iPhone-maker Foxconn to build flat-screen display factory in Wisconsin

Upwards of 10,000 jobs could come to the state.

Enlarge / The OLED-toting Google Pixel (left) next to the iPhone 7 Plus' LCD panel. (credit: Ron Amadeo)

Foxconn, one of the electronics manufacturers that makes Apple's iPhones, is set to reveal plans to build a factory in Wisconsin to product flat-screen displays. Foxconn has been in talks with state governments about investing $7 billion in US manufacturing since Donald Trump took office as President. The announcement will come at an event at the White House today at 4pm CT.

The factory will be located in southeastern Wisconsin in House Speaker Paul Ryan's congressional district. It's currently unclear how many jobs this will create in the state—an earlier report from The Chicago Tribune suggests it could create as many as 10,000 jobs, while others state the factory would initially create 3,000 jobs. Back in January, Foxconn Chairman Terry Gou estimated the $7 billion investment, if it went through, could create between 30,000 and 50,000 jobs in the US.

The deal won't come for free, though. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel is reporting Foxconn will receive an incentive package of $1 to $3 billion over the next few years, including state, local, and federal incentives.

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Quartalsbericht: Facebooks Belegschaft wurde erheblich vergrößert

Facebook steigert in einem Jahr die Zahl seiner Beschäftigten um 43 Prozent. Rund 20.650 Mitarbeiter erhöhten den Gewinn um 71 Prozent auf 3,89 Milliarden US-Dollar. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Facebook steigert in einem Jahr die Zahl seiner Beschäftigten um 43 Prozent. Rund 20.650 Mitarbeiter erhöhten den Gewinn um 71 Prozent auf 3,89 Milliarden US-Dollar. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Using a blockchain doesn’t exempt you from securities regulations

A $150 million Ethereum crowdfunding project broke the law, SEC says.

Enlarge / Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin. (credit: Techcrunch)

The DAO, a blockchain-based organization created last year, was supposed to demonstrate the potential of Bitcoin competitor Ethereum. Investors pumped $150 million of virtual currency into the project. But then in June 2016, hackers found a bug in the DAO's code that allowed them to steal $50 million from the organization, creating a crisis for the Ethereum community.

A Tuesday ruling from the Securities and Exchange Commission makes clear that security flaws were not the problem with the DAO. The agency says the DAO's creators broke the law by offering shares to the public without complying with applicable securities laws. Though luckily for the DAO's creators, the SEC isn't going to prosecute them.

"There's nothing surprising here," says Patrick Murck, a legal expert at Harvard's Berkman Klein Center. "It's very commonsensical."

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Microsoft expands bug bounty program to cover any Windows flaw

Now every part of Windows is covered by a bug bounty scheme.

Some bugs aren't worth very much cash. (credit: Daniel Novta)

Microsoft today announced a new bug bounty scheme that would see anyone finding a security flaw in Windows eligible for a payout of up to $15,000.

The company has been running bug bounty schemes, wherein security researchers are financially rewarded for discovering and reporting exploitable flaws, since 2013. Back then, it was paying up to $11,000 for bugs in Internet Explorer 11. In the years since then, Microsoft's bounty schemes have expanded with specific programs offering rewards for those finding flaws in the Hyper-V hypervisor, Windows' wide range of exploit mitigation systems such as DEP and ASLR, and the Edge browser.

Many of these bounty programs were time limited, covering software during its beta/development period but ending once it was released. This structure is an attempt to attract greater scrutiny before exploits are distributed to regular end-users. Last month, the Edge bounty program was made an on-going, continuous scheme no longer tied to any particular timeframe.

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Lawsuit seeks Ajit Pai’s net neutrality talks with Internet providers

FCC accused of not complying with FoIA request for Pai’s talks with ISPs.

Enlarge / FCC Chairman Ajit Pai testifying before a Senate subcommittee on May 11, 2016, when he was a commissioner. (credit: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

The Federal Communications Commission was sued today by a group that says the commission failed to comply with a public records request for communications about net neutrality between FCC officials and Internet service providers.

On April 26, a nonprofit called American Oversight filed a Freedom of Information Act (FoIA) request asking the FCC for all records related to communications on net neutrality between Internet service providers and Chairman Ajit Pai or Pai's staff. The group asked for "correspondence, e-mails, telephone call logs, calendar entries, meeting agendas," and any other records of such communications.

The group also asked for similar records related to FCC communications with members of Congress, congressional staff, and members of the media. But American Oversight's lawsuit against the FCC says the commission hasn't complied with the requests.

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Fire Tablet Tool makes hacking Amazon’s 2017 tablets easier

Fire Tablet Tool makes hacking Amazon’s 2017 tablets easier

Amazon’s 2017 tablet lineup includes a new and improved $50 Fire Tablet with a 7 inch screen, and an updated $80 Fire HD 8 tablet with a higher-resolution display, more memory, and more storage. While hackers haven’t found a way to root either device or install custom ROMs yet, we’ve already noted that you can install […]

Fire Tablet Tool makes hacking Amazon’s 2017 tablets easier is a post from: Liliputing

Fire Tablet Tool makes hacking Amazon’s 2017 tablets easier

Amazon’s 2017 tablet lineup includes a new and improved $50 Fire Tablet with a 7 inch screen, and an updated $80 Fire HD 8 tablet with a higher-resolution display, more memory, and more storage. While hackers haven’t found a way to root either device or install custom ROMs yet, we’ve already noted that you can install […]

Fire Tablet Tool makes hacking Amazon’s 2017 tablets easier is a post from: Liliputing

Google Challenges Canada’s Global Blocking Injunction in the US

In June, the Supreme Court of Canada ordered Google to remove a company’s websites from its search results all over the world, not just in Canada. With options to appeal exhausted in Canada, this week Google filed for an injunction in the United States, arguing that the ruling violates the First Amendment.

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

Despite being what courts have described as an “innocent bystander”, Google has found itself at the heart of a potentially damaging intellectual property case. Running since 2014, Equustek Solutions Inc. v. Jack saw Canadian entities battle over stolen intellectual property.

Equustek Solutions claimed that Google’s search results helped to send visitors to Datalink websites operated by the defendants (former Equustek employees) who were selling unlawful products. Google voluntarily removed links to the sites from its Google.ca (Canada) results but Equustek wanted more, and soon got it.

A court in British Columbia, the Court of Appeal, and then the Supreme Court of Canada all agreed that Google should remove links to the sites on a global basis, by definition beyond Canada’s borders.

When court rulings encroach on potentially opposing legal systems overseas, difficulties are bound to arise. Google raised concerns that the decision would conflict with U.S. law, but the Supreme Court described the issues as “theoretical” and left it up to the U.S. to solve the problem.

In response, Google filed for an injunction at the US District Court for Northern California this week, arguing that the Canadian decision violates important U.S. legislation.

“Google now turns to this Court, asking it to declare that the rights established by the First Amendment and the Communications Decency Act are not merely theoretical,” Google wrote.

“The Canadian order is repugnant to those rights, and the order violates principles of international comity, particularly since the Canadian plaintiffs never established any violation of their rights under U.S. law.

“Pursuant to well-established United States law, Google seeks a declaratory judgment that the Canadian court’s order cannot be enforced in the United States and an order enjoining that enforcement.”

According to Google, Internet search results are fully protected speech under the First Amendment, and because the Canadian decision is directed to a specific speaker (Google) and is content-specific, it must come under scrutiny.

Google insists that the websites to be censored are already a matter of public record and Equustek has not shown that it has no alternative remedies to hand other than to censor Google’s results outside of Canada.

“Equustek has not sought similar delisting injunctions against the world’s other search engines, such as Bing or Yahoo,” Google writes, noting that action hasn’t been taken against regular websites carrying links either.

Google also suggests that Equustek could have taken action against Datalink’s registrars and webhosts, which have the ability to delete the actual sites in question. With the websites gone the search de-indexing battle would be moot, but for reasons unknown, Equustek has chosen a different battle.

Describing the Canadian order as one of “convenience,” Google criticizes the effort to deal with a Canadian legal problem on a global basis, adding that “no one country should purport to control the global internet.”

In closing, Google asks the court to declare the Canadian Order unenforceable in the United States on the basis it violates the the First Amendment, the Communications Decency Act, and public policy surrounding enforceability of foreign judgments.

“The Canadian Order purports to place the Canadian court in the position of
supervising the law enforcement activities of a foreign sovereign nation (the United States) against the United States’ own citizens on American soil. Because the Canadian courts ignored principles of international comity, corrective action by this Court is required,” Google concludes.

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

Meizu Pro 7 smartphones have two cameras… and two screens

Meizu Pro 7 smartphones have two cameras… and two screens

Pretty much every phone maker has a device with top-tier specs these days, which is why companies are starting to turn to gimmicks like squeezable sides, support for modular accessories, and odd-looking designs. Some companies, including LG and Yota Devices have even tried releasing phones with extra displays, offering new ways to interact with a […]

Meizu Pro 7 smartphones have two cameras… and two screens is a post from: Liliputing

Meizu Pro 7 smartphones have two cameras… and two screens

Pretty much every phone maker has a device with top-tier specs these days, which is why companies are starting to turn to gimmicks like squeezable sides, support for modular accessories, and odd-looking designs. Some companies, including LG and Yota Devices have even tried releasing phones with extra displays, offering new ways to interact with a […]

Meizu Pro 7 smartphones have two cameras… and two screens is a post from: Liliputing

Verizon’s throttling of video should be investigated by FCC, petition says

FCC has no comment on petition to investigate Verizon slowing video to 10Mbps.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Steven Puetzer)

The Federal Communications Commission should investigate whether Verizon Wireless violated net neutrality rules by throttling video applications on its mobile network, advocacy group Free Press says.

Free Press is asking people to sign a petition that will be delivered to the FCC.

"Late last week Verizon Wireless customers started to notice something suspicious: Videos from Netflix and YouTube were slow," the call for signatures says. "Verizon Wireless couldn't explain why. When reporters asked the wireless giant to comment, the company first said it was just a temporary network test with no impact on user experience. But Verizon later admitted that, temporary test or not, it was indeed 'optimizing' video streams."

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Apple must pay $506M for infringing university’s patent

University of Wisconsin may collect $4.35 apiece for millions of iPads and iPhones.

Enlarge / Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation will be able to collect more than $500 million in royalties on Apple products that used the A7, A8, and A8X chips. That includes the iPad Air, pictured here in 2013. (credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

A judge has ordered Apple to pay $506 million to the research arm of the University of Wisconsin.

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, or WARF, sued Apple in 2014, accusing its A7, A8, and A8X chips of infringing US Patent No. 5,781,752, which claims a type of "table based data speculation circuit." The following year after a trial, a Wisconsin jury found (PDF) that Apple had infringed the '752 patent and that it should pay $234 million in damages.

Yesterday's order (PDF), signed by US District Judge William Conley, more than doubles that amount. Conley awarded WARF $1.61 per unit for many of the iPad and iPhone devices that use the accused chips, up until the entry of judgment in October 2015. He also tacked on $2.74 per unit as a royalty payment covering the period from the date of judgment through December 26, 2016, which is when the '752 patent expired.

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