Google Now Card Offers Deadpool Piracy Advice

Millions of users of Android and iOS devices are using Google Now, the personal digital assistant that can respond to questions and offer intelligent recommendations. Surprisingly, however, Google Now recently noted a user’s interest in Deadpool and served up a Card linking to a torrent site offering it for download.

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

deadpoolBritish science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke is credited with the penning of three laws, one of which declares that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.

While not quite magic for those who understand how it works, Google Now can be both impressive and spooky.

On mobile devices (Android and iOS) Google Now and its ‘Card’ notifications often pop up at the most opportune times, offering advice about things that haven’t yet happened in a users life – but are about to.

It’s not unusual for Google Cards to let you know how long it will take you to get home – from a restaurant you haven’t quite arrived at yet. And it can also advise what the weather will be like tomorrow, in a place that more often that not you’ve planned to visit only in your head.

Google can’t read people’s minds but it does harvest data from Google accounts in order to provide its Now services. That includes your search and location history, sites you’ve visited and the content of Gmail messages. It can also access your phone contacts, calendar entries and even certain apps.

“To know when to display cards and reminders, Google Now uses information from your device and from other Google products,” the company explains.

But while Google Now does some predictable things, like offering news about a favorite sporting event or offering appropriate stock listings, it can also serve up the odd surprise. One of those landed on the phone of TorrentFreak reader Ryan Raab this past weekend.

While using his Nexus 6 (loaded with the latest Android N beta), Ryan received a serving of Google Cards. After Google noticed he’d “shown an interest” in Olivia Munn, he was advised of her upcoming role in the X-Men Apocalypse movie as documented by Engadget. Nice.

But it was his interest in the movie Deadpool that delivered the surprise. Sandwiched between a Guardian article about Barack Obama and a New York Post piece about Donald Trump, Google Now advised Ryan where he could watch the hit movie. (Hint: Not in a theater)

Screenshot_20160320-XXX-GoogleNow

As can be seen from the screenshot, Ryan’s interest in Deadpool resulted in a Google Card being presented to him referencing one of the world’s largest torrent sites, 1337x. Indeed, clicking on the Card landed Ryan on the site in question, as shown below.

Screenshot_20160320-144824-GoogleNow

Obviously there isn’t a team at Google hand-crafting Google Cards designed to promote unauthorized torrents. However, this does appear to show that Google’s algorithms are smart enough to put together interesting advice based on multiple and diverse information sources.

TorrentFreak sent Ryan’s findings to Google for comment but at the time of publication we were yet to hear back. However, it does appear that in this instance simply having an interest in both torrents and a particular movie was enough to trigger a custom Card linking to a pirate site.

While a feature like this won’t annoy too many torrent fans, they may change their tune when more sensitive information is picked up by Google in future editions.

“You showed an interest in ‘having an affair’ – here’s a link to AdulteryX4u.com.”

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

Für HD und Internet: Unitymedia beschleunigt Analogabschaltung

Der Kabelnetzbetreiber Unitymedia schaltet einige analoge Sender ab und nimmt neue HD-Sender in sein Angebot auf. Bereits im Jahr 2017 dürfte ganz Schluss sein mit der Verbreitung analoger TV-Programme. (Unitymedia, Internet)

Der Kabelnetzbetreiber Unitymedia schaltet einige analoge Sender ab und nimmt neue HD-Sender in sein Angebot auf. Bereits im Jahr 2017 dürfte ganz Schluss sein mit der Verbreitung analoger TV-Programme. (Unitymedia, Internet)

Dealmaster: Get a 55-inch Samsung 4K Smart 3D HDTV for $1,250

Plus, here’s where you can preorder Playstation VR bundles now.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have a bunch of new deals this week. The featured deal includes the best price we've seen for a high-end TV since last year's Black Friday. Now you can get a 55-inch Samsung SUHD 4K Smart 3D HDTV for just $1,250. This model features Samsung's Nano Crystal technology which offers beautifully vibrant colors, optimized contrast for extreme crispness, and a quad-core processor. There's also a 65-inch version on our list for just $1,799.

Check out the rest of the deals below, including where you can preorder Playstation VR bundles.

Featured

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Netflix: Aktualisiertes Smart-TV-Logo bringt Verwirrung

Netflix legt sein Empfehlungsprogramm für geeignete Smart-TVs neu auf – mit verschärften Anforderungen für die TV-Hersteller. Käufer haben es damit aber schwerer, den Überblick zu behalten. Und eine Kaufempfehlung ist es vielfach nicht. (Netflix, Streaming)

Netflix legt sein Empfehlungsprogramm für geeignete Smart-TVs neu auf - mit verschärften Anforderungen für die TV-Hersteller. Käufer haben es damit aber schwerer, den Überblick zu behalten. Und eine Kaufempfehlung ist es vielfach nicht. (Netflix, Streaming)

CTL J5 is a ruggedized Chromebook convertible

CTL J5 is a ruggedized Chromebook convertible

Few OEMs have embraced Chromebooks the way CTL has. They released several models last year, and they’ve just added a new convertible model to their line-up. Their latest Chrome OS portable is the J5. It features a 360 degree hinge like Lenovo’s Yoga laptops (and numerous others) that allow it to be used as a […]

CTL J5 is a ruggedized Chromebook convertible is a post from: Liliputing

CTL J5 is a ruggedized Chromebook convertible

Few OEMs have embraced Chromebooks the way CTL has. They released several models last year, and they’ve just added a new convertible model to their line-up. Their latest Chrome OS portable is the J5. It features a 360 degree hinge like Lenovo’s Yoga laptops (and numerous others) that allow it to be used as a […]

CTL J5 is a ruggedized Chromebook convertible is a post from: Liliputing

BlackBerry cries foul as Facebook plans to end BB OS 10 support

Calls BlackBerry faithful to launch hashtag protest, pays Twitter to update app.

Facebook's icon may soon disappear from BlackBerry devices along with WhatsApp.

Facebook and its WhatsApp messaging subsidiary have both announced plans to end support for BlackBerry OS 10 by the end of 2016 despite pleas from BlackBerry's executives. In a blog post, BlackBerry's senior manager in charge of the company's App Ecosystem and Developer Outreach team, Lou Gazzola, expressed disappointment over the decision and urged customers to protest it. "We fought back to work with WhatsApp and Facebook to change their minds, but at this time, their decision stands (but let them know how you feel on social media, using the hashtag #ILoveBB10Apps)," he wrote.

The decision comes as BlackBerry has started to look at paths beyond its own operating system. In late 2015, the company introduced its own Android-based phone, the Priv. And with the introduction of the Passport, BlackBerry began supporting some Android applications on BB OS itself. But the company's executives have continuously tried to attract and keep developers for their native operating system's ecosystem.

Gazzola wrote that despite the Facebook decision, "we have worked hard to ensure our end users have the best experience in light of this decision and are continuing to search for alternate solutions." In an attempt to convince users of the company's commitment and to highlight the efforts of the BlackBerry developer community—which Gazzola said is "creating thousands of apps every month"—Blackberry is launching a featured list of 20 of applications on BlackBerry World called Great Apps on BlackBerry.

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Urban Empire: Städtebau plus Politik und Intrigen

Sieht aus wie ein klassisches Aufbauspiel, will aber einen Schwerpunkt auf Stadtpolitik und Gesellschaftsplanung legen: In Urban Empire tritt der Spieler als Bürgermeister mit vielen Rechten und Pflichten in seiner eigenen Metropole an. (Aufbauspiel, Games)

Sieht aus wie ein klassisches Aufbauspiel, will aber einen Schwerpunkt auf Stadtpolitik und Gesellschaftsplanung legen: In Urban Empire tritt der Spieler als Bürgermeister mit vielen Rechten und Pflichten in seiner eigenen Metropole an. (Aufbauspiel, Games)

Codeweavers demos Steam game client running on Android*

Codeweavers demos Steam game client running on Android*

Crossover is a tool that allows you to run some Windows software on Mac or Linux machines. It’s developed by a company called Codeweavers, and it’s basically a commercial version of the open source WINE software, and last year Codewavers announced it was working to bring the software to Android. That means you could eventually run some […]

Codeweavers demos Steam game client running on Android* is a post from: Liliputing

Codeweavers demos Steam game client running on Android*

Crossover is a tool that allows you to run some Windows software on Mac or Linux machines. It’s developed by a company called Codeweavers, and it’s basically a commercial version of the open source WINE software, and last year Codewavers announced it was working to bring the software to Android. That means you could eventually run some […]

Codeweavers demos Steam game client running on Android* is a post from: Liliputing

Psst: Here’s Uber’s most vulnerable code just waiting to be hacked

Company’s just-unveiled bug bounty program aims to outdo industry norms.

Over the past decade, there's been an explosion of bug bounty programs that pay hackers big cash rewards for finding vulnerabilities in applications and Web services. On Tuesday, ride-hailing service Uber became the latest company to embrace the trend with the unveiling of its own program.

In most respects, the program is similar to those offered by Google, Facebook, and so many other companies. It pays as much as $10,000 for the most critical vulnerabilities and provides a public forum to acknowledge the smarts of researchers who privately report bugs that no one inside the company was able to identify. Still, there are a few features that its designers say make it stand out from what's been done so far.

For instance, the Uber bounty program comes with a technical treasure map of sorts that's intended to help researchers find high-severity bugs quickly. The treasure map included with Tuesday's announcement enumerates some of the company's most security-sensitive subdomains, along with a brief description of types of assets that are at stake and the types of vulnerabilities that might threaten them. A description of partners.uber.com, for instance, describes it as the place driver partners visit to access private driver documents, payment statements, tax information, and other highly sensitive data.

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FCC’s cable box rules won’t prohibit extra ads around TV channels

Ban unneeded as companies like TiVo “are not disrupting advertising,” FCC says.

(credit: flash.pro)

When the Federal Communications Commission voted for a plan to let consumers watch TV channels on more devices, pay-TV companies complained that makers of third-party set-top boxes might insert their own advertising into cable TV. As a result, the cable TV lobby claimed customers would have to watch the standard television commercials plus see extra advertising distributed by whichever company makes the device or software they're using to watch TV.

FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler dismissed these concerns, and on the day of the vote he said that insertion of additional advertising would be prohibited. But the full text of the notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM), released after the vote on February 18, shows that there likely won't be a new rule preventing insertion of additional advertising.

The NPRM is a set of proposed rules that asks the public for comment with the goal of issuing final rules by the end of the year.

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