
Month: September 2017
Fertigungstechnik: Das Nanometer-Marketing
Egal ob Notebook oder Smartphone: Die Hersteller werben gerne mit modernen Fertigungsprozessen von Intel, Globalfoundries, Samsung oder TSMC für die verbauten Chips. Ein genauerer Blick zeigt aber, dass 10 nm nicht gleich 10 nm sind und dass 11 nm und 16 nm ziemlich eng beieinander liegen können. Von Marc Sauter (Prozessor, AMD)

Gofly Prize: Boeing lässt Fluggerät für jedermann entwickeln
Der US-Luftfahrtkonzern Boeing hat einen Wettbewerb ausgelobt, dessen Ziel es ist, ein individuelles Fluggerät für das städtische Umfeld zu bauen. Es gehe um fliegende Menschen, sagt Boeing. (Luftfahrt, Technologie)

Handy: Nokia 3310 kommt als UMTS-Version für 70 Euro
Solarin-Smartphone: Blockchain statt Luxus
Sie hatten es mit einem 14.000 Euro Smartphone versucht und waren damit gescheitert. Jetzt wollen die Macher des Startups Solarin mit einem Blockchain-Smartphone erfolgreich werden. Finanziert werden soll das – natürlich – über einen Token-Sale auf Ethereum-Basis. (Blockchain, Smartphone)

Football Coach Retweets, Gets Sued for Copyright Infringement
Pennsylvania-based King’s College and head football coach Jeffery Knarr are being sued for copyright infringement. Sports psychologist and author Dr. Keith Bell alleges that both committed offenses when Knarr retweeted a page from his book, that was initially tweeted by someone else, almost two years ago.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
When copyright infringement lawsuits hit the US courts, there’s often a serious case at hand. Whether that’s the sharing of a leaked movie online or indeed the mass infringement that allegedly took place on Megaupload, there’s usually something quite meaty to discuss.
A lawsuit filed this week in a Pennsylvania federal court certainly provides the later, but without managing to be much more than a fairly trivial matter in the first instance.
The case was filed by sports psychologist and author Dr. Keith Bell. It begins by describing Bell as an “internationally recognized performance consultant” who has worked with 500 teams, including the Olympic and national teams for the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Fiji, and the Cayman Islands.
Bell is further described as a successful speaker, athlete and coach; “A four-time
collegiate All-American swimmer, a holder of numerous world and national masters swim records, and has coached several collegiate, high school, and private swim teams to competitive success.”
At the heart of the lawsuit is a book that Bell published in 1982, entitled Winning Isn’t Normal.
“The book has enjoyed substantial acclaim, distribution and publicity. Dr. Bell is the sole author of this work, and continues to own all rights in the work,” the lawsuit (pdf) reads.
Bell claims that on or about November 6, 2015, King’s College head football coach Jeffery Knarr retweeted a tweet that was initially posted from @NSUBaseball32, a Twitter account operated by Northeastern State University’s RiverHawks baseball team. The retweet, as shown in the lawsuit, can be seen below.

“The post was made without authorization from Dr. Bell and without attribution
to Dr. Bell,” the lawsuit reads.
“Neither Defendant King’s College nor Defendant Jeffery Knarr contacted Dr.
Bell to request permission to use Dr. Bell’s copyrighted work. As of November 14, 2015, the post had received 206 ‘Retweets’ and 189 ‘Likes.’ Due to the globally accessible nature of Twitter, the post was accessible by Internet users across the world.”
Bell says he sent a cease and desist letter to NSU in September 2016 and shortly thereafter NSU removed the post, which removed the retweets. However, this meant that Knarr’s retweet had been online for “at least” 10 months and 21 days.
To put the icing on the cake, Bell also holds the trademark to the phrase “Winning Isn’t Normal”, so he’s suing Knarr and his King’s College employer for trademark infringement too.
“The Defendants included Plaintiff’s trademark twice in the Twitter post. The first instance was as the title of the post, with the mark shown in letters which
were emphasized by being capitalized, bold, and underlined,” the lawsuit notes.
“The second instance was at the end of the post, with the mark shown in letters which were emphasized by being capitalized, bold, underlined, and followed by three
exclamation points.”
Describing what appears to be a casual retweet as “willful, intentional and purposeful” infringement carried out “in disregard of and with indifference to Plaintiff’s rights,” Bell demands damages and attorneys fees from Knarr and his employer.
“As a direct and proximate result of said infringement by Defendants, Plaintiff is
entitled to damages in an amount to be proven at trial,” the lawsuit concludes.
Since the page from the book retweeted by Knarr is a small portion of the overall work, there may be a fair use defense. Nevertheless, defending this kind of suit is never cheap, so it’s probably fair to say there will already be a considerable amount of regret among the defendants at ever having set eyes on Bell’s 35-year-old book.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
Assassin’s Creed Origins: Interaktiver Lernmodus im alten Ägypten geplant
Keine Kämpfe, kein Zeitdruck: Ubisoft arbeitet an einem interaktiven Lernmodus für Assassin’s Creed Origins. Darin sollen Spieler in aller Ruhe die großen Pyramiden oder das Leben von Kleopatra erforschen können. (Assassin’s Creed, Ubisoft)

Streik: Amazon-Beschäftigte wollen Gamer auf Fifa 18 warten lassen
Mobile-Games-Auslese: Herzschmerz, Weltraum und ein verlorenes Smartphone
Abenteuer im prozedural generierten All und eine Art Civilization für unterwegs: Die Mobile Games im September bieten komplexe Strategie, Action sowie ein Smartphone im Smartphone. Von Rainer Sigl (Mobile Games, Spieletest)

Android: Google schafft Entsperrung per NFC-Chip ab
Vorsicht beim Gerätewechsel: Google hat die Entsperrung per NFC-Tag aus Android entfernt. Nutzer von subdermalen Implantaten oder NFC-Ringen dürften die unbegründete Entscheidung nicht gut finden. (NFC, Smartphone)

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