Netflix, Inc. Using Outside Help In Its War Against VPNs, 4 April 2016

Lumen, which is a Harvard University Berkman Center for Internet and Society project studying online content take-down requests, claims that in the past four months, Vobile has filed more than 350 take-down notices against Google, asking the search giant to remove suspected URLs from its search results, the report says.

Source: Netflix, Inc. Using Outside Help In Its War Against VPNs

Hacking That iPhone May Be the Best Option for Everyone – Morning Consult, 4 April 2016

Encryption is more common, but as more devices are linked to the internet, more unencrypted data will be available. “The trajectory of technological development points to a future abundant in unencrypted data,” wrote several researchers in a recent paper from the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University.

Source: Hacking That iPhone May Be the Best Option for Everyone – Morning Consult

Netflix enlists outside help to crack down on piracy, virtual-border hopping | Toronto Star, 3 April 2016

Over roughly the past four months, Vobile filed more than 350 takedown notices to Google, according to Lumen, a Harvard University Berkman Center for Internet and Society project studying online content takedown requests. The notices ask Google to remove the suspected URLs from its search results.

Source: Netflix enlists outside help to crack down on piracy, virtual-border hopping | Toronto Star

New Berkman report curates best practices in transparency reporting – Harvard Law Today | Harvard Law Today, 1 April 2016

‘The Transparency Reporting Toolkit: Survey and Best Practice Memos,’ a new report from the Berkman Center for Internet & Society and the Open Technology Initiative, is a compilation of eight memos that look at the major challenges that U.S. Internet and telecommunications companies face when reporting on U.S. law enforcement and government requests for user information, and identify industry best practices for this transparency reporting.

Source: New Berkman report curates best practices in transparency reporting – Harvard Law Today | Harvard Law Today

Should the FBI tell Apple how it cracked the iPhone? (+video) – CSMonitor.com, 1 April 2016

“While it is appropriate for law enforcement, with a warrant, to use a security flaw to gain access to which it is legally entitled, the flaw should be patched as soon as possible for everyone else’s sake,” Jonathan Zittrain, a professor of law and computer science at Harvard Law School, told the Monitor.

Source: Should the FBI tell Apple how it cracked the iPhone? (+video) – CSMonitor.com