Patent troll claims HTTPS websites infringe crypto patent, sues everybody

Netflix and others are fighting back while Scotttrade and others are settling.

An image from the patent called "Auto-escrowable and auto-certifiable cryptosystems." (credit: Auto-escrowable and auto-certifiable cryptosystems patent)

A Texas company is suing some of the biggest names in tech and retail, claiming their HTTPS websites infringe an encryption patent titled "Auto-Escrowable and Auto-Certifiable Cryptosystems." CryptoPeak Solutions has filed about six dozen cases in all, and they began hitting the patent-troll friendly venue of the Eastern District of Texas in July.

The patent's abstract describes the invention, granted in 2001:

A method is provided for an escrow cryptosystem that is overhead-free, does not require a cryptographic tamper-proof hardware implementation (i.e., can be done in software), is publicly verifiable, and cannot be used subliminally to enable a shadow public key system. A shadow public key system is an unescrowed public key system that is publicly displayed in a covert fashion. The keys generated by the method are auto-recoverable and auto-certifiable (abbrev. ARC). The ARC Cryptosystem is based on a key generation mechanism that outputs a public/private key pair and a certificate of proof that the key was generated according to the algorithm. Each generated public/private key pair can be verified efficiently to be escrowed properly by anyone. The verification procedure does not use the private key. Hence, the general public has an efficient way of making sure that any given individual's private key is escrowed properly, and the trusted authorities will be able to access the private key if needed. Since the verification can be performed by anyone, there is no need for a special trusted entity, known in the art as a “trusted third party”. The cryptosystem is overhead free since there is no additional protocol interaction between the user who generates his or her own key, and the certification authority or the escrow authorities, in comparison to what is required to submit the public key itself in regular certified public key systems. Furthermore, the system is designed so that its internals can be made publicly scrutinizable (e.g., it can be distributed in source code form). This differs from many schemes which require that the escrowing device be tamper-proof hardware.

The latest batch of cases was lodged November 25. The cases name AT&T, Costco, Expedia, GoPro, Groupon, Netflix, Pinterest, Shutterfly, Starwood Hotels, Target, and Yahoo, among others. All the lawsuits include virtually identical language.

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Fedora 23 review: Skip if you want stability, stay to try Linux’s bleeding edge

New default apps and Xdg support arrive, but stick to RHEL if you want long-term support.

Even its logo remains hip. (credit: Fedora Project)

Two releases ago, Fedora 21 introduced its namesake project's "Fedora Next" plan. The goal was simple—bring the massive, sprawling entity that is Fedora into some neatly organized categories that would clearly define the project's aims. And since Next launched, Fedora has been busy doing just that. The results are impressive, and it feels like the distro has found a renewed sense of purpose.

Fedora Next's structure is like a series of concentric rings where each ring is supported by the one inside it. At the center are the core components of the system, APIs that applications hook into, and so on. On the outside are the visible layers that users interact with, what Fedora calls "Environments."

For the recently unveiled Fedora 23, these Environments consist of Workstation (Desktop), Server, and Cloud. It's the same Environment trio that Fedora offered in its two prior releases. While Cloud still has the feel of an also-ran, the Workstation and Server releases see quite a few new packages. That's especially true for the GNOME-based Workstation, and luckily the changes are largely welcome.

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AT&T urges unlimited data customers to give up plans, raises price by $5

Millions of AT&T customers still have unlimited data.

(credit: Chris Young)

AT&T is trying to nudge customers on grandfathered unlimited data plans to switch to ones with limited data. But the company's latest move isn't all that punitive: AT&T is raising the price, but for the first time in seven years, and by only $5 a month.

The $30-per-month plan will cost $35 starting in February, AT&T announced. The change will affect a few million customers.

Compared to AT&T's years-long history of throttling customers on the old unlimited plans (which aren't offered to new customers), the price increase is pretty tame. It's also still cheap compared to Verizon, which recently raised its unlimited price from $30 to $50 a month. (The AT&T and Verizon prices don't include what customers pay for voice calls and text messaging, which can bring the total bill closer to the $80-100 range.)

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Moto 360 Sport smartwatch coming this month (in some markets)

Moto 360 Sport smartwatch coming this month (in some markets)

When Motorola launched its 2nd-generation smartwatches in September, the company introduced two models: the new Moto 360 and the Moto 360 Sport. While the 2nd-gen Moto 360 has been available for a while, the Sport edition was nowhere to be found… but that will change later this month. Motorola says its new smartwatch aimed at […]

Moto 360 Sport smartwatch coming this month (in some markets) is a post from: Liliputing

Moto 360 Sport smartwatch coming this month (in some markets)

When Motorola launched its 2nd-generation smartwatches in September, the company introduced two models: the new Moto 360 and the Moto 360 Sport. While the 2nd-gen Moto 360 has been available for a while, the Sport edition was nowhere to be found… but that will change later this month. Motorola says its new smartwatch aimed at […]

Moto 360 Sport smartwatch coming this month (in some markets) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (12-01-2015)

Deals of the Day (12-01-2015)

Acer introduced the Revo Build mini-desktop computer in September, promising it’d be available in the United States later in the year. Now the company has delivered on that promise: this little desktop computer with Windows 10 Home software, a Celeron N3050U Braswell processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a USB keyboard and mouse […]

Deals of the Day (12-01-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (12-01-2015)

Acer introduced the Revo Build mini-desktop computer in September, promising it’d be available in the United States later in the year. Now the company has delivered on that promise: this little desktop computer with Windows 10 Home software, a Celeron N3050U Braswell processor, 2GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a USB keyboard and mouse […]

Deals of the Day (12-01-2015) is a post from: Liliputing

Xenoblade Chronicles X review: The reward is sweeter for the struggle

Pack plenty of patience for a trip to this punishing, open alien world.

Xenoblade Chronicles X operates on a massive scale in more ways than one.

After about 25 to 30 hours of solid work, Xenoblade Chronicles X finally becomes a video game. Before that point, the game exists not to be enjoyed but to rhythmically clobber you into a biomass able to be sculpted into someone capable of playing the remainder of Xenoblade Chronicles X.

X, like its predecessor, is a sort of single-player-only take on the massively multiplayer experience, enabling players to traipse among colossal, uninhibited plains full of creatures that someone, somewhere, probably wants you to kill. But while most modern MMOs will guide you through some semblance of order or direction, X's world is an undirected mishmash.

More than you can possibly comprehend

Xenoblade Chronicles X starts with your protagonist and a whole mess of other poor unfortunates having crash-landed on the planet Mira. Earth is gone thanks to a passing intergalactic war that destroyed your home world as mere collateral damage. Thankfully, a few human cities managed to depart the atmosphere in search of new, habitable worlds.

Battles in Xenoblade Chronicles X play out in real time, in the sense that you can move your character around at will. While you can use any ability you have selected for whatever class you have selected, it's often a better idea to just let the game choose for you.

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Patenttroll: US-Unternehmen verklagt Großkonzerne wegen HTTPS

Ein Patenttroll treibt sein Unwesen gegen Unternehmen, die die HTTPS-Verschlüsselung einsetzen. Technologieunternehmen haben sich bereits verbündet, um sich gegen den Missbrauch von Patenten zu wehren. (Patent, Google)

Ein Patenttroll treibt sein Unwesen gegen Unternehmen, die die HTTPS-Verschlüsselung einsetzen. Technologieunternehmen haben sich bereits verbündet, um sich gegen den Missbrauch von Patenten zu wehren. (Patent, Google)

Google says Chrome for Android can reduce bandwidth by up to 70%

Google says Chrome for Android can reduce bandwidth by up to 70%

Almost two years ago Google added a data saving feature to its Chrome web browsers for mobile devices, allowing users to route internet traffic through a remote server and compress data before it was sent to a phone. At the time Google said its Data Saver feature could cut a user’s bandwidth by up to 50 […]

Google says Chrome for Android can reduce bandwidth by up to 70% is a post from: Liliputing

Google says Chrome for Android can reduce bandwidth by up to 70%

Almost two years ago Google added a data saving feature to its Chrome web browsers for mobile devices, allowing users to route internet traffic through a remote server and compress data before it was sent to a phone. At the time Google said its Data Saver feature could cut a user’s bandwidth by up to 50 […]

Google says Chrome for Android can reduce bandwidth by up to 70% is a post from: Liliputing

Amid tough competition, Samsung’s mobile division gets a new president

The new guy was previously responsible for Samsung Knox, Samsung Pay, and Tizen.

The Galaxy S 1 through 6. (not to scale)

Samsung's mobile division is getting a new leader, as long-time division head JK Shin will be replaced by Koh Dong Jin.

Under Shin, the mobile division adopted Android and gained a dominating position in the mobile market, which culminated in five straight quarters of record profits ending in 2013. The ride ended in 2014, though, when the company saw huge drops in profits due to its inability to compete with low-cost Chinese vendors like Xiaomi and Huawei. Shin is also blamed for not producing enough handsets to meet demand for the curved-screen Galaxy S6 Edge, which proved more popular with consumers than Samsung expected.

As for the new guy, Koh Dong Jin, no one seems quite sure what direction the new mobile leader will pull the company in. One analyst tells Bloomberg that "the new leader will try to boost software power and foster new innovations." while another analyst tells Reuters"There is no real change and Samsung appears to be continuing on the hardware-centric path."

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Internet: Vodafone Kabel setzt 10-GByte-Drosselung um

Vodafone hat bestätigt, die Drosselung auf 100 KBit/s bei Überschreitung eines Datenvolumens “nun konsequent umzusetzen”. Seit Anfang November laufen dazu technische Maßnahmen. (Kabel Deutschland, Vodafone)

Vodafone hat bestätigt, die Drosselung auf 100 KBit/s bei Überschreitung eines Datenvolumens "nun konsequent umzusetzen". Seit Anfang November laufen dazu technische Maßnahmen. (Kabel Deutschland, Vodafone)