Streamripper: Musikindustrie wird Youtube-mp3.org abschalten

Der deutsche Betreiber von Youtube-mp3.org hat sich mit der Musikindustrie geeinigt, die Plattform abzuschalten und zu übergeben. Nach Zustimmung durch das Gericht darf er keine Streamripper-Technik mehr entwickeln oder bereitstellen. (Youtube, Video-Community)

Der deutsche Betreiber von Youtube-mp3.org hat sich mit der Musikindustrie geeinigt, die Plattform abzuschalten und zu übergeben. Nach Zustimmung durch das Gericht darf er keine Streamripper-Technik mehr entwickeln oder bereitstellen. (Youtube, Video-Community)

Raumschiffe: Russland entwickelt eine neue Sojus-Rakete

Größere Raumschiffe brauchen größere Raketen. Die Sojus-Rakete ist für das neue Federazija-Raumschiff zu klein und bekommt deswegen einen Nachfolger. Wegen der Geldknappheit in Russland ist daran nicht alles neu. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Sojus, Raumfahrt)

Größere Raumschiffe brauchen größere Raketen. Die Sojus-Rakete ist für das neue Federazija-Raumschiff zu klein und bekommt deswegen einen Nachfolger. Wegen der Geldknappheit in Russland ist daran nicht alles neu. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Sojus, Raumfahrt)

Chinese Man Jailed For Nine Months For Selling VPN Software

A man who sold VPN software via a website has been sentenced to nine months in prison by China’s Supreme People’s Court. The decision, handed down earlier this year but only just made public, notes that the software supplied by the man allowed the public to circumvent China’s Great Firewall while granting access to foreign websites.

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

Back in January, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology announced that due to Internet technologies and services expanding in a “disorderly” fashion, regulation would be needed to restore order.

The government said that it would take measures to “strengthen network information security management” and would embark on a “nationwide Internet network access services clean-up.”

One of the initial targets was reported as censorship-busting VPNs, which allow citizens to evade the so-called Great Firewall of China. Operating such a service without a corresponding telecommunications business license would constitute an offense, the government said.

The news was met with hostility, with media and citizens alike bemoaning Chinese censorship. Then early July, a further report suggested that the government would go a step further by ordering ISPs to block VPNs altogether. This elicited an immediate response from local authorities, who quickly denied the reports, blaming “foreign media” for false reporting.

But it was clear something was amiss in China. Later that month, it was revealed that Apple had banned VPN software and services from its app store.

“We are writing to notify you that your application will be removed from the China App Store because it includes content that is illegal in China, which is not in compliance with the App Store Review Guidelines,” Apple informed developers.

With an effort clearly underway to target VPNs, news today from China suggests that the government is indeed determined to tackle the anti-censorship threat presented by such tools. According to local media, Chinese man Deng Mouwei who ran a small website through which he sold VPN software, has been sentenced to prison.

The 26-year-old, from the city of Dongguan in the Guangdong province, was first arrested in October 2016 after setting up a website to sell VPNs. Just two products were on offer but this was enough to spring authorities into action.

A prosecution notice, published by Chinese publication Whatsonweibo, reveals the university educated man was arrested “on suspicion of providing tools for illegal control of a computer information system.”

It’s alleged that the man used several phrases to market the VPNs including “VPN over the wall” and “Shadow shuttle cloud”. The business wasn’t particularly profitable though, generating just 13957 yuan ($2,133) since October 2015.

“The court held that the defendant Deng Mouwei disregarded state law, by providing tools specifically for the invasion and illegal control of computer information systems procedures,” the Guandong Province’s First People’s Court said in its ruling, handed down earlier this year but only just made public.

“The circumstances are serious and the behavior violated the ‘Criminal Law of the People’s Republic of China Article 285.”

Article 285 – don’t interfere with the state

“The facts of the crime are clear, the evidence is true and sufficient. In accordance with the provisions of Article 172 of the Criminal Procedure Law of the People’s Republic of China, the defendant shall be sentenced according to law.”

Under Chinese law, Article 172 references stolen goods, noting that people who “conceal or act as distributors” shall be sentenced to not more than three years of fixed-term imprisonment, or fined, depending on circumstances. Where VPNs fit into that isn’t clear, but things didn’t end well for the defendant.

For offering tools that enable people to “visit foreign websites that can not be accessed via a domestic (mainland) IP address,” Deng Mouwei received a nine-month prison sentence.

News of the sentencing appeared on Chinese social media over the weekend, prompting fear and confusion among local users. While many struggled to see the sense of the prosecution, some expressed fear that people who even use VPN software to evade China’s Great Firewall could be subjected to prosecution in the future.

Whatever the outcome, it’s now abundantly clear that China is the midst of a VPN crackdown across the board and is serious about stamping out efforts to bypass its censorship. With the Internet’s ability to treat censorship as damage and route round it, it’s a battle that won’t be easily won.

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

The Ends of the World is page-turner about mass extinction

Tale of deep geological time feels like a scientifically-accurate disaster movie.

Enlarge (credit: Ecco)

The Ends of the World, Peter Brannen’s masterful non-fiction debut, might be just the book to give to that uncle of yours who still wants to argue about climate change (or even, to your US Representative). But first, read it yourself. It's a page turner.

The book’s premise is mind-bendingly vast: a geological history of Earth’s past extinctions. It succeeds because of bold and lyrical writing—a rare occurrence in a science book—and because of its unyielding focus on the present. Brannen shows us how past extinction crises were in fact climate crises. Deep time and geology are the keys to comprehend the effects of global warming. Even more so than statistical models and projections, fossils and discontinuities in ancient rock layers tell us a gripping tale of what lies ahead of us. As the author remarked to me: “it's crazy that most people don't know anything about the most important events in the history of the planet [...] especially given their unsettling relevance to the future.”

Cataclysmic global mass death inevitably summons images of the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, at the end of the Cretaceous era. And yet, as Brannen artfully recounts it, the dinosaurs’ cinematic end is merely the last great extinction event in the deep past, and a misleading one at that. All extinction episodes, including the dinosaurs’, share one feature or process in common: quick and massive disruptions in the atmosphere’s carbon cycle, usually—but not always—triggered by volcanic activity.

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4K-UHD-Blu-ray: LG zieht Dolby-Vision-Firmware für UP970 zurück

Für den einzigen in Deutschland offiziell verfügbaren Dolby-Vision-Blu-ray-Player gibt es erst einmal kein Dolby Vision. Das lang erwartete Update für entsprechende Ultra-HD-Blu-rays ist zurückgezogen worden. (UHD-Blu-ray, Blu-ray)

Für den einzigen in Deutschland offiziell verfügbaren Dolby-Vision-Blu-ray-Player gibt es erst einmal kein Dolby Vision. Das lang erwartete Update für entsprechende Ultra-HD-Blu-rays ist zurückgezogen worden. (UHD-Blu-ray, Blu-ray)

Wii Remote: Nintendo muss 10 Millionen US-Dollar in Patentstreit zahlen

Die Controller der Wii werden für Nintendo teuer: Zehn Millionen US-Dollar muss das Unternehmen zahlen, weil es mit den Bewegungssensoren gegen Patente verstößt. Auch andere Tech-Firmen sind betroffen. (Wii, Nintendo)

Die Controller der Wii werden für Nintendo teuer: Zehn Millionen US-Dollar muss das Unternehmen zahlen, weil es mit den Bewegungssensoren gegen Patente verstößt. Auch andere Tech-Firmen sind betroffen. (Wii, Nintendo)

Raumfahrt: Neuer Nasa-Chef für die Trump-Regierung

Zurück zur guten alten Zeit, als die US-amerikanische Raumfahrt allen anderen überlegen war – so ähnlich könnten die Pläne des Republikaners Jim Bridenstine zusammengefasst werden. Der 42-Jährige wird künftig die Nasa leiten. Eine Analyse von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Nasa, Raumfahrt)

Zurück zur guten alten Zeit, als die US-amerikanische Raumfahrt allen anderen überlegen war - so ähnlich könnten die Pläne des Republikaners Jim Bridenstine zusammengefasst werden. Der 42-Jährige wird künftig die Nasa leiten. Eine Analyse von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Nasa, Raumfahrt)

Oracle: Mitarbeiter müssen gehen – Solaris steht wohl vor dem Aus

Auf Twitter und in Foren auf Thelayoff wird von Entlassungen bei Oracle gesprochen. Betroffen sind viele Mitarbeiter, die an Solaris gearbeitet haben. Diese sind weitere Opfer von Oracles Wechsel auf die Cloud. (Solaris, Prozessor)

Auf Twitter und in Foren auf Thelayoff wird von Entlassungen bei Oracle gesprochen. Betroffen sind viele Mitarbeiter, die an Solaris gearbeitet haben. Diese sind weitere Opfer von Oracles Wechsel auf die Cloud. (Solaris, Prozessor)

Masterpiece: Street Fighter II

Street Fighter II is an arcade monster that has stood the test of time.

This week, the Street Fighter franchise celebrated its 30th birthday. While every entry in the long-running fighting game series has found an audience (including the recent SFV), Ars is resurfacing this retrospective of perhaps the most iconic edition: 1991's Street Fighter II. This appreciation was originally published on December 27, 2010.

Everyone knows to look out for the uppercut (video link)

Street Fighter II was an arcade monster that has stood the test of time. Even today, it's Capcom's golden goose and it's not hard to see why. Even after the unsuccessful clones and the innumerable follow-ups, this game still has it all.

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RTP Bleed: Mit Asterisk-Bug Telefonate belauschen

Ein Bug in der IP-Telefonielösung Asterisk ermöglicht Angreifern, Telefonate mitzuhören. Das Problem liegt in der zugrundeliegenden RTP-Implementierung. Ein erster Patch ist da, aber noch fehlerhaft. (Asterisk, VoIP)

Ein Bug in der IP-Telefonielösung Asterisk ermöglicht Angreifern, Telefonate mitzuhören. Das Problem liegt in der zugrundeliegenden RTP-Implementierung. Ein erster Patch ist da, aber noch fehlerhaft. (Asterisk, VoIP)