Cloud computing pushes into the classroom, but not without challenges

Representatives from classroom-friendly cloud services share their thoughts.

Enlarge / Seth Erdman, center, and his fellow students use Chromebooks while working on a lesson in a third grade class on Friday, January 16, 2015, at Walden Elementary School in Deerfield, Illinois. (Anthony Souffle) (credit: Chicago Tribune / Contributor)

When you think about a traditional school workflow, it's not unlike that of a business: paper is generated and moved in a systematic way between the children and the teacher. Just as cloud computing has transformed workflows in business to make them more collaborative and mobile, that same type of change has been coming to schools. Children and teachers use the power of the cloud to collaborate while accessing, storing, and sharing content.

As with business, this change is ongoing, uneven, and by no means complete. But if schools are at least partly about preparing children for the next generation of work, then the cloud needs to be a part of that preparation. Just as some businesses have struggled to transition to the cloud, schools face similar challenges. But because schools involve a specific demographic—children from a variety of abilities and socioeconomic and linguistic backgrounds—their challenges can be even more complicated.

Slowly but surely, in spite of the issues, cloud tools are coming to the classroom. As more companies, large and small, help schools bring about this transition in a way that makes sense for teachers and children in a classroom context, we are seeing a shift to the cloud and all the advantages (and problems) that brings.

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Deep Sea Mining: Nautilus Minerals will Gold auf dem Meeresgrund abbauen

Gold und Silber aus der Tiefsee: Das kanadische Unternehmen Nautilus Mining will 2019 anfangen, Edelmetalle vom Meeresboden abzubauen. Unter Wasser soll es große Vorkommen an Rohstoffen geben. Die Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt könnte gravierend sein. (Technologie, Tauchroboter)

Gold und Silber aus der Tiefsee: Das kanadische Unternehmen Nautilus Mining will 2019 anfangen, Edelmetalle vom Meeresboden abzubauen. Unter Wasser soll es große Vorkommen an Rohstoffen geben. Die Auswirkungen auf die Umwelt könnte gravierend sein. (Technologie, Tauchroboter)

Festplatten zerstören: Wie man in 60 Sekunden ein Datencenter auslöscht

Wie wird man seine Daten schnell und sicher los, wenn die Polizei das Rechenzentrum stürmt? Der Hacker und Maker Zoz Brooks hat da so einige Ideen: Plasmaschneider, Sauerstoff – und Sprengstoff mit Rasierschaum. Von Hauke Gierow (Troopers 2017, Datenschutz)

Wie wird man seine Daten schnell und sicher los, wenn die Polizei das Rechenzentrum stürmt? Der Hacker und Maker Zoz Brooks hat da so einige Ideen: Plasmaschneider, Sauerstoff - und Sprengstoff mit Rasierschaum. Von Hauke Gierow (Troopers 2017, Datenschutz)

Supercomputer: HPE und BASF kooperieren für die industrielle Chemie

Mit virtuellen Simulationen will BASF in Zukunft noch schneller und günstiger neue Polymere entwickeln. Dafür holt sich der deutsche Konzern US-Unterstützung von HPE und dessen HPC-Erfahrung. (Supercomputer, Prozessor)

Mit virtuellen Simulationen will BASF in Zukunft noch schneller und günstiger neue Polymere entwickeln. Dafür holt sich der deutsche Konzern US-Unterstützung von HPE und dessen HPC-Erfahrung. (Supercomputer, Prozessor)

Lufthansa: Hyperloop könnte innerdeutsche Flüge ersetzen

Schweben statt fliegen? Die Lufthansa interessiert sich für den Hyperloop. Elon Musks Rohrpostzug könnte künftig auf einigen Strecken in Deutschland das Flugzeug ersetzen. Vier deutsche Städte kommen als Ziel infrage. (Hyperloop, Technologie)

Schweben statt fliegen? Die Lufthansa interessiert sich für den Hyperloop. Elon Musks Rohrpostzug könnte künftig auf einigen Strecken in Deutschland das Flugzeug ersetzen. Vier deutsche Städte kommen als Ziel infrage. (Hyperloop, Technologie)

Third of EU Citizens OK With Piracy When There Are No Legal Options

A new study from the European Union Intellectual Property Office has found that 31% of EU citizens believe that Internet piracy is acceptable when legal options aren’t immediately available. Also, in a clear signal to content providers, a massive 83% say they would prefer to consume content from affordable legal sources.

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

The European Union Intellectual Property Office has published the findings of a new study commissioned from Deloitte which aims to better understand how EU citizens perceive intellectual property issues.

The report is the product of 26,500 interviews with citizens aged 15 and over and paints a fairly positive picture for rightsholders and other businesses that rely on the exploitation of intellectual property.

The striking headline figure is that 97% of respondents believe that content creators should be able to protect their rights in order to get paid for their work. Alongside almost total support for IP rights, an impressive 83% indicate they would prefer to access digital content through legal services when there is an affordable option available.

Across the EU, just 10% of respondents said they’d deliberately obtained content from illegal sources during the past 12 months, a figure that jumps to 27% among 15 to 24-year-olds. A similar survey carried out in 2013 produced close to the same results.

But while 10% is the average percentage of pirates across all EU countries, several major EU members buck the trends in interesting ways.

France, for example, has many years’ experience of the state-sponsored Hadopi “three strikes” anti-piracy program. With millions of notices sent to ISP subscribers, the program was supposed to educate citizens away from piracy. However, 15% of French citizens admit to downloading or streaming from illegal sources, five percentage points higher than the EU average.

In Germany, where copyright trolls have been running rampant for many years and claiming a deterrent effect, just 7% say they download or stream from illegal sources. While this figure lower than the EU average might seem the logical conclusion, the same percentage is shared with Italy where there is no trolling or state-sponsored anti-piracy scheme.

In Spain, a country that is trying to shake off a reputation of being a piracy haven, 16% of citizens admit to online piracy. That’s double the 8% of UK citizens who admit to consuming unauthorized content online.

As usual, however, there are significant gray areas when it comes to content consumption and whether or not people can be labeled as hardcore pirates.

Just under a third (32%) of the those surveyed said they access content online, whether that’s from a legal or illegal source. Under a quarter (22%) say they use only authorized services. Just 5% use illegal sources alone and 5% said they use a mix of paid lawful and illegal sources.

“This suggests that respondents are willing to switch between legal and illegal sources in order to gain access to content,” the study found.

Also of interest are the significant numbers of citizens who feel that piracy is acceptable under particular sets of circumstances.

A not insignificant 35% of respondents said that it’s acceptable to obtain content illegally as long as it’s only for personal use. Since millions of citizens are already taxed via a private copying levy, the notion that copying for yourself is acceptable shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise, although the charge itself applies to blank media, not illegal downloads.

Interestingly, close to a third (31%) believe that it’s acceptable to obtain content illegally if there are no immediately available legal alternatives. So, if a distributor chooses to bring content late to a region or makes content otherwise difficult to obtain, millions believe it’s ok for citizens to help themselves. While that’s probably a concern for rightsholders, it’s a problem that can be fixed.

Overall, an encouraging 71% of pirate respondents said they would stop obtaining content from illegal sources if there was an accessible and affordable legal alternative. Around 20% said they would not necessarily go legal, even if there was an available and affordable option.

“The availability of affordable content from legal offers as the top reason for stopping the behavior is most strongly cited by respondents in the following categories: respondents aged 25 to 39 (74 %), employed (76 %), living in large urbanized cities (75 %), and the most educated (72 %), which is in line with the profile of a typical online user,” the survey notes.

Close to 30% believe that being better informed could help them back away from illegal sources while just 5% said they could never be stopped, no matter what.

But while many consumers want to “do the right thing”, there appears to be confusion when it comes to assessing whether an online service is legal or not. Almost a quarter (24%) of Europeans surveyed said they’d questioned whether an online source was legal, a five-point increase over the earlier 2013 study.

That being said, there’s a perception that legal services can provide a better product. When comparing the quality of content offered on legal and illegal platforms, 69% said that licensed services come out on top, an opinion shared by illegal downloaders and legal consumers alike.

However, when it comes to diversity of content, just over half of respondents (56%) said that legal services do a better job, a figure that drops to 45% among those who illegally download some content. Making a broader range of content available online could address this particularly lukewarm response.

António Campinos, Executive Director of EUIPO, said that the results of the survey show that EU citizens generally have respect for intellectual property but there is still room for improvement.

“Overall, we see that support for IP rights is high among EU citizens,” he said.

“But we also see that more needs to be done to help young people in particular understand the importance of IP to our economy and society, especially now, when encouraging innovation and creativity is increasingly the focus of economic policy across our European Union.”

The full report can be downloaded here (pdf)

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

Blitzkrieg 3: Neuronale-Netzwerke-KI für Echtzeit-Strategiespiel verfügbar

General Boris – so nennt das Entwicklerstudio Nival seinen KI-Gegner für das Echtzeit-Strategiespiel Blitzkrieg 3. Es soll das erste Mal sein, dass solche Algorithmen voll funktionsfähig in einem derartigen Titel verfügbar sind. (Echtzeitstrategie, Games)

General Boris - so nennt das Entwicklerstudio Nival seinen KI-Gegner für das Echtzeit-Strategiespiel Blitzkrieg 3. Es soll das erste Mal sein, dass solche Algorithmen voll funktionsfähig in einem derartigen Titel verfügbar sind. (Echtzeitstrategie, Games)

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week on BitTorrent – 03/27/17

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. ‘Rogue One tops the chart this week, followed by ‘The Great Wall”. ‘Logan’ completes the top three.

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

This week we have two newcomers in our chart.

Rogue One is the most downloaded movie for the second week in a row.

The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only. All the movies in the list are Web-DL/Webrip/HDRip/BDrip/DVDrip unless stated otherwise.

RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart.

This week’s most downloaded movies are:
Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrents
1 (1) Rogue One 8.0 / trailer
2 (5) The Great Wall (Subbed HDRip) 6.2 / trailer
3 (8) Logan (HDCam) 8.6 / trailer
4 (3) Assassin’s Creed 6.3 / trailer
5 (…) Split (Subbed HDRip) 7.4 / trailer
6 (2) xXx: Return of Xander Cage (Subbed HDRip) 5.5 / trailer
7 (6) Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them 7.6 / trailer
8 (7) Passengers 7.1 / trailer
9 (…) Resident Evil: The Final Chapter 5.7 / trailer
10 (4) Patriots Day 6.2 / trailer

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

Gesetzesentwurf: Ein Etikettenschwindel bremst das automatisierte Fahren aus

Eine neue Qualität des Autofahrens sollte der Gesetzesentwurf der großen Koalition ermöglichen – und scheitert daran. Unklare Bestimmungen und hohe Haftungsrisiken für den Fahrer verhindern jede Entwicklung zu hoch- oder vollautomatisiertem Fahren. Eine Analyse von Hannes Doderer (Autonomes Fahren, GreenIT)

Eine neue Qualität des Autofahrens sollte der Gesetzesentwurf der großen Koalition ermöglichen - und scheitert daran. Unklare Bestimmungen und hohe Haftungsrisiken für den Fahrer verhindern jede Entwicklung zu hoch- oder vollautomatisiertem Fahren. Eine Analyse von Hannes Doderer (Autonomes Fahren, GreenIT)