Pirate App Store Operator Convicted for Criminal Copyright Infringement

Four years ago the FBI took down several pirate Android app ‘stores’ and later arrested several people connected to the sites. This week one of the SnappzMarket operators, Joshua Taylor, was found guilty. During a bench trial, Judge Timothy C. Batten, Sr. convicted Taylor for conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement.
.

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

snappzAssisted by police in France and the Netherlands, the FBI took down the “pirate” Android stores Appbucket, Applanet, and SnappzMarket during the summer of 2012.

The domain seizures were the first ever against “rogue” mobile app marketplaces and followed similar actions against BitTorrent and streaming sites.

During the years that followed several people connected to the Android app sites were arrested and indicted. Most cases are still pending, but this week one of the operators of SnappzMarket was convicted.

The now 26-year-old Joshua Taylor, a resident of Kentwood, Michigan, was convicted of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement during a bench trial this week.

Taylor’s attorney had filed a motion to dismiss the case, claiming that the indictment was inadequate and unclear, but U.S. District Judge Timothy Batten Sr. denied this request.

Taylor was found guilty instead and now awaits his sentencing, which is scheduled to take place February next year.

Taylor found guilty

taylotguilty

The Department of Justice (DoJ) is pleased with the guilty verdict. They note that Taylor and his co-conspirators distributed more than a million apps without permission from the copyright holders, causing significant losses.

“The total retail value of the more than one million pirated apps distributed by the SnappzMarket Group was estimated to have been more than $1.7 million, according to evidence presented at previous court proceedings,” DoF notes.

Two other co-conspirators, Jon Peterson Gary Edwin Sharp II, previously pleaded guilty and will be sentenced at a later date as well. The three all face up to several years in prison.

This summer, SnappzMarket’s ‘PR manager’ Scott Walton was the first of the group to receive his sentence. He was convicted to 46 months in prison for conspiracy to commit copyright infringement.

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

Elon Musk: Teslas Solardach wird günstiger als ein herkömmliches Dach

Schöner, haltbarer, nützlicher – und dazu noch günstiger: Elon Musk hat das Solardach von Tesla bei einer Sitzung mit Aktionären in höchsten Tönen gelobt. Sein Publikum hatte zuvor für gute Laune beim Chef gesorgt. (Elon Musk, Technologie)

Schöner, haltbarer, nützlicher - und dazu noch günstiger: Elon Musk hat das Solardach von Tesla bei einer Sitzung mit Aktionären in höchsten Tönen gelobt. Sein Publikum hatte zuvor für gute Laune beim Chef gesorgt. (Elon Musk, Technologie)

Summit Ridge: AMDs neue CPUs sollen im Januar für über 200 Euro erscheinen

Geht es nach einem AMD-Partner, werden erste Zen-basierte Prozessoren Anfang 2017 veröffentlicht. Die Summit Ridge genannten Chips sollen zu Preisen von über 200 Euro starten – nach oben hin könnte die Spanne bis 300 Euro reichen. (AMD Zen, Prozessor)

Geht es nach einem AMD-Partner, werden erste Zen-basierte Prozessoren Anfang 2017 veröffentlicht. Die Summit Ridge genannten Chips sollen zu Preisen von über 200 Euro starten - nach oben hin könnte die Spanne bis 300 Euro reichen. (AMD Zen, Prozessor)

Kaspersky OS: Kaspersky stellt eigenes Betriebssystem vor

Sicher ohne Linux: Kaspersky hat ein eigenes Betriebssystem entwickelt. Das Unternehmen hat es nach eigenen Angaben komplett neu entwickelt, und es ist vor allem: sicher. (Kaspersky, Betriebssystem)

Sicher ohne Linux: Kaspersky hat ein eigenes Betriebssystem entwickelt. Das Unternehmen hat es nach eigenen Angaben komplett neu entwickelt, und es ist vor allem: sicher. (Kaspersky, Betriebssystem)

Arkane Studios: Patch für Dishonored 2 steigert Bildrate teils signifikant

Eine neue Beta-Version von Dishonored 2 erhöht die Leistung auf Radeon-Grafikkarten spürbar, auf Geforce-Modellen kaum. Ein genereller Performance-Patch soll kommende Woche folgen. (Dishonored, Steam)

Eine neue Beta-Version von Dishonored 2 erhöht die Leistung auf Radeon-Grafikkarten spürbar, auf Geforce-Modellen kaum. Ein genereller Performance-Patch soll kommende Woche folgen. (Dishonored, Steam)

Die Woche im Video: Nachlässige App-Entwickler und ahnungslose Schüler

Entwickler schlampen bei Apps, Politiker interessieren sich endlich für Schul-IT – und wir basteln mit dem Router. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Instant Messenger)

Entwickler schlampen bei Apps, Politiker interessieren sich endlich für Schul-IT - und wir basteln mit dem Router. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Instant Messenger)

PS4 Pro Firmware Update Causes Copy Protection Headaches for Gamers

A firmware bug for the newly released PS4 Pro is causing copy protection related problems with selected 4K TVs.Some users who upgraded to their PS4 Pro to version 4.05 have found that their PS4 Pro turns back on with nothing being displayed on their TV…



A firmware bug for the newly released PS4 Pro is causing copy protection related problems with selected 4K TVs.

Some users who upgraded to their PS4 Pro to version 4.05 have found that their PS4 Pro turns back on with nothing being displayed on their TV. Restarting the PS4 Pro doesn't seem to fix the issue, leaving users with a seemingly bricked console. The same users experienced no problems when using the previous version of the firmware.

With Sony yet to offer any advice, or an expected fix date for the bug, frustrated users were left to their own devices to first figure out what the problem was, and then to find a workaround. Users eventually figured out that the problem lies with the PS4 Pro's use of HDMI 2.0, specifically, the HDCP 2.2 copy protection present in the new HDMI version.

Older PS4s use HDMI version 1.4, but the PS4 Pro has upgraded the connection to a newer version so it can fully support 4K output. HDMI 1.4 does support 4K output, but the output is limited to 30Hz.

Luckily, enterprising PS4 owners on Reddit and elsewhere on the Internet have found managed to find a temporary solution, which involves forcing the PS4 to output in HDMI 1.4 mode, or to turn of HDCP entirely.

Unfortunately, the fix procedure doesn't work in all situations, and there are some caveats with the workaround. Forcing HDMI 1.4 output will disable 4K output for video services like Netflix and Amazon, while disabling HDCP will prevent these apps from working altogether.

It's worth noting that only a small number of TVs are affected, so most users will have nothing to worry about.

With the most likely culprit being a problem with Sony's firmware, it's expected that Sony will release a fix for the bug soon - version 4.06 is already available, but it failed to address this bug.

[via PolygonReddit]

It’s time to get rid of the Facebook “news feed,” because it’s not news

Fake news didn’t throw the election. It was a symptom, not a cause.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich / Thinkstock)

In the wake of the US election, critics have blamed Facebook for bringing about—at least in part—Trump's surprise win. A BuzzFeed report showed that Facebook users interacted far more with "fake news" stories about both candidates than they did with mainstream news outlets before the election. This wouldn't seem like such a big deal if it weren't for a Pew Research Center survey showing that 44% of Americans rely on Facebook to get all their news.

But proving whether fake news influenced the election more than the usual political propaganda is impossible. What's certain is that fake news on Facebook is a symptom of a larger problem: the company is trying to play contradictory roles as both trustworthy news publisher and fun social media platform for personal sharing. The problem is that it cannot be both—at least not without making some changes.

Facebook shapes people's perceptions

When you log into your Facebook account, your default page is dominated by a cascading "news feed," automatically selected for your pleasure, which consists of whatever your friends have shared. The company uses a mix of secret-sauce algorithms to choose which pieces of news you see. Some items are displayed based on what you've responded to before. For example, if you always like or reply to news from Trevor but ignore news from Mike, you're going to see more Trevor and less Mike.

Read 25 remaining paragraphs | Comments

America’s new, super-expensive weather satellite launches Saturday

Before it begins operations in geostationary space, GOES-R must safely get there.

United Launch Alliance

Christmas is coming early for meteorologists. At 5:42pm ET Saturday, the United Launch Alliance will blast the GOES-R satellite into space for NOAA. This new instrument will provide real-time data and images to aid in the forecasting various types of weather, from hurricanes on Earth to solar storms. NASA TV will provide live coverage beginning at 5:10pm ET.

All manner of superlatives have been applied to this first of a new generation of weather satellites—fastest, best, clearest—in terms of data and images beamed back to Earth. Mission scientists say GOES-R bridges the divide from an era when most people got their weather information at 10 from a TV personality to when everyone carries a 10-day forecast in their pocket. Or, they say, it is like going from black-and-white television to high-definition.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

It only took 17 years: Metallica’s full catalog is now on Napster

Public row began with unfinished song leak in 1999.

Napster and Metallica, together again—and they look so happy about it, too! (credit: Sam Machkovech)

Metallica's first full album in eight years launched on Friday, and as with most modern albums, it went on sale on a variety of digital storefronts. One of those sellers was more noteworthy than the others, of course, as the album launch coincided with Metallica's first-ever warm, hugging embrace of Napster.

Earlier this week, the band and company announced that Metallica's entire catalog would finally launch on the Napster service on Friday. The $10/month music service currently resembles all-you-can-stream subscription services like Spotify and Google Play Music, and Napster's fee now includes every published song by Hetfield and Co., from 1983's Kill 'Em All to this week's Hardwired... To Self-Destruct.

Of course, the Napster of today is different than the Napster that drummer Lars Ulrich lashed out against in 1999. What was once a totally free, peer-to-peer service for the trading of MP3s has since been shuffled from corporate handler to corporate handler. After its transformation to an iTunes-styled MP3 store, Napster was taken over by Best Buy in 2008 before being dealt to Rhapsody three years later.

Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments