“Trumpmania” abortion battle begins: Ohio passes extreme heartbeat bill

Previously defeated legislation would ban abortions if fetal heartbeat detected.

Enlarge / The bill, passed Tuesday, now moves on to Ohio Governor John Kasich to sign into law or veto. (credit: Getty | Leigh Vogel )

Emboldened by President-elect Donald Trump, Ohio lawmakers have passed what stands to be the most restrictive anti-abortion legislation in the country.

The so-called “heartbeat” bill would make abortions illegal if a fetal heartbeat is detected, which can be as early as around six weeks into a pregnancy. The bill does not include exceptions for cases of rape or incest, but it does allow abortions if the mother’s life is in jeopardy.

The bill violates current constitutional standards for abortion rights, and similar measures in Arkansas and North Dakota have already been struck down by federal courts. Nevertheless, the state’s Senate and House passed the bill Tuesday as part of unrelated legislation dealing with how child abuse is reported. It now moves to Gov. John Kasich to sign into law.

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NuVision launches Duo 10 2-in-1 Windows tablet for $299

NuVision launches Duo 10 2-in-1 Windows tablet for $299

NuVision isn’t exactly a household name, but the company made a bit of a splash with the launch of a $99 Windows 10 tablet with a full HD display.

The company later added a $149 model with an updated Intel Atom processor, and now there’s a 10 inch NuVision Duo tablet with a 10 inch display and a detachable keyboard.

The latest model is probably the most versatile yet, but with a $299 price tag, it’s also the most expensive NuVision computer available from the Microsoft Store.

Continue reading NuVision launches Duo 10 2-in-1 Windows tablet for $299 at Liliputing.

NuVision launches Duo 10 2-in-1 Windows tablet for $299

NuVision isn’t exactly a household name, but the company made a bit of a splash with the launch of a $99 Windows 10 tablet with a full HD display.

The company later added a $149 model with an updated Intel Atom processor, and now there’s a 10 inch NuVision Duo tablet with a 10 inch display and a detachable keyboard.

The latest model is probably the most versatile yet, but with a $299 price tag, it’s also the most expensive NuVision computer available from the Microsoft Store.

Continue reading NuVision launches Duo 10 2-in-1 Windows tablet for $299 at Liliputing.

New York law banning right to bear “electronic” arms faces lawsuit

Suit says state can’t ban arms “for self-defense that are not unusually dangerous.”

A civilian practices firing a stun gun at Travis Air Force Base in California last year. (credit: Travis AFB)

A New York law making it illegal for members of the public to possess "electronic" arms like Tasers is facing a federal lawsuit claiming that making such possession a criminal misdemeanor is a violation of the Second Amendment.

New York, one of five states outlawing electronic weapons, is being sued (PDF) by the Firearms Policy Foundation and Matthew Avitabile—the mayor of Middleburgh, New York. Avitabile wants to purchase a Taser for self-defense. But New York Penal Law § 265.01 says, "A person is guilty of criminal possession of a weapon in the fourth degree when:(1) He or she possesses any firearm, electronic dart gun, electronic stun gun..."

The suit claims the New York law is unconstitutional, saying:

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Verizon FiOS expands again, but Verizon’s future is still wireless

Verizon brings fiber to more homes, but also plans future wireless home service.

A Verizon billboard in the Boston neighborhood of Dorchester. (credit: Verizon)

Verizon FiOS has begun offering services to customers in Boston, Massachusetts, and services should be available to 25,000 homes and businesses in the city by the end of the year.

Verizon mostly stopped expanding FiOS fiber-to-the-home service in 2010 and has since then focused on completing existing builds instead of moving into new cities. But the company changed course in April this year when it said it would finally do a large fiber buildout in Boston, replacing the copper lines used to deliver phone, Internet, and TV service. The company has said it's also talking to other cities about possible fiber rollouts.

Residents of a few Boston neighborhoods are about to see the first fruits of that project.

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IFPI Sneers at YouTube’s $1 Billion Music Industry Revenue Payout

Google has just announced that during the past 12 months, YouTube paid out $1 billion to the music industry from advertising alone. However, the IFPI remains unimpressed, accusing the platform of taking advantage of artists and producers. YouTube exploits loopholes in the DMCA, the industry group argues, while calling for legislative change to address the “value gap.”

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

sadyoutubeYouTube is one of the most popular sites on the Internet so when owners Google make an announcement about revenues, people tend to sit up and listen.

Yesterday, via its official YouTube blog, Google said that there were “a billion reasons to celebrate music” on YouTube.

“Last year was a bright one for music — after several tough years of declining revenues, the industry started growing again, spurred in large part by the growth of music streaming subscriptions,” YouTube Chief Business Officer Robert Kyncl wrote.

“This year, the industry has even more reasons to be optimistic. Even as music subscriptions have been growing faster than any other subscription type, advertising is another powerful driver of revenue. In fact, in the last 12 months, YouTube has paid out over $1 billion to the music industry from advertising alone, demonstrating that multiple experiences and models are succeeding alongside each other.”

In ordinary circumstances a company paying a trading partner a billion dollars worth of spoils would definitely be a reason for celebration. However, the relationship between YouTube and the labels is both uneasy and fractured, so IFPI openly poured cold water all over the hosting platform’s party instead.

“Google has today issued more unexplained numbers on what it claims YouTube pays the music industry. The announcement gives little reason to celebrate, however,” IFPI began.

“With 800 million music users worldwide, YouTube is generating revenues of just over US$1 per user for the entire year. This pales in comparison to the revenue generated by other services, ranging from Apple to Deezer to Spotify. For example, in 2015 Spotify alone paid record labels some US$2 billion, equivalent to an estimated US$18 per user.”

While on the surface this appears to be a business problem, IFPI and its member labels see things differently. They believe this is a legislative issue, one borne out of YouTube’s apparent exploitation of the DMCA and similar frameworks which offer the platform safe harbor when users upload infringing content.

While Apple, Deezer and Spotify must pay out huge sums to license and distribute music (Spotify is said to part with 85 cents for every dollar in revenue), YouTube can sit back and allow its users to upload ‘pirate’ music instead. It pays nothing for this content but still places ads alongside to generate revenue, the labels say.

YouTube correctly argues that the DMCA protects it under these circumstances and when copyright holders ask for content to be taken down, it acts quickly. YouTube also correctly notes that its Content ID fingerprinting system already goes above and beyond what is required of it under the law and is in itself a great system to help copyright holders generate revenue.

The labels, however, see this whole setup as a protection racket, one in which YouTube gets the content for nothing and as a result is free to offer poor rates when the industry comes begging for licensing fees.

“YouTube, the world’s largest on-demand music service, is not paying artists and producers anything like a fair rate for music,” IFPI said last night.

“This highlights more than ever the need for legislative action to address the ‘value gap’ that is denying music rights holders a fair return for their work.”

What IFPI and its recording label members want are changes in the law which will effectively force YouTube to pay a fair price for the content from which it generates revenue.

In the United States, the labels want the DMCA tightened. In Europe, all eyes are on Article 13 (1,2)of the proposed Copyright Directive which would require online services to monitor and filter pirated content.

Whether the labels will get their way will remain to be seen, but this kind of legislative change has the potential to shake up the entire Internet, with far-reaching effects that go way beyond music. Expect more battles – and mudslinging – as the months and years unfold.

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

Deals of the Day (12-07-2016)

Deals of the Day (12-07-2016)

Didn’t get a chance to pick up a $25 media streamer on Black Friday or Cyber Monday when mulitple retailers were selling the second-gen Chromecast for that price.

No problem. Office Depot is doing it again today. The latest Chromecast is available for $10 off its usual price, and it’s available for shipping or free in-store pickup.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Media devices

  • Google Chromecast (2nd gen) for $25 – Office Depot/OfficeMax
  • Amazon Tap portable Bluetooth speaker w/Alexa for $80 – Best Buy
  • Refurb Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (1st gen) for $40 – Woot
  • Refurb Kindle & Fire eReaders and tablets for $35 and up – Woot
  • Samsung Radiant360 R1 WiFi/Bluetooth speaker for $120 – Samsung

Computers

  • Buy Samsung Notebook 7 Spin + Galaxy Tab E 9.6″ tablet for $800 – Samsung
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 4 w/Core i5/4GB/128GB for $740 – Walmart
  • HP ProDesk 600 G2 mini PC w/Core i3-6300T/8GB/180GB/Win7 Pro for $380 – Woot

Wearables

  • Fitbit Alta for $85 – Amazon
  • Refurb Fitbit Charge HR for $69 – A4C
  • Motorola Moto 360 2nd gen 42mm smartwatch w/leather strap for $200 – Verizon

Gaming & more

  • Oculus Rift + $100 gift card for $599 – Amazon
  • Assassin’s Creed III for free – Ubisoft

You can find more bargains in our daily deals section.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-07-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (12-07-2016)

Didn’t get a chance to pick up a $25 media streamer on Black Friday or Cyber Monday when mulitple retailers were selling the second-gen Chromecast for that price.

No problem. Office Depot is doing it again today. The latest Chromecast is available for $10 off its usual price, and it’s available for shipping or free in-store pickup.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Media devices

  • Google Chromecast (2nd gen) for $25 – Office Depot/OfficeMax
  • Amazon Tap portable Bluetooth speaker w/Alexa for $80 – Best Buy
  • Refurb Amazon Kindle Paperwhite (1st gen) for $40 – Woot
  • Refurb Kindle & Fire eReaders and tablets for $35 and up – Woot
  • Samsung Radiant360 R1 WiFi/Bluetooth speaker for $120 – Samsung

Computers

  • Buy Samsung Notebook 7 Spin + Galaxy Tab E 9.6″ tablet for $800 – Samsung
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 4 w/Core i5/4GB/128GB for $740 – Walmart
  • HP ProDesk 600 G2 mini PC w/Core i3-6300T/8GB/180GB/Win7 Pro for $380 – Woot

Wearables

  • Fitbit Alta for $85 – Amazon
  • Refurb Fitbit Charge HR for $69 – A4C
  • Motorola Moto 360 2nd gen 42mm smartwatch w/leather strap for $200 – Verizon

Gaming & more

  • Oculus Rift + $100 gift card for $599 – Amazon
  • Assassin’s Creed III for free – Ubisoft

You can find more bargains in our daily deals section.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (12-07-2016) at Liliputing.

Erotik-Abo-Falle: Verdienen Mobilfunkbetreiber an WAP-Billing-Betrug mit?

Netzbetreiber und Provider sollen den Betrug mit WAP-Billing vielleicht billigend in Kauf nehmen, sagt ein Staatssekretär des Bundesjustizministeriums. Ein Grund: Weil sie daran mitverdienten. (Verbraucherschutz, Onlinewerbung)

Netzbetreiber und Provider sollen den Betrug mit WAP-Billing vielleicht billigend in Kauf nehmen, sagt ein Staatssekretär des Bundesjustizministeriums. Ein Grund: Weil sie daran mitverdienten. (Verbraucherschutz, Onlinewerbung)

Bluetooth 5 launches with longer range, faster speeds

Bluetooth 5 launches with longer range, faster speeds

Bluetooth has long been the go-to wireless spec for connecting gadgets over short ranges. It’s what you use to connect a smartwatch, fitness tracker, speaker, or wireless headphones to a smartphone. It can connect a mouse or keyboard to a laptop or tablet.

But the folks behind the Bluetooth specification are eyeing the smart home and Internet of Things space with the latest version of the standard.

Bluetooth 5 launches today, and it supports faster speeds, longer ranges, and the ability to transfer more data in a message.

Continue reading Bluetooth 5 launches with longer range, faster speeds at Liliputing.

Bluetooth 5 launches with longer range, faster speeds

Bluetooth has long been the go-to wireless spec for connecting gadgets over short ranges. It’s what you use to connect a smartwatch, fitness tracker, speaker, or wireless headphones to a smartphone. It can connect a mouse or keyboard to a laptop or tablet.

But the folks behind the Bluetooth specification are eyeing the smart home and Internet of Things space with the latest version of the standard.

Bluetooth 5 launches today, and it supports faster speeds, longer ranges, and the ability to transfer more data in a message.

Continue reading Bluetooth 5 launches with longer range, faster speeds at Liliputing.

A slow Atari 2600 emulator is now inside Minecraft—and it’s pretty cool

3D interface, slow speeds expose the machinations of the ancient 6502C processor.

Enlarge / Video card data represented in this Minecraft-built emulator of the Atari 2600 console. (credit: Seth Bling)

The world's first functioning machine emulation of a game console has arrived within Minecraft. However, it's not exactly playable. The emulator renders Atari 2600 games at a refresh rate so slow, you can only see its games, including Donkey Kong and Space Invaders, animate by using a time-lapse camera.

What's cool here, in spite of its unplayability, is how project creator Seth Bling exposes the system's machinations in an easy-to-read way for programming newbies.

Atari 2600 machine emulation within Minecraft.

"The dirt is zeroes; the stones are ones," Bling says as he pans over a giant Minecraft field on the ground of his creation. That field is dedicated to the Atari 2600's RAM, and as Bling reminds us, while the 6502C processor could support up to 64KB of RAM (a size that's visually represented), the Atari only addressed 128 bytes of it. The far end of the field is where 4KB cartridge ROM is dumped (whose zeroes and ones are also represented by Minecraft dirt and stones). The demo has a few sample cartridges floating in space; tapping a button on any of them loads that game's data into the emulator's data field.

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After Blizzard shutdown, legacy World of Warcraft server returns this month

Nostalrius team no longer waiting for Blizzard, helps launch spiritual successor.

Enlarge / A scene from a recent stress test of the Elysium "legacy" server, which recreates classic World of Warcraft circa 2006. (credit: Elysium)

After their unofficial "legacy" World of Warcraft server was shut down by Blizzard, and after tiring of waiting for Blizzard to launch official legacy server support, the fan community behind the popular Nostalrius server is now organizing behind a spiritual successor. That new unofficial server, dubbed Elysium, is set to launch later this month with the same "Vanilla" PVP and PVE experience found in the classic version 1.12 of World of Warcraft circa 2006.

Back in April, Blizzard forced the shutdown of the 800,000-user-strong Nostalrius server, citing legal issues with allowing such unofficial servers that recreate how World of Warcraft existed a decade ago, before numerous expansions. But by May, after 250,000 people signed an online petition urging them to reconsider, Blizzard agreed to meet with the volunteer Nostalrius team to discuss the possibility of official support for legacy World of Warcraft servers.

In deference to that planned meeting, the Nostalrius team halted plans to release its source code publicly so new fan-run servers could flourish. And after that June meeting, the Nostalrius team seemed optimistic that Blizzard was making a good faith effort to address its concerns.

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