Deals of the Day (3-02-2016)

Deals of the Day (3-02-2016)

Dell’s Inspiron1 3 7000 series notebooks feature 13.3 inch toucshcreen displays that can be folded back 360 degrees for use in tablet mode. You can pick up an entry-level model with a Pentium processor and 4GB of RAM from the Dell website for $450. If you want a model with a Core i5 or faster […]

Deals of the Day (3-02-2016) is a post from: Liliputing

Deals of the Day (3-02-2016)

Dell’s Inspiron1 3 7000 series notebooks feature 13.3 inch toucshcreen displays that can be folded back 360 degrees for use in tablet mode. You can pick up an entry-level model with a Pentium processor and 4GB of RAM from the Dell website for $450. If you want a model with a Core i5 or faster […]

Deals of the Day (3-02-2016) is a post from: Liliputing

IoT: Bosch sucht Tausende Software-Spezialisten

Bosch sieht sich als Softwareunternehmen. Der Automobilzulieferer beschäftigt bereits heute mehr als 15.000 Software-Entwickler. 2.100 Akademiker werden hierzulande in diesem Jahr neu eingestellt, darunter viele Software-Entwickler für das Internet der Dinge. (Cebit 2016)

Bosch sieht sich als Softwareunternehmen. Der Automobilzulieferer beschäftigt bereits heute mehr als 15.000 Software-Entwickler. 2.100 Akademiker werden hierzulande in diesem Jahr neu eingestellt, darunter viele Software-Entwickler für das Internet der Dinge. (Cebit 2016)

Scientists pluck genes at the root of gray hairs, unibrows, bushy beards

Data may help evolution, forensic, aesthetic research. Neckbeards still mystery.

(credit: New Line Cinema)

Combing through the hairy genetic data of more than 6,000 people, researchers have teased out ten genes behind various furry features on human heads—unibrows, lush beards, and graying strands alike.

The study, published in Nature Communications, offers the first look at hair heredity beyond balding, color, and curliness. And the results may be useful for forensic analyses, understanding human evolution, as well as for cosmetic purposes.

The study, led by Kaustubh Adhikari at the University College London, plucked hair-feature information and blood samples from 6,630 people in Brazil, Colombia, Chile, Mexico, and Peru. The group had a mix of European, African, and Native American ancestry, providing plenty of genetic variation to untangle. At the blood drawing, the researchers took note of the participants’ hair features, such as eyebrow and beard follicle density, unibrow presence, hair-line shape, and graying. Then they tried to tie those features with genetic patterns from analysis of the blood samples.

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AnyDVD is Back But Don’t Call Us Pirates, Developer Says

A little more than a week after the closure of owner SlySoft, controversial ripping tool AnyDVD is back. Now operating under the RedFox banner, AnyDVD and friends have skipped to Belize while offering a brand new release. Interestingly, associations with piracy are being made unwelcome, with one developer claiming that’s not what their tools are all about.

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

After coming under pressure from decryption licensing outfit AACS LA, last week DVD and Blu-ray copy-protection circumvention company SlySoft shutdown.

It still hasn’t been made clear if studios including Warner Bros, Disney and technology partners Microsoft and Intel were behind the closure, but for now that’s the working assumption. Having SlySoft flagship product AnyDVD off the market would’ve been a huge feather in their collective caps.

But shutdowns of companies like SlySoft often prove troublesome and earlier this week the first signs of cracks in the closure began to show. With talk of a return under a new banner a hot topic, former developers openly discussed bringing AnyDVD and other products back online.

Making things more interesting was the revelation that SlySoft was not entirely based in Antigua but actually a decentralized operation with developers scattered in countries around the world. Developers who, it transpired, still had access to key SlySoft infrastructure and the will to reanimate the project. In the end, it didn’t take long.

Still sporting a familiar ‘fox’ logo, yesterday a reborn ‘RedFox’ rose from the ashes of SlySoft. Now hailing from Belize with at least some infrastructure in Latvia, the RedFox team delivered their first release – an update to AnyDVD, version 7.6.9.1.

“AnyDVD reborn! SlySoft is dead, long live RedFox!” declared the changelog.

“This is an intermediate release, so old customers can continue to use their existing AnyDVD license to watch their discs. This version can access the new RedFox Online Protection Database,” the group added.

Perhaps of most interest are the new features. In addition to some minor fixes and improvements, AnyDVD also supports new discs, a big first step for a product that just a week ago looked destined for the archives.

The release will only work if users already own a valid AnyDVD license, which suggests that RedFox have access to the old company’s licensing systems, another important step for keeping the business model moving forward. Additionally, old SlySoft products have also returned, including CloneBD and CloneDVD.

But while would-be pirates might find cause for celebration, not everyone in the new RedFox team welcomes being so closely associated with the practice. A developer identifying himself as ‘Peer’ says that comments made by release groups in an article published on TF at the weekend left him feeling “depressed”.

redfox-logo“Pirates were never the intended audience. If SlySoft could have shaken them off, they would have. In fact – some people seem to think, that without piracy, SlySoft wouldn’t have existed,” Peer explains.

For those that primarily used SlySoft’s products for piracy (and the MPAA and AACS LA seem to think that’s a whole bunch of them) the assumption seems reasonable. However, Peer sees things somewhat differently.

“Pirates only made a very small percentage of the AnyDVD userbase. And – given that they are pirates, it’s a valid question whether they were even paying customers,” he says.

“AnyDVD was created out of the frustration of a few people, who got fed up with the unplayability (yes! that word is fitting!) of DVDs and later on Blu-ray discs. So, of course, SlySoft could have easily done without the pirates – and had they, SlySoft might even still exist.”

While one can see Peer’s point (and presuming for a moment we can easily interchange the terms ‘piracy’ and ‘copyright infringement’), the fact that AnyDVD drilled a huge hole through the encryption efforts of AACS LA makes it a seriously infringing piece of software, if of course the trade groups and courts are to be believed.

So, one has to conclude that even without piracy SlySoft would’ve been in trouble, a point not lost on the developer.

“It’s not that the AACS-LA wouldn’t have gone to the same lengths trying – don’t mistake them to be fighting piracy, their goal is a more immediate one, which is to justify their existence,” Peer says.

“They have this huge money-making machine, collect fees for every [blu ray disc] ever being sold without having to really, well, do much (god, I wish I were the AACS-LA), while promising to protect the discs in return, which effectively doesn’t work – so they have no choice but to fight back.”

That fight includes taking down products like AnyDVD and DVDFab, both of which are closely connected (whether the developers like it or not) with DRM circumvention and ultimately piracy.

“You can’t deny that [piracy] is hurting the movie industry. And you can’t deny that we were involuntarily helping piracy. Just like the glass cutter involuntarily helps burglary,” Peer says.

“So, sorry MPAA, AACS and all you people with the fancy acronyms – we can’t help you with the piracy, but since no one is helping us with [playing and backing up] movies, we’re picking up things ourselves.”

Nevertheless, the intentions of the RedFox team will have little bearing on how they are perceived by the MPAA and AACS LA. They will be seen as outlaws with no respect for the laws that the industry groups worked long and hard to have put in place. On that basis alone, this battle is far from over.

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

Brazil frees imprisoned Facebook exec who couldn’t decrypt WhatsApp messages

With the help of US tax dollars, WhatsApp upped its security back in 2014.

(credit: Jeso Carneiro)

A Brazilian judge has ordered the release of a Facebook executive one day after he was jailed in São Paulo for "repeated non-compliance with court orders," according to the Agence France Presse. Facebook spokesman Matt Steinfeld confirmed to Ars that executive Diego Dzodan has indeed been released.

Dzodan was arrested (Portuguese) after apparently refusing to provide WhatsApp messages that the Brazilian police sought in connection with a drug case. Since late 2014, all WhatsApp messages sent between Android devices are end-to-end encrypted, which means that not even parent company Facebook can access their plaintext contents. (WhatsApp messges that involve an iOS device are not end-to-end encrypted.)

Judge Ruy Pinheiro described Dzodan’s detention as "unlawful coercion," according to the AFP.

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E-Sport: Rocket League bekommt eigene Liga

Das Auto-Actionspiel Rocket League bekommt eine eigene, offizielle Liga. Das hat Entwickler Psyonix zusammen mit Twitch angekündigt. Fast gleichzeitig verstärkt auch Yahoo seine Aktivitäten im Bereich des E-Sport. (Rocket League, Yahoo)

Das Auto-Actionspiel Rocket League bekommt eine eigene, offizielle Liga. Das hat Entwickler Psyonix zusammen mit Twitch angekündigt. Fast gleichzeitig verstärkt auch Yahoo seine Aktivitäten im Bereich des E-Sport. (Rocket League, Yahoo)

Spionageprozess: Staatsanwalt erhebt schwere Vorwürfe gegen BND

In ihrem Plädoyer hat die Staatsanwaltschaft einem Doppelagenten eine “nachrichtendienstliche Todsünde” vorgeworfen. Aber auch dessen Arbeitgeber BND kam dabei nicht gut weg. (BND-Affäre, Datenschutz)

In ihrem Plädoyer hat die Staatsanwaltschaft einem Doppelagenten eine "nachrichtendienstliche Todsünde" vorgeworfen. Aber auch dessen Arbeitgeber BND kam dabei nicht gut weg. (BND-Affäre, Datenschutz)

Mozilla wants to bring virtual reality to the web

Mozilla wants to bring virtual reality to the web

Virtual Reality is all the rage these days, with 15,000 pre-orders of HTC’s new $800 headset having been placed in 10 minutes, millions of Google Cardboard headsets already shipped to date, and even McDonald’s getting in on the action. Right now there are probably more people using smartphone apps for VR and immersive experiences than just […]

Mozilla wants to bring virtual reality to the web is a post from: Liliputing

Mozilla wants to bring virtual reality to the web

Virtual Reality is all the rage these days, with 15,000 pre-orders of HTC’s new $800 headset having been placed in 10 minutes, millions of Google Cardboard headsets already shipped to date, and even McDonald’s getting in on the action. Right now there are probably more people using smartphone apps for VR and immersive experiences than just […]

Mozilla wants to bring virtual reality to the web is a post from: Liliputing

Ritualized behavior? Chimps all throw rocks at the same tree

Consistent location, repetitive behavior have biologists scratching their heads.

(credit: Mark Linfield/Walt Disney Pictures, CC BY)

Camera trap footage, taken with no humans present to cause a disturbance, shows one chimp after another pick up a rock and hurl it at the same tree. Rocks pile up at the foot of the tree, which starts to show signs of wear and tear. For some reason, the chimps have picked this particular tree for an accumulation of hurled rocks.

“It was unlike anything I had ever observed among wild chimpanzees,” said primatologist Ammie Kalan. Her team has discovered the behavior in four distinct populations, and it’s possible that more will turn up as they continue searching. What the rock piles mean is an open question, but the discovery of such a distinct and puzzling stone tool use is unquestionably exciting.

We’ve known for a while now that chimps use stone tools for more easily discernible purposes, like extracting food. They’ve also been observed throwing objects, like rocks and branches, haphazardly. What’s different about this behavior is the consistent location and the repetitive actions seen in multiple individuals, which is what has led the researchers to label it as tool use. “It’s definitely the first indication of something else going on other than stone tool use for food extraction or for throwing rocks… haphazardly,” Kalan told Ars.

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Eagle-360: Goodyears Konzeptreifen funktioniert wie BB-8

Vier kugelförmige Reifen, über denen das Auto auf einem Magnetfeld schwebt: So stellt sich der US-Reifenhersteller Goodyear den Reifen für das autonom fahrende Auto der Zukunft vor. (Auto, Technologie)

Vier kugelförmige Reifen, über denen das Auto auf einem Magnetfeld schwebt: So stellt sich der US-Reifenhersteller Goodyear den Reifen für das autonom fahrende Auto der Zukunft vor. (Auto, Technologie)