Deals of the Day (5-18-2016)

Deals of the Day (5-18-2016)

Asus and TP-Link are two of the first companies to launch wireless routers based on Google’s OnHub platform. They’ve got multiple antennas, support for 802.11ac WiFi and Bluetooth Smart, and they’re designed to be easy to control using a smartphone app.

They’re also pretty expensive, with prices typically starting at $200. But Best Buy is currently selling an Asus OnHub model for $150. It still ain’t exactly cheap, but that’s the best price I’ve seen on an OnHub device to date.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (5-18-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (5-18-2016)

Asus and TP-Link are two of the first companies to launch wireless routers based on Google’s OnHub platform. They’ve got multiple antennas, support for 802.11ac WiFi and Bluetooth Smart, and they’re designed to be easy to control using a smartphone app.

They’re also pretty expensive, with prices typically starting at $200. But Best Buy is currently selling an Asus OnHub model for $150. It still ain’t exactly cheap, but that’s the best price I’ve seen on an OnHub device to date.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (5-18-2016) at Liliputing.

Rote Ampel: Oberlandesgericht lässt Dashcam als Beweismittel zu

Wer über eine rote Ampel fährt, muss damit rechnen, mit einem Dashcam-Video eifriger Mitbürger überführt zu werden. Das ist laut Oberlandesgericht Stuttgart zulässig. Der Deutsche Anwaltverein protestiert. (Datenschutz, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)

Wer über eine rote Ampel fährt, muss damit rechnen, mit einem Dashcam-Video eifriger Mitbürger überführt zu werden. Das ist laut Oberlandesgericht Stuttgart zulässig. Der Deutsche Anwaltverein protestiert. (Datenschutz, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)

Buzz Aldrin says NASA is going about Mars exploration the wrong way

The second man on the Moon joins another Apollo legend in calling for change.

Buzz Aldrin, left of President Obama, visited the Oval Office in 2014. (credit: NASA)

Of all the Apollo astronauts that walked on the Moon, none has made more of his fame than Buzz Aldrin, who followed Neil Armstrong onto the lunar surface in 1969. But long before he danced with the stars and inspired Buzz Lightyear, and even before he served as the Apollo 11 lunar module pilot, Aldrin was known as an expert in orbital rendezvous.

In recent years, Aldrin has used his astronautics expertise and fame to push a cycler concept that he believes would be the best way to visit and eventually inhabit Mars. In his public lectures, however, Aldrin has largely avoided criticizing the present approach being taken by NASA with the development of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft and its two-decade "Journey to Mars."

That changed at this week's Humans to Mars conference. In his remarks, Aldrin said NASA should change the approach it has had in place since the 1960s, that of designing and managing development of its own rockets. He took direct aim at the SLS vehicle, which he reminded listeners was based on 1970s technology and the space shuttle rather than more modern concepts. "It competes with the private sector," Aldrin said. "I thought most of us were in the process of learning that the government shouldn't do that."

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Pal Strap adds GPS, battery to Pebble Time smartwatches (crowdfunding)

Pal Strap adds GPS, battery to Pebble Time smartwatches (crowdfunding)

The Pebble Time line of smartwatches can display smartphone notifications, display smartphone notifications, and perform a bunch of other functions thanks to support for third-party apps.

But the Pebble Time lineup also supports third-party hardware add-ons, thanks to Pebble’s smartstrap system.

Earlier this year a team launched a Crowdfunding campaign for a smartstrap that would add contactless payment to a Pebble smartwatch. Now another group has launched a campaign for a smartstrap that adds GPS and an extended battery.

Continue reading Pal Strap adds GPS, battery to Pebble Time smartwatches (crowdfunding) at Liliputing.

Pal Strap adds GPS, battery to Pebble Time smartwatches (crowdfunding)

The Pebble Time line of smartwatches can display smartphone notifications, display smartphone notifications, and perform a bunch of other functions thanks to support for third-party apps.

But the Pebble Time lineup also supports third-party hardware add-ons, thanks to Pebble’s smartstrap system.

Earlier this year a team launched a Crowdfunding campaign for a smartstrap that would add contactless payment to a Pebble smartwatch. Now another group has launched a campaign for a smartstrap that adds GPS and an extended battery.

Continue reading Pal Strap adds GPS, battery to Pebble Time smartwatches (crowdfunding) at Liliputing.

Antivirensoftware: Symantec und Norton haben kritische Sicherheitslücken

Wieder einmal sind Antivirenprodukte prominenter Hersteller von schweren Sicherheitslücken betroffen. Angreifer können Systeme mit Norton- und Symantec-Software zum Absturz bringen, bei Windows-Rechnern soll es besonders schlimm sein. (Anti-Virus, Virenscanner)

Wieder einmal sind Antivirenprodukte prominenter Hersteller von schweren Sicherheitslücken betroffen. Angreifer können Systeme mit Norton- und Symantec-Software zum Absturz bringen, bei Windows-Rechnern soll es besonders schlimm sein. (Anti-Virus, Virenscanner)

Then there were 117 million. LinkedIn password breach much bigger than thought

With a pricetag of $2,200, the new haul came from a 2012 breach.

Enlarge (credit: @flanvel)

Login credentials for as many as 117 million LinkedIn accounts have been put up for sale online by someone who is seeking more than $2,200 for the haul, a security researcher said.

The credentials—which include e-mail addresses and passwords hashed using the woefully weak SHA1 function—appear to come from a 2012 breach of the career networking site, researcher Troy Hunt said in a series of tweets. LinkedIn officials have since verified that the 2012 hack was the source and said they are working to invalidate any passwords that may still be actively used on compromised accounts. According to LeakedSource, a site that maintains a database of more than 1.25 billion compromised accounts, the new batch contains data for 167 million accounts. 117 million of the records in the batch include a password field.

The discovery means that the 2012 LinkedIn breach was much bigger than previously believed. At the time, researchers found almost 6.5 million credentials belonging to site users. It's not clear if the new number of affected accounts is news to LinkedIn. In the days following discovery of the 2012 breach, company officials implemented a mandatory password reset for affected users. A statement from company officials on Wednesday saying that they're working to change any passwords still in use leaves open the possibility that they were unaware the number was so high.

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TP-Link’s $350 Talon AD7200 is the first 802.11ad router

TP-Link’s $350 Talon AD7200 is the first 802.11ad router

So the good news is that you can now buy the first wireless router to support 802.11ad or WiGig technology. The even better news is that it supports crazy fast wireless data transfer speeds.

While 802.11ad might sound like a replacement for 802.11ac WiFi, it isn’t. Instead, the new WiGig protocol is designed to offer speedy, connections between hardware like laptops and docking stations, storage devices, and external displays. It only works over short distances.

Continue reading TP-Link’s $350 Talon AD7200 is the first 802.11ad router at Liliputing.

TP-Link’s $350 Talon AD7200 is the first 802.11ad router

So the good news is that you can now buy the first wireless router to support 802.11ad or WiGig technology. The even better news is that it supports crazy fast wireless data transfer speeds.

While 802.11ad might sound like a replacement for 802.11ac WiFi, it isn’t. Instead, the new WiGig protocol is designed to offer speedy, connections between hardware like laptops and docking stations, storage devices, and external displays. It only works over short distances.

Continue reading TP-Link’s $350 Talon AD7200 is the first 802.11ad router at Liliputing.

Fitbit acquires “wearable payment assets” from startup Coin

“No plans” for integration into products in 2016, but 2017 is a whole new year.

(credit: Valentina Palladino)

Fitbit devices are known for being easy-to-use, fitness-first products, but now the company that makes them may be planning to tack on extra features. Fitbit released a statement today announcing that it has acquired "wearable payment assets" from the Silicon Valley company Coin.

According to the statement, Fitbit gains "key personnel and intellectual property" from Coin's wearable-payments platform in the deal. However, it excludes smart-payment products such as Coin 2.0, a singular smart card meant to replace the many credit and debit cards stuffed in your wallet. Coin's website shows that Coin 2.0 has sold out, and Coin's own statement about the acquisition, the company says it will no longer continue to sell its smart payment products. Existing Coin users will be able to use their devices for the duration of their "lifetime"; the card itself can last two years without any recharging.

Fitbit also says in its statement that there are no plans to integrate Coin's mobile payment technology into any 2016 products. Fitbit recently launched the Alta fitness tracker and the Blaze smartwatch a few months ago, and while the company could launch another product or two before the year is up, it likely won't have time to thoughtfully integrate mobile payments into any of them. The statement did say, though, that the deal "accelerates Fitbit’s ability to develop an active NFC payment solution that could be embedded into future Fitbit devices, broadening its smart capabilities."

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Copyright Holders Dominate Closed-Door DMCA Hearings

As discussions over DMCA reform continue, a number of closed-door hearings have taken place in San Francisco. Representatives from Fight for the Future and YouTube’s Channel Awesome were there and they report that discussions were dominated by copyright holders seeking new powers to permanently disappear content and even whole sites from the Internet.

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

Earlier this year the U.S. Government ran a public consultation to evaluate the effectiveness of the DMCA’s Safe Harbor provisions. These include issues such as ‘notice and takedown’ plus short-comings and abuses that arise from the current system.

In the final days of the consultation Fight for the Future (FFTF) and popular YouTube channel Channel Awesome launched a campaign urging the public to get involved. What followed was a massive response to the U.S. Copyright Office coordinated via the associated TakedownAbuse site. But that was just the beginning.

Thanks to the huge support FFTF and Channel Awesome (CA) were able to convince the U.S. Copyright Office (USCO) to give them seats at the table in a series of closed-door meetings on DMCA reforms held in San Francisco last week. Jeff Lyon (FFTF) and Mike Michaud (CA) attended and they report that discussion was heavily skewed in favor of copyright owners.

“Unfortunately, the hearings appeared to be rigged against the public interest, and unless we step up our game, it’s looking very likely that the USCO will make the DMCA even worse, with major giveaways to the copyright industry that put SOPA-style restrictions on independent content creators,” Lyon reports.

The FFTF CEO says that while Google, EFF and Mozilla were in attendance (pdf), they were outnumbered by pro-copyright groups including the MPAA, RIAA, Copyright Alliance (who previously labeled FFTF’s campaign participants as “zombies“), Creative Future, Disney, Paramount and NBCUniversal.

Speaking with TorrentFreak, Lyon says that one of the key copyright industry demands is for a “take down, stay down” system which would require platform owners to proactively police user-uploaded content.

“I can say for sure that there was overwhelming consensus in favor of ‘take down, stay down’ from members of the discussions affiliated with the copyright industry,” Lyon says.

“The idea is that once a copyright holder files a DMCA takedown for a particular piece of content, for example a music clip, it should then become the responsibility of the website operator to proactively scan everything uploaded by users and block that content from being posted in the future.”

Lyon says that this would effectively eliminate a user’s right to file a counter-notice, since they would be unable to post any content with a copyright claim against it, even in a fair use situation.

“Being unable to post copyrighted content also means users would be less able to sue copyright holders to assert a fair use right, since the content would be blocked by the website, instead of being taken down by a legal claim made by the copyright holder,” he explains.

TorrentFreak asked Lyon if copyright holders had made any suggestions on how such a complex system could work in practice. Apparently some feel it is Google’s problem.

“Keith Kupfershmid of Copyright Alliance said something to the effect of ‘I’m not a techie, but if they can make self driving cars, they can surely figure out how to keep copyrighted material from being posted,” he said.

However, also in attendance was Tony Rodriguez of anti-piracy outfit Digimarc. Lyon says that Rodriguez suggested that his company has the ability to deal with the job.

“It was strongly implied that Digimarc’s scanning technology could be adapted for use by website owners to comply with staydown requirements. I think Digimarc is practically salivating at the prospect of being in control over a government-mandated copyright protection racket, where they can serve both copyright holders and website owners who are held hostage by new staydown rules,” he explained.

“Overall the attitude was that it should be the tech industry’s problem to figure out how to do it and pay for it. Nobody had a good answer for determining fair use scenarios programmatically.”

While physically outnumbered by copyright holders, Google senior copyright counsel Fred von Lohman agreed with Jeff Lyon that content filtering technology is extremely expensive and burdensome for website owners to develop, noting that Google had spent over $40 million and deployed 100 software engineers to develop its Content ID system. Others weighed in too.

“One of the best points was made by Daphne Keller from Stanford Law,” Lyon says.

“She backed up my and von Lohman’s claims that content scanning systems are generally expensive, but added that good content scanning algorithms that could protect fair use rights will be very expensive. Thus if sites are required to implement content scanning, they will be incentivized to use cheap options that would err on the side of filtering out lawful content and fair use.”

Interestingly, sitting right next to Lyon in one of the sessions was MPAA attorney Dean Marks. He appeared to have SOPA on his mind.

“After some light-hearted joking banter with the regulators, the MPAA attorney suggested new legislation to take down entire websites (aka SOPA) for suspected copyright infringement,” Lyon explains.

“He spoke briefly and near the end of the meeting, so it was really almost in passing. He did not get into specifics about overseas websites [per SOPA], only mentioned that torrent sites only exist to spread pirated material and should be taken down completely.”

Overall, Lyon says he gets the impression that rather like with the SOPA debate, these DMCA discussions are being framed as “copyright industry vs. tech industry”, something which undermines the public interest. Nevertheless, FFTF and groups including EFF are putting up a fight.

“The general public is more affected by the DMCA than they even know. Copyright holders are abusing the process to censor negative reviews and commentary from the Internet. Creators are discouraged from fighting back, facing lost revenue and permanent bans from online platforms,” Lyon says.

“The sheer number of copyright holders at the meetings allowed them to push the discussions toward their ‘take down, stay down’ agenda, and they repeatedly tried to discredit nearly 100,000 comments sent by the public calling them out for mass censorship and abuse of the existing DMCA takedown rules. The copyright industry is clearly engaging in a massive lobbying effort to bring new SOPA-style legislation back in front of Congress.”

FFTF acknowledge that their opponents are powerful lobbying forces but they believe they have the tools and the public backing to put up a fight.

“We’ve beat them before and we can do it again. The copyright industry was blindsided by nearly 100,000 comments sent to the Copyright Office in the span of one day. When the next round of public commenting opens up, we will be ready, and our voices will be impossible to ignore,” Lyon concludes.

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

Jeep’s new Renegade: Simplicity is its own reward

With mixed parentage, it’s a cute ute of real capability.

(credit: Jim Resnick)

Among all the American auto brands in business today, none are more truly free than Jeep. You know the story. Conceived for light-duty battlefield work in WWII. Conveyor of military brass and even limited firepower. Popular and nimble off-roader. Simple mechanicals. Honest, forthright service. Ever faithful. And now, international.

The Italian-built Renegade is built on a shared platform with the Fiat 500X and fills the niche Jeep needs in order to compete in the small SUV dogfight that runs the gamut from car-derived vehicles like Subaru's Crosstrek, Chevy's Trax, Nissan's Juke, the Fiat 500X itself, Mazda's CX-3, and the absolute staple of the segment, Honda's CR-V. Aside from the Subaru, the Jeep offers the most comprehensive off-road prowess in Trailhawk form, though admittedly few will venture through mud bogs and single-track trails with any of these vehicles. (We did test a Renegade Trailhawk on serious off-road trails and even non-trails last year and came away enormously impressed. It's not just a cute ute.)

And those Italian roots actually make more sense than you might imagine now that Europeans have made such a strong shift to small SUVs from station wagons and Americans have replaced small sedans with subcompact SUVs. As a business, FCA can spread cost and productivity internationally by focusing Renegade production at the Melfi, Italy factory alongside other Fiat models.

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