Keine Stilllegung: Verkehrsministerium findet Tesla-Autopilot gefährlich

Dem Bundesverkehrsministerium soll einem Bericht nach ein vernichtendes Gutachten über Teslas Autopilotfunktion vorliegen. Demnach kann das System zum assistierten Fahren zu einer erheblichen Gefährdung anderer Verkehrsteilnehmer führen. Stillgelegt werden die Autos trotzdem nicht. (Tesla Motors, GreenIT)

Dem Bundesverkehrsministerium soll einem Bericht nach ein vernichtendes Gutachten über Teslas Autopilotfunktion vorliegen. Demnach kann das System zum assistierten Fahren zu einer erheblichen Gefährdung anderer Verkehrsteilnehmer führen. Stillgelegt werden die Autos trotzdem nicht. (Tesla Motors, GreenIT)

Russia Mulls Downloading Fines if Site Blocking Fails

Faced with the possibility that website blocking may not achieve its goals, Russia is now considering fresh opportunities for decreasing online file-sharing. Sources familiar with negotiations say that authorities are mulling a system of fines which would target individual downloaders.

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

cashWell over a decade ago when peer-to-peer file-sharing was in its relative infancy, the RIAA thought it could stop piracy by punishing end users with ‘fines’ and lawsuits.

What followed was a punishing campaign that alienated consumers and ultimately failed to achieve its goals. Only subsequent widespread access to legitimate content proved to be effective in bringing piracy rates down.

But despite improved availability, piracy is alive and well, which means that groups all over the world continue to look for solutions to the problem. More innovation would be nice but Russian authorities appear to be looking into the past.

According to sources cited by Russian news publication RNS, the government is considering introducing a system of fines for Internet users who download copyrighted content without permission.

“It is expected that evidence of a download of an illegal movie, for example, will be shown by providing an IP address, then the offender will be sent the penalty fine,” a source familiar with the inter-agency consultations told the publication.

It’s understood that if ‘pirate’ site-blocking fails, authorities favor the kind of system that German Internet users are already subjected to, with fines up to 1000 euros per logged offense.

“If the initiative with blocking sites that publish illegal content does not work, will be discussing the German model,” the source said.

What isn’t known at this stage is who will be issuing the ‘fines’ or who will benefit from the revenue they create. What is clear, however, is that introducing this kind of system won’t be straightforward.

“There are two ways [to reduce piracy] – to block websites and penalize the user,” the source said. “The second option is effective, but we need to understand the social consequences.”

Reached for comment, Russia’s Ministry of Culture confirmed knowledge of the proposals but said that no formal consultations on how such a system might operate have yet been conducted.

The Ministry of Communications also admitted knowledge of the discussions but a spokesman urged caution.

“I’m not sure that it would be straightforward to implement [a system of fines] in Russia, but it is always the responsibility…of the person who posted the pirated content, and the one who deliberately consumes pirated content,” he said.

“The responsibility, in principle, should be [with these people]. How to implement a system in the Russian reality…that for sure requires a cautious and incremental process.”

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

Judge Questions Validity of IP Address Evidence in BitTorrent Pirate Chase

A California federal court judge has thrown a spanner into the works of serial copyright lawsuit filers Nu Image and Millennium Films, questioning the validity of using IP addresses as evidence in the case.Nu Image and Millennium Films’s latest copyrig…



A California federal court judge has thrown a spanner into the works of serial copyright lawsuit filers Nu Image and Millennium Films, questioning the validity of using IP addresses as evidence in the case.

Nu Image and Millennium Films's latest copyright lawsuit involves the film Criminal, and as per the usual process, the production company gathered a publicly available IP address data for a potential pirate, linked them to a geographical location (in this case, San Diego County) via a IP/Geo search, and proceeded to locate the right jurisdiction for the lawsuit based on this information. A subpoena is then sought in the court to obtain the identity of the person who owned the IP address at the time.

It's this subpoena that California Magistrate Judge Mitchell Dembin refused to issue to the plaintiff, because according to the Judge, too much time had elapsed between the recording of the IP address, and the geolocation search, so much so, that the geolocation information obtained might be "irrelevant".

Showing excellent knowledge in regards to how IP addresses work, Judge Dembin correctly identified that IP address are usually allocated to users "dynamically", meaning that users might have a different IP address every time they go online (although in most situations, the IP address is only reassigned when the user disconnects to the ISP).

Judge Dembin also correctly argues that geolocation data based on IP addresses also change with time, and since Nu Image and Millennium Films did not provide details on when the geolocation search was performed, Judge Dembin felt that the correct jurisdiction had been established, and so no subpoena could be granted.

Recent court cases has seen IP address evidence scrutinized like never before, and this particular case appears to continue the trend towards accepting the nuances behind IP address evidence, as opposed to just taking the rights-holder's word on the validity of the evidence.

[via TorrentFreak]

Die Woche im Video: Knusprige Brezeln und hilfreiche Pixel

Brillante physikalische Forschung ist diese Woche mit Hilfe von Brezeln nur unzureichend erklärt worden. Google hat seine Pixel-Smartphones gezeigt. Und wir haben ausprobiert, ob es auch ohne den Suchkonzern geht. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Brillante physikalische Forschung ist diese Woche mit Hilfe von Brezeln nur unzureichend erklärt worden. Google hat seine Pixel-Smartphones gezeigt. Und wir haben ausprobiert, ob es auch ohne den Suchkonzern geht. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Apple got its verdict back—$120M against Samsung

Controversial Apple patents on “slide-to-unlock” and autocorrect are restored.

A 1992 paper by Catherine Plaisant describes a touchscreen "slider toggle." Apple lawyers said that until the iPhone was unveiled, it wouldn't have been obvious to use such an invention on a phone. (credit: Court documents)

What looked like a solid defense win for Samsung in the second Apple v. Samsung litigation has suddenly slipped away, due to an opinion issued earlier today by the full US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

The second Apple v. Samsung trial led to a $120 million jury verdict in Apple's favor. Samsung appealed, and, in February, a three-judge appeals panel said that the jury got it wrong. The judges stripped away Apple's win, saying one patent wasn't infringed and the other two were invalid.

Apple got the full court to take up the case, and the three judges who sided with Samsung didn't win a single ally. An opinion (PDF) issued earlier today restores Apple's win entirely on an 8-3 vote. (One of the 12 sitting Federal Circuit judges, Richard Taranto, did not participate.)

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AT&T could discontinue Galaxy Note 7 sales over continued explosion fears

Safety issues could force a withdrawal.

Enlarge / One of the extra-crispy Galaxy Note 7s after a charging accident. (credit: BusinessKorea )

AT&T may cease selling Samsung's fiery flagship Galaxy Note 7 smartphone as concerns over the device's safety continue, reports Bloomberg. The phones have been subject to a large recall and replacement program due to exploding batteries that have seen them banned from use on planes.

Citing sources "familiar with the situation," the decision to discontinue could be made as soon as today. AT&T gave no comment.

Major wireless carriers including AT&T are allowing customers to switch from the Note 7 to alternative handsets, while Samsung continues its efforts to replace faulty devices with fixed ones. Even this replacement scheme may not be sufficient; though the exact circumstances are murky, there have been reports that even non-faulty devices have caught fire.

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For ripping off Medicaid, EpiPen maker Mylan pays Feds $465 million

In settlement, Myland doesn’t admit guilt for misclassifying life-saving device.

Enlarge / Heather Bresch, chief executive officer of Mylan. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

In a settlement announced Friday, Mylan, Inc., the maker of EpiPens, will shell out $465 million to the Department of Justice and other federal agencies to brush aside any questions about its Medicaid rebates.

As Ars reported last week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced that, by misclassifying EpiPens for years, Mylan has been stiffing federal and state governments out of millions of dollars’ worth of rebates. The CMS said that it had notified Mylan of the mistake “on multiple occasions” since 2007, when the company bought the EpiPen from Merck.

In the meantime, Mylan hiked the price of the life-saving devices on 15 separate occasions, reaching an increase of more than 500 percent. An EpiPen two-pack now goes for more than $600, while a nearly identical single pen was around just $50 in 2007. The steep rise in price has drawn outrage and scorn from the public and lawmakers.

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Meet LeEco’s first smartphones for the US market (smart TVs too)

Meet LeEco’s first smartphones for the US market (smart TVs too)

China’s LeEco is bringing its phones and smart TVs to America. The company is holding a kick-off event on October 19th, but it looks like someone at the company just couldn’t wait to share the details… because Android Police noticed that product pages for a bunch of LeEco’s US-bound products just went live.

It looks like LeEco’s first products for the US market include at least two smartphones and four smart TV models.

Continue reading Meet LeEco’s first smartphones for the US market (smart TVs too) at Liliputing.

Meet LeEco’s first smartphones for the US market (smart TVs too)

China’s LeEco is bringing its phones and smart TVs to America. The company is holding a kick-off event on October 19th, but it looks like someone at the company just couldn’t wait to share the details… because Android Police noticed that product pages for a bunch of LeEco’s US-bound products just went live.

It looks like LeEco’s first products for the US market include at least two smartphones and four smart TV models.

Continue reading Meet LeEco’s first smartphones for the US market (smart TVs too) at Liliputing.

Spionage: USA werfen Russland offiziell Wahl-Hacking vor

Es ist ein Novum: Die USA werfen Russland erstmals offiziell vor, die Wahl in den Vereinigten Staaten durch Hackerangriffe beeinflussen zu wollen. Russland hat sich unterdessen bei der UN über Aussagen zu Donald Trump beschwert. (Hacker, Server)

Es ist ein Novum: Die USA werfen Russland erstmals offiziell vor, die Wahl in den Vereinigten Staaten durch Hackerangriffe beeinflussen zu wollen. Russland hat sich unterdessen bei der UN über Aussagen zu Donald Trump beschwert. (Hacker, Server)

A video game called Polybius is actually coming out. Will it kill you?

Will PSVR exclusive get Tempest 2000 dev Jeff Minter sued again? We kinda hope so…

Enlarge / A video game called Polybius actually exists. The PlayStation VR exclusive doesn't yet have a release date, but it will have trippy, retro visuals and this weird-looking cyber-bull. We have yet to learn whether or not it will cause amnesia or cause players to be whisked away by men in black. (credit: PlayStation Europe)

Arcade historians and retro gaming geeks have heard a weird word whispered in the wind for decades: Polybius. According to legend—but never verified—an arcade machine with that name appeared in Portland, Oregon in the early '80s and caused "severe headaches, amnesia," "horrific nightmares, and suicidal tendencies" in its players. (The story also had stuff about "men in black," a military-run study, and other awesome-sounding nonsense.)

That game may have never been released, but a game called Polybius will soon exist. Sony posted the news on its PlayStation blog on Friday, confirming that the game will be made by certifiably weird developer Jeff Minter, the man responsible for the trippy, retro-inspired classics Tempest 2000 and Space Giraffe. The PlayStation VR exclusive was announced by way of a bizarre, 1,600-word tall tale written by Minter himself, complete with an allegation that he laid eyes on mysterious, decades-old hardware in an undisclosed location:

In the corner, beneath a sheet, was hidden a single, somewhat unusually-shaped cab. I was informed again of the terms upon which I would be shown what was beneath: no pictures, no video, no precise descriptions of gameplay, definitely no locations that could pin it down to anywhere closer than just the vicinity of darkest Basingstoke. Broad descriptions were okay, and of course the name is legendary. Mythological, even.

Polybius for PlayStation VR.

Minter also attached a brief snippet of his PSVR game in action, which appears to be an evolution of the TxK video game he has already released for the PlayStation Vita and planned to release for other systems before he received cease-and-desist orders from the license-holders who currently carry the Atari banner. (TxK is a spiritual successor to Tempest 2000, a game that Minter singlehandedly coded for the Atari Jaguar.) At that time, the frail, withering ghost of Atari alleged that it had never filed a lawsuit over Minter's work on TxK; Minter responded by posting a letter written by Atari's law firm detailing at great length the firm's intent to sue.

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