Raumfahrt: Erste Rakete startet in Wostotschny

Premiere geglückt, wenn auch mit Verzögerung: Im Beisein von Präsident Wladimir Putin hob die erste Rakete vom Startplatz Wostotschny in Sibirien ab. Von dem neuen Kosmodrom aus sollen künftig auch westliche Astronauten ins All fliegen. (Raumfahrt, Satelliten)

Premiere geglückt, wenn auch mit Verzögerung: Im Beisein von Präsident Wladimir Putin hob die erste Rakete vom Startplatz Wostotschny in Sibirien ab. Von dem neuen Kosmodrom aus sollen künftig auch westliche Astronauten ins All fliegen. (Raumfahrt, Satelliten)

Facebook: Zuckerberg nimmt Krankheiten und Klima ins Visier

Facebook hat in den vergangenen drei Monaten über 60 Millionen Nutzer hinzugewonnen, Umsatz und Gewinn deutlich gesteigert. Gründer Mark Zuckerberg will jetzt mit seinem Geld “alle Krankheiten” heilen – sichert aber erst mal seine Kontrolle über Facebook ab. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Facebook hat in den vergangenen drei Monaten über 60 Millionen Nutzer hinzugewonnen, Umsatz und Gewinn deutlich gesteigert. Gründer Mark Zuckerberg will jetzt mit seinem Geld "alle Krankheiten" heilen - sichert aber erst mal seine Kontrolle über Facebook ab. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Cybertruppe: Die Bundeswehr sucht händeringend Nerds

Die Bundeswehr hat eine neue Cybertruppe, doch Spezialisten dafür sind nur schwer zu finden – der IT-Nachwuchs geht selten zum Bund. Jetzt sollen auch Nerds umworben werden, die bisher nicht für eine Bundeswehrkarriere infrage kamen. (Technologie, Computer)

Die Bundeswehr hat eine neue Cybertruppe, doch Spezialisten dafür sind nur schwer zu finden - der IT-Nachwuchs geht selten zum Bund. Jetzt sollen auch Nerds umworben werden, die bisher nicht für eine Bundeswehrkarriere infrage kamen. (Technologie, Computer)

Lucid Trips: Virtual Reality als Vorstufe zu Klarträumen

Die Traumwelten anderer erleben – das soll mit Virtual Reality in Lucid Trips irgendwann gehen. Erst soll jedoch das Gefühl eines Klartraums vermittelt werden. Golem.de hat mit den Entwicklern über das ungewöhnliche Spiel gesprochen. (VR, Interview)

Die Traumwelten anderer erleben - das soll mit Virtual Reality in Lucid Trips irgendwann gehen. Erst soll jedoch das Gefühl eines Klartraums vermittelt werden. Golem.de hat mit den Entwicklern über das ungewöhnliche Spiel gesprochen. (VR, Interview)

DFKI-Roboter: Eine riesige Gottesanbeterin für Mond, Mars und Erde

Wenn sich Mantis aufrichtet, ist er mannshoch. Doch zum Glück ist der sechsbeinige Roboter anders als sein natürliches Vorbild nicht auf Beute aus. Der neue Laufroboter des DFKI soll unwegsames Terrain erkunden. (Roboter, Technologie)

Wenn sich Mantis aufrichtet, ist er mannshoch. Doch zum Glück ist der sechsbeinige Roboter anders als sein natürliches Vorbild nicht auf Beute aus. Der neue Laufroboter des DFKI soll unwegsames Terrain erkunden. (Roboter, Technologie)

‘Game of Thrones’ Season 6 Piracy Overwhelming, but No Records Broken This Time

It’s that time of the year again, and the eagerly anticipated season premier of the hit HBO show Game of Thrones has again encouraged a surge of piracy. But unlike previous years, no records have been broken this year … so far.The previous season’s s…



It's that time of the year again, and the eagerly anticipated season premier of the hit HBO show Game of Thrones has again encouraged a surge of piracy. But unlike previous years, no records have been broken this year ... so far.

The previous season's season finale saw the record for the largest torrenting swarm broken, and this season's finale could again break the same record. But even without breaking any records, the number of downloads for the season 6 premier is significant, and hundreds of thousands of downloads had occurred within hours of the premier.

Again, Australia lead the charts when it comes to where downloaders are from, with 12.5% of downloaders coming from the land down under (where legal options can be expensive or out of reach to many). Australia was followed by India (9.7%), United States (8.5%) and the United Kingdom (6.9%) in terms of popularity.

The relatively low number of U.S. downloaders could be related to the fact that HBO had offered a free preview weekend for non subscribers, which allowed many to watch the season premier for free. This could also explain why torrenting records weren't broken this time around - the other main reasons could be related to the increasing use of streaming and direct downloads by pirates, in a bid to avoid detection and punishment.

Oppo and Vivo joined the top 5 smartphone companies in Q1 2016

Oppo and Vivo joined the top 5 smartphone companies in Q1 2016

Apple may have had a decline in iPhone shipments for the first time since launching the first model in 2007. But Apple wasn’t the only company to see a slump in smartphone sales: According to a new report from IDC, the smartphone market only grew by 0.2 percent in the first quarter of 2016, with total shipments of 334.9 million, up from 334.3 million during the same period in 2015.

That’s the smallest amount of year-to-year growth since IDC started tracking smartphone sales, and the research firm figures it’s because of market saturation in developed countries (most people who want a smartphone already have one, and may not feel the need to upgrade to a new model frequently).

Continue reading Oppo and Vivo joined the top 5 smartphone companies in Q1 2016 at Liliputing.

Oppo and Vivo joined the top 5 smartphone companies in Q1 2016

Apple may have had a decline in iPhone shipments for the first time since launching the first model in 2007. But Apple wasn’t the only company to see a slump in smartphone sales: According to a new report from IDC, the smartphone market only grew by 0.2 percent in the first quarter of 2016, with total shipments of 334.9 million, up from 334.3 million during the same period in 2015.

That’s the smallest amount of year-to-year growth since IDC started tracking smartphone sales, and the research firm figures it’s because of market saturation in developed countries (most people who want a smartphone already have one, and may not feel the need to upgrade to a new model frequently).

Continue reading Oppo and Vivo joined the top 5 smartphone companies in Q1 2016 at Liliputing.

Microsoft experiments with DNA storage: 1,000,000,000 TB in a gram

Reading and writing are a bit of a chore, but it keeps data safe for thousands of years.

Microsoft is buying ten million strands of DNA from biology startup Twist Bioscience to investigate the use of genetic material to store data.

The data density of DNA is orders of magnitude higher than conventional storage systems, with 1 gram of DNA able to represent close to 1 billion terabytes (1 zettabyte) of data. DNA is also remarkably robust; DNA fragments thousands of years old have been successfully sequenced.

These properties make it an intriguing option for long-term data archival. Binary data has already been successfully stored as DNA base pairs, with estimates in 2013 suggesting that it would be economically viable for storage of 500 years or more.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Blame the victim: Report shows fifth of breaches caused by “miscellaneous errors”

Verizon annual report finds breaches happening faster and taking longer to be detected.

This breach was likely not caused by a default password. But too many data breaches in 2015 were. (credit: Jim Barton)

The number of reported breaches of organizations' data has been growing hyperbolically over the past few years, based on data in Verizon's 2016 Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR). And a major reason for that is that many organizations are still doing security like they were decades ago. The leading cause of reported data breaches, as documented by Verizon, is "miscellaneous errors"—mistakes made by employees—that open the door to attackers.

For those who've followed the recent chain of crypto-ransomware attacks at hospitals around the country, this finding will come as no surprise. Issues such as system misconfiguration, end users sending sensitive data out of the network by mistake, or users clicking on stuff they shouldn't be clicking on were among the errors made by organizations that led to about 18 percent of the data breaches documented in 2015—and were likely the leading contributor to the many incidents that went unreported.

In 63 percent of "confirmed" breaches, attackers took advantage of weak password credentials, default passwords left in place, or passwords that were stolen through phishing attacks or other means. In other words, if organizations were using something other than just usernames and passwords as credentials to gain access to systems, more than half of the data breaches that happened in 2015 would not have occurred.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

US House unanimously passed bill requiring warrants for e-mail

It remains to be seen whether Senate has the wherewithal to approve House version.

(credit: Dennis Skley)

The US House unanimously approved legislation Wednesday requiring the authorities to obtain a court warrant to acquire e-mail and stored cloud data.

The Email Privacy Act unwinds a President Ronald Reagan-era law that allows the authorities to access e-mail and data from service providers without a warrant if the message or data is at least 180 days old. The 1986 e-mail privacy law, adopted when CompuServe was king, considered cloud-stored e-mail and other documents older than six months to be abandoned and ripe for the taking.

The measure now goes to the Senate, where its passage is unknown. The Senate Judiciary Committee for years has debated, and even passed similar legislation, which has gone nowhere. President Obama must also sign the bill, and it's unlikely yet hopeful it would reach his desk before his term expires in January.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments