Boston Dynamics: Google will Roboterfirma an Toyota verkaufen

Googles Mutterkonzern Alphabet will sich einem Medienbericht zufolge von Boston Dynamics trennen und es an Toyota abgeben. Ganz aufgeben will Google seine Robotersparte aber nicht. (Boston Dynamics, Google)

Googles Mutterkonzern Alphabet will sich einem Medienbericht zufolge von Boston Dynamics trennen und es an Toyota abgeben. Ganz aufgeben will Google seine Robotersparte aber nicht. (Boston Dynamics, Google)

Oracle-Anwältin nach Niederlage: “Google hat die GPL getötet”

Der Gerichtsentscheid zugunsten von Google im Streit um Java-APIs freut viele Beobachter. Eine Anwältin von Oracle aber meint, dass das Urteil die Existenz der General Public License gefährde – und damit den Bestand der Open-Source-Community. (Oracle vs. Google, Urheberrecht)

Der Gerichtsentscheid zugunsten von Google im Streit um Java-APIs freut viele Beobachter. Eine Anwältin von Oracle aber meint, dass das Urteil die Existenz der General Public License gefährde - und damit den Bestand der Open-Source-Community. (Oracle vs. Google, Urheberrecht)

Selbstvermessung: Jawbone steigt offenbar aus Fitnesstracker-Geschäft aus

Einer der Pioniere der Selbstvermessung zieht sich offenbar aus dem Geschäft mit Fitness-Trackern zurück. Einem Bericht zufolge hat Jawbone die Herstellung seiner Fitness-Armbänder gestoppt und sucht einen Käufer für die Lautsprechersparte. Doch das Unternehmen hat noch eine andere Perspektive. (Fitness, Mobil)

Einer der Pioniere der Selbstvermessung zieht sich offenbar aus dem Geschäft mit Fitness-Trackern zurück. Einem Bericht zufolge hat Jawbone die Herstellung seiner Fitness-Armbänder gestoppt und sucht einen Käufer für die Lautsprechersparte. Doch das Unternehmen hat noch eine andere Perspektive. (Fitness, Mobil)

SpaceX: Falcon 9 Rakete kippelt nach Landung auf Schiff

SpaceX ist die dritte Landung einer ersten Stufe in Folge gelungen, allerdings kippelt die Raketenstufe auf dem Deck des Landeschiffs. Inzwischen plant die Firma, weitere Teile der Rakete wiederzuverwenden. (SpaceX, Raumfahrt)

SpaceX ist die dritte Landung einer ersten Stufe in Folge gelungen, allerdings kippelt die Raketenstufe auf dem Deck des Landeschiffs. Inzwischen plant die Firma, weitere Teile der Rakete wiederzuverwenden. (SpaceX, Raumfahrt)

Police Conducting “World’s Largest” Pirate Box Crackdown

Police in Scotland say they are conducting the world’s biggest ‘pirate box’ crackdown. Together with the Federation Against Copyright Theft, police are targeting sellers of Android-style set-top boxes and believe that thousands of pubs could be customers. In addition, three torrent sites have been closed down.

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

pirate-wifiWhile Internet piracy has thrived on desktop machines for decades, it is now quite common to find the activity taking place in the living room. Expensive equipment is no longer needed and bulky machines have been replaced by much smaller HDMI-capable devices.

There are several types around but the most common have Android under the hood. Typically in small set-top or dongle format, these products can be loaded with media software from Google’s Play Store or invariably “side-loaded” with more unofficial products such as customized versions of Kodi, Showbox and Popcorn Time.

These cheap IPTV systems can provide users with access to a bewildering array of free content, from movies and TV shows to live sports and other PPV events. As a result, copyright holders around the world are mounting aggressive crackdowns on those who sell such devices for infringing uses.

Some of the most prominent actions have involved the Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT), who together with police have conducted a number of raids in the UK in recent months. Most have taken place in England but news is now emerging of a large scale anti-IPTV operation underway in Scotland.

According to local police, two premises were raided in Glasgow this week as part of what they describe as the “world’s largest” investigation into pirate IPTV boxes which has been underway for the last 16 months.

While movie companies have shown an interest in these devices it appears the focus in Scotland is on the streaming of live sports broadcasts. These are officially offered by FACT partners the English Premier League (soccer) alongside distributors Sky and BT but individuals and pubs are obtaining them illegally.

Speaking with STV, police say that initial estimates of the scale of infringement are now being dwarfed.

“As of today we estimated about 500 pubs might be involved, but today’s investigation has suggested it could be thousands,” a spokesman said.

“This is undoubtedly the biggest operation of its kind in the world in terms of recovery. It’s a process that’s been done elsewhere but not on this scale, this is the biggest.”

In a comment FACT director general Kieron Sharp said that his organization is committed to working with law enforcement to crack down IPTV-related piracy, wherever it may be.

“Pub landlords, as well as the general public, need to be aware that IPTV and set-top boxes with apps and add-ons allowing the streaming of pirated TV, sports and films are very much illegal,” Sharp said.

“FACT will continue to work with police forces across the UK to crack down on the illegal sale of these boxes.”

In other action, police in Scotland say that in conjunction with FACT they have taken down three “major” torrent sites operated from the Edinburgh, Kilmarnock and Falkirk areas.

“We’ve been successful in removing these sites and work is ongoing to remove several more that we have identified, in what is undoubtedly a growing problem,” said Police Constable Andy Law.

“Hosts often believe they leave no footprint, but in reality we can trace sites back to an address and from there it leaves little scope for the culprit to hide their actions.”

Police have not revealed the names of the sites and there has been no indication in torrent circles of any large indexes or trackers going down. It therefore seems more likely that these are lower level sites rather than the “major” ones suggested by the police.

“Websites offering illegal access to films, music, games and books are threatening our creative industries and the 1.8 million people in the UK working in them,” said FACT’s Kieron Sharp.

“FACT is committed to tackling online piracy and together with our partners at the police and within industry, we will continue the fight to clampdown on anyone operating these sites within our own territories.”

These latest announcements come alongside news that FACT has lost the support of its movie studios partners alongside an estimated 50% of its budget. The MPA says it will carry out its own investigations from regional hubs in future.

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

Die Woche im Video: Die Schoko-Burger-Woche bei Golem.de – mmhhhh!

Oracle weiß viel über Hamburger und würde für Schoko-Geschenke sicherlich auch die Passwörter der Geschworenen bekommen. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Oracle weiß viel über Hamburger und würde für Schoko-Geschenke sicherlich auch die Passwörter der Geschworenen bekommen. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Op-ed: Oracle attorney says Google’s court victory might kill the GPL

Developers shouldn’t celebrate Google’s win in this hard-fought copyright case.

Annette Hurst is an attorney at Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe who represented Oracle in the recent Oracle v. Google trial. This op-ed represents her own views and is not intended to represent those of her client or Ars Technica.

The Oracle v. Google trial concluded yesterday when a jury returned a verdict in Google's favor. The litigation began in 2010, when Oracle sued Google, saying that the use of Java APIs in Android violated copyright law. After a 2012 trial, a judge held that APIs can't be copyrighted at all, but that ruling was overturned on appeal. In the trial this month, Google successfully argued that its use of Java APIs, about 11,500 lines of code in all, was protected by "fair use."

(credit: barraquito)

The developer community may be celebrating today what it perceives as a victory in Oracle v. Google. Google won a verdict that an unauthorized, commercial, competitive, harmful use of software in billions of products is fair use. No copyright expert would have ever predicted such a use would be considered fair. Before celebrating, developers should take a closer look. Not only will creators everywhere suffer from this decision if it remains intact, but the free software movement itself now faces substantial jeopardy.

While we don't know what ultimately swayed the jury, Google's narrative boiled down to this: because the Java APIs have been open, any use of them was justified and all licensing restrictions should be disregarded. In other words, if you offer your software on an open and free basis, any use is fair use.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

“I will give you everything” promises Trump in announcing his energy plan

We’ll preserve our natural resources while extracting them as quickly as possible.

(credit: Gage Skidmore)

Yesterday in a press conference and speech in North Dakota, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump announced what some are terming his energy policy. His announcement was extremely short on specifics, included factual inaccuracies, and in some cases contained obvious internal contradictions. As such, what he said might better be termed "energy aspirations." We'll have to wait for the details to see how these aspirations might eventually lead to policy.

What were those aspirations? There were two related themes in the announcements: extraction is good, and regulations are bad because they tend to limit extraction. So Trump will get rid of a lot of the latter in order to boost the former. But, at the same time, he'll preserve our air, water, and natural resources.

At one point, Trump estimated that "75 percent of our rules and regulations are bad for us." So he'd get rid of most of them: "Any regulation that's outdated, unnecessary, bad for workers, or contrary to the national interest will be scrapped, and scrapped completely." Lest there be any confusion about whose rules were problematic, he went on to accuse the Environmental Protection Agency of using "totalitarian tactics" and accused the Obama administration of blocking extraction.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Verizon workers declare end to 44-day strike, claim “big gains”

During Verizon strike, replacement workers maintained fiber and copper networks.

Verizon workers rallying in July 2015, just before their contract expired. (credit: Communications Workers of America)

Thirty-six thousand Verizon employees are close to going back to work because of an agreement struck by the company and union representatives.

The workers went on strike on April 13 after working without a contract for 10 months. The union said Verizon was seeking to move jobs offshore, outsource work to low-wage contractors, close call centers, and force technicians to go on months-long assignments away from home. Union reps also accused Verizon of cutting staff instead of living up to promises to install more FiOS fiber lines.

But there is now an agreement in principle to end the strike and sign a new four-year contract, US Labor Secretary Thomas Perez announced today.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Now you can try Amazon Echo… in a browser

Now you can try Amazon Echo… in a browser

Want to take Amazon’s Alexa voice service for a spin, but don’t want to spend money on an Amazon Echo or another product with Alexa support? All you need is a web browser.

Amazon has launched Echoism.io, a website where you can interact with with a virtual Amazon Echo. It’s aimed at developers, but anyone can give it a try.

You’ll need a computer that has a microphone, and you’ll need to grant the web page permission to use your mic.

Continue reading Now you can try Amazon Echo… in a browser at Liliputing.

Now you can try Amazon Echo… in a browser

Want to take Amazon’s Alexa voice service for a spin, but don’t want to spend money on an Amazon Echo or another product with Alexa support? All you need is a web browser.

Amazon has launched Echoism.io, a website where you can interact with with a virtual Amazon Echo. It’s aimed at developers, but anyone can give it a try.

You’ll need a computer that has a microphone, and you’ll need to grant the web page permission to use your mic.

Continue reading Now you can try Amazon Echo… in a browser at Liliputing.