Baojun E100: GM stellt Elektroauto für 5.300 US-Dollar vor

Das Elektroauto Baojun E100 erinnert an einen Smart, stammt jedoch von der GM-Tochterfirma Baojun und kostet rund 5.300 US-Dollar. Das Fahrzeug ist allerdings nur für den chinesischen Markt gedacht. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Das Elektroauto Baojun E100 erinnert an einen Smart, stammt jedoch von der GM-Tochterfirma Baojun und kostet rund 5.300 US-Dollar. Das Fahrzeug ist allerdings nur für den chinesischen Markt gedacht. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Prozessor: Intels achte Core-Generation kommt im August

Noch im August 2017 wird Intel neue Prozessoren für Mini-PCs und Ultrabooks veröffentlichen. Die als 8th Gen Core bezeichneten Chips werden intern als Kaby Lake Refresh entwickelt und weisen bei 15 Watt erstmals vier statt zwei CPU-Kerne auf. (Kaby Lake, Prozessor)

Noch im August 2017 wird Intel neue Prozessoren für Mini-PCs und Ultrabooks veröffentlichen. Die als 8th Gen Core bezeichneten Chips werden intern als Kaby Lake Refresh entwickelt und weisen bei 15 Watt erstmals vier statt zwei CPU-Kerne auf. (Kaby Lake, Prozessor)

Valve announces Artifact, a Dota-themed digital card game

Lay cards in three lanes (or however exactly the game works) sometime in 2018.

Enlarge / Want more info on Valve's upcoming card-battling game Artifact? Too bad! All you get for now is this logo. (credit: Valve)

Rather than wait until the end of The International, the major Dota 2 tournament taking place in Seattle all week, to announce major Dota news, Valve surprise-announced an entirely new video game on the event's second, early-rounds evening.

"It's not Half-Life 3," broadcaster Sean "Day9" Plott said, and he insisted that the game was not a re-release or a fine-tuning of an existing game à la Counter Strike: GO or Dota 2. Then, he introduced a vague, 35-second teaser video that prominently featured a triangular logo. It ended with the phrase: Artifact: The Dota Card Game, which Valve says will publicly launch sometime in 2018. (Technically, Plott wasn't lying, but gosh, did he come close.)

Sadly, Artifact's reveal was not followed with anything in the way of screenshots or gameplay. Instead, Plott described having played test versions of the game already, and his brief description hinted at a one-on-one digital card-battling game, like Hearthstone, only with a Dota-themed three-lane system and other Dota-like tweaks.

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Sony’s next-gen flagships might have a usable fingerprint sensor in the US

Sony’s next-gen flagships might have a usable fingerprint sensor in the US

Sony’s smartphones might not get as much attention in the US as models from Samsung, HTC, or LG. But for the past few years, Sony has been putting out phones with decent hardware… except for one weird quirk: the fingerprint sensor has been built into the power button on the side of the phone. And […]

Sony’s next-gen flagships might have a usable fingerprint sensor in the US is a post from: Liliputing

Sony’s next-gen flagships might have a usable fingerprint sensor in the US

Sony’s smartphones might not get as much attention in the US as models from Samsung, HTC, or LG. But for the past few years, Sony has been putting out phones with decent hardware… except for one weird quirk: the fingerprint sensor has been built into the power button on the side of the phone. And […]

Sony’s next-gen flagships might have a usable fingerprint sensor in the US is a post from: Liliputing

No Man’s Sky version 1.3 is live, adds “joint exploration,“ more [updated]

“Atlas Rises” follows seemingly endless ARG that included real-life escape rooms.

Hello Games

Update, Friday, August 11: No Man's Sky version 1.3 is now live for players on PC and PlayStation 4. "30 hours" of campaign plot have been added, Hello Games says, and other updates to the game support that increased plot content, including new types of missions and an interstellar "politics" map that looks at economies and warring alien factions.

Arguably the most intriguing update is the new "joint exploration" mode. However, be warned that this is not necessarily full-blown multiplayer. Instead, this adds visual and voice indicators whenever more than one person is traversing the same planet in the game while connected online. Any other players who happen to be on the same planet as you will appear as floating, glowing orbs. At the very least, players can now hop, skip, and jump across the universe as a group and chat about what they each see and discover, but they will not share missions, terrain deformation, or other system-specific actions in the game.

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Disney to launch streaming service, end Netflix deal (and streaming will eventually be as expensive as cable)

Disney to launch streaming service, end Netflix deal (and streaming will eventually be as expensive as cable)

Want to sign up for basic cable service and get little more than your local channels and a few extras? Plenty of providers will offer you a fairly affordable option. But if you want to add ESPN, you’ll probably have to pay for a more expensive tier. Then there are premium channels like Showtime and […]

Disney to launch streaming service, end Netflix deal (and streaming will eventually be as expensive as cable) is a post from: Liliputing

Disney to launch streaming service, end Netflix deal (and streaming will eventually be as expensive as cable)

Want to sign up for basic cable service and get little more than your local channels and a few extras? Plenty of providers will offer you a fairly affordable option. But if you want to add ESPN, you’ll probably have to pay for a more expensive tier. Then there are premium channels like Showtime and […]

Disney to launch streaming service, end Netflix deal (and streaming will eventually be as expensive as cable) is a post from: Liliputing

US government’s grim climate summary draft leaks

Fate of congressionally mandated report uncertain in the face of Trump’s disbelief.

Enlarge (credit: NASA)

In 1990, during the presidency of the first George Bush, Congress passed the Global Change Research Act. Along with reorganizing government-funded climate research, the Act stipulates that, every four years, the federal agencies involved provide an update on the state of climate science.

It has been four years, and the next report's draft has been completed and has undergone scientific vetting.

The draft paints a grim picture of how the US is already dealing with a variety of issues related to climate change and how much worse most of those issues will get during the coming decades. And the report places the blame squarely on humanity's greenhouse gas emissions.

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Disney to give Netflix the white-gloved Mickey middle finger in 2019

Curiously, the announcement doesn’t mention superheroes or galaxies far, far away.

Enlarge / “O-ho! Oh boy! We're leaving Netflix!” (credit: Aurich / Disney / Netflix)

Disney's latest quarterly report included a major announcement about its online video-streaming plans—and how sharply they will diverge from the company's current Netflix partnership.

Starting in 2019, Disney will operate its own paid video-streaming service. This news came about as Disney announced on Tuesday that it would acquire a majority stake in a video-streaming company called BAM Tech. (Following a 2016 stock purchase, Disney had previously owned a 33-percent stake in BAM Tech.)

Currently, Disney has an exclusive deal with Netflix for streaming of its films and TV series, which began in 2012 and expanded last year. Terms for that deal, particularly its expiration date, were never publicly disclosed. It's possible that the Netflix deal's expiration will line up perfectly with the launch of what Disney describes as "the exclusive home in the US for subscription-video-on-demand viewing of the newest live-action and animated movies from Disney and Pixar." This paid online service will also include a selection of classic Disney and Pixar content, along with "original movies, TV shows, short-form content, and other Disney-branded exclusives" made exclusively for the streaming service.

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Pirate Domain Blocking ‘Door’ Should Remain Open, RIAA Tells Court

The RIAA wants the court to keep an order in place that opens the door to widespread site blocking efforts. The order applies to CDN provider Cloudflare, which previously argued that the targeted domains are no longer using its services. However, according to the RIAA, Cloudflare is misdirecting the court because it doesn’t like the legal consequences of the ruling.

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

As one of the leading CDN and DDoS protection services, Cloudflare is used by millions of websites across the globe.

This includes thousands of “pirate” sites which rely on the U.S.-based company to keep server loads down.

While Cloudflare is a neutral service provider, rightsholders are not happy with its role. The company has been involved in several legal disputes already, including the RIAA’s lawsuit against MP3Skull.

Last year the record labels won their case against the MP3 download portal but the site ignored the court order and continued to operate. This prompted the RIAA to go after third-party services including Cloudflare, to target associated domain names.

The RIAA demanded domain blockades, arguing that Cloudflare actively cooperated with the pirates. The CDN provider objected and argued that the DMCA shielded the company from the broad blocking requirements. In turn, the court ruled that the DMCA doesn’t apply in this case, opening the door to widespread anti-piracy filtering.

While it’s still to be determined whether Cloudflare is indeed “in active concert or participation” with MP3Skull, the company recently asked the court to vacate the order, arguing that the case is moot.

MP3Skull no longer has an active website, and previous domain names either never used Cloudflare or stopped using it long before the order was issued, the company argued.

The RIAA clearly disagrees. According to the music industry group, Cloudflare’s request relies on “misstatements.” The motion wasn’t moot when the court issued it in March, and it isn’t moot today, they argue.

Some MP3Skull domains were still actively using Cloudflare as recently as April, but Cloudflare failed to mention these.

“CloudFlare’s arguments to the contrary rely largely on misdirection, pointing to the status of domain names that expressly were not at issue in Plaintiffs’ motion,” the RIAA writes.

Even if all the domain names are no longer active on Cloudflare, the order should remain in place, the RIAA argues. The group points out that nothing is preventing the MP3Skull owners from relaunching the site and moving back to Cloudflare in the future.

“By its own admission, CloudFlare took no steps to prevent Defendants from using its services at any time. Given Defendants’ established practice of moving from domain to domain and from service to service throughout this case in contempt of this Court’s orders, Defendants could easily have resumed — and may tomorrow resume — their use of CloudFlare’s services.”

In addition, the RIAA stressed that the present ruling doesn’t harm Cloudflare at all. Since there are no active MP3Skull domains using the service presently, it need take no action.

“The March 23 Order does not require CloudFlare to do anything. All that Order did was to clarify that Rule 65, and not Section 512(j) of the DMCA, applied,” the RIAA stresses.

While it seems pointless to spend hours of legal counsel on a site that is no longer active, it shows the importance of the court’s ruling and the wider site blocking implications it has.

The RIAA wants to keep the door open for similar requests in the future, and Cloudflare wants to avoid any liability for pirate sites. These looming legal consequences are the main reason why the CDN provider asked the court to vacate the order, the RIAA notes.

“It is evident that the only reason why CloudFlare wants the Court to vacate its March 23 Order is that it does not like the Court’s ruling on the purely legal issue of Rule 65(d)’s scope,” the RIAA writes.

It is now up to the court to decide how to move forward. A decision on Cloudflare’s request is expected to be issued during the weeks to come.

The RIAA’s full reply is available here (pdf).

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

Fallout board game announced as competitive four-player RPG adventure

Launching in “Q4 2017” from Fantasy Flight Games, set in worlds of Fallout 3 and 4.

Is it better to be alone than in bad company? We'll find out once we learn more about the co-op specific parts of the <em>Fallout</em> board game in "Q4 2017."

Is it better to be alone than in bad company? We'll find out once we learn more about the co-op specific parts of the Fallout board game in "Q4 2017." (credit: Fantasy Flight Games / Bethesda Softworks)

Time to start saving up your bottle caps, because the Fallout RPG series is getting its first real board game soon.

Fantasy Flight Games teased a familiar-looking "please stand by" image on its social media pages on Tuesday morning, but the vague tease didn't last long. Shortly after, the Fallout board game's official announcement rolled out with plenty of details about how exactly the game will work. The adventure game, tentatively priced at $59, will support up to four players, along with single-player adventuring, and it will challenge players to amass the most "influence" points by the time the game ends.

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