The search for exoplanets goes cold as Kepler enters emergency mode

The planet hunting spacecraft has already been a wild success for NASA.

The Kepler spacecraft is in trouble again. (credit: NASA)

Something's gone wrong aboard the planet-hunting Kepler spacecraft. On Friday evening, mission manager Charlie Sobeck announced that Kepler had entered "emergency mode." This is the lowest functioning operation mode and, critically, consumes the most fuel.

The last time NASA contacted Kepler, on April 4th, the spacecraft was in good health. On Thursday, however, Kepler was found to have been in emergency mode for about a day and a half. Even though it takes roughly 13 minutes for messages to travel the 120 million km from Earth to the spacecraft, it is a positive sign that NASA can still communicate with Kepler. This leaves open the possibility of some technical repair.

Since its launch in 2009, Kepler has been a major success for NASA, finding about 5,000 candidate planets, with 1,000 of those already confirmed by ground-based observations. Moreover, it has firmly established the commonality of planets, from Earth-sized worlds to gas giants, throughout the Milky Way Galaxy.

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Copyright Group Likens Massive DMCA Abuse Protests to “Zombie Apocalypse”

Last week a campaign launched by Fight for the Future and popular YouTube channel ChannelAwesome to protest DMCA abuse generated nearly 100,000 responses, overwhelming the U.S. Copyright Office. This effort appears to have frustrated various industry insiders, with Copyright Alliance boss Keith Kupferschmid likening it to a “Zombie Apocalypse.”

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

copyright-bloodIn recent years there have been a lot of complaints about the current state of the DMCA takedown process.

To hear the growing concerns from all sides, the U.S. Copyright Office launched a public consultation in order to evaluate the impact and effectiveness of the 1998 copyright law.

Just before the deadline expired last week, Fight for the Future (FFTF) and popular YouTube channel ChannelAwesome decided to join in. They launched a campaign through which people could protest DMCA abuse, triggering over 90,000 responses in less than 24 hours.

The public interest was so overwhelming that the Government’s servers reportedly “crashed” under the heavy load.

The protest organizers were delighted to see that so many people had voiced their concerns. Up until they got involved there had only been a few dozen responses so their efforts made a huge impact.

However, copyright holders and industry groups are not pleased with the public outcry. Earlier this week Keith Kupferschmid, CEO of the Hollywood funded Copyright Alliance, likened it to a “Copyright Zombie Apocalypse.”

“Well, in case you were unconscious and left for dead in a hospital last week, the copyright community experienced its own zombie apocalypse,” Kupferschmid writes.

His main complaint is that nearly all comments were sent through the TakedownAbuse campaign site, where people could send in the pre-filled form highlighting various abuse related problems.

“These 90,000 comments are all identical submissions generated merely by clicking on the ‘I’m in’ button at takedownabuse.org. Like the zombies in The Walking Dead, there was not a lot of effort or brainpower that went into the 90,000 plus submissions,” he notes.

“If there are problems with the DMCA the best way to understand what those problems are, and to attempt to address them, is for those with concerns to voice them in detail and not file yet another zombie comment. As we’ve learned from The Walking Dead, those zombies are rather easily disposed of.”

While Kupferschmid certainly has a point when he argues that the massive number of responses is unlikely to generate a broad range of insights, the harsh wording appears to be a sign of bitter frustration.

Knowing that tens of thousands of people share a certain point of view has value, and the Copyright Office is clever enough to take the context into account.

Interestingly, however, Kupferschmid notes that he would say the same if the comments were voicing pro-copyright sentiments.

This is rather ironic because the Copyright Alliance is actively promoting several pro-copyright campaigns that also allow the public to sign pre-written petitions. Unlike the form at TakedownAbuse.org, people can’t even edit the message. Like “zombies,” all they are encouraged to do is sign.

TorrentFreak spoke to FFTF’s Tiffiniy Cheng, who notes that people did edit or add their own comments. In any case, equating tens of thousands of concerned citizens to zombies might not be best move.

“The expression of a disagreement with a certain policy is valuable to our democracy and debate. And, that’s what we have here,” Cheng says.

“The people who filed comments have experienced real censorship that they want to stop and care deeply about stopping DMCA takedown abuse. You can’t discount that, they are getting organized and demanding a seat at the table the best way they know how – by coming together and showing how big this problem is,” she adds.

After the comment deadline passed the Takedownabuse campaign received thousands of additional comments. They plan to submit these additional responses to the Copyright Office as a petition.

Perhaps the Copyright Alliance should join in, rally some “zombies,” and launch a petition of their own?

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

Researchers help shut down spam botnet that enslaved 4,000 Linux machines

Mumblehard blasted the Internet with spam for more than a year.

A botnet that enslaved about 4,000 Linux computers and caused them to blast the Internet with spam for more than a year has finally been shut down.

Known as Mumblehard, the botnet was the product of highly skilled developers. It used a custom "packer" to conceal the Perl-based source code that made it run, a backdoor that gave attackers persistent access, and a mail daemon that was able to send large volumes of spam. Command servers that coordinated the compromised machines' operations could also send messages to Spamhaus requesting the delisting of any Mumblehard-based IP addresses that sneaked into the real-time composite blocking list, or CBL, maintained by the anti-spam service.

"There was a script automatically monitoring the CBL for the IP addresses of all the spam-bots," researchers from security firm Eset wrote in a blog post published Thursday. "If one was found to be blacklisted, this script requested the delisting of the IP address. Such requests are protected with a CAPTCHA to avoid automation, but OCR (or an external service if OCR didn’t work) was used to break the protection."

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Ford just made spotting its police SUV a lot harder

The Police Interceptor Utility can now hide its flashing lights in the roof liner.

Scofflaw drivers beware: spotting police vehicles is about to get more challenging. Ford has designed a new lightbar for its Police Interceptor Utility, the big SUV many police departments now drive. Unless its red and blue lights are flashing, the Interceptor is basically invisible.

Life used to be simple. We knew where we stood with the Ford Crown Victoria—unless painted bright yellow it was always a cop car. But the Crown Vic was pretty ancient tech even in the early 1990s, and by 2011 Ford had called time on this rear-wheel drive dinosaur. Based on the Ford Explorer SUV, the Police Interceptor Utility is fast becoming a favorite of law enforcement. With this new lightbar it's going to be even harder to tell whether the big Ford is simply a soccer mom with a penchant for black or John Q. Law.

“Today, agencies typically use aftermarket interior visor light bars that are somewhat bulky and can obstruct the field of vision–especially for taller officers,” said Stephen Tyler, Ford police marketing manager for North American fleet, lease, and remarketing operations. “This extremely low-profile unit is fully integrated where the headliner and top of the windshield meet, for tremendously improved driver visibility versus aftermarket alternatives.”

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iZombie is the zombie-themed police procedural show you need to be watching

The CW’s genre-hopping show from the creator of Veronica Mars is a lot of fun.

Enlarge / Rose McIver as Liv Moore in the CW's iZombie. (credit: The CW)

Comic book-themed TV and movie fatigue is real, and I suffer from it big time. I tried very hard to like Jessica Jones and failed. I have nothing to give your Daredevils and your Gothams and your The Flashes but a gigantic Liz Lemon-class eye-roll. I can’t even say I “hate” them because “hate” still requires some modicum of emotional investment.

So imagine my surprise when I found a comic-book-derived show that I actually love: The CW’s iZombie, which is currently nearing the end of its second season. Created by Veronica Mars’ Diane Ruggiero-Wright and Rob Thomas, the show is loosely based on the 28-issue Vertigo comic of the same name and admirably juggles the reliability and predictability of a crime-of-the-week police procedural with a multithreaded serial.

The show’s name sells it short, so here’s the expanded premise: young doctor Liv Moore (Rose McIver) has a great job and a great fiancé (Major Lilywhite, played by Robert Buckley) and everything is going great! But one night, against her better judgment, Liv decides to put herself out there and socialize; she’s on a party boat when an apparent zombie outbreak kicks off, infecting her and radically altering the course of her life.

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Measure your muscle and fat anywhere with Skulpt Chisel

The $99 device uses EIM to tell you how strong your muscles really are.

Video shot/edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

It can be hard to see progress when you're trying to get fit. Pounds don't fly off in a week, and massive muscles don't appear overnight. But a company called Skulpt wants to make it easier for you to see the fitness hurdles you've already jumped. Its $99 Skulpt Chisel is a brick-like device that uses "electrical impedance myography" to assess muscle quality and fat percentage all across the body. Think of it as a tracker for your fitness tracker, if you use a fitness tracker—the Chisel can assess if your workouts are actually working for you. Even if you don't use a fitness device, it can show you which parts of your body need improvement and how you've gotten stronger over time.

How it works: Feel the currents

Design and features go hand-in-hand with the Skulpt Chisel. It's a white, rectangular device that's slightly taller than a deck of cards, with a thin light ring around the edges. The front of the device is just the Skulpt logo, but the back is where all the technology is. That's where you'll find small electrode strips covering most of the surface, along with four small nodes that fit into its charging base. Those electrodes measure muscle quality and fat percentage on different parts of the body using electrical impedance myography, or EIM.

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Closer look at the Alcatel Xess 17 inch Android… thing

Closer look at the Alcatel Xess 17 inch Android… thing

The Alcatel Xess is an Android tablet with a big screen. Or maybe it’s an all-in-one computer with a reasonably small screen and Android software. Any way you look at it, the Xess is a device with a 17.3 inch full HD display, a 9,600 mAh battery, and a built-in kickstand and handle. It weighs […]

Closer look at the Alcatel Xess 17 inch Android… thing is a post from: Liliputing

Closer look at the Alcatel Xess 17 inch Android… thing

The Alcatel Xess is an Android tablet with a big screen. Or maybe it’s an all-in-one computer with a reasonably small screen and Android software. Any way you look at it, the Xess is a device with a 17.3 inch full HD display, a 9,600 mAh battery, and a built-in kickstand and handle. It weighs […]

Closer look at the Alcatel Xess 17 inch Android… thing is a post from: Liliputing

Betriebssystem-Statistik: Windows XP ist weiter verbreitet als Windows 8.1

Das dritthäufigste Desktop-Betriebssystem? Windows XP! Das veraltete und unsichere Betriebssystem kommt aktuellen Zahlen zufolge immer noch häufig zum Einsatz. Windows 10 belegt den zweiten Platz. (Windows XP, Mac)

Das dritthäufigste Desktop-Betriebssystem? Windows XP! Das veraltete und unsichere Betriebssystem kommt aktuellen Zahlen zufolge immer noch häufig zum Einsatz. Windows 10 belegt den zweiten Platz. (Windows XP, Mac)

Aboard HMS Cavalier, where Wargaming is battling to shape the future of VR films

World of Tanks maker is doing great work preserving the HMS Cavalier.

Sometimes promotion for a videogame can go too far, becoming overwrought and vastly inflating the value of what it is promoting. Other times it can be subtle, unique, maybe even truly interesting, and draw in a new audience that might not have otherwise have cared. Then there's the Wargaming approach, which seems to be: "make something that doesn't promote any of our games, purely because we can."

Thus, Virtually Inside Warships was born: a virtual, 360-degree video tour of the HMS Cavalier, made with virtual reality headsets in mind, but the kind of thing you can just as easily watch on a smartphone, tablet, or even (with some cumbersome mouse-swiping) your browser. It is a complex technical undertaking, requiring much preparation, technical know-how, and traditional documentary-making chops—and, if you didn't already know ahead of time, there's almost no indication that it was made by a gaming company.

This isn't uncharted territory for the Minsk-based studio, which is best known for developing the game World of Tanks. Its first VR outing was Virtually Inside Tanks, and it followed that with a 360-degree 1941 battle re-enactment, a neat proof-of-concept for where the studio wants its VR ambitions to end up. But Virtually Inside Warships sees a number of improvements to the technology used, including a far more experienced production team, and a level of ambition I've yet to see in any VR or 360-degree film to date.

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