Kids who played shoot-em-up games in the ‘90s were probably (mostly) OK

Study looking at negative impacts of video games finds small effects.

The persistent suggestion that video gaming leads to violent behavior prompts innumerable eye-rolls and Internet rants from gamers. But it’s persistent because it’s surprisingly hard to nail down a solid answer to the question. A lot of the research just raises more questions, so consensus remains elusive, despite claims to the contrary.

A fair number of studies suggest that there is a link, but those can be contrasted with other research that says there isn’t. The problem is that there are so many different factors to take into account, along with a swiftly-changing medium and difficulty in obtaining high-quality data—we'd need an avalanche of research to answer the question definitively.

While it's not an avalanche, a group of researchers, led by biological psychologist and video game violence skeptic Peter Etchells, has published an analysis suggesting that players of violent games might face a very small increase in risk for behavioral problems. They’re the kinds of small results that would be met with disappointment by authors who were hoping to find an effect, but they’re there. And yet, as always, this analysis isn’t the final word.

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Indian man could be first recorded human fatality due to a meteorite

Indian officials say bus driver was killed by a meteorite, pending confirmation.

A Perseid meteor is seen entering Earth's atmosphere from the International Space Station. (credit: NASA)

Indian officials say a meteorite struck the campus of a private engineering college on Saturday, killing one person. If scientists confirm the explosion was due to a meteorite, it would be the first recorded human fatality due to a falling space rock.

According to local reports, a bus driver was killed on Saturday when a meteorite landed in the area where he was walking, damaging the window panes of nearby buses and buildings. Three other people were injured.

On Sunday, various Indian publications, including The Hindu, reported that the chief minister of Tamil Nadu, Jayalalithaa, issued a statement confirming the death: "A mishap occurred yesterday when a meteorite fell in the campus of a private engineering college in Vellore district's K Pantharappalli village." Tamil Nadu is located in southern India, and has a population of more than 70 million people.

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Nick Farmer knows dozens of languages, so he invented one for The Expanse

From the archives: “Pelésh mi ere imbobo rum Oakland.”

Linguist Nick Farmer tells us more about some of his favorite Belter words. (Video edited by Jennifer Hahn) (video link)

OAKLAND, Calif.—It all started when Nick Farmer bought George R. R. Martin a drink, but the plot really thickened when the linguist met Martin's then-assistant Ty Franck. Franck was one half of the writing team behind the novels that fuel SyFy's incredible new series, The Expanse. And the author soon discovered that Farmer was a talented polyglot, a master of over two dozen languages who worked as a linguistic sellsword for financial research companies desperate to translate global business news for analysts. Farmer also happened to be just the kind of expert that Franck and his co-author Daniel Abraham needed to bring their novels to the screen.

The Expanse series takes place two centuries from now in the Belt, a ring of asteroids that orbit the Sun between Mars and Jupiter. People who have migrated to the Belt come from all over Earth speaking dozens of languages, and they're often isolated for years at a time on remote mining stations. To communicate, they evolve a creole called Belter, which becomes the lingua franca for what is essentially the solar system's new proletariat. The problem? In the book, Belter could be referenced. But now that The Expanse was coming to television, people would actually have to speak the damn thing. SyFy suddenly needed a linguist who could build a language out of dozens of parts. Luckily, Franck knew a guy. He soon recommended Farmer, who delivered a lot more than they bargained for.

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AudioCast M5 is a $37 multi-room audio streamer, Chromecast Audio wannabe

AudioCast M5 is a $37 multi-room audio streamer, Chromecast Audio wannabe

Last year Google launched a tiny device called the Chromecast Audio that you can plug into any speaker to stream music from your phone or the internet to that speaker. This year Uyesee has introduced a similar device called the AudioCast M5. Like the Chromecast Audio it plugs into any speaker, pairs with an Android or […]

AudioCast M5 is a $37 multi-room audio streamer, Chromecast Audio wannabe is a post from: Liliputing

AudioCast M5 is a $37 multi-room audio streamer, Chromecast Audio wannabe

Last year Google launched a tiny device called the Chromecast Audio that you can plug into any speaker to stream music from your phone or the internet to that speaker. This year Uyesee has introduced a similar device called the AudioCast M5. Like the Chromecast Audio it plugs into any speaker, pairs with an Android or […]

AudioCast M5 is a $37 multi-room audio streamer, Chromecast Audio wannabe is a post from: Liliputing

That Dragon, Cancer and how the digital age talks about death

The advent of high technology has changed the conversation about our mortality.

“You have to let me feel this!”

Ryan Green is half-shouting, half-sobbing at his wife Amy. They’re fighting over the way that Ryan is dealing with the knowledge that their son’s diagnosis will lead to a future of palliative care and grief. We never see their faces, never get more than that solitary audio clip, but it’s a powerful, poignant moment that ends with us plunging Ryan deeper into an ocean of light.

That Dragon, Cancer is not an easy game to experience. It’s a eulogy, an autobiography, a cry into the dark. It’s one family’s endeavour to make sense of a looming tragedy, to press pause on a life that is—was— running out of time. Joel, the tow-headed child at the heart of the whole endeavour, died in March last year. He would have turned seven on the game’s January 12th launch.

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Descent of the Shroud: Grey Goo erhält kostenlose DLC-Kampagne

Frische Missionen und eine neue, eigentlich altbekannte Fraktion: Descent of the Shroud erweitert Grey Goo um eine zusätzliche Kampagne rund um die sogenannten Silent Ones. (Grey Goo, Steam)

Frische Missionen und eine neue, eigentlich altbekannte Fraktion: Descent of the Shroud erweitert Grey Goo um eine zusätzliche Kampagne rund um die sogenannten Silent Ones. (Grey Goo, Steam)

Deals: Amazon Fire for $40, other Fire and Kindle devices on sale too

Deals: Amazon Fire for $40, other Fire and Kindle devices on sale too

Amazon’s entry-level Fire tablet is already probably one of the best tablets you can buy for $50. But for the next week you pick one up for just $40. The company is running an “Amazon Device Deals” sale with discounts on a number of Fire tablets, Kindle eReaders, and bundles that knock between $10 and […]

Deals: Amazon Fire for $40, other Fire and Kindle devices on sale too is a post from: Liliputing

Deals: Amazon Fire for $40, other Fire and Kindle devices on sale too

Amazon’s entry-level Fire tablet is already probably one of the best tablets you can buy for $50. But for the next week you pick one up for just $40. The company is running an “Amazon Device Deals” sale with discounts on a number of Fire tablets, Kindle eReaders, and bundles that knock between $10 and […]

Deals: Amazon Fire for $40, other Fire and Kindle devices on sale too is a post from: Liliputing

Tuxedo Infinitybook: Das voll konfigurierbare Linux-Macbook

Topaktuelle Technik mit diversen Linux-Distributionen: Tuxedos Infinitybook ist aus Aluminium gefertigt, im 13-Zoll-Gerät stecken Skylake-CPUs, USB Typ C und per PCIe angeschlossene SSDs. (Notebook, Computer)

Topaktuelle Technik mit diversen Linux-Distributionen: Tuxedos Infinitybook ist aus Aluminium gefertigt, im 13-Zoll-Gerät stecken Skylake-CPUs, USB Typ C und per PCIe angeschlossene SSDs. (Notebook, Computer)

Flash-Speicher: Micron spricht über 768-GBit-Chip

Fast die doppelte Speicherdichte wie Samsung, aber viel größer: Micron hat einen Vortrag über einen 3D-NAND-Flash-Chip gehalten, der 768 GBit fasst. Er basiert auf für planaren Speicher typischer Technik. (Flash-Speicher, Speichermedien)

Fast die doppelte Speicherdichte wie Samsung, aber viel größer: Micron hat einen Vortrag über einen 3D-NAND-Flash-Chip gehalten, der 768 GBit fasst. Er basiert auf für planaren Speicher typischer Technik. (Flash-Speicher, Speichermedien)

Labels Target RuTracker Domain as Blocking Fails to Stop Site

Last month entertainment industry bodies finally succeeded in having leading Russian torrent site RuTracker permanently blocked by local ISPs. But with that ban failing to bring the site to its knees, rightsholders say they will now attack RuTracker’s domain. It’s unclear whether that will succeed but rightsholders remain undeterred.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

rutrackerAfter years of problems with local and international rightsholders, leading Russian torrent site RuTracker received a serious blow last month. Following a ruling from the Moscow Court, the site was blocked by local Internet service providers.

Almost immediately the situation became more complex. In response to this aggressive action, RuTracker broke off cooperation with copyright holders who had previously been allowed to remove infringing content from the site.

“Today we put an end to these agreements, as users of the Russian Federation are now blocked from accessing our tracker. Therefore rights holders did not want to continue their cooperation, which allows us to do more and not adhere to it,” the site said in a statement.

Of course, the site still had the blocking to contend with. RuTracker had been coaching its users for months on how any blockade could be bypassed so the eventual lockout was not unexpected. However, while local copyright holders hoped their efforts would fatally damage the site’s visitor numbers, the blockade has been less effective than planned.

Stats obtained by Vedomosti reveal that two days after the blockade was put in place, visitors to RuTracker from Russia were down 33%. However, the numbers of visitors to the site from countries outside the Russian Federation increased significantly, a change consistent with people using proxies and VPNs to access the site. Overall, total visitors to the site fell by just 13%.

While the blockade certainly won’t help the site long-term, copyright holders believe it is actually proving more effective, with their claims centering around a traffic drop of around 30%. Nevertheless, they’re already standing by to deliver another blow.

According to Izvestia, record labels including Sony Music, Universal Music and Warner Music will now investigate ways to neutralize RuTracker’s domain. Leonid Agronov, Director General of the National Federation of Music Industry (NFMI), said his group is consulting with lawyers to decide the best course of action.

“Our lawyers will choose a way to do it that is most convenient. For example, through the courts. We’ll choose where it’s cheaper and faster,” he said.

For their part, RuTracker don’t see an attack on their domain as being successful.

“We see no reason for problems with the RuTracker.org domain, it is registered in accordance with the rules of the registrar and the domain owner information is verified and confirmed,” the site said.

But despite this confidence, efforts to attack site domains are gathering pace. An announcement on the website of the Association for the Protection of Copyright on the Internet (AZAPO) proposes amendments to Russian copyright law which would allow for the pre-trial suspension of domain names.

“AZAPO proposes…that if a site does not show its owner information, or it is not supported by its WHOIS information, rights holders should have the right to require the pre-trial blocking of the whole site, not just the pages on which there are disputed works,” the group said.

While for many Russia might seem far away, it’s certainly a battleground to watch. Initially slow out of the blocks, Russia is now increasingly quick to introduce new and aggressive anti-piracy measures. However, this enthusiasm is matched by site operators and their users who are prepared to do whatever is necessary to retain access to free content.

This battle is far from over.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.