isoHunt Founder Settles with Music Industry for $66 Million

After a decade of lawsuits, the iconic torrent site IsoHunt has settled its last remaining legal dispute. Gary Fung, the Canadian founder of the defunct search engine, has agreed to pay a $66 million settlement to the local music industry group and is glad he can move on with his life.

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isohunt-fredomAfter years of legal battles, isoHunt and its founder Gary Fung are free at last.

Today, Fung announced that he has settled the last remaining lawsuit with Music Canada, formerly known as the Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA).

“After 10 long years, I’m happy to announce the end of isoHunt’s and my lawsuits,” Fung says, noting that he now owes the Canadian music group $66 million.

The multi-million dollar agreement follows an earlier settlement with the MPAA, for $110 million, on paper. While most site owners would be devastated, Fung has long moved beyond that phase and responds rather sarcastically.

“And I want to congratulate both Hollywood and CRIA on their victories, in letting me off with fines of $110m and $66m, respectively. Thank you!” he notes, adding that he’s “free at last”.

The consent order (pdf) signed by the Supreme Court of British Columbia prohibits isoHunt’s founder from operating any file-sharing site in the future.

It further requires Fung to pay damages of $55 million and another $10 million in aggravated punitive damages. The final million dollars is issued to cover the costs of the lawsuit.

Although isoHunt shut down 2013, it took more than two years for the last case to be finalized. The dispute initially began in the last decennium, when the Canadian music industry went after several prominent torrent sites.

In May 2008, isoHunt received a Cease and Desist letter from the CRIA in which they demanded that isoHunt founder Gary Fung should take the site offline. If Fung didn’t comply, the CRIA said it would pursue legal action, and demand $20,000 for each sound recording the site has infringed.

A similar tactic worked against Demonoid, but the isoHunt founder didn’t back down so easily. Instead, he himself filed a lawsuit against the CRIA asking the court to declare the site legal.

That didn’t work out as isoHunt’s founder had planned, and several years later the tables have been turned entirely, with the defeat now becoming final.

While the outcome won’t change anything about isoHunt’s demise, Fung is proud that he was always able to shield its users from the various copyright groups attacking it. No identifiable user data was shared at any point.

Fung is also happy for the support the site’s users have given him over the years.

“I can proudly conclude that I’ve kept my word regarding users’ privacy above. To isoHunt’s avid users, it’s worth repeating since I shutdown isoHunt in 2013, that you have my sincerest thanks for your continued support,” Fung notes.

“Me and my staff could not have done it for more than 10 years without you, and that’s an eternity in internet time. It was an interesting and challenging journey for me to say the least, and the most profound business learning experience I could not expect.”

The Canadian entrepreneur can now close the isoHunt book for good and move on to new ventures. One of the projects he just announced is a mobile search tool called “App to Automate Googling” AAG for which he invites alpha testers.

The original isoHunt site now redirects to MPAA’s “legal” search engine WhereToWatch. However, the name and design lives on via the clone site IsoHunt.to, which still draws millions of visitors per month – frustrating for the MPAA and Music Canada.

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

The quest to get a unique SNES CD-ROM prototype working again

Ben Heck’s hardware hacking gets a unique CD-ROM drive spinning again.

Part 1 of Ben Heck's SNES-CD restoration project (part 2 at the bottom of this post).

Since a prototype of the fabled, unreleased SNES-CD (aka the "Nintendo PlayStation") was first found and disassembled last year, we've learned enough about this one-of-a-kind piece of hardware to actually emulate homebrew games as if they were running on its CD-ROM drive. The prototype console itself, though, has never been fully functional—it couldn't generate sound, the CD-ROM drive wouldn't spin up, and, after a recent trip to Hong Kong, it actually stopped generating a picture.

That's when the prototype's owners, Terry and Dan Diebold, went to famed gaming hardware hacker Ben Heck. They want this piece of gaming history up and running again. Heck documented his efforts in a fascinating two-part YouTube series that reveals a lot about the system and what makes it tick.

Terry Diebold starts off talking about how he first discovered the prototype SNES while boxing up an estate sale, where it was sold in a lot alongside CDs, cups, saucers, and other knickknacks. After paying $75 for the entire lot, Diebold recalls, "if you break it down to everything I did buy, I probably paid a nickel for it."

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Eyes of the Animal lets you become a bat—in VR

Nature meets tech via 360-degree cameras, drones, laser scans, and 3D-printed bat ears.

Virtual reality may have launched with gamers in mind, but so far the most interesting applications for the technology have come from outside the games industry. Case in point: Marshmallow Laser Feast's In the Eyes of the Animal, a VR experience showcased at this year's Sundance film festival, which showed what it would be like to see and hear a forest through the eyes of its fluffy (and not so fluffy) inhabitants.

The experience is, as you might imagine, a strange one. When it launched, In the Eyes of the Animal was set in the dream-like Grizedale Forest in the Lake District. Amongst the ferns and ancient oaks, viewers strapped on an Oculus Rift headset (weirdly encased in a grass-covered pod), and were transported through a pink and purple landscape, transforming from a midge into a dragonfly, and then from a frog into an owl.

In the Eyes of the Animal was made using a combination of 360-degree cameras, drones, and laser and CT scans. London's Natural History Museum pitched in too, offering up animal footage captured with photogrammetry, while surround sound and audio vibrations were added to help complete the experience.

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A Magic: The Gathering addict moves to China

“The more I re-invested into Magic, the more I placed all of my self-worth into the game.”

This piece is an edited excerpt from James Hsu's recent book, Magic: The Addiction: My 20-Year Gaming Journey. James is a life-long gaming enthusiast and technophile. He currently lives in Beijing.

Magic: The Gathering has opened many cultural doors for me. A game with the international reach of Magic allows its players to compete in locations around the world. In places like New York, Amsterdam, and Munich, I have played Magic with strangers, armed only with our mutual love of the game as a shared language.

This became an unexpected benefit in my early thirties as I relocated halfway around the world, from Canada to China, in search of a new beginning.

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That time a bunch of journalists confused an opinion piece for a study

Pile of neglected research gets passed off as new data by reporters.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA (credit: Marlon E)

Drinking alcohol ups your risk of cancer—several kinds of cancer, in fact. The links have been firmly established and reaffirmed over the years with stacks of studies, reviews, and meta-analyses. The National Cancer Institute has had an explainer on the subject since at least 2013.

Yet, the connection remains relatively unknown to consumers.

“We know that nine in 10 people aren’t aware of the link between alcohol and cancer,” Jana Witt, Cancer Research UK’s health information officer, told The Guardian. And the few that are aware of the link may be skeptical of it based on misleading health stories and competing reports on the potential benefits of drinking.

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Batten down the hatches—Navy accused of pirating 585k copies of VR software

Bitmanagement Software says Navy “did not license” its virtual reality product.

(credit: Nicolas Raymond)

A German maker of 3D virtual reality software is accusing the US Navy of engaging in wanton piracy, and we're not talking about piracy on the high seas. This is about digital piracy of software, according to a federal lawsuit brought by Bitmanagement Software. The company is seeking copyright infringement damages of more than $596,000 from the Navy for allegedly stealing more than 558,000 copies of its BS Contact Geo software.

The amount of damages, if the Navy loses, could go up substantially. That price tag included in the lawsuit is the market value of the unpaid licenses. Bitmanagement also noted that in addition to licensing fees it is seeking pre- and post-judgement interest, punitive damages, legal costs, attorney fees, and statutory damages that could amount to $150,000 per infringement.

According to the lawsuit (PDF) filed in the US Court of Federal Claims:

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Künstliche Intelligenz: Softbank und Honda wollen sprechendes Auto bauen

Ein sprechendes Auto, das den Gemütszustand des Fahrers lesen und darauf reagieren kann – klingt nach Knight Rider, ist aber ein Projekt, an dem Softbank und Honda arbeiten. Die KI des Wagens soll auf der Technologie des Softbank-Roboters Pepper basieren. (KI, Internet)

Ein sprechendes Auto, das den Gemütszustand des Fahrers lesen und darauf reagieren kann - klingt nach Knight Rider, ist aber ein Projekt, an dem Softbank und Honda arbeiten. Die KI des Wagens soll auf der Technologie des Softbank-Roboters Pepper basieren. (KI, Internet)

Alternatives Android: Cyanogen soll zahlreiche Mitarbeiter entlassen

Insidern zufolge soll Cyanogen aktuell einen nicht unerheblichen Teil seiner Entwickler entlassen. Dies soll im Zusammenhang mit einer Refokussierung des Unternehmens stehen, nach der eher Apps anstelle der lizenzierten Android-Version Cyanogen OS prog…

Insidern zufolge soll Cyanogen aktuell einen nicht unerheblichen Teil seiner Entwickler entlassen. Dies soll im Zusammenhang mit einer Refokussierung des Unternehmens stehen, nach der eher Apps anstelle der lizenzierten Android-Version Cyanogen OS programmiert werden sollen. (Cyanogen OS, Applikationen)

Making bright X-ray pulses with shapely electron bunches

Laser-selected electrons emit shorter pulses to probe chemical reactions.

An undulator, or wiggler, used in a free electron laser. (credit: UCLA Particle Beam Physics Lab)

Lots of interesting stuff happens really fast. Think about a chemical reaction, for instance. The rate of reactions might be slow, but each individual reaction proceeds quickly. This is because a chemical reaction is, essentially, the shuffling of electrons between different atoms, and electrons are fleet of foot.

Generally, if you want to watch something this fast happen, you use what is called pump-probe spectroscopy, in which one short pulse of light initiates an action while another measures the result. A critical requirement for pump-probe spectroscopy is control over the pulses, something that is difficult to achieve in the X-ray regime. This is why a new paper from Physical Review Letters is a promising development.

Pump-Probe

In pump-probe spectroscopy, the pump is a strong laser pulse that sets a reaction (or action of some kind) in motion. After some delay, a gentler probe pulse measures the state of the thing you just kicked. Repeat this for varying delays between pump and probe and you build up a picture of the trajectory a reaction might take.

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Gole1 mini PC review: Blurring the lines between tablets and desktop PCs

Gole1 mini PC review: Blurring the lines between tablets and desktop PCs

The Gole1 is a tiny computer that’s hard to categorize. It’s basically a compact desktop computer that you can also use as a tablet. Or maybe it’s a tablet with a really small screen, a bunch of ports, and a kind of thick case.

Either way, it’s a small device that you can plug into a TV or monitor to use as a computer, media streaming device, or video game system. There’s a five inch touchscreen display on top that you can use to either mirror what’s happening on the big screen, or set up to use as an extended desktop.

Continue reading Gole1 mini PC review: Blurring the lines between tablets and desktop PCs at Liliputing.

Gole1 mini PC review: Blurring the lines between tablets and desktop PCs

The Gole1 is a tiny computer that’s hard to categorize. It’s basically a compact desktop computer that you can also use as a tablet. Or maybe it’s a tablet with a really small screen, a bunch of ports, and a kind of thick case.

Either way, it’s a small device that you can plug into a TV or monitor to use as a computer, media streaming device, or video game system. There’s a five inch touchscreen display on top that you can use to either mirror what’s happening on the big screen, or set up to use as an extended desktop.

Continue reading Gole1 mini PC review: Blurring the lines between tablets and desktop PCs at Liliputing.