Up close and personal with Scuderia Corsa’s Ferrari 488 GT3 race car

What better thing to do with a Ferrari than go visit a Ferrari race car?

Although we usually pay for our own travel expenses, for this trip, Ferrari provided a night's accommodation in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

Scuderia Corsa

LAKEVILLE, Conn.—We weren't sure that we'd get a chance to see IMSA's WeatherTech Sportscar Championship race in 2017, but then a call came from the nice people at Ferrari asking if we wanted to drive one of their 488 GTB supercars up to the Northeast Grand Prix at Lime Rock Park in Connecticut. As you might imagine, that wasn't a hard decision to make. You can read all about the road car elsewhere on the site, so what follows is an up-close-and-personal look at Scuderia Corsa's 488 GT3 race car.

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Road tripping in a Ferrari 488 GTB: Worth the wait

661-horsepower, very clever aerodynamics, and a joy to drive even at legal speeds.

Although we usually pay for our own travel expenses, for this trip, Ferrari provided a night's accommodation in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

Video edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

LAKEVILLE, Conn.—Anyone lucky enough to be shopping for a mid-engined supercar in 2017 has quite the array of possibilities before them. There's the Lamborghini Huracán, now also available with just rear-wheel drive. McLaren has its new 720S, the follow-up to the sublime 650S we were so smitten with.

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Quartalszahlen: Nvidia meldet Umsatzrekord

Kein Geld mehr von Intel für Lizenzen, dafür alleine fast zwei Milliarden US-Dollar Umsatz durch GPUs: Nvidia hat für das zweite Quartal 2017 exzellente Zahlen vorgelegt. Dank dem Nintendo Switch läuft auch die Tegra-Sparte und im Datacenter-Bereich wurden die ersten Tesla V100 verkauft. (Nvidia, Server)

Kein Geld mehr von Intel für Lizenzen, dafür alleine fast zwei Milliarden US-Dollar Umsatz durch GPUs: Nvidia hat für das zweite Quartal 2017 exzellente Zahlen vorgelegt. Dank dem Nintendo Switch läuft auch die Tegra-Sparte und im Datacenter-Bereich wurden die ersten Tesla V100 verkauft. (Nvidia, Server)

Piracy Narrative Isn’t About Ethics Anymore, It’s About “Danger”

The MPAA’s former VP of Worldwide Internet Enforcement says that the industry narrative on piracy is no longer based on trying to get people to act ethically. Hemanshu Nigam says the discussion today is based around the dangers that pirate sites can pose to those who visit them. Few listened before, will they listen now?

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

Over the years there have been almost endless attempts to stop people from accessing copyright-infringing content online. Campaigns have come and gone and almost two decades later the battle is still ongoing.

Early on, when panic enveloped the music industry, the campaigns centered around people getting sued. Grabbing music online for free could be costly, the industry warned, while parading the heads of a few victims on pikes for the world to see.

Periodically, however, the aim has been to appeal to the public’s better nature. The idea is that people essentially want to do the ‘right thing’, so once they understand that largely hard-working Americans are losing their livelihoods, people will stop downloading from The Pirate Bay. For some, this probably had the desired effect but millions of people are still getting their fixes for free, so the job isn’t finished yet.

In more recent years, notably since the MPAA and RIAA had their eyes blacked in the wake of SOPA, the tone has shifted. In addition to educating the public, torrent and streaming sites are increasingly being painted as enemies of the public they claim to serve.

Several studies, largely carried out on behalf of the Digital Citizens Alliance (DCA), have claimed that pirate sites are hotbeds of malware, baiting consumers in with tasty pirate booty only to offload trojans, viruses, and God-knows-what. These reports have been ostensibly published as independent public interest documents but this week an advisor to the DCA suggested a deeper interest for the industry.

Hemanshu Nigam is a former federal prosecutor, ex-Chief Security Officer for News Corp and Fox Interactive Media, and former VP Worldwide Internet Enforcement at the MPAA. In an interview with Deadline this week, he spoke about alleged links between pirate sites and malware distributors. He also indicated that warning people about the dangers of pirate sites has become Hollywood’s latest anti-piracy strategy.

“The industry narrative has changed. When I was at the MPAA, we would tell people that stealing content is wrong and young people would say, yeah, whatever, you guys make a lot of money, too bad,” he told the publication.

“It has gone from an ethical discussion to a dangerous one. Now, your parents’ bank account can be raided, your teenage daughter can be spied on in her bedroom and extorted with the footage, or your computer can be locked up along with everything in it and held for ransom.”

Nigam’s stance isn’t really a surprise since he’s currently working for the Digital Citizens Alliance as an advisor. In turn, the Alliance is at least partly financed by the MPAA. There’s no suggestion whatsoever that Nigam is involved in any propaganda effort, but recent signs suggest that the DCA’s work in malware awareness is more about directing people away from pirate sites than protecting them from the alleged dangers within.

That being said and despite the bias, it’s still worth giving experts like Nigam an opportunity to speak. Largely thanks to industry efforts with brands, pirate sites are increasingly being forced to display lower-tier ads, which can be problematic. On top, some sites’ policies mean they don’t deserve any visitors at all.

In the Deadline piece, however, Nigam alleges that hackers have previously reached out to pirate websites offering $200 to $5000 per day “depending on the size of the pirate website” to have the site infect users with malware. If true, that’s a serious situation and people who would ordinarily use ‘pirate’ sites would definitely appreciate the details.

For example, to which sites did hackers make this offer and, crucially, which sites turned down the offer and which ones accepted?

It’s important to remember that pirates are just another type of consumer and they would boycott sites in a heartbeat if they discovered they’d been paid to infect them with malware. But, as usual, the claims are extremely light in detail. Instead, there’s simply a blanket warning to stay away from all unauthorized sites, which isn’t particularly helpful.

In some cases, of course, operational security will prevent some details coming to light but without these, people who don’t get infected on a ‘pirate’ site (the vast majority) simply won’t believe the allegations. As the author of the Deadline piece pointed out, it’s a bit like Reefer Madness all over again.

The point here is that without hard independent evidence to back up these claims, with reports listing sites alongside the malware they’ve supposed to have spread and when, few people will respond to perceived scaremongering. Free content trumps a few distant worries almost every time, whether that involves malware or the threat of a lawsuit.

It’ll be up to the DCA and their MPAA paymasters to consider whether the approach is working but thus far, not even having government heavyweights on board has helped.

Earlier this year the DCA launched a video campaign, enrolling 15 attorney generals to publish their own anti-piracy PSAs on YouTube. Thus far, interest has been minimal, to say the least.

At the time of writing the 15 PSAs have 3,986 views in total, with 2,441 of those contributed by a single video contributed by Wisconsin Attorney General Brad Schimel. Despite the relative success, even that got slammed with 2 upvotes and 127 downvotes.

A few of the other videos have a couple of hundred views each but more than half have less than 70. Perhaps most worryingly for the DCA, apart from the Schimel PSA, none have any upvotes at all, only down. It’s unclear who the viewers were but it seems reasonable to conclude they weren’t entertained.

The bottom line is nobody likes malware or having their banking details stolen but yet again, people who claim to have the public interest at heart aren’t actually making a difference on the ground. It could be argued that groups advocating online safety should be publishing guides on how to stay protected on the Internet period, not merely advising people to stay away from certain sites.

But of course, that wouldn’t achieve the goals of the MPAA Digital Citizens Alliance.

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

SSD: Silicon Motion bringt neue NVMe-Controller

Für künftige SSDs mit NVMe-Protokoll: Silicon Motion hat vom Einsteiger- ohne DRAM-Cache bis hin zum Topmodell mit vier PCIe-Gen3-Lanes und acht Flash-Speicher-Kanälen neue Controller vorgestellt. Bald steht PCIe Gen4 auf dem Plan. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Für künftige SSDs mit NVMe-Protokoll: Silicon Motion hat vom Einsteiger- ohne DRAM-Cache bis hin zum Topmodell mit vier PCIe-Gen3-Lanes und acht Flash-Speicher-Kanälen neue Controller vorgestellt. Bald steht PCIe Gen4 auf dem Plan. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

New ‘Cam’ Method Sees Unreleased ‘Power’ Episodes Leaked, along with Leaker’s Face

A new way to pirate has apparently been invented by the same person who could now face legal trouble because he accidentally recorded his face into the leaked video.Unreleased episodes of the hit STARZ show, ‘Power’, has been leaked online due to a bre…



A new way to pirate has apparently been invented by the same person who could now face legal trouble because he accidentally recorded his face into the leaked video.

Unreleased episodes of the hit STARZ show, 'Power', has been leaked online due to a breach of STARZ's Media Room portal. The screener episodes are now available to stream or download online, but how they came to be is both unique and farcical.

The leaked episodes are cammed copies, that is copies filmed with a camera. What's unique though is that unlike most cam copies, the source isn't a movie screen, but an iPhone. And not just any iPhone, but one with an cracked screen.

The recording device is also a smartphone of some kind, and the use of a broken iPhone for the playback device suggests that these were the only phones that the leaker had access to at the time.

Propped up against a large water bottle, the playback iPhone (with the broken screen) was recorded by the leaker who was holding up the recording phone throughout the playback of episodes - something that became a point of complaint for the leaker (the verbal complaints about sore arms having been recorded into the video).

The leaker also made no effort to hide the source of the screener episodes, proudly explaining how he got access to these unaired episodes.

"This is like the special, this is only for the people that work at STARZ that watch this shit. My man sent me the whole log-in shit. I had to pay that n****r though," said the man who recorded the video.

The log-in is a reference to STARZ's Media Room portal which houses unreleased content for media use. The portal has since been taken down, possibly while STARZ investigates the breach.

More worrying for the man was the fact that, either accidentally or intentionally, he recorded his own face into the uploaded videos, making it a relatively easy process to identify the man in question. STARZ has already promised to take legal action against all involved in the leak.

You couldn't make it up!

[via TorrentFreak]

Biggest amateur-built sub sinks—owner is suspected of killing passenger

Reporter missing after “minor problem with ballast” caused near-instant sinking.

Enlarge / The UV3 Nautilus in early sea trials in 2008. (credit: Frumperino)

Believe it or not, there's a crowdsourced, open source non-profit attempting to build a sea-launched suborbital rocket. Called Copenhagen Suborbitals, it even had access to a sub. A club associated with the venture completed a submarine in 2008, designed by Peter Madsen, a Danish inventor who is co-founder of the group. That submarine is now at the bottom of the sea, and Madsen is being held by Danish authorities on suspicion of "unlawful killing"—a precursor charge to manslaughter or murder.

The UV3 Nautilus was the third and largest submarine effort by the club, costing $200,000 to construct. It served as a workhorse for Copenhagen Suborbitals, helping push the group's Sputnik rocket launch platform into position on a number of occasions. Nautilus is—or was—powered by two diesel engines above the surface and by batteries underwater. While it could hold a crew of four underwater, all of its controls could be managed by a single person from its control room.

By 2011, the sub needed an overhaul. But the repairs required more than Copenhagen Suborbitals could afford to sink into the Nautilus. So in 2013, the group launched an Indiegogo campaign to get it back in the water. In a video, Madsen described the sub and the inspiration behind it.

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The next step for EPA to relax fuel economy standards: Public comment period

Automakers wanted EPA’s mpg targets relaxed, and they’ll likely get their way.

Enlarge / Car Exhaust With Two Tailpipes (credit: Getty Images)

Yesterday Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Scott Pruitt announced that the agency would start a public comment period in efforts to overhaul Obama-era fuel economy standards for cars and light duty trucks from 2021 to 2025.

Much like the Clean Power Plan and the Waters of the United States Act, the fuel economy standards that were proposed and finalized by Obama’s EPA have also been in the crosshairs of President Donald Trump's EPA. The new administration argues that the current fuel economy standards will cost automakers too much money. However, the current standards were based on extensive research that showed consumers saving hundreds or thousands of dollars per year in fuel expenses. Although the EPA estimated that automakers would collectively lose $200 billion over 13 years in complying with the fuel economy standards, the International Council on Clean Transportation—the same group that helped bring to light Volkswagen's emissions cheating scandal—released a study showing that the EPA's estimates had been too conservative, and automakers can meet aggressive fuel economy standards more economically.

The Obama-era EPA's fuel economy standards require that automakers reach an average fuel economy of 54.5 mpg by 2025, which would reduce consumption of fossil fuels and reduce the amount of CO2 entering the atmosphere. Many in Trump’s administration, including Pruitt and Trump himself, falsely claim that climate science is either bogus or murkier than it actually is.

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Investors rescue embattled SoundCloud with $170 million lifeline

The company laid off 40 percent of its workforce in July.

Enlarge / Alexander Ljung, co-founder of SoundCloud, will step aside as CEO. (credit: TechCrunch)

The struggling audio-hosting startup SoundCloud has secured a financial lifeline, with two investors putting up almost $170 million to help the company stay afloat, according to Billboard. As part of the deal, SoundCloud will get a new CEO, the company announced in a press release.

The German company's service is one of the most popular ways to store audio files online, but it has struggled to find a viable business model. As we reported last month, the company was forced to close its San Francisco and London offices and lay off 40 percent of its staff. The company's losses have steadily widened in recent years, reaching €51 million ($60 million) in 2015 and more than $150 million total between 2010 and 2015. Financial results for 2016 aren't publicly available yet.

Until this deal, it looked like SoundCloud could be forced to shut its doors before the end of the year. The new funding will give the company at least a couple more years to figure out how to become a profitable business. The company launched a subscription music service last year, but that didn't generate enough revenue to avoid last month's layoffs.

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