IoT garage door opener maker bricks customer’s product after bad review

Startup tells customer “Your unit will be denied server connection.”

(credit: Todd Martin)

Denis Grisak, the man behind the Internet-connected garage opener Garadget, is having a very bad week. Grisak and his Colorado-based company SoftComplex launched Garadget, a device built using Wi-Fi-based cloud connectivity from Particle, on Indiegogo earlier this year, hitting 209 percent of his launch goal in February. But this week, his response to an unhappy customer has gotten Garadget a totally different sort of attention.

On April 1, a customer who purchased Garadget on Amazon using the name R. Martin reported problems with the iPhone application that controls Garadget. He left an angry comment on the Garadget community board:

Just installed and attempting to register a door when the app started doing this. Have uninstalled and reinstalled iphone app, powered phone off/on - wondering what kind of piece of shit I just purchased here...

Shortly afterward, not having gotten a response, Martin left a 1-star review of Garadget on Amazon:

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BioWare says Mass Effect: Andromeda bugfixes and improvements are coming

Fixes for single-player (including animation skipping!) and multiplayer are on tap.

Enlarge / Peebee likes things short. Fewer cutscenes make her happy.

We like Mass Effect: Andromeda and said so in our preliminary review, but the game has some problems and rough edges. We’re hip-deep in writing our final review, but it looks like we may be able to wipe a number of our complaints off the list while the writing is still in progress. In a blog post today, BioWare General Manager Aaryn Flynn explained that the Andromeda team has been keeping track of feedback on the game and that this coming Thursday, the team will release a patch aimed at correcting the things that have garnered the most complaints. The full patch notes are here.

The list of confirmed fixes stretch from the superficial to the deeply technical. There will be general performance and stability fixes, but most welcome is the option to skip the transition animations while traveling between places on the galaxy map. The animations are beautiful but intolerably long; if you’re exploring multiple systems in one go, you’ll spend far more time staring at unskippable animations than you’ll spend exploring. Adding the option to skip will reclaim a huge amount of lost time.

Also on the list are updates to the eyes for human and Asari character models and fixes to animation lip-syncing, along with a fix for Ryder’s weird running animation glitch. Additionally, players will get a larger inventory, more Remnant decryption keys at merchants for folks who hate the pseudo-Sudoku minigame, and an improved multiplayer experience with better matchmaking and less latency.

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Workstation: Apple rüstet endlich den Mac Pro auf

Erstmals seit drei Jahren aktualisiert: Apple hat die stark veralteten Modelle des Mac Pro mit schnelleren Grafikeinheiten ausgestattet, zudem gibt es für den gleichen Preis auch noch flottere Prozessoren. Wirklich neu ist die verbaute Hardware aber nicht – die soll es laut Apple frühestens 2018 geben. (Mac Pro, Apple)

Erstmals seit drei Jahren aktualisiert: Apple hat die stark veralteten Modelle des Mac Pro mit schnelleren Grafikeinheiten ausgestattet, zudem gibt es für den gleichen Preis auch noch flottere Prozessoren. Wirklich neu ist die verbaute Hardware aber nicht - die soll es laut Apple frühestens 2018 geben. (Mac Pro, Apple)

Overwatch und World of Warcraft: Kalifornisches Gericht verurteilt Bossland GmbH

Das deutsche Unternehmen Bossland muss rund 8,6 Millionen US-Dollar an Blizzard zahlen und darf Cheatprogramme für Overwatch und World of Warcraft nicht mehr vertreiben. (Blizzard, WoW)

Das deutsche Unternehmen Bossland muss rund 8,6 Millionen US-Dollar an Blizzard zahlen und darf Cheatprogramme für Overwatch und World of Warcraft nicht mehr vertreiben. (Blizzard, WoW)

Yooka-Laylee review: Better than a 90s platformer

Yooka-Laylee changes just enough to support its compelling platforming.

Enlarge

Is the 3D platformer dead? Someone should probably tell Nintendo. Can't have any more critically acclaimed Mario games doing the rounds. Hell, let Sony know too. Who knows how many more series-best Ratchet & Clank games it has in the works?

That's the thing about nostalgia: Everything seems better in the past, even when it wasn't. It isn't a good idea to put '90s TV demagogue Chris Evans back on the air, for instance. Nor is it a good idea to buy all your music on the hiss-filled tape of a compact cassette. The Nokia 3310 isn't the greatest phone ever made, blue passports won't usher in a grand era of pre-war British prosperity, and not all '90s 3D platformers were all they were cracked up to be.

But then, if you were one of the thousands that helped Yooka-Layee ride a wave of nostalgia to a £2 million Kickstarter windfall back in 2015, you know what you let yourself in for: anthropomorphic animals, dry British humour, a saccharine soundtrack, thousands of collectibles...comic sans (or at least a close match). Kickstarter backers eager to dig into a game that ignores the past 20 years of games development—including its many wonderful platformers—in favour of rose-tinted thrills will find Yooka-Layee delivers and then some.

What backers might not expect (it certainly took me by surprise) are a few modern, if subtle, twists. Yooka-Layee is painfully true to its roots at times (developer PlayTonic is made up of ex-Rare employees that worked on the likes of Banjo-Kazooie and Donkey Kong Country), with unfriendly level design and a wayward camera ranking high on the list of period particulars that should have had a makeover. But Yooka-Layee also sprawls over its vast levels like a modern open-world game, luring you in with endless collectibles, challenges, and power-ups.

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Android 7.1.2 leaves beta, arrives on Pixel and Nexus devices

The Pixel C gets the Pixel skin and a new recent apps screen; everyone else gets bug fixes.

After a lengthy beta period that began in January, Google released Android Nougat 7.1.2 on Monday. Images and OTAs are up on Google's factory image page, and a rollout has started to creep across the Google device landscape.

Google is releasing the update for the Pixel, Pixel XL, Pixel C, Nexus 6P, 5X, and Nexus Player. As we reported during the beta release, 7.1.2 marks the end of the line for the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9, Google's flagship devices from 2014.

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Apple is completely redesigning the Mac Pro… again

New design coming sometime in 2018, along with a new Apple-made external display.

Enlarge / The 2013 Mac Pro, doomed to never be updated again. (credit: Apple)

Wonders never cease. Apple, normally secretive to a fault and allergic to talking about future products before it considers them ready, summoned a small group of journalists from outlets including TechCrunch and Mashable to its headquarters earlier this month to tell them that the Mac Pro will once again be completely redesigned. But it isn't saying what the redesign will look like, and a new Mac Pro is not launching until sometime "next year."

The 2013 Mac Pro was controversial right from the jump. It replaced a hulking desktop with multiple expansion slots, multiple CPU sockets, and multiple internal drive bays with a tiny shiny computer that looked more than a little like a high-end designer trash can ("can't innovate, my ass," a defiant Phil Schiller said when it was announced). Users could still upgrade the RAM and the SSD themselves relatively easily, but most internal expansion space was replaced with a whopping six Thunderbolt 2 ports. Brave buyers could also pop in a new CPU if they were comfortable tearing the system apart, but the machine offered only one CPU socket, and its proprietary graphics cards couldn't be upgraded unless Apple released new versions (something it never did).

We don't know much about the new design except that we can expect it to be a response to the old one. Apple acknowledges that the new Mac Pro design will be "modular," which could mean anything but hopefully at least means that users will be able to swap out their own drives and GPUs if they want. The company wants to be able to "keep [the machine] fresh with regular improvements" and to make the Pro Apple's "highest-end, high throughput desktop system." The system will also be introduced with a new first-party external display, a business that Apple said it was leaving last year when it discontinued its Thunderbolt Display and leaned on LG to provide external screens for the new MacBook Pros.

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Kaspersky: Geldautomaten mit 15-US-Dollar-Bastelcomputer leergeräumt

Am Ende bleibt nur ein golfballgroßes Loch und das Geld ist weg: Kaspersky hat einen neuen Angriff auf Geldautomaten vorgestellt. Bei dem Angriff werden physische Beschädigung und Hacking kombiniert. Betroffen sind weit verbreitete Modelle aus den 90er Jahren. (Geldautomat, Virus)

Am Ende bleibt nur ein golfballgroßes Loch und das Geld ist weg: Kaspersky hat einen neuen Angriff auf Geldautomaten vorgestellt. Bei dem Angriff werden physische Beschädigung und Hacking kombiniert. Betroffen sind weit verbreitete Modelle aus den 90er Jahren. (Geldautomat, Virus)

President Trump Signs Internet Privacy Repeal Into Law

President Trump has signed a bill which repeals Internet privacy rules passed last year by the Federal Communications Commission. Internet service providers are now free to spy on their customers’ browsing activities in order to generate targeted advertising. Predictably, many users are considering counter-measures.

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

In a major setback to those who value their online privacy in the United States, last week the House of Representatives voted to grant Internet service providers permission to sell subscribers’ browsing histories to third parties.

The bill repeals broadband privacy rules adopted last year by the Federal Communications Commission, which required ISPs to obtain subscribers’ consent before using their browsing records for advertising or marketing purposes.

Soon after, the Trump Administration officially announced its support for the bill, noting that the President’s advisors would advise him to sign it, should it be presented. Yesterday, that’s exactly what happened.

To howls of disapproval from Internet users and privacy advocates alike, President Trump signed into law a resolution that seriously undermines the privacy of all citizens using ISPs to get online in the US. The bill removes protections that were approved by the FCC in the final days of the Obama administration but had not yet gone into effect.

The dawning reality is that telecoms giants including Comcast, AT&T, and Verizon, are now free to collect and leverage the browsing histories of subscribers – no matter how sensitive – in order to better target them with advertising and other marketing.

The White House says that the changes will simply create an “equal playing field” between ISPs and Internet platforms such as Google and Facebook, who are already able to collect data for advertising purposes.

The repeal has drawn criticism from all sides, with Mozilla’s Executive Director Mark Surman openly urging the public to fight back.

“The repeal should be a call to action. And not just to badger our lawmakers,” Surman said.

“It should be an impetus to take online privacy into our own hands.”

With the bill now signed into law, that’s the only real solution if people want to claw back their privacy. Surman has a few suggestions, including the use of Tor and encrypted messaging apps like Signal. But like so many others recently, he leads with the use of VPN technology.

As reported last week, Google searches for the term VPN reached unprecedented levels when the public realized that their data would soon be up for grabs.

That trend continued through the weekend, with many major VPN providers reporting increased interest in their products.

Only time will tell if interest from the mainstream will continue at similar levels. However, in broad terms, the recent public outcry over privacy is only likely to accelerate the uptake of security products and the use of encryption as a whole. It could even prove to be the wake-up call the Internet needed.

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

Samsung’s folding phone might not be ready until 2019

Samsung’s folding phone might not be ready until 2019

You know that Samsung phone with a foldable display we’d heard might be ready to launch this year? It’s starting to look like it won’t be ready in 2017… or 2018. According to The Korea Herald, Samsung Display engineer Kim Tae-woong says foldable phone technology will “be mature around 2019,” and there’s no rush to […]

Samsung’s folding phone might not be ready until 2019 is a post from: Liliputing

Samsung’s folding phone might not be ready until 2019

You know that Samsung phone with a foldable display we’d heard might be ready to launch this year? It’s starting to look like it won’t be ready in 2017… or 2018. According to The Korea Herald, Samsung Display engineer Kim Tae-woong says foldable phone technology will “be mature around 2019,” and there’s no rush to […]

Samsung’s folding phone might not be ready until 2019 is a post from: Liliputing