More GOP presidential hopefuls now side with the FBI in iPhone crypto fight

Rubio: Apple doesn’t want to “hurt their brand.” Carson: terrorism is “bad for America.”

What do they have in common? They want to be president and (seem to) think Apple should comply with the FBI. (credit: Getty Images)

The now five candidates vying for the GOP presidential nomination discussed everything from immigration, health care, and the Middle East during their latest debate, sponsored by CNN/Telemundo and held in Houston on Thursday evening. But what caught our attention was the candidates' discourse about the Apple-FBI encryption legal fight.

CNN moderators Wolf Blitzer and Dana Bash actually initiated the topic. Blitzer first mentioned how Apple responded to the FBI's court order earlier in the day with a formal motion to vacate. Bash then addressed the topic to Florida Senator Marco Rubio, referencing his defense of Apple last week during a GOP candidate town hall in South Carolina.

BASH: Senator Rubio, you say it's complicated, and that, quote, "Apple isn't necessarily wrong to refuse the court order." Why shouldn't investigators have everything at their disposal?

RUBIO: No, in fact what I have said is the only thing—the FBI made this very clear 48 hours ago—the only thing they are asking of Apple is that Apple allow them to use their own systems in the FBI to try to guess the password of the San Bernardino killer. Apple initially came out saying, "We're being ordered to create a back door to an encryption device." That is not accurate.

The only thing they're being asked to do, and the FBI made this very clear about 48 hours ago, is allow us to disable the self-destruct mode that's in the Apple phone so that we can try to guess using our own systems what the password of this killer was.

And I think they should comply with that. If that's all they're asking for, they are not asking for Apple to create a back door to encryption.

BASH: So just to be clear, you did say on CNN a couple of weeks ago this is a complicated issue; Apple is not necessarily wrong here.

RUBIO: Because at the time, Apple was portraying that the court order was to create a back door to an encryption device.

BASH: But just to be clear—just to be clear, if you are president, would you instruct your Justice Department to force Apple to comply or not?

RUBIO: To comply with an order that says that they have to allow the FBI the opportunity to try to guess the password?

BASH: Correct.

RUBIO: Absolutely. That Apple phone didn't even belong to the killer. It belonged to the killer's employee (sic) who have agreed to allow him to try to do this. That is all they're asking them to do is to disable the self-destruct mode or the auto-erase mode on one phone in the entire world. But Apple doesn't want to do it because they think it hurts their brand.

Bash and Blitzer soon directed the question of national security or personal privacy to a trio of other candidates in attendance—Texas Senator Ted Cruz, Ohio Governor John Kasich, and Neurosurgeon Dr. Ben Carson. Cruz pointed out Rubio's potential hypocrisy, said Apple doesn't need to place back doors in every phone, but concluded with "Apple doesn't have a right to defy a valid court order in a terrorism investigation." Carson simply took an anti-terror approach ("I think allowing terrorists to get away with things is bad for America"), while Kasich criticized President Obama for not bringing the two sides together for a meeting outside the court system.

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Raspberry Pi 3 to feature on-board WiFi, Bluetooth

Raspberry Pi 3 to feature on-board WiFi, Bluetooth

A few weeks ago Swedish site SweClockers reported that a Raspberry Pi 3 was on the way. Now it looks like we have confirmation… courtesy of the FCC. A listing for the Raspberry Pi 3 just showed up, and while there isn’t a description of new features, there are a few things we know for certain: […]

Raspberry Pi 3 to feature on-board WiFi, Bluetooth is a post from: Liliputing

Raspberry Pi 3 to feature on-board WiFi, Bluetooth

A few weeks ago Swedish site SweClockers reported that a Raspberry Pi 3 was on the way. Now it looks like we have confirmation… courtesy of the FCC. A listing for the Raspberry Pi 3 just showed up, and while there isn’t a description of new features, there are a few things we know for certain: […]

Raspberry Pi 3 to feature on-board WiFi, Bluetooth is a post from: Liliputing

Hackers did indeed cause Ukrainian power outage, US report concludes

DHS officials say well-coordinated hack cut power to 225,000 people.

A December outage in Ukraine that caused 225,000 customers to lose electricity was the work of hackers, a report prepared by US Department of Homeland Security officials has determined.

The report published Thursday by the DHS Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team largely agrees with analysis provided last month by a member of the SANS industrial control systems team—that the December 23 outage was caused by external hackers. As Ars reported earlier, the unscheduled interruptions are the first confirmed instance of someone using hacking to generate a power outage.

None of the analysis so far has determined the precise role played by "BlackEnergy," a malware package discovered in 2007 that infected at least three of the substations involved in the outage. While initial research speculated that BlackEnergy and an added data-wiping component called KillDisk may have given attackers access or allowed them to carry out destructive events causing the power to go out, the DHS report holds out the possibility that the two pieces of malware were used only after the outage in an attempt either to destroy evidence or make recovery more difficult.

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AT&T gave $62K to lawmakers months before vote to limit muni broadband

Missouri bill would make it difficult for cities to offer Internet service.

AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson. (credit: AT&T)

A Missouri legislative committee last week approved a bill that would limit the spread of municipal broadband networks, helping private Internet service providers such as AT&T avoid competition.

A few months before that vote, AT&T donated a total of $62,500 to political committees in Missouri. This included $20,000 to the House Republican Campaign Committee, $20,000 to the Missouri Democratic State Committee, $7,500 to the Missouri Republican Party, and $15,000 to the Missouri Senate Campaign Committee (apparently a Republican group). One of the donations is listed by the Missouri Ethics Commission as occurring just two weeks ago, but we’ve been told it was made in September 2015 and not deposited until this month because the original check was lost.

The donations were made before the legislature went into session; AT&T's policy is to not make contributions during legislative sessions. AT&T gave similar amounts in previous years.

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“Dangerous paleo diet” study is ragged with holes

Study reporting that high fat diet made mice fat somehow makes headlines.

Mice eating their pre-Neolithic wood shavings (credit: flickr user: crwr)

There’s a deep sense of irony in adding to a never-ending series of headlines on a study that shouldn’t have had any attention paid to it at all. But the publication on the dangers of the “paleo” diet that’s spawned countless headlines is so flawed that it’s worth exploring why it got so much attention.

“Diabetes expert warns paleo diet is dangerous and increases weight gain,” claims the press release issued to promote a paper in last week’s Nature Nutrition and Diabetes. What's particularly flabbergasting about this situation is that the study didn’t actually have anything to do with a paleo diet—it used a low-carb, high-fat (LCHF) diet. The two diets can be similar—paleo diets tend to be lower in carbs and higher in fats—but they’re not the same thing, and it’s possible to eat a paleo diet that’s not high in fat.

The headline also doesn’t mention that the study looked at mice. But not many mice—only seventeen male New Zealand Obese (NZO) mice, which are inbred to be severely predisposed to obesity and diabetes. Given that the study wanted to find out whether the diet is suitable for obese, pre-diabetic people, it makes sense to study mice with a predisposition toward these conditions. But it does mean that the results don't apply more broadly. “It’s not even applicable to all mice, let alone all humans,” says Yoni Freedhoff, an assistant professor at the University of Ottawa with a specialty in debunking diet nonsense.

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Meet America’s next top bomber—the B-21

With design that echoes B-2, the new bomber looks the same as the old bomber.

(credit: US Air Force)

The aircraft to be built by Northrop Grumman for the US Air Force's Long Range Strike Bomber (LRS-B) has now been officially designated by the Air Force as the B-21. The first conceptual drawings of the bomber to be revealed look very familiar—almost like a carbon copy of the last bomber the Air Force bought in the 1980s and 1990s.

In a presentation at the Air Force Association's Air Warfare Symposium in Orlando on February 26, Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James unveiled an initial conceptual drawing of the aircraft as well as its designation. James announced that the Air Force will be taking suggestions from service members for the official name of the bomber. The B-21 designation, she said, was in recognition of the LRS-B as the first bomber of the 21st century.

“This aircraft represents the future for our Airmen," James said. “The Airman who submits the selected name will help me announce it at the conference this fall (the Air & Space Conference in September)."

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Asus says Android 6.0 will replace (some) bloatware from its phones

Asus says Android 6.0 will replace (some) bloatware from its phones

The Asus Zenfone 2 which launched in 2015 has pretty great hardware for a mid-range phone, but I was a little taken aback by amount of unnecessary apps that come pre-installed: I counted 36. Now Asus is outlining plans for the next major software update for the Zenfone 2 and a bunch of other phones… and […]

Asus says Android 6.0 will replace (some) bloatware from its phones is a post from: Liliputing

Asus says Android 6.0 will replace (some) bloatware from its phones

The Asus Zenfone 2 which launched in 2015 has pretty great hardware for a mid-range phone, but I was a little taken aback by amount of unnecessary apps that come pre-installed: I counted 36. Now Asus is outlining plans for the next major software update for the Zenfone 2 and a bunch of other phones… and […]

Asus says Android 6.0 will replace (some) bloatware from its phones is a post from: Liliputing

Appeals court reverses Apple v. Samsung II, strips away Apple’s $120M jury verdict

Apple’s autocorrect and “slide to unlock” are invalid in light of prior art.

(credit: Aurich Lawson)

Apple's second high-profile patent win against Samsung was appealed, just as the first was. In an opinion (PDF) published today, a panel of appeals judges entirely wiped out Apple's victory, along with its $120 million verdict.

The decision found that out of three different patent Apple became famous for winning with, one wasn't infringed, and two of them are invalid.

The '647 patent described how to turn phone numbers and other software "structures" into links, allowing users to take actions like calling a number with one "click" rather than copying and pasting. The jury awarded Apple $98.7 million based on that patent, but the appeals judges today held that the patent wasn't infringed at all. They held that "Apple failed to prove, as a matter of law, that the accused Samsung products use an 'analyzer server' as we have previously construed that term."

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Thomas Urmann: Redtube-Abmahner “unbekannt nach Istanbul verzogen”

Der durch die Redtube-Abmahnwelle bekannt gewordene Thomas Urmann sei unbekannt verzogen, wird aus Regensburg berichtet. Er soll sich aber weiter in der Stadt aufhalten. (Abmahnung, Streaming)

Der durch die Redtube-Abmahnwelle bekannt gewordene Thomas Urmann sei unbekannt verzogen, wird aus Regensburg berichtet. Er soll sich aber weiter in der Stadt aufhalten. (Abmahnung, Streaming)

Cratering portable sales can’t prop up Nintendo’s business anymore

With 3DS sales declining rapidly, Nintendo needs NX to succeed fast.

With annualized 3DS sales peaking low and early, Nintendo no longer has the financial cushion it once did.

No matter how its console business is doing, Nintendo has always been able to lean on healthy portable system sales to prop up its finances. With the Wii U continuing to severely underperform sales expectations, though, it looks like the Nintendo 3DS is failing to pick up the slack as its predecessors once did.

A new revision to Nintendo's projected earnings, released today, sees Nintendo reducing its expectations of Nintendo 3DS sales for the full fiscal year, which ends in March. Nintendo now expects to sell 6.6 million 3DS units during the 12-month period, a 13 percent drop from previous projections and a 24 percent decline from the year before. That drop (and the accompanying drop in 3DS software sales projections) is a big reason why Nintendo is now also saying that its annual profits will be 50 percent lower than it had projected, though the company blames some of that decline on the weakening Japanese yen.

You might think this kind of decline is natural for a system like the 3DS, which is, after all, approaching its fifth birthday. But previous Nintendo handhelds have looked much more robust at this point in their lifecycles. The Nintendo DS was still near the peak of its hardware sales dominance in its fifth and sixth years, selling a whopping 31.18 million units in the 2009 fiscal year (and a healthy 27.11 million the next year). Game Boy Advance sales were still near a steady peak in the 2005-2006 period, bouncing up and down in the 15 million to 18 million annual sales range, thanks in part to the successful Game Boy Advance SP hardware refresh.

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