New surface is so slippery, shellfish can’t get a grip

Mussels end up confused when they try to stick to a polymer/lubricant mix.

Enlarge / A sticky situation. (credit: University of Washington)

When engineers look at mussels, they're typically looking in awe at how they anchor themselves to nearly every surface imaginable, all while under water. The fibers they use to attach themselves are incredibly strong, and the adhesive works wet or dry on all sorts of materials. For the most part, engineers are looking to create a substance with similar properties.

This week, however, brings an exception: engineers who want to try to keep mussels from sticking to everything. Zebra mussels, a species that has invaded the Great Lakes, is estimated to cost utilities hundreds of millions of dollars each year due to clogged pipes and intakes. Ships, buoys, and pretty much anything else we put in the water also ends up needing to have mussels cleared off.

The international team behind the new work has designed a material that mussels can't seem to get a grip on. It's not because the mussel's adhesive fail; instead, the mussel itself doesn't seem to know what it's touching when it's set down on the material.

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Ladestationen: Regierung lehnt Zwangsverkabelung von Tiefgaragen ab

Die EU-Kommission will neue Gebäude zwangsweise mit Leitungen für Ladestationen ausstatten lassen. Die Bundesregierung und andere Mitgliedstaaten sind offenbar gegen diese Art der Förderung der Elektroautos. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Die EU-Kommission will neue Gebäude zwangsweise mit Leitungen für Ladestationen ausstatten lassen. Die Bundesregierung und andere Mitgliedstaaten sind offenbar gegen diese Art der Förderung der Elektroautos. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Rightscorp Bleeds Another Million, Borrows $200K From Customer BMG

According to a new filing, anti-piracy outfit Rightscorp incurred a net loss of more than $1m during the first six months of 2017, raising new doubts about its ability to continue as a going concern. The situation was so serious earlier this year that the company had to borrow $200,000 from customer BMG to settle a lawsuit. At the end of June, Rightscorp had just $1,725 in cash.

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

Anti-piracy outfit Rightscorp is one of the many companies trying to turn Internet piracy into profit. The company has a somewhat novel approach but has difficulty balancing the books.

Essentially, Rightscorp operates like other so-called copyright-trolling operations, in that it monitors alleged offenders on BitTorrent networks, tracks them to their ISPs, then attempts to extract a cash settlement. Rightscorp does this by sending DMCA notices with settlement agreements attached, in the hope that at-this-point-anonymous Internet users break cover in panic. This can lead to a $20 or $30 ‘fine’ or in some cases dozens of multiples of that.

But despite settling hundreds of thousands of these cases, profit has thus far proven elusive, with the company hemorrhaging millions in losses. The company has just filed its results for the first half of 2017 and they contain more bad news.

In the six months ended June 2017, revenues obtained from copyright settlements reached just $138,514, that’s 35% down on the $214,326 generated in the same period last year. However, the company did manage to book $148,332 in “consulting revenue” in the first half of this year, a business area that generated no revenue in 2016.

Overall then, total revenue for the six month period was $286,846 – up from $214,326 last year. While that’s a better picture in its own right, Rightscorp has a lot of costs attached to its business.

After paying out $69,257 to copyright holders and absorbing $1,190,696 in general and administrative costs, among other things, the company’s total operating expenses topped out at $1,296,127 for the first six months of the year.

To make a long story short, the company made a net loss of $1,068,422, which was more than the $995,265 loss it made last year and despite improved revenues. The company ended June with just $1,725 in cash.

“These factors raise substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern within one year after the date that the financial statements are issued,” the company’s latest statement reads.

This hanging-by-a-thread narrative has followed Rightscorp for the past few years but there’s information in the latest accounts which indicates how bad things were at the start of the year.

In January 2016, Rightscorp and several copyright holders, including Hollywood studio Warner Bros, agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit over intimidating robo-calls that were made to alleged infringers. The defendants agreed to set aside $450,000 to cover the costs, and it appears that Rightscorp was liable for at least $200,000 of that.

Rightscorp hasn’t exactly been flush with cash, so it was interesting to read that its main consumer piracy settlement client, music publisher BMG, actually stepped in to pay off the class-action settlement.

“At December 31, 2016, the Company had accrued $200,000 related to the settlement of a class action complaint. On January 7, 2017, BMG Rights Management (US) LLC (“BMG”) advanced the Company $200,000, which was used to pay off the settlement. The advance from BMG is to be applied to future billings from the Company to BMG for consulting services,” Rightscorp’s filing reads.

With Rightscorp’s future BMG revenue now being gobbled up by what appears to be loan repayments, it becomes difficult to see how the anti-piracy outfit can make enough money to pay off the $200,000 debt. However, its filing notes that on July 21, 2017, the company issued “an aggregate of 10,000,000 shares of common stock to an investor for a purchase price of $200,000.” While that amount matches the BMG debt, the filing doesn’t reveal who the investor is.

The filing also reveals that on July 31, Rightscorp entered into two agreements to provide services “to a holder of multiple copyrights.” The copyright holder isn’t named, but the deal reveals that it’s in Rightscorp’s best interests to get immediate payment from people to whom it sends cash settlement demands.

“[Rightscorp] will receive 50% of all gross proceeds of any settlement revenue received by the Client from pre-lawsuit ‘advisory notices,’ and 37.5% of all gross proceeds received by the Client from ‘final warning’ notices sent immediately prior to a lawsuit,” the filing notes.

Also of interest is that Rightscorp has offered not to work with any of the copyright holders’ direct competitors, providing certain thresholds are met – $10,000 revenue in the first month to $100,000 after 12 months. But there’s more to the deal.

Rightscorp will also provide a number of services to this client including detecting and verifying copyright works on P2P networks, providing information about infringers, plus reporting, litigation support, and copyright protection advisory services.

For this, Rightscorp will earn $10,000 for the first three months, rising to $85,000 per month after 16 months, valuable revenue for a company fighting for its life.

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

Raspberry Pi: Raspbian auf Stretch upgedated

Raspbian basiert nun mehr auf der aktuellen Debian-Version 9. Das Betriebssystem-Update für den Raspberry Pi schließt eine Sicherheitslücke des Funkchips. Ansonsten ändert sich für den Nutzer wenig. (Raspberry Pi, Server)

Raspbian basiert nun mehr auf der aktuellen Debian-Version 9. Das Betriebssystem-Update für den Raspberry Pi schließt eine Sicherheitslücke des Funkchips. Ansonsten ändert sich für den Nutzer wenig. (Raspberry Pi, Server)

Trotz Förderung: Breitbandausbau kommt nur schleppend voran

Die Förderprogramme des Bundes zum Breitbandausbau werden nur langsam abgerufen. Von den im Jahr 2015 bewilligten Millionen ist noch kein Cent bei den Kommunen angekommen. (Breitband, Breko)

Die Förderprogramme des Bundes zum Breitbandausbau werden nur langsam abgerufen. Von den im Jahr 2015 bewilligten Millionen ist noch kein Cent bei den Kommunen angekommen. (Breitband, Breko)

Asus VivoBook Pro 15 now available for $1299 (powerful, thin, and relatively light 15.6 inch laptop)

The Asus VivoBook Pro 15 N580VD is a high-power laptop with discrete graphics, a quad-core Kaby Lake processor, plenty of RAM, and a big solid state drive. First unveiled at Computex in May, the VivoBook Pro 15 is now available for $1299. While its 15.6 inch display makes it a bit larger than most of […]

Asus VivoBook Pro 15 now available for $1299 (powerful, thin, and relatively light 15.6 inch laptop) is a post from: Liliputing

The Asus VivoBook Pro 15 N580VD is a high-power laptop with discrete graphics, a quad-core Kaby Lake processor, plenty of RAM, and a big solid state drive. First unveiled at Computex in May, the VivoBook Pro 15 is now available for $1299. While its 15.6 inch display makes it a bit larger than most of […]

Asus VivoBook Pro 15 now available for $1299 (powerful, thin, and relatively light 15.6 inch laptop) is a post from: Liliputing

Code chunk in Kronos malware used long before MalwareTech published it

Marcus Hutchins, the researcher who stopped WCry, complained his code was lifted.

Enlarge / Marcus Hutchins, security researcher for Kryptos Logic. In May, he registered a domain name that neutralized the WCry ransomware worm. In August, he was charged with developing malware called Kronos. (credit: Bloomberg via Getty Images)

A chunk of code found in the Kronos bank-fraud malware originated more than six years before security researcher Marcus Hutchins is accused of developing the underlying code, a fellow security researcher said Friday.

The conclusion, reached in an analysis of Kronos published by security firm Malwarebytes, by no means proves or disproves federal prosecutors' allegations that Hutchins wrote Kronos code and played a role in the sale of the malware. It does, however, clarify speculation over a Tweet from January 2015, in which MalwareTech—the online handle Hutchins used—complained that a complex piece of code he had published a month earlier had been added to an unnamed malware sample without his permission.

Shortly after his arrest in Las Vegas two weeks ago, the Tweet resurfaced, and almost immediately it generated speculation that the malware Hutchins was referring to was Kronos. An analysis of Kronos soon showed that one portion used an instruction that was identical to one included in the code Hutchins published in January 2015.

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Tor Project blasts hate sites, but defends principle of free speech

“We are everything they claim to despise,” but Tor won’t prevent vile usage of its tools.

(credit: Tor Project)

The Tor Project has reiterated its absolutist commitment to free speech, saying that even though Daily Stormer recently moved to a Tor onion service, the organization won’t do anything to stop the "hate-spewing website."

Various online services have begun to re-evaluate their willingness to do business with sites that publish obviously vile content in the wake of last weekend’s violence in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Earlier in the week, Google removed the Gab app on the Google Play store, Squarespace said it would disable some of the offensive sites that it hosts as identified as hateful by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Most famously within the tech world, Daily Stormer itself was recently booted from CloudFlare’s CDN service, after the company had initially said it would not do so.

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Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP)

We already know Acer and HP have laptops with Intel Coffee Lake chips on the way. But in addition to the upcoming HP Envy 13 and Acer Swift 3 with Coffee Lake, it looks like we can expect a new 14 inch Coffee Lake laptop from Asus (which also features NVIDIA graphics) and at least […]

Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP) is a post from: Liliputing

We already know Acer and HP have laptops with Intel Coffee Lake chips on the way. But in addition to the upcoming HP Envy 13 and Acer Swift 3 with Coffee Lake, it looks like we can expect a new 14 inch Coffee Lake laptop from Asus (which also features NVIDIA graphics) and at least […]

Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP) is a post from: Liliputing

Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP)

We already know Acer and HP have laptops with Intel Coffee Lake chips on the way. But in addition to the upcoming HP Envy 13 and Acer Swift 3 with Coffee Lake, it looks like we can expect a new 14 inch Coffee Lake laptop from Asus (which also features NVIDIA graphics) and at least […]

Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP) is a post from: Liliputing

We already know Acer and HP have laptops with Intel Coffee Lake chips on the way. But in addition to the upcoming HP Envy 13 and Acer Swift 3 with Coffee Lake, it looks like we can expect a new 14 inch Coffee Lake laptop from Asus (which also features NVIDIA graphics) and at least […]

Some more Coffee Lake laptop leaks (Acer, Asus, and HP) is a post from: Liliputing