Large IPTV Piracy Ring Shut Down by Spanish Police and Europol

Police in Spain have shut down a large IPTV piracy operation with help from Europol and Bulgarian authorities. The group was operating through two legitimate ISPs in Spain and Bulgaria, which were allegedly set up to facilitate the illegal offering. Eight people have been arrested in connection with the piracy ring.

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

Increasingly, people are trading in their expensive cable subscriptions, to use cheaper or free Internet TV instead.

In recent years this has become much more convenient with help from a variety of easy-to-use media players, Kodi boxes included.

Following this trend, there has also been an uptick in the availability of unlicensed TV streams, with vendors offering virtually any channel imaginable, for free or in exchange for a small fee.

Rightsholders are not happy with this development and are actively cracking down on sellers of these illicit services and devices.

This week one of the largest IPTV piracy groups was dismantled in Europe. The operation was headed by the Spanish National Police, with help from Bulgarian authorities, Europol and Eurojust.

The investigation was triggered by a complaint from the UK-based Premier League. In total, 12 searches were carried out in both Spain and Bulgaria, leading to the arrest of eight people that are allegedly connected to the dismantled piracy group.

Spanish police carrying out the raid

The enforcement effort, dubbed “Operation Casper,” found that the piracy ring was operating through several shell companies. Two legitimate ISPs were setup in Spain and Bulgaria, through which the group offered their IPTV services.

“Operation Casper began when a representative from a broadcast rights holder filed a complaint against the owner of an Internet Service Provider located in Málaga (Spain), for illicitly distributing pay-TV channels to thousands of clients in different EU countries,” Europol writes.

“Investigators also unveiled the existence of a second ISP in Silistra (Bulgaria) owned by the network, which was permanently connected to the ISP in Spain and provided coverage to other European countries.”

The owner of the two ISPs is a Danish citizen, the investigation revealed. This man is being seen as the mastermind behind the IPTV piracy ring which offered its services throughout Europe.

This is not the first time that Spanish police have raided a company that provides unauthorized IPTV services. A similar operation took place last year. That case was also based on a Premier League complaint and involved a local Internet provider as well.

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

Canon: Makroobjektiv mit eingebautem Ringlicht

Nahaufnahmen im Maßstab 1:1 sind mit Canons neuem Objektiv mit dem sperrigen Namen EF-S 35mm 1:2,8 Macro IS STM möglich. Ein eingebautes Ringlicht soll Gegenstände direkt beleuchten. (Objektiv, DSLR)

Nahaufnahmen im Maßstab 1:1 sind mit Canons neuem Objektiv mit dem sperrigen Namen EF-S 35mm 1:2,8 Macro IS STM möglich. Ein eingebautes Ringlicht soll Gegenstände direkt beleuchten. (Objektiv, DSLR)

Maschinenlernen: Adobe will Selfies neu erfinden

Adobe Research arbeitet an einer App, mit der bessere Selbstporträts aufgenommen werden können. Dabei wird Maschinenlernen eingesetzt, um einen Aufnahmestil auf das eigene Foto zu übertragen, die Perspektive zu modifizieren oder den Hintergrund unscharf zu stellen. (Adobe, Grafiksoftware)

Adobe Research arbeitet an einer App, mit der bessere Selbstporträts aufgenommen werden können. Dabei wird Maschinenlernen eingesetzt, um einen Aufnahmestil auf das eigene Foto zu übertragen, die Perspektive zu modifizieren oder den Hintergrund unscharf zu stellen. (Adobe, Grafiksoftware)

Android-Verbreitung: Nougat-Anteil zieht an, Marshmallow verliert erstmals

Innerhalb eines Monats hat sich der Anteil an Smartphones und Tablets mit Android 7 alias Nougat deutlich erhöht. Im Gegenzug gab es erstmals einen Rückgang für Android 6 alias Marshmallow. Noch immer laufen die meisten Geräte mit einem über zwei Jahre alten Betriebssystem. (Android, Google)

Innerhalb eines Monats hat sich der Anteil an Smartphones und Tablets mit Android 7 alias Nougat deutlich erhöht. Im Gegenzug gab es erstmals einen Rückgang für Android 6 alias Marshmallow. Noch immer laufen die meisten Geräte mit einem über zwei Jahre alten Betriebssystem. (Android, Google)

Lagerverkehr: Amazon setzt auf Gabelstapler mit Brennstoffzellen

Amazon will in einigen seiner Lager künftig Gabelstapler mit Brennstoffzellen-Antrieb von Plug Power verwenden. Sie sollen solche Fahrzeuge ersetzen, die nur mit Akkus unterwegs sind. Am Hersteller dieser Antriebe will sich Amazon gleich beteiligen. (Brennstoffzelle, Amazon)

Amazon will in einigen seiner Lager künftig Gabelstapler mit Brennstoffzellen-Antrieb von Plug Power verwenden. Sie sollen solche Fahrzeuge ersetzen, die nur mit Akkus unterwegs sind. Am Hersteller dieser Antriebe will sich Amazon gleich beteiligen. (Brennstoffzelle, Amazon)

Little Flocker: F-Secure kauft Sicherheitstechnik für den Mac ein

Der Zukauf soll mehr Sicherheit für Apple-Rechner bieten: F-Secure hat Little Flocker übernommen. Die Software soll in die eigene Xfence-Suite integriert werden und vor Viren und Ransomware schützen. (F-Secure, Virus)

Der Zukauf soll mehr Sicherheit für Apple-Rechner bieten: F-Secure hat Little Flocker übernommen. Die Software soll in die eigene Xfence-Suite integriert werden und vor Viren und Ransomware schützen. (F-Secure, Virus)

AMD Chromebooks on the way?

AMD Chromebooks on the way?

Some Chromebooks have Intel chips. Others have ARM-based processors. But soon there may be another option. Over the past few months, there have been signs that AMD-powered Chromebooks are on the way. In December, Chrome Unboxed spotted mentions of an AMD-powered board codenamed “Jadeite” in the Chromium repositories. In March, the website spotted another AMD-powered […]

AMD Chromebooks on the way? is a post from: Liliputing

AMD Chromebooks on the way?

Some Chromebooks have Intel chips. Others have ARM-based processors. But soon there may be another option. Over the past few months, there have been signs that AMD-powered Chromebooks are on the way. In December, Chrome Unboxed spotted mentions of an AMD-powered board codenamed “Jadeite” in the Chromium repositories. In March, the website spotted another AMD-powered […]

AMD Chromebooks on the way? is a post from: Liliputing

Tapdo is a wireless fingerprint reader that works like a 20-button remote for your phone (crowdfunding)

Tapdo is a wireless fingerprint reader that works like a 20-button remote for your phone (crowdfunding)

One of the things I miss most about old-fashioned PDAs and MP3 players is the physical buttons that let you easily pause music, skip tracks, or do other things without taking your phone out of your pocket and unlocking the screen. Smartwatches and voice assistants are sort of reviving the idea of interacting with your […]

Tapdo is a wireless fingerprint reader that works like a 20-button remote for your phone (crowdfunding) is a post from: Liliputing

Tapdo is a wireless fingerprint reader that works like a 20-button remote for your phone (crowdfunding)

One of the things I miss most about old-fashioned PDAs and MP3 players is the physical buttons that let you easily pause music, skip tracks, or do other things without taking your phone out of your pocket and unlocking the screen. Smartwatches and voice assistants are sort of reviving the idea of interacting with your […]

Tapdo is a wireless fingerprint reader that works like a 20-button remote for your phone (crowdfunding) is a post from: Liliputing

Twitter balks at US demand to expose account condemning Trump policy [Update]

Feds cited incorrect law and did not get a judge’s signature for account data.

Enlarge (credit: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)

Update 11:45 PDT: The government on Friday withdrew (PDF) its demand that Twitter unmask the account holder behind the @ALT_uscis handle, putting an end to the privacy dispute.
End Update:
The Trump administration is demanding Twitter expose the anonymous account holder behind the @ALT_uscis handle that has been critical of the US president's immigration policy. The handle has more than 56,000 followers since it debuted in the immediate aftermath of President Donald Trump signing his first immigration executive order. The authorities believe it is run by a government employee of the US Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), a branch of the Department of Homeland Security, and suspect the account is one of several so-called new "alt" Twitter feeds run by federal employees critical of the government.

The Customs and Border Protection agency, which is seeking to unmask the account holder, issued Twitter a summons (PDF), unsigned by a judge, citing a section of federal law granting border officials the power to investigate importation taxes. Twitter is refusing to unmask the account holder, saying the government is "abusing" its authority by making the demand without a legal basis.

"Beyond that boilerplate language, the CBP Summons provides no justification for issuance of a summons targeting the @ALT_USCIS account," Twitter wrote in court documents challenging the order, which demanded that Twitter keep it a secret.

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Xbox Scorpio: Are its 4K chops masking a change of VR heart?

Some unanswered questions leave us perplexed.

Microsoft has finally revealed most of the hardware going into its Project Scorpio console. Digital Foundry was shown the hardware exclusively and has come away broadly impressed. While there are still some questions—what exactly are those processor cores?—we have a pretty solid idea of what will make the machine go and what it'll be capable of.

But as of press time, it's missing one of the things we expected. When Scorpio was first announced at E3 last year, Microsoft didn't just rattle off a list of specs—the 8-core CPU, 6 TFLOPS of GPU compute power and 320GB of memory bandwidth that were confirmed today. Xbox division chief Phil Spencer also made a bold proclamation at the time: "The next-step change for gamers and developers must deliver true 4K gaming and high-fidelity VR."

VR, you say? Microsoft was never entirely clear about what those VR capabilities would be. The company has, or at least had, some kind of working relationship with Oculus—and Facebook's VR headset shipped with Xbox controllers—but since Scorpio's initial reveal, Microsoft has launched its own VR initiative that'll use a new range of headsets made by companies including Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and Acer. These headsets won't use the Oculus APIs, nor will they use Valve's SteamVR, as used on the HTC Vive. Instead, they'll use Microsoft's own developer framework.

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