Bundestagswahl 2017: Keine Verschnaufpause für Google und Facebook

Trotz aller Befürchtungen haben strafbare Hasskommentare, Fake News, Leaks und Social Bots bislang nicht den Wahlkampf bestimmt. Dennoch müssen sich die Parteien überlegen, wie sie mit der Macht der sozialen Medien und Internetplattformen umgehen. Eine Analyse von Friedhelm Greis (BTW 2017, Urheberrecht)

Trotz aller Befürchtungen haben strafbare Hasskommentare, Fake News, Leaks und Social Bots bislang nicht den Wahlkampf bestimmt. Dennoch müssen sich die Parteien überlegen, wie sie mit der Macht der sozialen Medien und Internetplattformen umgehen. Eine Analyse von Friedhelm Greis (BTW 2017, Urheberrecht)

Tastatur-Smartphone: Blackberry Keyone bekommt mehr Speicher

Der Hersteller TCL hat eine neue Variante des Blackberry Keyone vorgestellt. Demnächst gibt es das Smartphone auch in einem schwarzen Gehäuse mit mehr Speicher. Das lässt sich der Hersteller allerdings auch gut bezahlen. (Ifa 2017, Smartphone)

Der Hersteller TCL hat eine neue Variante des Blackberry Keyone vorgestellt. Demnächst gibt es das Smartphone auch in einem schwarzen Gehäuse mit mehr Speicher. Das lässt sich der Hersteller allerdings auch gut bezahlen. (Ifa 2017, Smartphone)

Sandisk: Western Digital verkauft Speicherkarten für Nintendo Switch

Wer seine Switch intensiv nutzt, dürfte mittelfristig kaum mit dem internen Speicher auskommen. Nun wollen Nintendo und Western Digital offiziell lizenzierte MicroSDXC-Karten in zwei Größen anbieten. (Nintendo Switch, Nintendo)

Wer seine Switch intensiv nutzt, dürfte mittelfristig kaum mit dem internen Speicher auskommen. Nun wollen Nintendo und Western Digital offiziell lizenzierte MicroSDXC-Karten in zwei Größen anbieten. (Nintendo Switch, Nintendo)

Director of Kim Dotcom Documentary Speaks Out on Piracy

Last week the documentary “Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web” was released to the public. While sales are going well, it was inevitable that the film would be widely shared among pirates too. Today we catch up with director Annie Goldson to hear her thoughts on piracy and how the movie industry should respond.

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

When you make a documentary about Kim Dotcom, someone who’s caught up in one of the largest criminal copyright infringement cases in history, the piracy issue is unavoidable.

And indeed, the topic is discussed in depth in “Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web,” which enjoyed its digital release early last week.

As happens with most digital releases, a pirated copy soon followed. While no filmmaker would actively encourage people not to pay for their work, director Annie Goldson wasn’t surprised at all when she saw the first unauthorized copies appear online.

The documentary highlights that piracy is in part triggered by lacking availability, so it was a little ironic that the film itself wasn’t released worldwide on all services. However, Goldson had no direct influence on the distribution process.

“It was inevitable really. We have tried to adopt a distribution model that we hope will encourage viewers to buy legal copies making it available as widely as possible,” Goldson informs TorrentFreak.

“We had sold the rights, so didn’t have complete control over reach or pricing which I think are two critical variables that do impact on the degree of piracy. Although I think our sales agent did make good strides towards a worldwide release.”

Now that millions of pirates have access to her work for free, it will be interesting to see how this impacts sales. For now, however, there’s still plenty of legitimate interest, with the film now appearing in the iTunes top ten of independent films.

In any case, Goldson doesn’t subscribe to the ‘one instance of piracy is a lost sale’ theory and notes that views about piracy are sharply polarized.

“Some claim financial devastation while others argue that infringement leads to ‘buzz,’ that this can generate further sales – so we shall see. At one level, watching this unfold is quite an interesting research exercise into distribution, which ironically is one of the big themes of the film of course,” Goldson notes.

Piracy overall doesn’t help the industry forward though, she says, as it hurts the development of better distribution models.

“I’m opposed to copyright infringement and piracy as it muddies the waters when it comes to devising a better model for distribution, one that would nurture and support artists and creatives, those that do the hard yards.”

Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web trailer

The director has no issues with copyright enforcement either. Not just to safeguard financial incentives, but also because the author does have moral and ethical rights about how their works are distributed. That said, instead of pouring money into enforcement, it might be better spent on finding a better business model.

“I’m with Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales who says [in the documentary] that the problem is primarily with the existing business model. If you make films genuinely available at prices people can afford, at the same time throughout the world, piracy would drop to low levels.

“I think most people would prefer to access their choice of entertainment legally rather than delving into dark corners of the Internet. I might be wrong of course,” Goldson adds.

In any case, ‘simply’ enforcing piracy into oblivion seems to be an unworkable prospect – not without massive censorship, or the shutdown of the entire Internet.

“I feel the risk is that anti-piracy efforts will step up and erode important freedoms. Or we have to close down the Internet altogether. After all, the unwieldy beast is a giant copying machine – making copies is what it does well,” Goldson says.

The problems is that the industry is keeping piracy intact through its own business model. When people can’t get what they want, when, and where they want it, they often turn to pirate sites.

“One problem is that the industry has been slow to change and hence we now have generations of viewers who have had to regularly infringe to be part of a global conversation.

“I do feel if the industry is promoting and advertising works internationally, using globalized communication and social media, then denying viewers from easily accessing works, either through geo-blocking or price points, obviously, digitally-savvy viewers will find them regardless,” Goldson adds.

And yes, this ironically also applies to her own documentary.

The solution is to continue to improve the legal options. This is easier said than done, as Goldson and her team tried hard, so it won’t happen overnight. However, universal access for a decent price would seem to be the future.

Unless the movie industry prefers to shut down the Internet entirely, of course.

For those who haven’t seen “Kim Dotcom: Caught in the Web yet,” the film is available globally on Vimeo OnDemand, and in a lot of territories on iTunes, the PlayStation Store, Amazon, Google Play, and the Microsoft/Xbox Store. In the US there is also Vudu, Fandango Now & Verizon.

If that doesn’t work, then…

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

Review: Dominate the solar system in The Expanse board game

The hit sci-fi show is now a board game—and a pretty good one.

Enlarge (credit: It's cubes on a map!)

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage at cardboard.arstechnica.com—and let us know what you think.

The Expanse just has it. George R.R. Martin can't stop professing his love, and the franchise is fresh off a Hugo award nomination in the new TV category. Now, the sci-fi series is flaring its engines and painting a target on your tabletop.

The official new board game from publisher Wizkids games features the events of the first two seasons to craft a compelling strategy game of political jockeying as players take on the roles of one of four competing factions: the United Nations, the Mars Congressional Republic, the Outer Planets Alliance (OPA), or the Protogen corporation.

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PAX West: At least eight of UFO 50’s games are instant retro classics

Preview: NES-styled game anthology is off to an amazing start.

Enlarge / All 50 of UFO 50's games, displayed as pixelated cartridges. The blue ones are playable at PAX West 2017. The red ones aren't quite done yet. (credit: Sam Machkovech)

SEATTLE—Our dive into this year's PAX West expo has just begun, and there are already too many video games. The deep sea of content at this year's expo, now celebrating its 11th year at the Washington State Convention Center, may take us a while to parse and process.

The esteemed developers of UFO 50, a collection of 50 (fifty) (yes, five-zero) NES-styled games coming out in 2018 as a single retail package, aren't helping matters.

UFO 50 released a revealing trailer last month, and its team of developers, including Derek Yu (Spelunky) and Eirik Suhrke (Downwell), have followed that trailer with a massive world premiere of its playable version. That means the developers' kiosk is packed with 35 playable games.

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This is Microsoft’s canceled Surface Mini (@evleaks)

We’ve already gotten a pretty good look at the Surface Mini tablet Microsoft had planned to release in 2014, before canceling at the last minute. But now Evan Blass (@evleaks) has released some marketing materials created for the discontinued device, including a spec sheet and some rendered pictures. It looks like the Surface Mini would […]

This is Microsoft’s canceled Surface Mini (@evleaks) is a post from: Liliputing

We’ve already gotten a pretty good look at the Surface Mini tablet Microsoft had planned to release in 2014, before canceling at the last minute. But now Evan Blass (@evleaks) has released some marketing materials created for the discontinued device, including a spec sheet and some rendered pictures. It looks like the Surface Mini would […]

This is Microsoft’s canceled Surface Mini (@evleaks) is a post from: Liliputing

Google promised not to scan Gmail for targeted ads—but for how long?

Google tells judge it might resume targeted advertising “to meet changing demands.”

Enlarge (credit: Cairo)

On July 23, Google promised with great fanfare that it would stop scanning consumers' Gmail messages to serve targeted, contextually aware ads. The announcement—which put Gmail in line with competing services and Google's paid e-mail for government, business, and education sectors—was published widely, from tech blogs to the mainstream media. "Free consumer Gmail users," Google said, "can remain confident that Google will keep privacy and security paramount as we continue to innovate."

However, court documents suggest that this could be temporary. A month after Google's announcement, the company quietly agreed (PDF) to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging that the targeted-advertising scanning was illegal wiretapping. That deal, in which a federal judge gave "preliminarily approval" (PDF) to on Thursday, binds Google for just three years.

According to footnote 3 in the settlement:

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Huawei Mate 10 smartphone with Kirin 970 chip launching Oct 16th

As expected, Huawei’s next flagship phone will be powered by the Kirin 970 processor the company unveiled this week at the IFA show in Berlin. The new phone is called the Huawei Mate 10 and it’ll get an official launch on October 16th. There’s also a higher-priced model called the Mate 10 Pro that will […]

Huawei Mate 10 smartphone with Kirin 970 chip launching Oct 16th is a post from: Liliputing

As expected, Huawei’s next flagship phone will be powered by the Kirin 970 processor the company unveiled this week at the IFA show in Berlin. The new phone is called the Huawei Mate 10 and it’ll get an official launch on October 16th. There’s also a higher-priced model called the Mate 10 Pro that will […]

Huawei Mate 10 smartphone with Kirin 970 chip launching Oct 16th is a post from: Liliputing

LG V30 hands on—LG’s OLED displays still have quality issues

The OLED display and f1.6 camera sound great on paper. In real life though…

Ron Amadeo

LG took the wraps off its newest flagship this week, the LG V30. We've got the usual high-end smartphone specs: a Snapdragon 835 SoC, 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, a 3300mAh battery, and an old version of Android—7.1 Nougat. What's interesting are the display and the camera. The display is the first LG-made OLED display we've seen in some time, and the camera hits a new high with an f1.6 aperture.

We recently got to spend some time with the device, and the first thing that stands out is the aesthetic. The design is great; it's a clear evolution-of and improvement-on the LG G6. The G6 was LG's first phone with super-slim bezels, and on the V30 the bezels are even smaller. The ugly "LG" logo is gone from the bottom of the phone and the front glass is nicely curved to meet the sides, instead of the flat slab of glass used on the G6. Like the G6, the corners of the display are round, but again things are improved over the G6. The G6 did a clunky job of transitioning the screen corners into the rest of the display, but on the V30, the corners are a lot smoother and form a more natural, pleasing shape.

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