of TechDirt about it. They call it 'content moderation' when they agree with it and censorship when they don't, based on whether it's left leaning (Good™) or right leaning (Bad™).

It's so bizarre how the left controls the house, the presidency, academia, the mainstream media for the most part, all of the big tech companies, but complain that the Republicans are the fascists.

We either have free speech, or we have fascism. And it's not the right trying to censor and cancel people, it's the authoritarian left who feel like they know better than everyone else. Very irritating as a libleft, because they read my disagreement as being right leaning rather than freedom loving.

If you are a freedom lover foremost perhaps you should work more on making the issue seperate from right vs left rhetorics. Always look at why someone wants to censor, rather than just assume it's because of ordinary left vs. right. The scale seems to a lot more binary in the US than I'm used to.

It's not a left right issue, we do need to have sex-ed in schools, you need to talk about homosexuality, and the problem with nationalism even the american flavour. I don't even think those are issues that all left leaning people agree on. Dig deeper.

> Always look at why someone wants to censor

Just as if logic was working. Last time I checked from the Smithsonian woke bullshit, logic itself is racist... Oh well.

> we do need to have sex-ed in schools, you need to talk about homosexuality

Over my dead body. My children will not hear about any trans / Kinsey reports bullshit, or even CRT clusterfuck for that matter.

>If you are a freedom lover foremost perhaps you should work more on making the issue seperate from right vs left rhetorics.

I have tried. It simply doesn't work. Proudly censorious authoritarian leftists. They see themselves as the good guys saving the world, and if that means free speech has to go, then so be it.

I'm reminded of this quote:

>“There is no worse tyranny than to force a man to pay for what he does not want merely because you think it would be good for him.”

― Robert A. Heinlein, The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress

The problem with opposing civil rights movements is that reciprocity matters in the real world. People are disinclined to support your rights if they see you as advocating against theirs.
This might have been the case maybe 30 years ago, today's mentality is really all about submission to power, their power. If they say "put a hand on your stomach, one on your head, and turn from right to left singing the International on a single hand", you better do it, or fear being cancelled.
I’m not accepting your assertion as fact. There are currently multiple civil rights movements facing organized conservative resistance.

You can invent whatever moralizing obligation you want, but I don’t think it’s reasonable expect an organized effort from the {$outgroup} community to defend the rights rights of the people who designated them the outgroup.

Existence of such groups is not your original assertion. You stated:

> People are disinclined to support your rights if they see you as advocating against theirs.

By that argument, the Libertarians would be loved by everybody, but they aren't, because it's no longer a discussion on ethics, it's a fight over holly dogma. The ACLU will no longer support people on the Right in the name of Free Speech. Lines in the sand have been dug by the left, and they no longer crosses them. The right, (ie. the MSM's fascist) however do it all the time because they are the most open ones. If you are a gay 1sh amendment absolutist, you aren't gay, you're just a nazi. The ancients Greeks are no longer the bases of our culture/civilization, they're esclavagist.

> The ACLU will no longer support people on the Right in the name of Free Speech.

This is false[0]. After that, we appear to be getting into Godwin's law territory, so I'm gonna leave it alone.

[0] https://www.aclu.org/news/civil-liberties/defending-speech-w...

Just because they take credit for what they did in the past doesn't mean it will happen again. When did the ACLU last take the KKK's defence ?

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/06/us/aclu-free-speech.html

The ACLU actively advertised in the Kavanaugh nomination.

Then an ACLU trans lawyer stated: “Stopping the circulation of this book and these ideas is 100% a hill I will die on.”

Then in 2018 they covertly backed Stacey Abrams (democrat).

Then an ACLU editor wishes death on a republican senator.

and so on... The ACLU has very much been gangrened by the marxist.

Parler is online again, and I don't think Gilmore was saying that the internet would prevent you from losing your job.
If Quad9 complies, I would stay away from Quad9 services as they are not fighting for the right thing.
> Artists deserve to be compensated,

I like this dig at Sony. I don't believe for a second that Sony has any interest of the artists in mind. It's all about their own profits at all cost. They wouldn't care in the slightest if artists died of hunger. But that's just my opinion from dealing with the record labels myself.

Sony BMG can talk a long walk off a short pier. They're blood-sucking, rent-seeking, cannibal vampires.

If people would watch it, they would pay homeless people to dance and fight each other in LA's canals during a storm, monetize it, advertise it on all platforms, and they would still sleep OK at night.

It's true. Sony doesn't care about artists, any more than your boss or company cares about you.

But they are, nonetheless, the ones paying the artists. Not nearly enough, and with plenty of shenanigans, but that doesn't change the fact that every movie ends with a long, long, long list of people who got paid for working on it -- by Sony.

It's disingenuous for Sony to pretend they care about anything other than their own profits. It's just tugging at heartstrings. Few of them actually get a share of the profits. They work for a paycheck.

But they've nonetheless got a point: they hire artists, lots of 'em. Some of their profits go into making the next movie.

Arguably, that's better than caring about them. I don't particularly like facile capitalist arguments, but Adam Smith's quote about the baker really does apply here: the artists don't need Sony to care, they just need Sony to pursue its own self interest because it happens to also profit them.

You won't see me crying over Sony's lost profits, and I'd love for more people to see movies other than studio blockbusters. But I know a lot of people who make movies and they do, in fact, get their paychecks and royalty checks from Sony.

Is the censorship applied globally or just to their resolvers in or near Germany? Unfortunately the domain names are redacted so it’s not straightforward to test this.
There is no censorship. This is an ongoing dispute between a court in Hamburg and a non-profit in Switzerland. When the dispute is eventually settled, Quad9 either will or will not be providing service in Germany.

https://quad9.net/service/privacy

"Quad9 commits to obey the law in any country in which it operates. Therefore, it will only operate in countries with a rule of law compatible with Quad9's ethics and moral duty to protect users. If a government were to use national law to attempt to force Quad9 to act in a way that would harm users (such as collecting information that might de-anonymize an at-risk individual), Quad9 would withdraw from operations in that country. This does not mean users within that country would be prevented from using the Quad9 service (unless the country itself prevented them); the service will operate from locations in nearby countries."

Great stuff. I respect your commitment to your users.
So now we know why the push to centralize DNS even more... ?
I can see why one would be concerned about a heavily centralized DNS, but what I've experienced in the real world is that today's DNS gives me infinitely more options than I had back when I started on the Internet.

Back in the day, you were often limited to one or two widely known public servers (MCI's for example) or your ISPs. Today I have tons of providers of public DNS, all with different advantages and tradeoffs, including paid features and support. This alone is radically better than the choices we had ~20 years ago.

Add to that the fact that I can run my own caching resolver without reading a 642 page paper bound book (see pihole vs a dog-eared copy of DNS and BIND by Liu and and Albitz), and we're far from the dystopian nightmare you seem to be referring to.

> you were often limited to one or two widely known public servers

I have a found memory for the days when you could still use ns.sun.com (192.9.9.3) as a recursive resolver as it was such an easy to remember IP (for those days anyway).

Unless he edited his comment it said nothing of the sort. It states there's a push and there is.
I've been a happily paying customer of Spotify for nearly a decade now.

This is the kind of shit that makes me reconsider returning to piracy.

1.1.1.1 is the solution?
Cloudflare's public DNS would need to be within this jurisdiction or be hit in a similar way in another jurisdiction.

Edit: whoops, I thought Quad9 was an ISP.

What makes you think CloudFlare (or Google/8.8) could not be hit with the same legal injunction? This is a court order and Quad9 must comply, as would CloudFlare or Google.
I am not aware of 1.1 or 8.8 ever being forced to block/change DNS. While this does not prove they won't in the future, considering the popularity of the services this suggests US law is on their side.

Additionally, Cloudflare has previously shown commitment to deliver DNS exactly as it receives it with no changes (see archive.me debacle).

Except in the case of deciding to exclude EDNS Client Subnet, which in my experience completely borks CDNs. Which is why I switched to Quad9 in the first place.
I get what you're saying, but we're talking about a very specific action: a court injunction. Whether or not it will be overturned or invalid is a followup - I am not versed at all on German law but I would assume it's a criminal penalty to refuse to comply with a court injunction (for anything, not just this). As stated in the blog, they will comply and fight the injunction's validity.
That is not exactly what the blog says.

None of us will be traveling to Germany until this is settled.

> We have retained counsel, and we are in the process of filing an objection to the injunction, though we are required to comply with it.

Sir, I interpret your words as what I stated above - you will comply as required by law and fight the injunction as invalid. If you have another meaning, please clarify.

Nothing has yet been proposed which is technically possible to comply with, to the best of our knowledge. There has been no mechanism proposed whereby we could be in compliance, nor has anyone proposed a way of meeting the very substantial cost of making it happen. Nor has anyone yet addressed issues of proportionality, which I gather are central to this part of German law. Nor, as a public-benefit foundation, is it even legal for us to convert resources from the public benefit to Sony's private benefit, and that hasn't yet been addressed. So it is, for many reasons, very premature to be talking about compliance with the injunction.

For now, there's the filing of objection in the Hamburg court, then the appeal to a superior court... There are many steps here, and the first have barely been taken.

> I am not aware of 1.1 or 8.8 ever being forced to block/change DNS.

Maybe because both have a DMCA process in place and don’t see the need fighting in the courts?

> considering the popularity of the services this suggests US law is on their side.

That won't help much if they're brought before EU courts.

The reason Google doesn't get brought to courts like that is because they already comply with rights owners.

Reading the suit, it is interesting that it is very much based around the fact that Quad9 already blocks resolution for "malicious" domains, and therefore already has a censorship process in place. Basically "you're already censoring, one more domain won't hurt."
I am curious if this also applies to their unfiltered version 9.9.9.10 then.
Hm, but they also offer a DNS without the malware filter. Does that imply that they would not have to block "pirate" sites on the unfiltered resolver?
Which makes their argument about "the cost" mostly invalid
you can also add *.sony.* to that "one more" list. pretty sure there'd be no law against that - wonder if they'd appreciate it though.
That's the assertion Sony makes, but that doesn't actually make it true. Quad9 doesn't do any blocking, Quad9 relies entirely upon third-party expert malware analysts to define the blocks. Quad9 only decides what _not_ to block. Also, Quad9 blocks the same malware and phishing everywhere, because we don't know who or where users are. So Sony asserts that this is possible, but they certainly don't demonstrate how it could be done, much less who would pay for it.
Sony: the surreptitious installer of rootkits, COPA violator, and payola bribers. Now, with 50% more suck through DNS censorship!
The sad thing is, i like Sonys desing and the hardware a lot. But I think now is the point, where I just can't support that company anymore. A bit the same like Windows. Even I was early on Linux for most things, I still allways had Windows beside. But with Win10, I just couldn't agree to the EULA, so im Linux only since then.
The fact that Quad9 so easily complies = will not use quad9
Or, the fact that you don't seem to be able to use dig, your loss.
I was sued in Germany by Axel Springer due to an ad blocker I wrote. The lower court of Hamburg ruled against me. They openly admitted they did not know what they were doing because the case was too technical for them. They were just happy to please the big corporation.

Hamburg is a favourite for such cases because they just have no clue about technology. They are just old fashioned.

As a small indie developer, I could not afford to keep on fighting. I gave up. I was a psychological wreck. And since it is not binding, big entities can afford to sue you non-stop.

Hamburg was the second time I was in a court. I got sued by the same big corporation. I won the first one.

Despite not being binding Sony will use this as a precedent and they will start going against the bigger DNS players, till all of them have to comply with their demands.

>They were just happy to please the big corporation

In Germany?! Never! /s

This reminds me how the gyms in Germany were told by the government they were not allowed to collect membership fees during the lockdown but the big chains did it anyway on the basis of "what are you gonna do about it?". So if you wanted gyms to comply, each customer had to take their gym to court on an individual basis but most never bothered.

It's crazy, from a foreigner's perspective, with how much shenanigans big business in Germany can get away with legally, considering how strict and bureaucratic Germany is. And don't get me started on customer service.

Thus the saying: "More laws, less justice"
get your bank to charge back the card for fraudulent charges to your account
Nope, most banks(specially online-only) will decline your charge back citing some super complex directive that is totally unrelated & you can't appeal. Charge backs will work for no name small merchants mostly.
That's really strange logic. It's the government which block the people to use the gym service, not the gym. The damage was caused by the government and if somebody to compensate the damage, it should be the government.
The gyms got paid compensation by the government.
Are you a German resident or otherwise subject to their jurisdiction? What would happen if you just ignored the lawsuit, and/or ignored the final judgment?
seems to be a German company: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11584052

Eventually they'll sue you for damages, the court will rule that you have to stop what you are doing (as they already did so, and violating a court order seems like a surefire way to escalate the situation), plus the monetary compensation for the damages. And at that point it's just easy-peasy call the collections agency, and they'll just make your life more and more miserable by taking your stuff/car/home/etc. (Similarly if "you are" a company.)

As a company, they can only take what belongs to the company. Even if you're selfemployed they should only be able (IIRC, IANAL) to take things that are 100% part of the business.
This is definitely not true for German law.
For a mbH-type it is.
Right, but the vast majority of self-employed people are going to be "Einzelunternehmer" or maybe in a GbR
That's because in that case the legal entity of the company and the natural entity behind it are the same. A GmbH and similar are not directly associated with that. The quick way to prevent issues is to quickly register private insolvency if the money of your corporation is not enough to cover your bills. That means you get to keep a profit of 1.178,59€ monthly plus any necessities like rent and gas/power bills. At most this takes five years and you're free.
Why did you put your name under that ad blocker?

I remember "the good old web" (tm) where people did stuff anonymosly. In this way people can stay safe and continue publishing stuff.

The moral solution is to fix justice, the pragmatic solution is to not use your real name. In that light, I also have to ask, why did you use your real name?
I forgot that HN is a place for pure ideology.

Honestly, if the world was run by such people, we would be still in discussions and evaluations.

Sometimes you just have to accept facts and move on.

In Germany, if you run a website of any kind, it has to include an imprint, which is required to list a legal entity which usually is a person.

See https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impressumspflicht#Telemedienge...

Source: I'm a German, I publish websites.

Then run a .com address and you do not need an Impressum. Problem solved. LOL.

Source: I am also a German, I publish .com websites.

nope. it's not solved. If anybody knows who you are, if you still live in germany, you will be fined. the law has nothing to do with an ending of the dns or some stupid shit. it only applies to juridical persons in germany.
> If anybody knows who you are

I think the point here is to not disclose your identity online as a defense against bullshit lawsuits. Whether you agree with the approach itself is one thing, but if it works at protecting against lawsuits it'll definitely work at protecting against enforcement of this law.

it won't work at protecting against law enforcement. if they want you, they will find a way.
It will kind of. Law enforcement does not have unlimited resources, and its limited resources have to be prioritized based on the severity of the infringement. Lack of an "impressum" by itself would be quite tame unless there has been some other crime committed (or at the very least a credible tip or complaint) that would justify law enforcement looking into it in the first place.

Furthermore, when it comes to the lack of "impressum", merely determining whether the law has been broken would be difficult with proper anonymity. Let's say he's based in Germany but anonymously purchases hosting in the US or another country and never discloses his German residency on the website - in this case it's impossible from the outside to even determine whether he is actually breaking this law, removing the probable cause for an investigation in the first place. As far as I'm aware, Germany does not - and wouldn't have the resources anyway - to thoroughly investigate every foreign-hosted website to determine whether its owner is actually based in Germany and is thus breaking the law by not publishing an "impressum".

It's not solved. If you're based in Germany, as soon as you are doing any business and collect information from people, or better - money, you gotta do it.

Interestingly, you only have to do it IF you have an online presence. As in, you don't have to have an online presence when running a business.

Right, but you don't need an impressum for a GitHub repo or a browser extension, right? I guess the GP probably did run a website.
Which first or second world country doesn't abide by big corporations? Is there a useful ranking that would measure it? I'm really curious.
Switzerland is a third world country. This classification is outdated.
The problem is that this precedent applies not just to DNS operators, but to literally _any_ unrelated bystander. Sony make very clear in their complaint that Quad9 has no relationship with any party to the alleged infringement. That's why their so excited about this, it's a step further than they've ever taken before.
This reminds me of hearing about a surge of tech patent cases being litigated in the Eastern District of Texas, though according to this paper, there were perhaps reasons other than selecting a jurisdiction based on purported lack of the locals’ familiarity with technology: https://scholar.smu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1146&con...
> As a small indie developer, I could not afford to keep on fighting. I gave up.

You probably could ask EFF for help in this case.

It's amazing Quad9 is run as a non-profit org.

I run an email forwarding[0] app and I need to do a lot of DNS query(for spam filtering purpose), I run dnsmasq top load balance between CloudFlare, OpenDNS, GoogleDNS, Quad9 and Hetzner DNS. Quad9 outperform the rest with 2-4x faster and more reliable. In term of reliable I meant they won't rate limit me.

If anyone need reliable DNS, Quad9 rocks it. I'll contribute my part on this battle too.

Thanks Quad9

---

0: https://hanami.run

While I like Quad9 I get better results (IE. faster, etc.) from Uncensored DNS[1] and unlike most, including Quad9 now, it is, well, uncensored.

https://uncensoreddns.org/

I think that you may have just accidentally put them in harm's way (if Sony is reading here), since they're in Denmark (which the Hamburg court could also reach).
I doubt they would be successful :)
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Thank you! We hugely appreciate it! If this were just about us, we could have the Swiss courts throw it out, like US courts would, but that would leave the precedent standing and usable against anyone in the EU. So we need to fight this in Germany, and that's going to be expensive. Eco, the German Internet association, have committed a bit to the legal defense fund, and we're talking with the EFF and Digital Freedom Fund.
This is what the TOR browser is for.
No, this is what DNS sevices like uncensoreddns.org is for.
No, actually, uncensoreddns would have been a much softer target for Sony... They're in the EU, while Quad9 is in Switzerland.
Oh well. I use Quad9. But at least now when a torrent site won't work I'm reminded to turn on the VPN .