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      Brazil and Colombia outraged over Venezuela’s bids to block opposition

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Tuesday, 26 March - 18:46

    Nations respond to strongman Nicolás Maduro blocking María Corina Machado and now Corina Yoris from running against him

    A chorus of Latin American nations, including Brazil and Colombia, have voiced concern over the deteriorating political situation in Venezuela after the opposition politician best-positioned to challenge its strongman leader, Nicolás Maduro, in July’s presidential election was prevented from registering for the vote.

    Corina Yoris, an 80-year-old philosopher, was little-known outside academic circles until last Friday, when she was catapulted onto the frontline of Venezuela’s long-running political crisis by being named as the substitute for María Corina Machado , a prominent opposition figure who had been banned from running in the election.

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      From the archive: Operation Condor: the cold war conspiracy that terrorised South America. – podcast

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 20 March - 05:00


    We are raiding the Guardian Long Read archives to bring you some classic pieces from years past, with new introductions from the authors.

    This week, from 2020: During the 1970s and 80s, eight US-backed military dictatorships jointly plotted the cross-border kidnap, torture, rape and murder of hundreds of their political opponents. Now some of the perpetrators are finally facing justice by Giles Tremlett

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      Darwin Núñez swaps chaos for control but needs a statement showing | Jonathan Liew

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Friday, 24 November - 19:00 · 1 minute

    Forward is no longer a figure of fun but, like his team, a big performance against elite opposition has been lacking

    The first touch is a little heavy. Still, he retains possession and drives into the right channel with a billowing burst of pace. Gets tackled by Nathan Aké. Writhes around theatrically on the turf for a while, grimacing and holding his ankle. Has a little argument with the referee. Chases down a long ball as the next phase of play resets. Almost collides head-on with a teammate. Diverts his run into the penalty area. Scores an awkward header from four yards. Tears towards the corner in celebration. Rips off his shirt. Gets booked.

    Darwin Núñez’s first taste of English football came against Manchester City in the 2022 Community Shield . In retrospect this late passage of play – one minute of pure, liquid Darwin – was the moment the template was set. The hurricane. The cult hero. The agent of chaos. Andy Carroll with a slightly bigger price tag and a similar command of English. From the moment Núñez arrived on these shores, accompanied by a slew of unflattering social media clips and lazy comparisons with Erling Haaland, he would discover that his role as a kind of pantomime cow had largely been pre-assigned to him.

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      New Pirate Site Blocking Law Allows Intermediaries To File Complaints

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Sunday, 4 December, 2022 - 19:00 · 4 minutes

    stopstop A decade ago prominent voices issued dire warnings that blocking would “break the internet,” but of course, the internet survived, just as blocking advocates said it would.

    That meant tacit permission for more piracy blocks, then faster blocks, and then both – with less involvement of the courts and unnecessary public oversight. And with the groundwork done, other countries could quickly implement the same kinds of systems because the Internet is doing just fine .

    Those who issued those warnings a decade ago weren’t supporters of piracy – but they did know what was coming. Dozens of countries now have site-blocking systems in place and ISPs actively help to set them up. The recent moves against DNS providers are alarming but in time, they too will become the latest uncontested standard before implementation of the next incremental step, followed by the next.

    Of course, it would be alarmist to even imply that blocking, censoring, or diverting other types of information might suit future governments worldwide. Uruguay certainly doesn’t think so. Freedom of expression is fully guaranteed for citizens, groups and the press, without any kind of censorship, including the internet . With some exceptions, apparently.

    Uruguay Implements Site-Blocking

    Following legal action by Fox Networks Group Latin America, in 2018 a criminal court in Uruguay instructed local ISPs to block popular sports streaming portal RojaDirecta.

    The head of the Fox Networks’ anti-piracy unit described the ruling as “the beginning of judicial awareness on online piracy issues.” It was indeed just the beginning.

    The government made its intentions clear in 2020 with Article 712 of Law No. 19,924, which envisioned the Communications Services Regulatory Unit (URSEC) taking the lead to ensure that allegedly infringing content was blocked by local Internet service providers, before it could reach consumers in Uruguay.

    Time to Start Blocking

    Uruguay’s Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mining (MIEM), issued a decree on October 25, 2022. It states that since it is “the obligation of the State to ensure the protection of intellectual work and copyright,” the introduction of a pirate site blocking regime is the government’s response.

    “The issued decree was conceived to eliminate the broadcasting of television signals broadcast through the Internet or similar networks, for unauthorized commercial purposes, which violates laws 9,739, on literary and artistic property, and 17,616, on the protection of intellectual property,” a government statement reads.

    Any complaints concerning illegal TV streams must be sent to the Communications Services Regulatory Unit (URSEC). If the regulator is satisfied, instructions will be issued to service providers to implement blocking or similar measures within four days.

    What sets this system apart from those available in most other countries is that applications for blocking can be filed by companies that aren’t necessarily the ultimate rightsholders of TV shows or movies.

    TV Services and Intermediaries

    As Article 1 of Decree No. 345/022 explains, operators of licensed television services in Uruguay can report pirate services to URSEC for evaluation and if the regulator agrees, comprehensive blocking measures will follow.

    [T]he holders of television services for subscribers may file a well-founded complaint with the URSEC, as an affidavit, so that the Unit can evaluate it and order, if applicable, the notification to platforms and/or independent intermediaries or the provision of a temporary electronic blockade that is necessary to prevent access from the national territory to IP addresses (Internet Protocol) and/or Internet domains (DNS) and/or URLs (Uniform Resource Locator), corresponding to specific offers of infringing products, services and/or content, as appropriate, that are used to develop such activities, under the sole responsibility of the person filing the complaint.

    Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph, when the platform and/or the independent intermediary have their own complaint mechanisms for the removal of content and/or sales offers of allegedly illegal products and/or services, the owner or representative of the complainant, may appeal through the means provided by the intermediary, in order to assert their rights through the fastest and most effective means.(Translated from Spanish)

    The decree’s Article 3 details the rest of the process, including that assumed pirate services will initially face blocking for up to 30 days in advance of a judicial review.

    Blocking vs. Freedom of Expression

    The Latin American and Caribbean Internet Address Registry (LACNIC) appreciates the new blocking regime is designed to protect content from piracy. However, it has fears that freedom of expression could be a casualty due to an absence of skills to implement accurate blocking.

    “Recently the state published a decree in which the authorities can block sites that violate intellectual property rights, in essence: television signals that are transmitted illegally,” says Oscar Robles Garay, executive director of LACNIC.

    “It’s okay to protect the intellectual property of others, but sometimes when you do that without enough technical expertise, other rights can be affected: websites, government sites, schools and more, which is clearly not the focus of these measures.”

    A decision on whether live streams should be blocked within 30 minutes of a complaint has been delayed until next year but, given moves in other regions, implementation seems is only a question of time.

    After that, requests for complex dynamic injunctions will likely follow and when they aren’t considered effective enough, interference with DNS records seems the next likely blocking candidate. By then, even more aggressive blocking options will become available, most likely across 45 to 50 countries, covering just hundreds of millions of internet users, and countless ISPs and intermediaries.

    When none of these measures return the required results, tougher measures will undoubtedly follow. But whatever they are, the internet will never, ever break. Promise.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      Why Uruguay’s “miracle” Covid-19 app failed to deliver

      pubsub.do.nohost.me / Rest of World · Friday, 12 February, 2021 - 11:00

    In March 2020, Uruguay reported its first Covid-19 case. Software engineer Laura Aguiar immediately called Gastón Milano, CTO of the Montevideo-based software development firm GeneXus. Aguiar offered to help in creating a digital solution to combat the virus, but Milano was already one step ahead of her. In the days prior, he had coordinated hundreds of the country’s technologists around the...

    Source

    Journée #internationale des victimes de disparitions forcées

    Le 30 août, le Groupe #Amériques du Secrétariat International de la #CNT s’associe à la Journée Internationale des Victimes forcées, et témoigne tout son soutien aux familles des victimes, ainsi qu’aux organisations qui luttent pour la vérité et la justice à travers le sous-continent latino-américain.

    En effet, depuis les années des dictatures en #Argentine, au #Chili, en #Uruguay, au #Paraguay, au #Pérou, au #Brésil, en #Bolivie et dans de nombreux autres pays, les familles des disparus continuent de réclamer la vérité sur le sort de leurs proches qui reste généralement opaque, malgré les efforts déployés grâce aux luttes pour la mémoire et la dignité…

    http://www.cnt-f.org/international/Journee-internationale-des-victimes-de-disparitions-forcees.html

    #répression #lutte #social #politique #internationalisme
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      Montevideo, Uruguay : Attaque incendiaire du bureau de l’académie militaire argentine

      pubsub.movim.eu / anarmonde · Sunday, 5 November, 2017 - 01:36 · 1 minute

    A l’aube du mardi 24 octobre, une attaque incendiaire a été menée contre le bâtiment qui héberge le bureau de l’académie militaire d’argentine à Montevideo. L’attaque a causé des dommages importants à la façade du bâtiment.

    Devant le silence officiel qui essaye de passer notre action sous le tapis, nous avons choisi d’écrire cette revendication pour lui donner du sens et la contextualiser.

    Après la confirmation de la mort du compagnon Santiago Maldonado qui a placé le conflit Mapuche sous le feu des projecteurs à travers le monde, nous avons décidé d’attaquer ce symbole de l’État argentin afin d’exprimer notre solidarité avec la cause des opprimés – et dans ce cas là la lutte des Mapuches, ainsi que de venger notre compagnon tombé et de lui rendre hommage.

    Nous dénonçons la connivence entre l’État argentin et la multinationale Benetton, propriétaire légal mais illégitime de millions d’hectares dans la Patagonie argentine, endroit qui lui sert entre autres à élever des moutons pour l’industrie textile, terres qui sont dédiées à plusieurs projets contaminés, tels que l’extraction minière, la déforestation ou la culture de soja transgénique.

    Nous saluons avec nos poings serrés les frères Mapuche qui continuent à résister à l’usurpation oppressive et qui demandent également la libération immédiate de Facundo Jones Huala.

    Santiago vit à travers la lutte des opprimés !

    Marichiwew!

    Vive l’anarchie !

    Commando nocturne invisible

    [Traduit de l’italien de la Croce Nera Anarchica, 31 ottobre 2017]

    #anarchistes #Uruguay