German Datacenter Association: Betreiber von Rechenzentren gründen Lobbygruppe

Die Betreiber von Rechenzentren aller Art wollen eine gemeinsame Organisation aufbauen. Bitkom, Eco-Verband und VIRZ schafften nur Verkaufsveranstaltungen der Anbieter von Rechenzentrumsausrüstung, kritisiert der Initiator. (Internet, Politik/Recht)

Die Betreiber von Rechenzentren aller Art wollen eine gemeinsame Organisation aufbauen. Bitkom, Eco-Verband und VIRZ schafften nur Verkaufsveranstaltungen der Anbieter von Rechenzentrumsausrüstung, kritisiert der Initiator. (Internet, Politik/Recht)

Latest Moto Xd4 leaks paint picture of an upper mid-range phone

Latest Moto Xd4 leaks paint picture of an upper mid-range phone

Motorola hasn’t released a phone with the Moto X name since launching the Moto Z series a few years ago. But rumor has it that a Moto X4 is coming this year, and based on a series of leaks, it looks like X marks the spot for a mid-range device. While Motorola used to use […]

Latest Moto Xd4 leaks paint picture of an upper mid-range phone is a post from: Liliputing

Latest Moto Xd4 leaks paint picture of an upper mid-range phone

Motorola hasn’t released a phone with the Moto X name since launching the Moto Z series a few years ago. But rumor has it that a Moto X4 is coming this year, and based on a series of leaks, it looks like X marks the spot for a mid-range device. While Motorola used to use […]

Latest Moto Xd4 leaks paint picture of an upper mid-range phone is a post from: Liliputing

Woman: Uber driver drove perpendicular to traffic, leading to serious accident

Driver allegedly “suddenly and inexplicably veered through four lanes of traffic.”

Enlarge (credit: Bloomberg / Getty Images News)

An Illinois amateur runner sued Uber in state court in New Jersey on Friday, claiming that a negligent driver caused a significant traffic accident last year. The accident resulted in Katherine Vesce being knocked unconscious and sustaining a "serious knee injury." Vesce was en route to the New York City marathon, but she was hurt so badly that she likely will be unable to run any marathons in the future.

The Illinois woman is now suing for negligence, fraud, and other allegations, and she's the latest person in a series of similar lawsuits filed against Uber in recent years. Many of the cases make related claims that Uber’s safety and training procedures are woefully inadequate and can result in this type of unsafe behavior by drivers.

In January 2017, Matthew Luber, one of Vesce’s attorneys, also sued Uber on behalf of a man who said he was beaten up by his driver on a wintery evening in Philadelphia.

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DMCA Used to Remove Ad Server URL From Easylist Ad Blocklist

Easylist, the popular adblock filter list used by millions of subscribers, appears to be under attack. Github, where the project is maintained, has recently received a DMCA notice requiring a domain URL to be removed from the list. That domain appears to be owned by US-based anti-adblocking company Admiral.

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

The default business model on the Internet is “free” for consumers. Users largely expect websites to load without paying a dime but of course, there’s no such thing as a free lunch. To this end, millions of websites are funded by advertising revenue.

Sensible sites ensure that any advertising displayed is unobtrusive to the visitor but lots seem to think that bombarding users with endless ads, popups, and other hindrances is the best way to do business. As a result, ad blockers are now deployed by millions of people online.

In order to function, ad-blocking tools – such as uBlock Origin or Adblock – utilize lists of advertising domains compiled by third parties. One of the most popular is Easylist, which is distributed by authors fanboy, MonztA, Famlam, and Khrinunder, under dual Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike and GNU General Public Licenses.

With the freedom afforded by those licenses, copyright tends not to figure high on the agenda for Easylist. However, a legal problem that has just raised its head is causing serious concern among those in the ad-blocking community.

Two days ago a somewhat unusual commit appeared in the Easylist repo on Github. As shown in the image below, a domain URL previously added to Easylist had been removed following a DMCA takedown notice filed with Github.

Domain text taken down by DMCA?

The DMCA notice in question has not yet been published but it’s clear that it targets the domain ‘functionalclam.com’. A user called ‘ameshkov’ helpfully points out a post by a new Github user called ‘DMCAHelper’ which coincided with the start of the takedown process more than three weeks ago.

A domain in a list circumvents copyright controls?

Aside from the curious claims of a URL “circumventing copyright access controls” (domains themselves cannot be copyrighted), the big questions are (i) who filed the complaint and (ii) who operates Functionalclam.com? The domain WHOIS is hidden but according to a helpful sleuth on Github, it’s operated by anti ad-blocking company Admiral.

Ad-blocking means money down the drain….

If that is indeed the case, we have the intriguing prospect of a startup attempting to protect its business model by using a novel interpretation of copyright law to have a domain name removed from a list. How this will pan out is unclear but a notice recently published on Functionalclam.com suggests the route the company wishes to take.

“This domain is used by digital publishers to control access to copyrighted content in accordance with the Digital Millenium Copyright Act and understand how visitors are accessing their copyrighted content,” the notice begins.

Combined with the comments by DMCAHelper on Github, this statement suggests that the complainants believe that interference with the ad display process (ads themselves could be the “copyrighted content” in question) represents a breach of section 1201 of the DMCA.

If it does, that could have huge consequences for online advertising but we will need to see the original DMCA notice to have a clearer idea of what this is all about. Thus far, Github hasn’t published it but already interest is growing. A representative from the EFF has already contacted the Easylist team, so this battle could heat up pretty quickly.

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

14,700 years ago, cannibals conducted rituals in this English cave

Symbolic bone carvings and skull cups were left behind, hinting at early spirituality.

PLoS

Nestled in the dramatic Cheddar Gorge in Somerset, UK, there's a roomy limestone cave called Gough's Cave where a few generations of people lived about 14,700 years ago. They littered the floor with the remnants of their meals, leaving hundreds of bones behind for archaeologists to find. Now, scientists have analyzed these bones and discovered that some of them are from six separate human beings. And they bear the distinct marks of ritual cannibalism.

Natural History Museum of London scientist Silvia Bello and her colleagues write in PLoS One about the find. The bones came from a child, two adolescents, two adults, and one elderly adult. All showed evidence of butchery, which leaves characteristic marks behind when sharp tools are used for defleshing. The bones were also covered in human tooth marks from biting and gnawing, and some had been broken open for their marrow.

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Moto Z2 Force is now available in US, but China’s getting a better version

Moto Z2 Force is now available in US, but China’s getting a better version

Motorola’s latest flagship smartphone is now available in the US. The Moto Z2 Force has decent specs, a shatterproof (but easily scratchable) display, support for Moto Mod add-ons, and a relatively high starting price of $720 (which you can probably spread out over 2 years if you order from AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, or Sprint). But if […]

Moto Z2 Force is now available in US, but China’s getting a better version is a post from: Liliputing

Moto Z2 Force is now available in US, but China’s getting a better version

Motorola’s latest flagship smartphone is now available in the US. The Moto Z2 Force has decent specs, a shatterproof (but easily scratchable) display, support for Moto Mod add-ons, and a relatively high starting price of $720 (which you can probably spread out over 2 years if you order from AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon, or Sprint). But if […]

Moto Z2 Force is now available in US, but China’s getting a better version is a post from: Liliputing

ECIX: Messung der Bundesnetzagentur versagt beim Streaming

Der Betreiber des ECIX kritisiert die Breitbandmessung der Bundesnetzagentur. Alle Messserver stünden bei einem kleinen ISP, Angaben zum Streaming über Netflix und Amazon seien nicht enthalten. (Provider, Server)

Der Betreiber des ECIX kritisiert die Breitbandmessung der Bundesnetzagentur. Alle Messserver stünden bei einem kleinen ISP, Angaben zum Streaming über Netflix und Amazon seien nicht enthalten. (Provider, Server)

Verbraucherschutz: Consumer Reports empfiehlt Surface-Geräte nicht mehr

Eigentlich schneiden das Surface Book und der Surface Laptop im Test des US-Verbrauchermagazins Consumer Report (CR) sehr gut ab – allerdings sollen die Geräte öfter als die der Konkurrenz Qualitätsprobleme aufweisen. Daher hat CR seine Kaufempfehlung zurückgezogen. (Microsoft, Verbraucherschutz)

Eigentlich schneiden das Surface Book und der Surface Laptop im Test des US-Verbrauchermagazins Consumer Report (CR) sehr gut ab - allerdings sollen die Geräte öfter als die der Konkurrenz Qualitätsprobleme aufweisen. Daher hat CR seine Kaufempfehlung zurückgezogen. (Microsoft, Verbraucherschutz)

Star Wars and Iron Man may not disappear from Netflix in 2019 after all

Netflix and Disney are still having “active discussions.”

Enlarge (credit: Lucasfilm)

Earlier this week, Disney announced plans to pull many of its popular titles from Netflix in 2019 and put them on its own new, forthcoming streaming service. While many children's movies like Frozen and Toy Story 4 won't be available on Netflix anymore, Star Wars and superhero fans may be in luck. According to a Reuters report, Netflix is in "active discussions" with Disney about securing the rights to Lucasfilm and Marvel titles after 2019.

At the time of Disney's announcement, Chief Executive Bob Iger said the company hadn't decided what to do with the rights to Star Wars and Marvel comics films currently on Netflix. The rights could go to Netflix again or to another streaming service—or Disney could keep the rights to use however it pleases. Disney's new streaming service, which is slated for a 2019 debut, will include all of the "newest live-action and animated movies from Disney and Pixar."

Netflix's Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos told Reuters that the two companies are still in "active discussions" over these rights, and there's no word on when a deal could be reached. Sarandos also said he believes Disney's service could be "complementary" to Netflix since Netflix has many children's movies available, including Despicable Me and Shrek, that aren't owned or created by Disney.

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