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Japanese district court exonerates man for using Coinhive to mine cryptocurrency

Japanese district court exonerates man for using Coinhive to mine cryptocurrency

On 27 March, a Japanese District court exonerated a man for installing a mining program in users’ computers without their consent, according to a report by Japanese news portal, The Mainchi. The report identified the man in question to be a 31-year-old website designer, who was charged for “illicitly operating computer software,” between October and November 2017. This was a result of using his website for embedding a program that mined cryptocurrency from the visitors’ computer.

The program under spotlight is Coinhive, a cryptocurrency mining service which relies on a code that is designed to be installed on websites. This uses part or all of the computing power, allowing cryptojackers to mine Monero [XMR]. It is the thirteenth largest cryptocurrency by market cap and a leading privacy coin.

The report stated,

“The Yokohama District Court ruled that it would be “excessive” to punish the 31-year-old website designer […] saying that the program could not be considered a computer virus.”

Toshihiro Homma, the Presiding Judge of the Yokohama District Court, stated that the cryptojacker’s action cannot be classified as a crime as embedding the program was not deemed “socially unacceptable.”

Additionally, prosecutors reportedly “sought a fine” of $900 on the basis that the cryptojacker used the program on victims’ computers, without any authorization. It further stated that visitors were completely unaware that their computers were used for mining, thereby resulting in higher electricity costs.

However, this charge was dismissed as the Coinhive program was not used to “damage” users’ personal computers or leak their personal information. The ruling recognized that the program had an impact on visitors, but claimed it to be “minor.” Further, the ruling will be studied by the Yokohama District Public Prosecutors Office.

The website designer said,

“The house search and interrogations were troublesome […] My job is related to the Internet and I want to raise awareness about this ruling among users.”

The post Japanese district court exonerates man for using Coinhive to mine cryptocurrency appeared first on AMBCrypto.

Published at Thu, 28 Mar 2019 19:46:18 +0000

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The podcasts that got me into bitcoin

Before there was Let’s Talk bitcoin, there was Agorist Radio….

A long time ago, I was browsing around the anarchist parts of the internet and stumbled upon a website calledAgoristRadio.com. The site was home to several podcasts with titles such as “Cypherpunkd”, “The Agorist Social Club”, “Coinbase”, and “Reality Exploit Roundtable”. Each podcast was hosted by Hiro White, the admin of the Agorist Radio website, with a slew of different guests and co-hostsincluding Indee, Plato, Smuggler, Voodoo, and Wiseguy. The topics they covered included 3D printing, cryptography, darknets, drones, surveillance technology, Temporary Autonomous Zones, and digital cash systemssuch as Loom, OpenTransctions, andbitcoin – among many other interesting topics.

Prior to listening to these podcasts, I had only heard of bitcoin in passing and never looked into it at all.After a month or two of binging on these podcasts, I was completely sold on bitcoin. The podcasts gave me more thanenough information to pique my interest, and further exploration on thebitcoin wikiled me deep down a rabbit hole that I have yet to emerge from.

By blind luck and sheer coincidence, since first discovering Agorist Radio I havehad the pleasure of meeting all of the hosts of Agorist Radio podcasts in person except Plato (who I believe is still around in the online bitcoin communities) andSmuggler(who I hear is going to be speaking at theHackers Congress in Praguethis October, so there might still be a chance!). They are all super smart, super nice guys to whom I owe a tremendous debt of gratitude for producing these great podcasts and turning me on to bitcoin.

Without further adieu, please enjoy my collection of the complete*Agorist Radio catalogue:

https://archive.org/details/agorist-radio/

Listen closely -you might just recognize a familiar voice on a few of them 😉

* I believe Ihaveevery episode of every Agorist Radio podcast ever published online, but if I’m missing any and you have a copy, please let me knowso I can make a copy and add it to the archive.org collection!