Star-Wars-Trailer: Neues aus dem Jedi-Boot-Camp

Knapp 20 Stunden nach der Veröffentlichung hat der Trailer des für Dezember angekündigten Star-Wars-Films “Die letzten Jedi” bereits fast 16 Millionen Zuschauer auf Youtube gefunden. Zu sehen gibt es Daisy Ridley und Mark Hamill bei der Jedi-Ausbildung, einen zerbrochenen Helm und schwebende Kiesel. (Star Wars, Disney)

Knapp 20 Stunden nach der Veröffentlichung hat der Trailer des für Dezember angekündigten Star-Wars-Films "Die letzten Jedi" bereits fast 16 Millionen Zuschauer auf Youtube gefunden. Zu sehen gibt es Daisy Ridley und Mark Hamill bei der Jedi-Ausbildung, einen zerbrochenen Helm und schwebende Kiesel. (Star Wars, Disney)

Retro-Konsole: Nintendo stellt offenbar den NES Classic Mini ein

Nintendos Retro-Mini-Konsole Classic Mini ist schwer zu bekommen: Wer den NES-Nachbau bisher kaufen wollte, musste schnell sein oder lange suchen. Künftig wird das Gerät aber wohl gar nicht mehr erhältlich sein – in Nordamerika stellt Nintendo den Verkauf jetzt ein. (Nintendo, Games)

Nintendos Retro-Mini-Konsole Classic Mini ist schwer zu bekommen: Wer den NES-Nachbau bisher kaufen wollte, musste schnell sein oder lange suchen. Künftig wird das Gerät aber wohl gar nicht mehr erhältlich sein - in Nordamerika stellt Nintendo den Verkauf jetzt ein. (Nintendo, Games)

Shadowbrokers: NSA-Exploits für Windows als Ostergeschenk

Die Gruppe Shadowbrokers veröffentlicht zahlreiche NSA-Exploits und Informationen über einen Hack des Swift-Banksystems EastNets durch den US-Geheimdienst. Anders als beim letzten Mal sind viele der Exploits recht aktuell und können Windows-Systeme angreifen. (Shadow Broker, Microsoft)

Die Gruppe Shadowbrokers veröffentlicht zahlreiche NSA-Exploits und Informationen über einen Hack des Swift-Banksystems EastNets durch den US-Geheimdienst. Anders als beim letzten Mal sind viele der Exploits recht aktuell und können Windows-Systeme angreifen. (Shadow Broker, Microsoft)

Discogs Attacked By Two Kinds of Horrible ‘Pirate’ Spam

Discogs, one of the most useful music database sites online, is under attack from two particularly horrible kinds of spam. On the one hand, hundreds of fake movie, TV show and other links to shady ‘pirate’ sites have been posted on the platform. On the other, sloppy anti-piracy companies are attempting to delist thousands of legitimate Discog links from Google.

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

It’s often claimed that pirate sites only exist to generate revenue from other people’s hard work, but there are plenty of other entities making money from the online piracy boom too.

For every few dozen pirate sites on the Internet, there’s an anti-piracy outfit claiming that it can claw profits back for copyright holders. Whether or not they live up to these promises is up for debate, but there can be big differences in how these companies go about their trade.

While some clearly strive to be accurate, others make errors that are so huge it raises questions whether there’s much oversight at all. Case in point, the recent wave of DMCA notices targeting Discogs.

For those out of the loop, Discogs is one of the best music databases on the Internet. From its inception in 2000, it has crowdsourced information on 8,400,000 recordings and 5,000,000 artists across all genres, with a particular emphasis on electronic and dance. The site also has a massive marketplace offering more than 23 million titles for sale.

According to anti-piracy outfit Rivendell, however, Discogs is actually a hub of pirate activity.

For the past several weeks on an almost daily basis, Rivendell has been bombarding Google with requests to delist thousands of Discogs URLs, claiming that the site infringes its clients’ copyrights. A small sample is shown in the image below.

Bogus Discogs Takedown Requests

What’s most annoying about these bogus reports is that in many cases they target the work of Discog contributors, who volunteer their time to build one of the most comprehensive databases available today. The site actually works as a brilliant promotional platform, but Rivendell seems intent on making content as difficult to find as possible.

With that in mind, it’s likely that considering their aggressive attitude towards Napster, Metallica won’t appreciate the irony of their listings being repeatedly targeted by the anti-piracy outfit.

Just one of the pages targeted

Fortunately for Discogs, Google appears to be rejecting the bogus complaints filed by Rivendell which means that its listings are safe for now. However, the music database site has another piracy related problem to deal with, again through no fault of its own.

As illustrated via the custom Google search below, Discogs is being used by spammers to promote ‘pirate’ downloads. Pages and pages of results are available for a wide range of video content, from TV shows such as The Walking Dead to Hollywood movies.

Site-specific searches (such as Putlocker and Vodlocker) yield plenty of results, as do more generic terms such as ‘free’, ‘download’, and ‘HD’. However, for those thinking this might be a good way to download a movie or TV show for free, think again.

In common with most online spam, these ‘pirate’ entries on Discogs are often worse than useless, leading unsuspecting users to fake streaming sites that probably deliver malware, subscription traps, or other content best avoided.

Fake movie streaming anyone?

But of course, if they can’t tell the difference between a database entry on Discogs and a pirate music download site, anti-piracy outfits won’t be able to tell the difference between a scam and copyright infringement. To that end, they’ve been taking down fake pages too.

Taking down fake entries

It must be said though, that since these pages are designed to deceive, it shouldn’t be a surprise that some get caught up in the anti-piracy dragnet. It’s actually one of the few situations where most people would welcome a wrongful takedown.

At the time of publication, Discogs had not responded to our request for comment.

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

Die Woche im Video: Fenster ohne Ausblick und deshalb mehr Gestaltungsspielraum

Kein Vista mehr, dafür ein Creators Update sowie Handys und Prozessoren mit gutem Preis-Leistungs-Verhältnis im Test: Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, 3D-Drucker)

Kein Vista mehr, dafür ein Creators Update sowie Handys und Prozessoren mit gutem Preis-Leistungs-Verhältnis im Test: Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, 3D-Drucker)

HP is building Rockchip & Android laptop (or maybe a Chromebook)

HP is building Rockchip & Android laptop (or maybe a Chromebook)

Most of HP’s current laptops, tablets, and even smartphones run Windows software. But the company also has a few Chromebooks, and soon HP may also launch a laptop that runs Android… or rather, Remix OS, which is a version of Android designed to look at home on a laptop. Notebook Italia got a look at a […]

HP is building Rockchip & Android laptop (or maybe a Chromebook) is a post from: Liliputing

HP is building Rockchip & Android laptop (or maybe a Chromebook)

Most of HP’s current laptops, tablets, and even smartphones run Windows software. But the company also has a few Chromebooks, and soon HP may also launch a laptop that runs Android… or rather, Remix OS, which is a version of Android designed to look at home on a laptop. Notebook Italia got a look at a […]

HP is building Rockchip & Android laptop (or maybe a Chromebook) is a post from: Liliputing

Fate of the Furious is like a James Bond flick, only better

The Furious team has become a band of secret agents for the 21st century.

Universal

About halfway through Fate of the Furious, the eighth flick in the ever-changing gearhead ninja series that started with The Fast and the Furious, I realized that my world had changed. This franchise had leapfrogged over James Bond in my long list of badass, high-tech, silly action flicks that I love to watch. After audiences take in the glorious insanity of this movie, I don't think I'll be the only one who feels this way.

If you think of all eight movies in the Furious franchise as having a plot arc, the action has been consistently bending toward "secret agent techno-ninja" for quite some time. Even in the first movie, there's an uneasy truce between law enforcement and Dom's (Vin Diesel) band of sideshow outlaws. Furious has a Bond-like balance between beautifully choreographed hand-to-hand combat sequences and tricked-out gadget porn. For a long time, however, the difference between a Bond movie and a Furious one was whose side we were on. Bond is a man of the Crown, fighting global threats. Dom and his team, meanwhile, are sometimes just fighting to have faster vehicles than the Asian gangsters up the block.

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Microsoft officially ends support for a bunch of Windows phones

And Microsoft’s converged operating system has become a little less converged.

Lumia 950 (credit: Peter Bright)

Microsoft has just released a couple of new Windows Insider builds for people on the fast ring, one for PC and one for mobile. The builds are surprisingly divergent.

For PC, the build is numbered 16176; it's another Redstone 3 build, though as with the first Redstone 3 build, it doesn't change a whole lot. It adds access to serial ports from the Windows Subsystem for Linux, which will help with remote device debugging. The build also fixes some minor bugs while introducing a new, less minor bug.

Specifically, if you use a Centennial application built using the Desktop Bridge—Microsoft's semi-virtualized technology for putting existing Win32 applications in the Windows Store—your system will crash. This will cause a Green Screen of Death—green, because a few builds back, Microsoft changed the screen color for Insider system crashes. At a glance, then, you can see the difference between a crashing machine on the stable Windows branch (as these remain blue) and a crashing machine on the developer branch.

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Why one Republican voted to kill privacy rules: “Nobody has to use the Internet”

Republicans encounter angry citizens after killing online privacy rules.

Enlarge / Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.). (credit: Getty Images | Chip Somodevilla)

A Republican lawmaker who voted to eliminate Internet privacy rules said, "Nobody's got to use the Internet" when asked why ISPs should be able to use and share their customers' Web browsing history for advertising purposes.

US Rep. Jim Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.) was hosting a town hall meeting when a constituent asked about the decision to eliminate privacy rules. The person in the audience was disputing the Republican argument that ISPs shouldn't face stricter requirements than websites such as Facebook.

"Facebook is not comparable to an ISP. I do not have to go on Facebook," the town hall meeting attendee said. But when it comes to Internet service providers, the person said, "I have one choice. I don't have to go on Google. My ISP provider is different than those providers."

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LeEco scraps EcoPass subscription video/cloud storage/warranty service

LeEco scraps EcoPass subscription video/cloud storage/warranty service

When Chinese company LeEco announced it was entering the US market last year, the plan was to emulate LeEco’s business model in its home country. In addition to smartphones, smart TVs, and other products (such as smart bicycles and eventually autonomous cars), LeEco would offer an Amazon Prime-esque service called EcoPass that bundles a video streaming […]

LeEco scraps EcoPass subscription video/cloud storage/warranty service is a post from: Liliputing

LeEco scraps EcoPass subscription video/cloud storage/warranty service

When Chinese company LeEco announced it was entering the US market last year, the plan was to emulate LeEco’s business model in its home country. In addition to smartphones, smart TVs, and other products (such as smart bicycles and eventually autonomous cars), LeEco would offer an Amazon Prime-esque service called EcoPass that bundles a video streaming […]

LeEco scraps EcoPass subscription video/cloud storage/warranty service is a post from: Liliputing