Microsoft open-sources Live Writer, beloved but abandoned blogging tool

Opening the app means that it’ll get some much-needed maintenance.

Another day, another "Microsoft open-sources something" story. At the weekend it was the Chakra JavaScript engine. This time, it's Live Writer, the blogging tool that provides offline, WYSIWYG editing of blog posts, and can publish directly to WordPress, Blogger, and other blogging platforms.

Live Writer hasn't been significantly updated since 2012 but still retains a loyal fan base. For writers who don't trust authoring directly within their content management system, the combination of familiar word processor-like interface and seamlessly integrated publishing is a compelling one.

The lack of maintenance, however, threatened to render the tool useless. The most pressing concern is Blogger. Google is switching Blogger from an old authentication system to OAuth 2. Live Writer only supports the old system and will never include OAuth 2 support. Although Google has extended the availability of the old method to ensure that Live Writer continues to work, it will not do so indefinitely, posing a problem for users of the app.

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Deals of the Day (12-09-2015)

Deals of the Day (12-09-2015)

Liliputing posts some of the best deals on mobile tech on most week days, and we usually single out one of the best deals of the bunch to put at the top of the page. Today I had a hard time picking the best because there are three pretty spectacular deals at the moment. So here […]

Deals of the Day (12-09-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (12-09-2015)

Liliputing posts some of the best deals on mobile tech on most week days, and we usually single out one of the best deals of the bunch to put at the top of the page. Today I had a hard time picking the best because there are three pretty spectacular deals at the moment. So here […]

Deals of the Day (12-09-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

RIAA lawsuit kills Popcorn Time-like free music streaming site

Settlement demands US team behind the Aurous site cough up $3 million to RIAA.

Piracy site Aurous is disabled forever, according to lawsuit settlement. (credit: Aurous)

A music piracy site for the truly lazy that debuted two months ago agreed Wednesday to shut down and to forfeit its domain to the Recording Industry Association of America, which brought a lawsuit that is now being settled. The deal also calls for the Aurous site's developer, Florida resident Andrew Sampson, and others associated with the site to pay the RIAA $3 million in damages. Although it's a sum that likely won't ever be paid, it's a judgement hanging over their heads and a sum that the RIAA believes sends a message of deterrence.

"Aurous appropriately agreed to shut down," Cary Sherman, the RIAA chairman, said in an e-mailed statement. "It was the right thing to do. We hope this sends a strong signal that unlicensed services cannot expect to build unlawful businesses on the backs of music creators."

The law is clearly on Sherman's side, too. Under the US Copyright Act, the site's backers faced monetary damages of up to $150,000 per track.

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Attack floods Internet root servers with 5 million queries a second

Unusually large torrents renew calls to better protect vital Internet resource.

Early last week, one of the most vital organs of the Internet anatomy came under an unusual attack. On two separate occasions lasting an hour or more each, a flood of as many as many as five million queries per second hit multiple domain name system root servers that act as the final and authoritative reference for determining which IP address is returned when a user types a domain name into a browser.

The first barrage took place on Monday, November 30, and lasted for about two hours and 40 minutes. The second one happened a day later and lasted for almost exactly an hour. Most but not all of the 13 root servers that form the Internet's DNS root zone were hit. The attacks started and stopped on their own and consisted of billions of valid queries for just two undisclosed domain names, one for each incident. There's no indication of who or what was behind the attack.

While the load was large enough to be detected on external systems that monitor the Internet's root servers, they ultimately had little effect on the billions of Internet end users who rely on them. That's partly because root servers provide IP translations only when a much larger network of intermediate DNS servers fail to do so and partly because of the robust design of the hundreds of servers that run the dozen-plus root authorities.

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Kickstarter hires reporter to probe startup that collapsed after raising $3.4M

Crowdfunding firm: We are entitled to further info from Torquing Group.

(credit: Torquing Group)

In a first, Kickstarter has hired a journalist to look into how its largest-funded European project ever suddenly imploded.

Last month, Kickstarter said it was baffled as to how British drone startup Torquing Group raised $3.4 million—only to totally fall apart in less than a year. Kickstarter's announcement of its bewilderment came weeks after the startup's cofounder and CEO Ivan Reedman abruptly left the company, citing “personal health issues and irreconcilable differences.”

Ars visited the company's headquarters in western Wales in April 2015, months before they were supposed to be shipped, but did not get to see a working prototype.

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Werbeblockersperre auf Bild.de: Gericht bestätigt Verbot von Umgehungsanleitung

Im Streit über die Umgehung seiner Adblockersperre kann sich Bild.de vor Gericht vorerst durchsetzen. Zudem wurden gegen mehrere Werbeblocker-Apps inzwischen Verbote ausgesprochen. (AdBlocker, Firefox)

Im Streit über die Umgehung seiner Adblockersperre kann sich Bild.de vor Gericht vorerst durchsetzen. Zudem wurden gegen mehrere Werbeblocker-Apps inzwischen Verbote ausgesprochen. (AdBlocker, Firefox)

Microsoft Cortana voice assistant launches for Android, iOS

Microsoft Cortana voice assistant launches for Android, iOS

If you didn’t get in on the beta testing of Microsoft’s virtual personal assistant, today you can download the app without signing up as a tester. Microsoft has launched Cortana on Google Play and the App Store, as well as through Microsoft’s Windows 10 companion app. If you did sign up for the beta test, […]

Microsoft Cortana voice assistant launches for Android, iOS is a post from: Liliputing

Microsoft Cortana voice assistant launches for Android, iOS

If you didn’t get in on the beta testing of Microsoft’s virtual personal assistant, today you can download the app without signing up as a tester. Microsoft has launched Cortana on Google Play and the App Store, as well as through Microsoft’s Windows 10 companion app. If you did sign up for the beta test, […]

Microsoft Cortana voice assistant launches for Android, iOS is a post from: Liliputing

E-Mail-Client: Zahl der Thunderbird-Nutzer wächst weiter stetig

Derzeit gebe es rund 25 Millionen Thunderbird-Nutzer, schreibt der Chef des zuständigen Entwicklergremiums. Ihre Zahl wachse stetig. Die Pläne zur Loslösung des E-Mail-Clients von Mozilla werden zudem konkreter, die Entwickler damit aber auch abhängiger von ihren Nutzern. (Thunderbird, Firefox)

Derzeit gebe es rund 25 Millionen Thunderbird-Nutzer, schreibt der Chef des zuständigen Entwicklergremiums. Ihre Zahl wachse stetig. Die Pläne zur Loslösung des E-Mail-Clients von Mozilla werden zudem konkreter, die Entwickler damit aber auch abhängiger von ihren Nutzern. (Thunderbird, Firefox)

“The more bits you use, the more you pay”: Comcast CEO justifies data caps

Unfortunately, usage-based billing only works one way: in Comcast’s favor.

Comcast CEO Brian Roberts. (credit: Business Insider)

Comcast CEO Brian Roberts defended his company's much-criticized data caps yesterday, saying that consumers should pay for Internet access based on how much data they use, just like they do with gas or electricity.

"Just as with every other thing in your life, if you drive 100,000 miles or 1,000 miles you buy more gasoline. If you turn on the air conditioning to 60 vs. 72 you consume more electricity," Roberts said. "The same is true for [broadband] usage." Cellular data is already billed this way, "the more bits you use, the more you pay," he said. So why not cable Internet, too?

Roberts was being interviewed by Business Insider CEO Henry Blodget at the publication's Ignition conference. (Video is available here.)

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