Deals of the Day (8-02-2016)

Deals of the Day (8-02-2016)

Chromebooks are more than just cheap laptops… there are are some models that are actually pretty expensive.

But even the cheapest models offer some of the key benefits of Chrome OS: the operating system is fairly secure, since apps run in a sandboxed environment. Chrome OS boots in seconds and resumes from sleep even more quickly. And updating to the latest build of the operating system is as simple as rebooting the computer: it takes just a few seconds once the update is downloaded.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-02-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (8-02-2016)

Chromebooks are more than just cheap laptops… there are are some models that are actually pretty expensive.

But even the cheapest models offer some of the key benefits of Chrome OS: the operating system is fairly secure, since apps run in a sandboxed environment. Chrome OS boots in seconds and resumes from sleep even more quickly. And updating to the latest build of the operating system is as simple as rebooting the computer: it takes just a few seconds once the update is downloaded.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (8-02-2016) at Liliputing.

Court Rules Whole Site Blocking Justifiable in Piracy Fight

Forcing ISPs to block entire websites to tackle Internet piracy is justifiable, a court in India has ruled. The decision by the Delhi High Court means that copyright holders will not have to target specific URLs when attempting to stop infringement on sites that are involved in widespread piracy.

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

attackpage stopsignForcing Internet service providers to block access to ‘pirate’ content is one of the preferred methods of copyright holders dealing with online infringement.

How that should be carried out in practice is a matter for debate. In most cases thus far, sites that carry or index a large proportion of infringing content have been targeted by legal action, with rights holders arguing that whole domains should be blocked by ISPs.

In other cases, arguments have been made for pinpoint action against specific URLs, although this clearly has its problems. URLs are easily removed or replaced, and entertainment companies would much rather take out a whole domain for good instead of playing a game of cat and mouse.

Over in India, this debate has been playing out in a case involving Star India Pvt Ltd, an entertainment company owned by 21st Century Fox. Back in 2014, Star filed a complaint against more than 70 websites that were preparing to stream copyrighted sports broadcasts without permission.

The Delhi High Court considered the merits of the case and sided with Star, ordering local Internet service providers to block 73 websites which contained the specific URLs listed in the complaint.

However, the Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DEIT) filed an appeal early 2015, opposing the positioning of the government in the middle of a private copyright dispute and arguing that whole sites should not remain blocked once the events in question had concluded. The public should not be denied access to content that does not infringe Star’s rights, lawyers for the government added.

In March 2016, the Delhi High Court sided with the government, ruling that in the interests of free access to information only specific URLs carrying or linking to infringing content should be blocked. Star immediately filed another appeal, with success.

In a decision handed down last Friday, the High Court found that blocking entire sites engaged in large volumes of infringement is a justified course of action for copyright holders.

“In relation to websites which have hardly any lawful business and which are in entirety or to a large extent indulging in piracy, merely blocking a URL where the infringing content is located not an effective solution,” the Court ruled.

The Court found that dozens of sites carried up to 2,000 infringing URLs, each linking to cricket matches to which Star owned the rights. Blocking each one individually would prove an arduous task.

“It would be a gargantuan task for [Star] to keep on identifying each offending URL and especially keeping in view that as and when the respondent identifies the URL and it is blocked by the ISP, the rogue website, within seconds can change the URL thereby frustrating the very act of blocking the URL,” the Court’s added.

However, in instances where sites contain infringing URLs but are not “entirely or to a large extent indulging in piracy”, requests can be made to block only the URLs in question.

In respect of the assertion by the Department of Electronics and Information Technology that government departments shouldn’t become involved in private copyright disputes, the Court found that it is the “duty of the government” to “assist in the enforcement of court orders.”

Star India welcomed the decision.

“We believe that this landmark judgment will have a positive impact as it creates a fair balance between rights owners and public interest allowing for rights owners to more efficiently protect their rights against outright rogue or pirate websites that blatantly infringe copyright and contain large extent of infringing content,” the company’s legal team said.

Whether this ruling will prompt a new wave of blocking requests remains to be seen but that seems the most likely outcome.

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

Tiny rocket company aims for 100 launches a year—and it just might succeed

Vector Space Systems completes a successful test flight and has its first customer.

Alone in the Mojave desert, the tiny rocket stood barely as tall as a basketball goal backboard. Launch control was a laptop inside a nearby bunker, and the small gathering of aerospace engineers and investors seemed almost like a rocket hobby club as it watched the vehicle soar to about 5,000 feet before parachuting back to Earth. But this scene may have represented something much more than that. With its small-scale test Saturday, the company Vector Space Systems took another step toward upending the rapidly expanding small satellite launch market.

Not since the Germans and their V-2 rockets during World War II has anyone launched more than a few dozen of the same rockets per year. Now, within about five years Vector intends to launch as many as 100 of its 13-meter-tall Wolverine vehicles annually, with a capability to put a 50kg satellite into low-Earth orbit. The company aims to fill a niche below the current generation of launchers being developed by companies such as RocketLab and Virgin Galactic, with rockets capable of delivering 200 to 250kg satellites to low-Earth orbit.

So far, it seems like a good bet. On Tuesday morning, Vector announced that it has acquired its first customer, Finnish-based Iceye, to conduct 21 launches of the company’s commercial synthetic aperture radar satellite constellation. “Getting your satellite into orbit is one of the biggest challenges for new-space companies, but there just isn’t the launch capacity right now,” Iceye Chief Executive Rafal Modrzewski said in a news release.

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Xbox One S: Geshrinkter Chip macht Konsole schneller und sparsamer

Die Xbox One S setzt auf einen neuen Chip, weshalb die Konsole weniger Energie benötigt und flotter ist als die reguläre Xbox One. Vorerst verkauft Microsoft aber nur das teuerste Modell. (Xbox One S, TSMC)

Die Xbox One S setzt auf einen neuen Chip, weshalb die Konsole weniger Energie benötigt und flotter ist als die reguläre Xbox One. Vorerst verkauft Microsoft aber nur das teuerste Modell. (Xbox One S, TSMC)

Polar M600: Sechs LEDs für eine Pulsmessung

Das Wettrüsten bei der optischen Pulsmessung von Sportuhren hat offenbar begonnen: In seiner M600 lässt Polar sechs LEDs die Herzfrequenz erfassen. Das Gerät soll dank Android Wear gleichzeitig eine vollwertige Smartwatch sein. (Polar, Garmin)

Das Wettrüsten bei der optischen Pulsmessung von Sportuhren hat offenbar begonnen: In seiner M600 lässt Polar sechs LEDs die Herzfrequenz erfassen. Das Gerät soll dank Android Wear gleichzeitig eine vollwertige Smartwatch sein. (Polar, Garmin)

8TB disks seem to work pretty well, HGST still impressive

There’s no sign of a bathtub curve just yet.

(credit: Alpha six)

Cloud backup and storage provider Backblaze has published its latest batch of drive reliability data. The release covers failure information for the 70,000 disks that the company uses to store some 250PB of data.

This is the first quarter that Backblaze has been using a reasonable number of new 8TB disks: 45 from HGST and 2720 from Seagate. Drives from both companies are showing comparable annualized failure rates: 3.2 percent for HGST, 3.3 percent for Seagate. While the smaller HGST drives show better reliability, with annualized failure rates below one percent for the company's 4TB drives, the figures are typical for Seagate, which Backblaze continues to prefer over other alternatives due to Seagate's combination of price and availability.

Annualized failure rates for all of Backblaze's drives.

Annualized failure rates for all of Backblaze's drives. (credit: Backblaze)

But it's still early days for the 8TB drives. While evidence for the phenomenon is inconclusive, hard drive reliability is widely assumed to experience a "bathtub curve" when plotting its failure rate against time: failure rates are high when the drives are new (due to "infant mortality" caused by drives that contain manufacturing defects) and when the drives reach their expected lifetime (due to the accumulated effects of wear and tear), with a period of several years of low failure rates in the middle. If the bathtub theory is correct, Backblaze's assortment of 8TB drives should suffer fewer failures in the future.

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Galaxy Note 7 im Hands on: Ein Stift alleine reicht nicht unbedingt

Mit dem Galaxy Note 7 bringt Samsung sein großes Smartphone-Modell mit Stift wieder zurück nach Deutschland. Es bringt neue Stiftfunktionen und eine Entsperrung per Iris-Scanner – bei der restlichen Hardware konnte uns das neue Note im ersten Kurztest aber nicht mit Neuigkeiten überraschen. (Samsung, Smartphone)

Mit dem Galaxy Note 7 bringt Samsung sein großes Smartphone-Modell mit Stift wieder zurück nach Deutschland. Es bringt neue Stiftfunktionen und eine Entsperrung per Iris-Scanner - bei der restlichen Hardware konnte uns das neue Note im ersten Kurztest aber nicht mit Neuigkeiten überraschen. (Samsung, Smartphone)

Tablet shipments continue to fall

Tablet shipments continue to fall

There was a time when some folks predicted tablet shipments would eventually surpass those of traditional PCs like laptops and desktops. But it’s easy to make that kind of prediction when a product category is brand new, because going from 0 to a few million devices shipped looks like astronomical growth.

These days, things are looking a bit less rosy. Tablets aren’t exactly going away anytime soon. But the market has been contracting a bit for a while.

Continue reading Tablet shipments continue to fall at Liliputing.

Tablet shipments continue to fall

There was a time when some folks predicted tablet shipments would eventually surpass those of traditional PCs like laptops and desktops. But it’s easy to make that kind of prediction when a product category is brand new, because going from 0 to a few million devices shipped looks like astronomical growth.

These days, things are looking a bit less rosy. Tablets aren’t exactly going away anytime soon. But the market has been contracting a bit for a while.

Continue reading Tablet shipments continue to fall at Liliputing.

Mozilla: Firefox 48 bringt Multi-Prozess-Architektur für wenige

Mit der aktuellen Version 48 des Firefox-Browsers rollt Mozilla endlich die Multi-Prozess-Architektur aus, vorerst aber nur für wenige Nutzer. Die Version forciert außerdem die Addon-Signaturen, enthält Webextensions, Rust-Code und beendet den Support für alte Mac-OS-Versionen. (Firefox, Browser)

Mit der aktuellen Version 48 des Firefox-Browsers rollt Mozilla endlich die Multi-Prozess-Architektur aus, vorerst aber nur für wenige Nutzer. Die Version forciert außerdem die Addon-Signaturen, enthält Webextensions, Rust-Code und beendet den Support für alte Mac-OS-Versionen. (Firefox, Browser)

Amazon Marketplace: Verkäufer müssen Manipulation von Angeboten prüfen

Bei Amazon Marketplace ist es offenbar möglich, dass Händler die Angebote untereinander ändern. Für Verkäufer kann es zudem Ärger durch Angaben geben, die Amazon selbst hinzufügt. (Amazon, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)

Bei Amazon Marketplace ist es offenbar möglich, dass Händler die Angebote untereinander ändern. Für Verkäufer kann es zudem Ärger durch Angaben geben, die Amazon selbst hinzufügt. (Amazon, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)