

Just another news site
5G ist noch kein sehr heißes Thema für Menschen, die sich für Technik interessieren. Der Cheftechniker von Nokia meint: LTE sei schnell mit schnellen Smartphones, aber es verändere nicht das Leben. 5G dagegen schon. (5G, Technologie)
Wegen erhöhter Brandgefahr dürfen Lithium-Ionen-Akkus nicht mehr per Luftfracht in Passagierflugzeugen transportiert werden. Im Gepäck von Reisenden und in Frachtflugzeugen sind sie weiterhin erlaubt. (Boeing, Elektroauto)
Zehn Jahre Lebenszeit und ein gemeinsamer Sockel: Die neuen Embedded-Chips der dritten G-Serie von AMD sind nach Falken benannt, basieren auf Carrizo, unterstützen DDR4-Speicher und werden auf der Fassung FP4 verlötet. Obendrein gibt’s LX-Varianten mit Jaguar-Kernen. (Prozessor, Grafikhardware)
OPM CIO faced grilling over OPM hack; Education CIO was under ethics investigation.
In testimony last summer, OPM CIO Donna Seymour said that systems couldn't simply have encryption added, because some of them were over 20 years old and written in COBOL. (The statement was only partially accurate.)
The Office of Personnel Management's chief information officer, Donna Seymour, resigned Monday, two days before she was scheduled to face a House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing on the theft of data from OPM's network discovered last year. A spokesperson for the OPM confirmed to Ars that Seymour had resigned, saying "she has retired."
Seymour told colleagues at the OPM in an e-mail message that she was departing to make sure that her presence at OPM "does not distract from the great work this team does every single day for this agency and the American people," according to a report by USA Today's Erin Kelly.
House Oversight Committee chairman Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah) cancelled the planned hearing for Wednesday on the OPM hack. "Ms. Seymour’s retirement is good news and an important turning point for OPM," he commented in a prepared statement. "While I am disappointed Ms. Seymour will no longer appear before our Committee this week to answer to the American people, her retirement is necessary and long overdue. On her watch, whether through negligence or incompetence, millions of Americans lost their privacy and personal data. The national security implications of this entirely foreseeable breach are far-reaching and long-lasting. OPM now needs a qualified CIO at the helm to right the ship and restore confidence in the agency."
MSI is expanding its Cubi line of mini-desktop computers with a new model that’s… expandable. The MSI Cubi 2 Plus measures 6.1″ x 5.8″ x 2.3″ and features a mini STX 5×5 socketed motherboard. That means you can buy a system with, say, an Intel Core i3 chip and upgrade it to a Core i5 or Core […]
MSI launches Cubi 2 Plus upgradeable mini PC is a post from: Liliputing
MSI is expanding its Cubi line of mini-desktop computers with a new model that’s… expandable. The MSI Cubi 2 Plus measures 6.1″ x 5.8″ x 2.3″ and features a mini STX 5×5 socketed motherboard. That means you can buy a system with, say, an Intel Core i3 chip and upgrade it to a Core i5 or Core […]
MSI launches Cubi 2 Plus upgradeable mini PC is a post from: Liliputing
Could a basic research project get funded now? Probably not, science advisor says.
Newt Gingrich, Al Gore, and Bill Clinton sing the National Anthem at the 1997 Presidential Inaugural Swearing-in Ceremony. Under their watch the gravitational wave detectors got built. (credit: US National Archives)
It seemed an inauspicious time to seek funding for a large physics experiment. During the midterm elections in 1994, with Newt Gingrich and his Contract with America at the vanguard, Republicans stormed to power in Congress after successfully painting President Bill Clinton as a “tax-and-spend” liberal. Gingrich and his new majority promised to balance the country’s budget.
Meanwhile, at the offices of the National Science Foundation, the foundation’s director wanted to press ahead with the construction of gravitational wave detectors that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars. There was no guarantee that these instruments would find gravitational waves. In fact, many scientists predicted they wouldn't work. And even if they were successful, the discovery of gravitational waves would not advance the interests of the United States in any material way.
The foundation’s director at the time was particle physicist Neal Lane, who would go on to become President Clinton’s science advisor. When I asked him about the Gingrich revolution and the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors, he chuckled. “When Gingrich came to town with the Republicans, that could have definitely been a major hiccup,” Lane said.
The BPI recently announced it would be removing the leaders of both its Content Protection Unit and Head of Internet Investigations. The music industry group has now hired fresh blood to head up its anti-piracy team. Tim Cooper, current Head of Operations at anti-piracy outfit NetResult, will join the BPI as Head of Content Protection after years of protecting the Premier League.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
Despite sending notices requesting the removal of hundreds millions of links from Google’s search results, the British Recorded Music Industry (BPI) consistently manages to do so without causing serious collateral damage.
While that accuracy is to be commended, the BPI is also famous for being involved in the wholesale blocking of hundreds of ‘pirate’ websites in the UK, regardless of the non-infringing content many of them index. It also has a reputation for being ruthless in prosecutions of people sharing files.
All that being said, the BPI’s anti-piracy team is one of the most effective out there so an announcement last December that there would be upheaval in the team came as something of a surprise. The heads of both its Copyright Protection Unit and Head of Internet Investigations would both be moving on following a restructuring exercise, the BPI said.
Now the industry group has revealed a key new addition to the team. On April 20, Tim Cooper will become the BPI’s brand new Head of Content Protection.
Cooper is currently Head of Operations at NetResult, a Thomson Reuters company doing business in the anti-piracy space. Established in 2000 and headquartered in London, NetResult describes itself as being active in the online monitoring and enforcement sector for intellectual property rights.
Cooper has spent a decade at NetResult and according to the BPI developed the world’s first anti-piracy service to combat live streaming and devised strategies to tackle live P2P networks and streaming platforms. Chinese operator PPLive was one of the main targets but since then web-based operations have swamped the market.
Indeed, one doesn’t have to look far to find instances of Cooper’s anti-piracy footprints on the web, in this instance threatening the operators of a site indexing clips of soccer games who sarcastically refer to Cooper as their “friend”.
But after 10 years with NetResult Cooper says he’s looking forward to working in the music sector.
“I am thrilled to be joining The BPI to head up its content protection work. I have worked in rights protection for over a decade and music has been a passion all of my life,” he said in a statement.
“I look forward to leading The BPI’s Content Protection team and working closely with its General Counsel to continue to develop and deliver The BPI’s world-renowned content protection services for record labels and performers.”
Interestingly, the BPI has also taken the opportunity to thrown down some general anti-piracy statistics concerning the UK, claiming it now has one of the lowest piracy rates in the world.
“The number of UK consumers visiting illegal sites has fallen to about half the global average, and is lower than any other technologically advanced country except the USA and Japan,” the BPI says.
However, as our article earlier today shows, pirate site blockades in the UK are faltering, at least temporarily, with key sites regained lost ground due to what appears to be technical issues at ISPs.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
Muss Facebook für Hassbotschaften in seinem Netzwerk haften? Weil Anzeigen gegen deutsche Manager gescheitert sind, gehen Anwälte nun gegen Mark Zuckerberg persönlich vor. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)
US national security probe kills interest from Chinese state-owned Unis.
(credit: Brett Farmiloe)
Western Digital has reaffirmed its plans to buy SanDisk, even though the deal suffered a major blow after a would-be Chinese investor bowed out of the multi-billion dollar bid.
The storage giant said it would now pick up the tab in a cash and stock deal valued at £11.2 billion (~$15.8 billion). It said in a statement that shareholders would receive the "alternative merger consideration," after an agreement with China's Unisplendour Corporation disintegrated amid US government concerns about national security.
The US foreign investment committee had confirmed plans to probe the proposed £2.7 billion ($3.8 billion) deal, which would have given Unis a 15 percent stake in the merger. Western Digital said the new agreement—sans Unis—had valued SanDisk at £55.64 ($78.50) per share, based on WD's closing share price on February 22.