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Monthly Archives: October 2008

Giganews Brings Network to UK through LINX

27-Oct-08

Giganews, Inc., the world’s foremost premium Usenet access provider, announced that they have established an open peering connection at the London Internet Exchange (LINX™). Thanks to this move, Giganews customers in the U.K. can expect consistently improved latency and bandwidth availability when using Giganews.

"Our motivation behind joining LINX was primarily to reinforce our ability to serve customers in the U.K. with speedy and consistently reliable service. From a business standpoint, we also cannot ignore the cost-saving benefits offered by open peering," explained Philip Molter, CTO of Giganews. "We can pass traffic to - and receive traffic from - the many U.K. ISPs that are LINX members in an extremely fast and direct manner with no costs incurred. This also benefits smaller service providers whose customers can now enjoy Giganews at full speed, with little cost burden on the provider."

Establishing open peering arrangements at neutral Internet Exchange Points is a highly desirable practice because the Internet Exchange members are able to significantly improve latency, bandwidth, fault-tolerance, and the routing of traffic between themselves at no additional costs. Without a neutral Internet Exchange to accommodate open peering, back-and-forth traffic delivery would be dependent on individual upstream providers and would not be guaranteed to follow an efficient route across networks.

Giganews has already seen much benefit from their initial connection, and plans to double their network capacity at LINX in the near future.

Giganews’ membership of the London Internet Exchange is the most recent of many service improvements Giganews has undertaken this year. Since January, Giganews has unveiled support for custom usernames, added PayPal™ payment methods, increased binary article retention to 240 days, and internally resolved and alerted the Usenet community to the issue of 64-bit article numbering.

Peering With Giganews

Giganews offers network and NNTP peering through direct cross connects and peering networks such as LINX and AMS-IX. For more information on peering directly with Giganews please contact peering@giganews.com.

About The London Internet Exchange (LINX)

LINX is a mutually owned membership association for operators of Internet Protocol networks. Established in 1994, LINX provides a neutral interconnection facility and peering platform while also representing the interests of its 298 members on matters of public policy. The LINX platform has a global reputation for quality, performance and technical excellence and as a result, is able to access 175,000 Internet routes reaching in excess of 40 countries from Europe, North America, the Middle East, the Far East, Australasia and Africa.

For more information please visit the LINX website: www.linx.net

Giganews is a trademark of Giganews, Inc. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners

SABnzbd-0.4.5 bugfix release RC1

26-Oct-08

New maintenance release.
Features:

Refine TV Special support in TV Sorting
Support gzipped NZB files in RSS run (enables tvbinz.net)
Allow override of the newzbin category in the RSS scanner
Use ionice (if present) to run external utilities on Linux
Refuse UNC paths in Windows for “incomplete” (due to par2)
Sort servers in Config->Servers
Make sure PAR2 files always have lowercase extension on [...]

phpnzbirc NZBirc v1.3 released (Sat, 25 Oct 2008 16:25:05 GMT)

25-Oct-08

Released at Sat, 25 Oct 2008 16:25:05 GMT by tiberious
Includes files: nzbirc_v1.3.tar.gz (238035 bytes, 21 downloads to date), nzbirc_v1.3.zip (136357 bytes, 45 downloads to date)
[Download] [Release Notes]

hellaVCR_0.4.zip (136 KB)

24-Oct-08

Giganews Increases Funding to Internet Watch Foundation (IWF), Recognizing Their Work Combating Child Sexual Abuse Images

06-Oct-08

Giganews, Inc., the world’s foremost premium Usenet access provider, announced today a substantial increase in their financial support of the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF, see: http://www.iwf.org.uk/) based in the UK. Giganews was the IWF’s 50th member to join on October 1, 2004 (see: http://www.iwf.org.uk/media/news.archive-2004.84.htm). Giganews is proud to announce that it has raised its level of support to match the level of AOL, BT, Google, MSN, T-Mobile, Virgin, Yahoo, and many other well known companies.

With all of the recent press from the New York Attorney General in his crusade against child sexual abuse images, Giganews performed a study using the information from his office as well as information at Giganews’ disposal. They found two things in this study:

First, by using the New York Attorney General’s information, 99.9997% of Usenet has been found to be free of child sexual abuse images. It is clear that Usenet is not the haven for child sexual abuse that some have recently attempted to claim. Regardless of the small percentage, Giganews has never and will never turn a blind eye to the problem.

Second, the Internet Watch Foundation is the most effective agency fighting the spread of this filth. Unlike any US based organization, the IWF actively monitors suspected and known newsgroups as well as any specific images reported to them by Internet users. After they verify the materials are, in fact, child sexual abuse, they transmit takedown notices to all member Usenet providers.

Giganews is extremely thankful to have the IWF acting as its "Child Sexual Abuse Department". Through its association with the IWF, Giganews has a method of verifying reports of child sexual abuse imagery. Ronald Yokubaitis, Co-CEO of Giganews, stated: "The IWF is the only electronic mechanism we have that helps us identify and thus delete this material from our Usenet feed. We are glad to partner with them in actually reducing the availability of these materials online."

Peter Robbins, CEO of the IWF, recognized Giganews’ efforts in helping our shared fight: "Your leadership and exemplary corporate social responsibility are clear. The IWF’s success in minimising the availability of child sexual abuse content around the world is a testament to the funding and cooperation of our member companies so thank you very much for your enduring support, it is truly appreciated."


About the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF)


IWF is the UK’s internet ‘Hotline’ for the public and IT professionals to report potentially illegal online content within its remit. The IWF works in partnership with the online industry, law enforcement, government, the education sector, charities, international partners and the public to minimise the availability of this content, specifically, child sexual abuse content hosted anywhere in the world and criminally obscene and incitement to racial hatred content hosted in the UK.

IWF is an independent self-regulatory body, funded by the EU and the wider online industry, including internet service providers, mobile operators and manufacturers, content service providers, filtering companies, search providers, trade associations and the financial sector as well as other organisations that support us for corporate social responsibility reasons.

IWF helps internet service providers and hosting companies to combat abuse of their networks through its national ‘notice and take-down’ service which alerts them to potentially illegal content within IWF’s remit on their systems and IWF provides unique data to law enforcement partners in the UK and abroad to assist investigations into the distributers of potentially illegal online content. As a result of this partnership approach, less than 1% of child sexual abuse content, known to the IWF, has apparently been hosted in the UK since 2003, down from 18% in 1997. As sexually abusive images of children are primarily hosted abroad, IWF facilitates the industry-led initiative to protect users from inadvertent exposure to this content by blocking access to it through our provision of a dynamic list of child sexual abuse URLs.

Please note that "child pornography", "child porn" and "kiddie porn" are not acceptable terms. The use of such language acts to legitimise images which are not pornography, rather, they are permanent records of children being sexually abused and as such should be referred to as child sexual abuse images.

For more information about IWF visit www.iwf.org.uk

Giganews is a trademark of Giganews, Inc. All other trademarks mentioned in this document are the property of their respective owners