In spätestens fünf Jahren will Volkswagen ein eigenes, selbstfahrendes Auto auf den Markt bringen, verriet der Chief Digital Officer von Volkswagen, Johann Jungwirth. Aber auch Elektroautos soll es vermehrt geben und VW will mit Mobilitätslösungen viel Geld verdienen. (VW, GreenIT) Month: June 2016
Now you can run Android apps on the Asus Chromebook Flip
As promised, Google has started rolling out an update to Chrome OS that lets you download and install Android apps from the Google Play Store.
Right now the Chrome OS 53 update is only available for the Asus Chromebook Flip, and you’ll need to be on the developer channel to run Android apps. But the update should be available for the Google Chromebook Pixel (2015) and Acer Chromebook R11 soon, and later this year it will roll out to additional Chrome OS devices.
Continue reading Now you can run Android apps on the Asus Chromebook Flip at Liliputing.

As promised, Google has started rolling out an update to Chrome OS that lets you download and install Android apps from the Google Play Store.
Right now the Chrome OS 53 update is only available for the Asus Chromebook Flip, and you’ll need to be on the developer channel to run Android apps. But the update should be available for the Google Chromebook Pixel (2015) and Acer Chromebook R11 soon, and later this year it will roll out to additional Chrome OS devices.
Continue reading Now you can run Android apps on the Asus Chromebook Flip at Liliputing.
AMC Sues Fansite for ‘Walking Dead’ Spoilers
Cable channel AMC has sent out a controversial cease and desist letter that asks a “Walking Dead” spoilers Facebook page to hold off releasing information that could reveal a key plot point from the next season of the hit zombie show.The cliffhanger at…

Cable channel AMC has sent out a controversial cease and desist letter that asks a "Walking Dead" spoilers Facebook page to hold off releasing information that could reveal a key plot point from the next season of the hit zombie show.
The cliffhanger at the end of the most recent season points to the brutal murder (by a barb wire wrapped baseball bat called Lucille) of a main character on the show, and fans will have to wait for the season 7 premier to find out who has been killed.
But Facebook group The Spoiling Dead Fans (TSDF) has apparently received information, information that they had planned to post on their page, that reveals who Lucille kills. The Facebook group uses aerial photos and public sightings of actors in shooting locations to deduce spoilers, including the likely victim of Lucille.
Unfortunately for The Spoiling Dead Fans, AMC caught wind of the potential leak and promptly sent a cease and desist letter, forcing TSDF to cancel plans to post the information.
AMC is citing copyright infringement grounds for their demand, specifically, "The release of plot summaries and particularly the types of crucial plot elements that you have stated you intend to release, have been found to constitute copyright infringement," wrote Dennis Wilson, who is representing AMC in the matter.
TSDF are aware that AMC probably doesn't have much of a case if all have to go on is what they have set out in their demand letter, and if they truly believe that TSDF expressing an opinion on who gets killed at the start of season 7 constitutes copyright infringement. But TSDF is still complying with the demand because they simply can't afford to fight this in the courts, if it gets there.
"Whether there are grounds for it or not is not the issue, it still costs money to defend," read a statement published by TSDF.
Season 7 of The Walking Dead airs later this year.
Bluetooth 5: Funktechnik sendet mehr Daten auch ohne Verbindungsaufbau
Die neue Spezifikation für den Bluetooth-Standard sieht eine größere Reichweite und eine höhere Geschwindigkeit vor. Außerdem sollen Beacons zukünftig mehr als nur ihre Kennung liefern. (Bluetooth, Technologie)
Die neue Spezifikation für den Bluetooth-Standard sieht eine größere Reichweite und eine höhere Geschwindigkeit vor. Außerdem sollen Beacons zukünftig mehr als nur ihre Kennung liefern. (Bluetooth, Technologie) GitHub attacker launched massive login campaign using stolen passwords
Repository’s own account data not breached, affected passwords reset.

Reusing four-year old passwords from MySpace for GitHub? (credit: ABC Photo Archives / Getty Images)
On June 14, someone using what appears to have been a list of e-mail addresses and passwords obtained from the breach of "other online services" made a massive number of login attempts to GitHub's repository service. A review of logins by GitHub's administrators found that the attacker had gained access to a number of accounts, according to a blog post by Shawn Davenport, Vice President of Security at GitHub.
It’s not clear what the source of the e-mail/password combinations was, but there are certainly plenty of them out there right now—the recent bounty of "megabreaches," consisting of aged passwords from MySpace, Tumblr, LinkedIn and the dating site Fling, totaled more than 642 million accounts in all. And though they date back more than three years, there may have still been some that were being re-used by their owners on GitHub.
Davenport said that the passwords of the accounts accessed successfully by the attacker have all been reset. GitHub has begun contacting each affected user individually with instructions on how to get back into their account. He also urged GitHub users to enable two-factor authentication for the service and to "practice good password hygiene"—providing a link to an xkcd comic on password strength to explain.
DMCA wins big in record label lawsuit against Vimeo
Case questioned if DMCA gave immunity to ISPs for their users’ infringement.

(credit: Dennis Skley)
A federal appeals court ruled Thursday that ISP's such as video-sharing sites like Vimeo are protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act for pre-1972 musical recordings uploaded by their users.
The record labels had sued the YouTube-like site and successfully convinced a district court judge that, because pre-1972 recordings fell under state laws and not federal copyright law, the DMCA didn't apply. The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals reversed that decision, and also overturned the lower court that ruled the DMCA didn't grant so-called safe-harbor passage to ISPs whose employees saw infringements on their platforms uploaded by their users.
The decision once again affirms that the DMCA extends immunity to Internet Service Providers for the infringement of their customers if an ISP removes material at the request of the right holder. The decision was akin to an earlier and popular decision called Viacom v. YouTube, which the record labels said was off base in the case against Vimeo.
Huawei’s $699 Matebook 2-in-1 Windows tablet is coming to America
The Huawei Matebook is a 2-in-1 tablet with a 12.9 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and a starting price of $699… although that price doesn’t include the optional keyboard cover and digital pen accessories Huawei will offer.
Huawei unveiled the tablet in February, and now the company is getting ready to launch it in North America. Huawei is holding a press event on June 20th, but I got a chance to spend a few minutes with the tablet a little early at an event in New York City.
Continue reading Huawei’s $699 Matebook 2-in-1 Windows tablet is coming to America at Liliputing.

The Huawei Matebook is a 2-in-1 tablet with a 12.9 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel display, an Intel Core M Skylake processor, and a starting price of $699… although that price doesn’t include the optional keyboard cover and digital pen accessories Huawei will offer.
Huawei unveiled the tablet in February, and now the company is getting ready to launch it in North America. Huawei is holding a press event on June 20th, but I got a chance to spend a few minutes with the tablet a little early at an event in New York City.
Continue reading Huawei’s $699 Matebook 2-in-1 Windows tablet is coming to America at Liliputing.
WatchOS 3 might actually fix most of my problems with the Apple Watch
This update ought to make the Apple Watch work like it was always supposed to.
I make it a point not to install early betas of software on hardware that I use every day, but of all the software Apple announced at WWDC on Monday, the one that's tempting me the most is WatchOS 3. As many new things as iOS 10 and macOS Sierra both include, the next version of WatchOS is easily the biggest and most obvious improvement over the current one, and now that I've actually seen it in action on real hardware, it’s going to be hard to wait for.
A couple of months ago, I wrote about my first year with the Apple Watch. I've come to enjoy wearing the device even though I remain firmly convinced that most people don't really need one. The things I complained the most about were performance (in general) and consistency (in general). And some of the complaints I had in the original review, namely about the steep learning curve for new users and poor usage of the watch's physical buttons, still stood in WatchOS 2.0.
Let's start with the stuff that Apple has actually gotten rid of: Pressing the side button no longer brings up a Friends view, and swiping up from the bottom no longer brings up Glances. Glances were a decent idea in theory—fast access to snippets of information—but in practice they were hampered both by the watch’s speed and the way that its apps worked. The pauses while your watch and your phone communicated with each other to refresh the Glances made them frustrating and inconsistent, and it turns out that there's not really a need for a simpler, quicker version of a WatchOS app. WatchOS apps are already simple, so why make developers do the extra work?
“Guccifer” leak of DNC Trump research has a Russian’s fingerprints on it
Evidence left behind shows leaker spoke Russian and had affinity for Soviet era.

(credit: Arnold Nijhuis)
We still don't know who he is or whether he works for the Russian government, but one thing is for sure: Guccifer 2.0—the nom de guerre of the person claiming he hacked the Democratic National Committee and published hundreds of pages that appeared to prove it—left behind fingerprints implicating a Russian-speaking person with a nostalgia for the country's lost Soviet era.
Exhibit A in the case is this document created and later edited in the ubiquitous Microsoft Word format. Metadata left inside the file shows it was last edited by someone using the computer name "Феликс Эдмундович." That means the computer was configured to use the Russian language and that it was connected to a Russian-language keyboard. More intriguing still, "Феликс Эдмундович" is the colloquial name that translates to Felix Dzerzhinsky, the 19th Century Russian statesman who is best known for founding the Soviet secret police. (The metadata also shows that the purported DNC strategy memo was originally created by someone named Warren Flood, which happens to be the name of a LinkedIn user claiming to provide strategy and data analytics services to Democratic candidates.)
Microsoft will use Steam to sell Windows games, not just its own store
Forza 6 Apex and Killer Instinct have done well on the Store, but Quantum Break did not.

Quantum Break: not available on Steam.
While some of Microsoft's older game titles, such as Age of Empires II HD (a 2013 update of a 1999 game) are found on Valve's Steam platform, its latest high-profile titles, such as Forza 6 Apex and Quantum Break, are exclusive to the Windows Store. But this is going to change, with Microsoft planning to release more titles on the popular store.
Phil Spencer, head of the Xbox team at Microsoft, was talking on Giant Bomb's E3 stream, via GameSpot. When it comes to PC gaming, the Windows Store is very much an also-ran, with Steam the dominant force. As Spencer noted, "I don't think Valve's hurt by not having [Microsoft's] first-party games in their store right now. They're doing incredibly well." Accordingly, Spencer said that Microsoft "will ship games on Steam again."
Meanwhile, Microsoft's own experience had been more inconsistent. While some games have done well in the Windows Store, with Spencer naming both Forza 6 Apex and Killer Instinct as successful titles, he said that "Quantum Break wasn't our best PC release" and that Gears of War Ultimate Edition was merely "OK."
