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日本通信、ドコモ音声網との相互接続サービス開始を半年延期

2025年11月7日 11:45
日本通信は、NTTドコモの音声通信網およびSMS網との相互接続に基づく新サービスの開始時期を、当初予定していた2026年5月24日から同年11月24日に変更すると発表した。2024年2月にドコモと相互接続の合意を結び、2025年6月には携帯電話番号の割り当てを受けていた。他事業者との接続交渉が進展したことから、全体の調整を経て新たなスケジュールを定めた。

Cloudflare Tells US Govt That Foreign Site Blocking Efforts Are Digital Trade Barriers

著者:BeauHD
2025年11月7日 07:45
An anonymous reader quotes a report from TorrentFreak: In a submission for the 2026 National Trade Estimate Report (PDF), Cloudflare warns the U.S. government that site blocking efforts cause widespread disruption to legitimate services. The complaint points to Italy's automated Piracy Shield system, which reportedly blocked "tens of thousands" of legitimate sites. Meanwhile, overbroad IP address blocks in Spain and new automated blocking proposals in France are serious concerns that harm U.S. business interests, Cloudflare reports. [...] Cloudflare urges the USTR to take these concerns into account for its upcoming National Trade Estimate Report. Ideally, it wants these trade barriers to be dismantled. These calls run counter to requests from rightsholders, who urge the USTR to ensure that more foreign countries implement blocking measures. With potential site-blocking legislation being considered in U.S. Congress, that may impact local lobbying efforts as well. If and how the USTR will address these concerns will become clearer early next year, when the 2026 National Trade Estimate Report is expected to be published.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

FBI Subpoenas Registrar for Details on Anonymous Archiving Site Owner

著者:msmash
2025年11月7日 05:11
The FBI has subpoenaed popular Canadian domain registrar Tucows, demanding information about the owner of archive[dot]today, a popular archiving site used to bypass paywalls and avoid sending traffic to original publishers. The subpoena states it relates to a federal criminal investigation but provides no details about the alleged crime. Archive.today posted the document on X the same day. The site, also known as archive.is and archive.ph, started in the early 2010s and rose to prominence during GamerGate when users took snapshots of articles to avoid sending traffic to websites. It now has hundreds of millions of saved pages. The FBI requested the customer name, address, billing information, telephone connection records, payment methods, internet connectivity session times, and device identifiers. Very little is known about who operates the site. A 2013 analysis by Gyrovague suggested it is "a one-person labor of love, operated by a Russian of considerable talent and access to Europe." A 2013 FAQ states the site is privately funded. A 2021 blog post said "it is doomed to die at any moment."

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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