2012年12月20日星期四

Briefs: Radio IP mobile VPN now supports Android


Radio IP announced that its enterprise mobile VPN solution now supports Android applications and devices. The solution enables seamless roaming between wireless IP networks, as well as leveraging the FIPS 140-2, 256-bit, advanced encryption standard and two-factor authentication to provide the "highest levels" of user verification, the company said.
In other news, Radio IP said that it has entered into a reseller agreement with Alcatel-Lucent, which will sell the company's advanced mobile VPN solutions to government agencies, utilities and enterprises worldwide.

Texas city deploys Alvarion WiMAX solution

Alvarion announced that it has deployed its BreezeMAX Extreme solution in the city of Richardson, Texas. The WiMAX system will operate in the 4.9 GHz band will provide connectivity to the city's video-surveillance system. Feeds can be accessed on any PC monitor that is connected to the city's public-safety communications system, the company said.

Catalyst adds CSSI to console solution

Catalyst Communications Technologies said that it has added a console subsystem interface (CSSI) to its IP Console solution. The CSSI is one of eight primary interfaces specified in the Project 25 standards suite; CSSI gateways enable console systems manufactured by disparate vendors to interoperate. The IP Console solution supports primary dispatch, backup dispatch and mobile dispatch for P25, broadband push-to-talk, and legacy radio systems, Catalyst said.

ARINC joins NXDN Forum

ARINC recently announced that it has been selected to join the NXDN Forum. The forum was established in 2008 to promote the NXDN digital air protocol that was jointly developed by Kenwood and Icom.

Instagram Gets iOS & Android Update With Facebook Single Sign-On, New Filter And Album Uploading Option


nstagram just released an update for its iOS and Android apps that now allows people to login through Facebook’s iOS 6 single sign-on integrations. It also adds a new filter called Mayfair, and returns the ability to share photos from any album on your iPhone instead of just the main camera roll, which many users missed after it disappeared from the app’s last update.
Let’s break down these updates. Now if you’re signed into Facebook’s iOS 6 integration and go to login to Instagram, you can immediately get authenticated for Facebook sharing, which makes it easier for Facebook news feeds to get more ad-monetizable content and Instagram users to get more views for their photos.
Instagram Mayfair Compare
The Mayfair filter adds a cool lavender cast, lightens the center of the photo and has subtle vignetting (Instagram really seems to be into purple lately, as evidenced by Mayfair and Willow, last week’s new filter).
Support is also now available in 25 languages. And with full access to all the photos in your phone, it will be easier to import photos you’ve uploaded to your phone from your computer or edited with another app.
The update comes after a rough week for Instagram. Changes to its terms of service caused an outcry by users worried that the photo-sharing service would sell images without first securing individual permission. Instagram co-founder Kevin Systrom issued an apology and attributed the controversy to a miscommunication on his company’s part.
The big takeaway was that companies need to make sure not to confuse users when they update their terms of service. Otherwise people will assume the worst, panic, and lose trust in a service.

2012年9月13日星期四

When Google looked through the looking glass


The biggest news at Fashion Week in New York had as much to do with technology as it did with fashion. In a partnership with Google, prominent fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg hosted the first-ever runway fashion show featuring the new augmented reality Google Glasses. After supermodels took to the catwalk wearing Google Glasses, Google CEO Sergey Brin and Diane von Furstenberg held hands at the end of the show to symbolically mark the start of a remarkable collaboration between the worlds of fashion and technology. As a result, the "DVF Through Glass" collaboration might very well usher in the era of wearable computing and change forever how we think about high-tech gadgets.
What Google probably found when it looked through the Looking Glass, so to speak, was that the ubiquity of mobile devices is forever changing how we think about computing. And, yet, the folks at the Googleplex faced a dilemma: while wearable computing might be something that’s central to the Singularity, it had very little appeal to the mainstream population.
That is, until now.
From Google’s perspective, what could possibly be better than a group of impossibly beautiful supermodels strutting down the catwalk, wearing fashionable Google Glasses in tints of blue and pink? At a time when the price of even the highest-end tablet device is less than $1000, what other approach could possibly compel people to plunk down $1500 for a pair of new Google Glasses? As Rupert Murdoch tweeted when he first saw the Google Glasses on the catwalk, “Genius! Sergey Brin showing revolutionary new glasses at DVF, can take photos, receive texts, give directions, and more.”
Whether the new DVF-Google relationship opens up a whole new era of wearable computing, however, is open to debate. At best, the first batch of Google Glasses will not arrive until 2013. And, it’s still unclear whether Google Glasses are just a perpetual beta project from Google. Who knows (besides Brin, perhaps)? Given the upcoming launch of Apple’s iPhone 5, maybe Google is just looking to divert some of the attention away from Apple this week?

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, stands for a photograph while wearing Project Glass internet glasses at the Diane Von Furstenberg fashion show in New York, U.S., on Sunday, Sept. 9, 2012. (Peter Foley - BLOOMBERG)
While Google Glass had its big reveal in the tech world, its future may be in the world of fashion and design — and that could open up a whole new range of possibilities for wearable computing. Here’s one angle to consider: Barry Diller, the husband of Diane von Furstenberg, also just so happens to be one of the most powerful media moguls in the world. Diller’s New York-based Internet company IAC is the parent company of, among others, Match.com, OkCupid, Citysearch and Urbanspoon. The latter two would appear be the perfect match for the new Google Glasses, which will be able to display data and images about real-world locations. Or, imagine a future where, dressed in a beautiful DVF wrap dress, you are able to check out the details about your latest paramour from Match.com on your new Google Glasses before heading out for dinner and movie.
In an era where celebrities play an increasingly important role in generating buzz about new products, the Google Glasses would appear to have won half the battle in getting wearable computing to the masses. With the likes of Sarah Jessica Parker — someone who bridges the world of high and low fashion — wearing the Google Glasses, it’s only a matter of time before other aspiring fashionistas embrace nerd fashion and make it chic.
Dominic Basulto is a digital thinker at Bond Strategy and Influence (formerly called Electric Artists) in New York. Prior to Bond Strategy and Influence, he was the editor of Fortune’s Business Innovation Insider and a founding member of Corante.com, one of the Web’s first blog media companies. He also shares his thoughts on innovation on the Big Think Endless Innovation blog and is working on a new book on innovation called “Endless Innovation, Most Beautifuland Most Wonderful.”

More protests break out in Muslim world as U.S. appeals for calm


Protests inspired by an anti-Islam film targeted more U.S. facilities in the Muslim world Thursday, testing the will and capacity of foreign governments to protect Americans and the ability of the Obama administration to cool the growing anger.
A protester shouts slogans after sustaining injuries from a confrontation with riot police who fired tear gas at them outside the U.S. embassy in Sanaa September 13, 2012. Demonstrators attacked the U.S. embassies in Yemen and Egypt on Thursday in protest at a film they consider blasphemous to Islam, and American warships headed to Libya after the U.S. ambassador there died in related violence earlier this week. (Mohamed al-Sayaghi/Reuters)
  As the anti-U.S. demonstrations spread, the administration acted on a variety of fronts to convey two messages: that it had nothing to do with the offending video and that violence was not an acceptable response to the material.
  The impact of the administration’s message remained in question. In Sanaa, Yemen, the U.S. Embassy was overrun Thursday by protesters who stormed a wall, set fire to a building inside the compound, broke windows and carried away office supplies and other souvenirs before being dispersed by local security forces.
  “We want to expel the American ambassador,” Abdelwadood al-Mutawa said as he and other protesters left the compound. He said he was motivated by reports of the movie mocking the prophet Muhammad. “We cannot accept any insult to our prophet,” Mutawa said. “It’s a red line.”
  In Cairo, clouds of tear gas floated through the fortified area around the U.S. Embassy as security forces clashed with protesters for the third straight day. Smaller demonstrations were reported throughout the region, as well as in Iran and Bangladesh.
  In Pakistan, where anti-American demonstrations are frequent, the government said it had “banned” the American-made video and blocked access to it online. Although Afghanistan reportedly did the same, “Innocence of Muslims” was easily available there on the Internet on Thursday night.
  Two days after the deaths of J. Christopher Stevens, the U.S. ambassador to Libya, and three other Americans in an outbreak of violence in the Libyan city of Benghazi, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton took the lead in trying to distance the U.S. government from the movie, calling the film “disgusting and reprehensible” and condemning the violent response to it.
  “The U.S. government had absolutely nothing to do with this video,” Clinton said at a meeting in Washington with a delegation from Morocco. “We absolutely reject its content and messages. But there is no justification — none at all — for responding to this video with violence.”
  The message went out from Washington throughout the day, in White House briefings, in speeches in Arab capitals and through official Web sites, e-mails and Twitter feeds from the State Department and its embassies around the globe.
  Some governments responded to U.S. calls for strong statements against violence. After days of relative silence, Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi, speaking during a visit to Brussels, condemned the attacks on the embassy in Cairo and vowed to defend the security of U.S. diplomatic buildings.
  But Morsi also denounced the film and called on “the American people” to “declare their rejection” of such provocations. His Muslim Brotherhood movement joined other groups in calling for major but peaceful anti-U.S. demonstrations Friday, the traditional day of protest in the Muslim world and a time when appeals for tolerance will be tested.
  In a possible sign that influential Egyptian political and clerical leaders calling for protests were worried that the tone had gotten too heated, the ultraconservative Nour political party said the demonstrations should take place away from embassies and condemned both violence and the video.
  “We appreciate and value . . . the statement from the American embassy that condemned the insult to Islam and its prophets,” the party said in a statement.
  Yemeni President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, meanwhile, quickly apologized to the United States for the damage to the embassy in Sanaa and ordered an investigation into the incident.
  In a telephone call with Hadi on Thursday, the White House said, President Obama “reiterated his rejection of any efforts to denigrate Islam and emphasized that there is never any justification for the violence we are seeing.”
  Clinton spoke alongside Moroccan Foreign Minister Saad-Eddine el-Othmani, who offered condolences for the death of Stevens and the three other State Department employees. He echoed his government’s “clear position against violence and against any confrontation as a way to solve problems and settle conflicts.”
  Othmani also thanked Clinton for speaking out against the “insult” of the video.
  President Obama spoke by phone with Libyan President Mohamed Yusuf al-Magariaf late Wednesday, accepting condolences for the deaths and expressing appreciation for the cooperation between the United States and Libya in the wake of the attack, the White House said.
  Administration officials added little Thursday to accounts of how Stevens died. He became separated from others in the smoke and gunfire of the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi and was not seen by colleagues until hours later, when Libyans delivered his body to the airport during diplomatic evacuation efforts. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland repeated earlier information that officials were told that Stevens had first been taken from the consulate to the local hospital, but she said they could not confirm that.
  “We don’t have any definitive information of our own as to exactly when he passed or what the precise causes of death were,” Nuland said. “I would guess that this is among the things that’ll become clearer as the Libyans work on their investigation with our support.”
  The body of one of the other Americans, Sean Smith, was found inside the consulate when U.S. personnel regained control of it early Wednesday morning. On Thursday night, Clinton issued a statement identifying the other two as Glen A. Doherty and Tyrone S. Woods, both former Navy SEALs who had served in Afghanistan and Iraq and were working as security personnel for the State Department. Clinton said both had “died protecting their colleagues.”
  On Capitol Hill, CIA Director David H. Petraeus briefed lawmakers about the Benghazi attack, but according to one person who attended the closed-door session, Petraeus said it remained unclear who was behind the attack, whether it was planned or whether there was evidence pointing to al-Qaeda involvement. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the session.
  At the State Department, Nuland said Clinton “wanted to speak so strongly and so directly” because the government was concerned “that people in the region don’t understand our culture and society, that [the video] was, in fact, a private effort, that it has nothing to do with the U.S. government, that we don’t do these kinds of videos, and that, in fact, as a government, we found it disgusting and reprehensible.”
  “I hope all of you will disseminate and broadcast [her message] as broadly as you can,” Nuland told reporters at the daily briefing. Clinton’s remarks were “extremely intentional,” Nuland said, “because we are concerned that this is not understood well.”
  In a State Department reception Thursday night to celebrate the Eid holiday marking the end of Ramadan, Clinton told gathered Muslim diplomats and others, “When all of us who are people of faith — and I am one — feel the pain of insults, of misunderstanding, of denigration to what we cherish, we must expect ourselves and others not to resort to violence.”
  They and the United States, she said, must “recommit ourselves to working toward a future marked by understanding and acceptance rather than distrust, hatred and fear. We can pledge that whenever one person speaks out in ignorance and bigotry, ten voices will answer.”
  In emotional remarks, Libya’s ambassador to the United States, Ali Aujali, told Clinton and the others of his friendship with Stevens, whom he called “a real hero.” Aujali said it was “our responsibility, and the responsibility of the Libyan people . . . to protect the Americans” and other diplomats in his country. He said that without continued U.S. and international help, “we will not be able to do it.”
  Earlier in the day, Clinton acknowledged during her appearance with the Moroccan foreign minister that “it is hard for some people to understand why the United States cannot or does not just prevent” such videos “from ever seeing the light of day.” But she said stopping such expressions was not only “impossible” but also against U.S. values of free expression.
  Google, which owns YouTube, said it had acted on its own to stop access to the video in Egypt and Libya. A Google official said the company was “watching carefully” events in other countries.
  The administration has criticized other governments for trying to shut down the Internet, bar certain content or jam cellphone and other communications it finds displeasing. It also has assisted dissidents in countries such as Syria in making their voices heard electronically. And it has struggled to develop its own ability to promote U.S. messages through social media. In separate programs, the State Department and the Pentagon have spent tens of millions of dollars to monitor the public communications of others and send out their own.
  In a measure of the tension between American diplomats in Cairo and the Egyptian government, a minor tempest broke out Thursday on Twitter between representatives of the Muslim Brotherhood and U.S. Embassy public affairs officials.
  The Brotherhood posted a message of support for the embassy staff, saying it was “relieved” that no diplomatic worker had been harmed in the Cairo demonstrations and expressing hope that relations between the countries would be maintained through the “turbulence of Tuesday’s events.”
  In response, the U.S. Embassy feed said, “Thanks. By the way, have you checked out your own Arabic feeds? I hope you know we read those too,” an apparent reference to the calls for more protests.
  “We understand you’re under a lot of stress,” the Brotherhood replied. “But it will be more helpful if you point out exactly the Arabic feed of concern.”
  Birnbaum reported from Cairo. Greg Miller in Washington, Richard Leiby in Kabul and Mohammad al-Qadhi in Sanaa contributed to this report.

2012年9月4日星期二

Best smartphones: We review new and upcoming devices from Apple, Samsung and Nokia


Last week, at IFA in Berlin, Samsung dominated with a string of announcements, including a new and improved Galaxy Note. In the weeks that follow, many of the Korean firm's competitors are expected to announce their latest entrants into a mobile market that is increasingly competitive. How will the smartphone landscape look when the dust settles? We can make a few guesses. At the top of the market, it is a three-horse race - for the time being at least. Here are the big three.
Samsung
Korean electronics giant Samsung was once a manufacturer that simply made products that were cheaper than its rivals, such as Sony and Panasonic. Now, however, the manufacturer is reaping the rewards of a serious focus on much higher quality. While it continues to make some 60 phones each year, it now has the flagship models to cater for every market and the scale to make sure that innovative features quickly show up in cheaper models.
Its success has seen it quickly embroiled in a host of lawsuits over patents, most famously last month when it lost a $1bn case to Apple. But Samsung is also Apple’s supplier for many of its chips, and it makes televisions, excellent audio equipment and much more besides. In that sense it’s an example of the mega-corporations that we are seeing more and more of – it’s grown rapidly while Sony, Panasonic and HTC have struggled and often failed to stay profitable. For now, Samsung is Apple’s biggest rival.
Galaxy S3
The Galaxy S3 is the best phone on the market to use the most popular operating system, Google’s Android. It’s also the first phone to come close to generating the level of excitement that Apple enjoys.
Key to the S3’s appeal is a combination of lovely design, a beautiful 4.8” screen and a fast processor. Highlights include ‘Smart Stay’, which uses the front-facing camera to track your eyes as you look at the phone - as long as you're looking, the display won't go to sleep. As yet, it’s not quite consistent, but this seems like a feature that will be standard soon.
The camera offers decent quality, a burst mode and integrates with Facebook to automatically recognise the people in your pictures. And the huge battery (2,100mAh) will get most users easily through the day.
Fans of the iPhone dislike the size of the S3 – the screen is enormous, even if the device is thin – and for feeling plasticky compared to the iPhone’s glass-and-steel solidity. But the sales figures speak for themselves. Though when the new iPhone comes out users will have a proper point of comparison

2012年8月28日星期二

Alanis can't wait to get on stage


Alanis Morissette has revealed she's looking forward to "wearing something shiny" as she returns to the stage after having her son.
The Ironic singer - who is married to rapper Mario 'MC Souleye' Treadway - gave birth to son Ever in December 2010, and is back on the music scene with new album Havoc And Bright Lights.
She revealed: "It's all very, very exciting. Playing shows, getting ready to release the record. I've been under a rock for a while, being a new mom and wearing sweatpants.
"It'll be nice to get out of the house and wear something shiny again, or maybe even something fitted, to remind myself I have a body."
The Canadian singer said becoming a mum has been a "complete head-spinner", and made her realise that her career will have to take second place to family life.
"It's weird having this split agenda for the first time. Before getting married, I was an artist without a family, but I didn't want to carry on living that life, where the professional fulfilment is sky-high and the personal life is a little void," she said.
"I didn't want to get to 90 and have no family around me and think I had done nothing other than work. In the past few years I very much prioritised personal fulfilment and I'm really glad I did."
:: Havoc And Bright Lights is out now

Suspect in SECOND Case Lying to Cops

Lindsay Lohan is a most wanted woman ... because TMZ has learned a SECOND police department wants a chitchat with the actress to determine if she committed a crime by lying to cops.

0827_lindsay_lohan_article_5_large

Law enforcement sources tell us ... Santa Monica police detectives have been trying to get in touch with Lindsay to ask her questions about a car crash last June, when she slammed into a big rig on Pacific Coast Highway.  Sources say Linsday's lawyer, Shawn Holley, called the station and complained that cops should not be calling Lindsay directly because she has an attorney.

We broke the story ... Lindsay lied to cops when she told them she was NOT the driver, but a passenger.  Cops are convinced Lindsay was indeed behind the wheel and are now investigating 

Sources tell us the follow-up questions relate to Lindsay's alleged lying to cops -- which is a crime punishable by 1 year in jail.  We're told the case will be referred to prosecutors.  It will also be sent to the L.A. City Attorney for a possible probation violation in her necklace conviction.

And, as we first reported yesterday, the LAPD is investigating Lindsay on another front.  She's now a suspect in a $100,000 theft of watches and sunglasses at at Hollywood Hills home, and cops want to speak with her STAT.   LIndsay's lawyer shut detectives down, saying no way would she cooperate.

2012年8月22日星期三

Prince Harry’s Office Plays Down Naked Las Vegas Photographs


Prince Harry’s office played down photographs published on a U.S. website of the naked royal, the third-in-line to the British throne, with friends in a Las Vegas hotel room, saying he was on a private vacation.
The pictures on gossip website TMZ.com show the prince in a hotel room with friends. Harry is pictured wearing only a medallion and a wristband, with a naked woman in each shot.
“He was on a private holiday and is due back at work soon,” the prince’s office at Clarence House in London said in a statement today. A spokeswoman, who declined to named in line with official practice, said she could not give any information on which of the prince’s guests took and released the photos.
While the prince, 27, had a playboy image in the past, he has been taking more responsibility in recent months in representing his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II. He took her place at the closing ceremony of the London Olympics on Aug. 12.
Harry, the second son of Prince Charles and the late Princess Diana, made tabloid headlines when younger as a serial partygoer, clashing with paparazzi photographers outside nightclubs in 2004 and turning up at a costume affair in a Nazi uniform. Pictures from that event drew condemnation from politicians inside and outside Britain.
He is a member of the army and served with British forces in Afghanistan, making him the first royal to fight in a war zone in more than 25 years.

Cloak VPN Offers One-Click Security For Your Mac, iPhone Or iPad



  Mac/iOS: Cloak is a new VPN service for Apple devices that keeps all your internet traffic encrypted when you’re using an unsecured network. It stands out from the crowd for its simplicity and easy-to-understand policies that will keep your data safe the next time you’re on a public Wi-Fi network.
  Cloak promises to keep as little data as possible about your browsing and usage habits. In exchange, you get a super-easy way to secure your traffic anywhere you go. The service is free for the first two hours of each month or 1GB of data transferred, but after that you’ll have to sign up for a premium account to continue using it that will cost you between $US8 and $US15 per month. The service only supports iOS (iOS 4.0+) and Mac OS X (10.6+) devices at the moment, but its developers say support for Windows and Android are on the way.

Microsoft warns of VPN hack


  One of the advantages of the Defcon conference, where crackers show how to make software more secure by exposing how programs are vulnerable, is that vendors can learn valuable lessons. Microsoft apparently learned one, according to this report from Greg Keizer of ComputerWorld U.S.
Windows 7
  This week Microsoft warned Windows users of possible "man-in-the-middle" attacks able to steal passwords for some wireless networks and VPNs, or virtual private networks as a result of a disclosure at the recent conference.
  However, Keizer points out, the company hasn't issued a security update.
  The threat involves MS-CHAP v2 (Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol version 2). It's used to authenticate users in PPTP-based (Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol)
  VPNs.
  The greatest threat is spoofing a legitimate wireless hotspot, where a hacker can grab traffic out of the air. As a defence, Microsoft recommended that IT administrators add PEAP (Protected Extensible Authentication Protocol) to secure passwords for VPN sessions.

How Do I Torrent Safely Now That Demonoid Is Down?


  Dear Lifehacker,
  My favorite private BitTorrent tracker, Demonoid, has apparently gone down for good. I was so dependent on it for its quality, security from viruses, and protection from prying eyes. Where can I torrent safely now that Demonoid is gone?
  Sincerely,
  Lost and Leeching
  Dear Lost,
  This is an interesting question, and the answer is going to go in directions you may not have expected. First, we need to clear up a few common misconceptions, about BitTorrent and about Demonoid specifically. We've already recommended more secure ways to share files online—like the much safer Usenet (set it up in three easy steps here) or the truly private BitTorrent trackers—so I won't get into that here. The main thing you need to know is that Demonoid, while a fine site, was likely not nearly as safe and anonymous as you probably thought.
  In fact, many common BitTorrent "safety" precautions aren't really doing you any good.
  Demonoid Was Not a Private Tracker
  The Problem: Demonoid was often perceived as great because it was considered a private tracker. You could only download torrents on Demonoid if you had an account, and you couldn't just sign up for an account anytime you wanted. You either needed to get invited by another user, or wait for one of their limited "open signup" periods.
  However, Demonoid invites were incredibly easy to come by, and open signups were held often, meaning virtually anyone could join the community. They had few rules on who was allowed to participate, what kind of quality was allowed, and they'd even sometimes list torrents from other trackers. All of these things together gave a false sense of security, when in reality anyone could come on in and seed viruses, leech without seeding, or—in the cases of those pirating content—track what you were downloading (potentially resulting in a letter to your ISP).
  The Solution: If you want faster, high quality downloads with strict community rules, check out our guide to private trackers for suggestions. Note that they'll be much harder to get into, so you'll have to be patient and ready to seed your torrents 24/7.
  Encryption and PeerBlock Do Not Protect You from Prying Eyes
  The Problem: Many BitTorrent users, in an effort to hide their activity from media companies, the government, hackers, or other organizations, encrypt their traffic and use a program called PeerBlock to block known snoopers from connecting to you. Unfortunately, neither of these solutions can truly hide you. PeerBlock can't possibly know everyone that could try to snoop your traffic, and is only going to give you a false sense of security. Many users have gotten "caught" torrenting while using PeerBlock. Similarly, while encryption used to protect you from ISP throttling, ISPs have found other means of snooping on your traffic.
  The Solution: There's no harm in using encryption and PeerBlock, but they aren't enough to keep your traffic hidden. If you really want to keep other people out of your business, you'll need to use a proxy like BTGuard, a VPN like one of these, or other similar methods. And yes, you'll probably have to pay money for these services, so if you're looking for free solutions, you're mostly out of luck.
  Not All VPNs Are Created Equal
  The Problem: Lastly, some people go to sign up for a proxy of VPN service—which is good—but sign up for one that doesn't take privacy seriously—which is bad. Many VPN services, like the very popular HideMyAss, keep logs of all your activity and will gladly offer it up to those that ask for it. This means your data is barely safer than if you had foregone the VPN in the first place.
  The Solution: If you want to use a proxy or VPN, do your research and find out how committed they are to privacy. Make sure they don't keep logs, and see what their policy is on sharing information with third parties. TorrentFreak has a great guide to finding a committed VPN provider, so I recommend starting there if you're looking to anonymize your traffic.
  Obviously, the best way to avoid getting in trouble is not to pirate, and the best way to get high quality content is to go to the original, physical source (if possible). But unfortunately, BitTorrent is under so much heat that even legitimate BitTorrent users need to take precautions to avoid throttling, viruses, and other problems, and the above suggestions should help you do that. While Demonoid was a better site than most public trackers, it was not the Holy Grail of BitTorrent trackers by any means, and you should take this time to make sure you're really being safe.