Gab.ai: Social Network verklagt Google wegen Löschung im Play Store

Google hat die App des Twitter-ähnlichen sozialen Netzwerks Gab.ai aus dem Play Store geworfen. Grund: Die Beiträge werden nicht moderiert, weshalb rassistische, beleidigende und frauenfeindliche Äußerungen nicht gelöscht werden. Gab klagt nun gegen Google. (Google, Soziales Netz)

Google hat die App des Twitter-ähnlichen sozialen Netzwerks Gab.ai aus dem Play Store geworfen. Grund: Die Beiträge werden nicht moderiert, weshalb rassistische, beleidigende und frauenfeindliche Äußerungen nicht gelöscht werden. Gab klagt nun gegen Google. (Google, Soziales Netz)

Top 10 Most Pirated Movies of The Week on BitTorrent – 09/18/17

The top 10 most downloaded movies on BitTorrent are in again. ‘Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales’ tops the chart this week, followed by ‘Transformers: The Last Knight’. ‘Baby Driver’ completes the top three.

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

This week we have three newcomers in our chart.

Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales is the most downloaded movie for the second week in a row.

The data for our weekly download chart is estimated by TorrentFreak, and is for informational and educational reference only. All the movies in the list are Web-DL/Webrip/HDRip/BDrip/DVDrip unless stated otherwise.

RSS feed for the weekly movie download chart.

This week’s most downloaded movies are:
Movie Rank Rank last week Movie name IMDb Rating / Trailer
Most downloaded movies via torrents
1 (1) Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales 6.9 / trailer
2 (…) Transformers: The Last Knight 5.2 / trailer
3 (…) Transformers: Baby Driver 8.0 / trailer
4 (3) Wonder Woman 8.2 / trailer
5 (2) Hitman’s Bodyguard 7.2 / trailer
6 (4) The Mummy 2017 5.8 / trailer
7 (…) It 8.0 / trailer
8 (5) The Big Sick 6.9 / trailer
9 (6) Despicable Me 3 6.4 / trailer
10 (9) Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 8.0 / trailer

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

Oracles autonome Datenbank: “AWS kann nichts von alledem”

Oracles neues Cloud-Konzept beinhaltet eine sich selbst justierende und verwaltende Datenbank. Das spare Personalkosten und vermindere die Wahrscheinlichkeit von Ausfällen durch menschliche Fehler. Oracle will damit vor allem dem Konkurrenten AWS entgegentreten. (Oracle, Web Service)

Oracles neues Cloud-Konzept beinhaltet eine sich selbst justierende und verwaltende Datenbank. Das spare Personalkosten und vermindere die Wahrscheinlichkeit von Ausfällen durch menschliche Fehler. Oracle will damit vor allem dem Konkurrenten AWS entgegentreten. (Oracle, Web Service)

Cryptowährungen: The Pirate Bay experimentiert heimlich mit Monero Mining

Heimliches Monero Mining per Javascript: Die Macher der Torrent-Seite The Pirate Bay wollten offenbar feststellen, ob sie damit nennenswert Geld verdienen können. Viele Nutzer zeigten sich allerdings verärgert, weil keine Zustimmung eingeholt wurde. (Pirate Bay, Urheberrecht)

Heimliches Monero Mining per Javascript: Die Macher der Torrent-Seite The Pirate Bay wollten offenbar feststellen, ob sie damit nennenswert Geld verdienen können. Viele Nutzer zeigten sich allerdings verärgert, weil keine Zustimmung eingeholt wurde. (Pirate Bay, Urheberrecht)

Mobilestudio Pro 16 im Test: Wacom nennt 2,2-Kilogramm-Grafiktablet “mobil”

Das Mobilestudio Pro 16 ist ein tolles Wacom-Produkt: Auf dem exzellenten Digitizer und mit den Makrotasten zeichnet es sich richtig gut. Allerdings ist es eher All-in-One-PC als Tablet und in mehr als einer Hinsicht nicht so gut für unterwegs geeignet, wie der Hersteller uns glauben lassen will. Ein Test von Oliver Nickel (Wacom, Microsoft)

Das Mobilestudio Pro 16 ist ein tolles Wacom-Produkt: Auf dem exzellenten Digitizer und mit den Makrotasten zeichnet es sich richtig gut. Allerdings ist es eher All-in-One-PC als Tablet und in mehr als einer Hinsicht nicht so gut für unterwegs geeignet, wie der Hersteller uns glauben lassen will. Ein Test von Oliver Nickel (Wacom, Microsoft)

Linux-Desktops: Gnome 3.26 räumt die Systemeinstellungen auf

Neue Konfigurationsmenüs für Monitore, WLAN und Bluetooth sowie eine Baumstruktur statt Icons: Der Linux-Desktop Gnome weist in Version 3.26 eine übersichtlichere Systemsteuerung auf. Auch die Suche wird übersichtlicher. (Linux, Ubuntu)

Neue Konfigurationsmenüs für Monitore, WLAN und Bluetooth sowie eine Baumstruktur statt Icons: Der Linux-Desktop Gnome weist in Version 3.26 eine übersichtlichere Systemsteuerung auf. Auch die Suche wird übersichtlicher. (Linux, Ubuntu)

HP show us what a real PC workstation looks like with a 56-core, 3TB Z8

Fully decked out, it will be quite expensive.

Enlarge / HP Z8 Workstation (credit: HP)

If you're a demanding computer user, sometimes your 13" Ultrabook laptop just won't quite cut it. For those looking for a little more computing power, HP's new Z8 workstation could be just the answer. The latest iteration of HP's desktop workstations packs in a pair of Intel Skylake-SP processors, topping out with twinned Xeon Platinum 8180 chips: 28 cores/56 threads and 38.5MB cache each running at 2.5-3.8GHz, along with support for up to 1.5TB RAM.

Next year, you'll be able to go higher still with the 8180M processors; same core count and speeds, but doubling the total memory capacity to 3TB, as long as you want to fill the machine's 24 RAM slots.

Those processors and memory can be combined with up to three Nvidia Quadro P6000 GPUs, or AMD Radeon Pro WX 9100 parts if you prefer that team. The hefty desktop systems have four internal drive bays, two external (and a third external for an optical drive), and nine PCIe slots. Storage options include up to 4TB of PCIe-mounted SSD, and 48TB of spinning disks. A range of gigabit and 10 gigabit Ethernet adaptors are available; the machines also support 802.11a/b/g/n/ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.2. Thunderbolt 3 is available with an add-in card.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Can an Army of Bitcoin “Bounty Hunters” Deter Pirates?

Anti-piracy organizations have come up with a wide variety of measures to combat copyright infringement over the years, with varying results. Enlisting the public to track down pirates in exchange for Bitcoin bounties is one of the more exotic ways, but according to eBook publisher Erudition, it’s a great way to tackle this growing problem. And they’re not alone.

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

When we first heard of the idea to use Bitcoin bounties to track down pirated content online, we scratched our heads.

Snitching on copyright infringers is not a new concept, but the idea of instant cash rewards though cryptocurrency was quite novel.

In theory, it’s pretty straightforward. Content producers can add a unique identifying watermark into movies, eBooks, or other digital files before they’re circulated. When these somehow leak to the public, the bounty hunters use the watermark to claim their Bitcoin, alerting the owner in the process.

This helps to spot leaks early on, even on networks where automated tools don’t have access, and identify the source at the same time.

Two years have passed and it looks like the idea was no fluke. Custos, the South African company that owns the technology, has various copyright holders on board and recently announced a new partnership with book publisher Erudition Digital.

With help from anti-piracy outfit Digimarc, the companies will add identifying watermarks to eBook releases, counting on the bounty hunters to keep an eye out for leaks. These bounty hunters don’t have to be anti-piracy experts. On the contrary, pirates are more than welcome to help out.

“The Custos approach is revolutionary in that it attacks the economy of piracy by targeting uploaders rather than downloaders, turning downloaders into an early detection network,” the companies announced a few days ago.

“The result is pirates turn on one another, sowing seeds of distrust amongst their communities. As a result, the Custos system is capable of penetrating hard-to-reach places such as the dark web, peer-to-peer networks, and even email.”



Devon Weston, Director of Market Development for Digimarc Guardian, believes that this approach is the next level in anti-piracy efforts. It complements the automated detection tools that have been available in the past by providing access to hard-to-reach places.

“Together, this suite of products represents the next generation in technical measures against eBook piracy,” Weston commented on the partnership.

TorrentFreak reached out to Custos COO Fred Lutz to find out what progress the company has made in recent years. We were informed that they have been protecting thousands of copies every month, ranging from pre-release movie content to eBooks.

At the moment the company works with a selected group of “bounty hunters,” but they plan to open the extraction tool to the public in the near future, so everyone can join in.

“So far we have carefully seeded the free bounty extractor tool in relevant communities with great success. However, in the next phase, we will open the bounty hunting to the general public. We are just careful not to grow the bounty hunting community faster than the number of bounties in the wild require,” Lutz tells us.

The Bitcoin bounties themselves vary in size based on the specific use case. For a movie screener, they are typically anything between $10 and $50. However, for the most sensitive content, they can be $100 or more.

“We can also adjust the bounty over time based on the customer’s needs. A low-quality screener that was very sensitive prior to cinematic release does not require as large a bounty after cam-rips becomes available,” Lutz notes.

Thus far, roughly 50 Bitcoin bounties have been claimed. Some of these were planted by Custos themselves, as an incentive for the bounty hunters. Not a very high number, but that doesn’t mean that it’s not working.

“While this number might seem a bit small compared to the number of copies we protect, our aim is first and foremost not to detect leaks, but to pose a credible threat of quick detection and being caught.”

People who receive content protected by Custos are made aware of the watermarks, which may make them think twice about sharing it. If that’s the case, then it’s having effect without any bounties being claimed.

The question remains how many people will actively help to spot bounties. The success of the system largely depends on volunteers, and not all pirates are eager to rat on the people that provide free content.

On the other hand, there’s also room to abuse the system. In theory, people could claim the bounties on their own eBooks and claim that they’ve lost their e-reader. That would be fraud, of course, but since the bounties are in Bitcoin this isn’t easy to prove.

That brings us to the final question. What happens of a claimed bounty identifies a leaker? Custos admits that this alone isn’t enough evidence to pursue a legal case, but the measures that are taken in response are up to the copyright holders.

“A claim of a bounty is never a sufficient legal proof of piracy, instead, it is an invaluable first piece of evidence on which a legal case could be built if the client so requires. Legal prosecution is definitely not always the best approach to dealing with leaks,” Lutz says.

Time will tell if the Bitcoin bounty approach works…

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

If you read one sci-fi series this year, it should be The Broken Earth

The haunting trilogy by N.K. Jemisin won Hugo Awards two years running and changed sci-fi.

The final book in the trilogy, The Stone Sky, just came out. It completes an incredibly satisfying exploration of the overlap between scifi and fantasy.

I don't make absolutist statements like the one in this headline very often, but sometimes a book series is so important that you just want people to put everything aside and just read it. I'm not the only one who feels this way about N.K. Jemisin's Broken Earth trilogy. The first and second novels in Jemisin's trilogy, The Fifth Season and The Obelisk Gate won the prestigious Hugo Award for the past two years in a row—the first time this has happened since Ender's Game and its sequel Speaker for the Dead won sequential Hugos in 1986 and 87. Now the final Broken Earth book, The Stone Sky, is out. You can gobble up the whole series without interruption.

There are very light spoilers ahead.

A mesmerizing world

There are a lot of reasons why this series has been hailed as a masterpiece. There are unexpected twists which, in retrospect, you realize have been carefully plotted, skillfully hinted at, and well-earned. There are characters who feel like human beings, with problems that range from the mundane (raising kids in a risky world) to the extraordinary (learning to control earthquakes with your mind). The main characters are called orogenes, and they have the ability to control geophysics with their minds, quelling and starting earthquakes. Somehow the orogenes are connected with the lost technologies of a dead civilization, whose machines still orbit the planet in the form of mysterious giant crystals called obelisks. To most people on the planet, the orogenes are known by the derogatory term "rogga," and they're the victims of vicious prejudice.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Feds in California are aggressively going after Silk Road, AlphaBay vendors

Federal courthouse in Fresno is set to see a lot of action in coming months.

Enlarge / A stack of bitcoins sits among twisted copper wiring inside a communications room at an office in this arranged photograph in London on Tuesday, September 5, 2017. (credit: Bloomberg / Getty Images News)

Next month, a California drug dealer who recently pleaded guilty to selling on Silk Road, AlphaBay, and other sites is scheduled to be sentenced. According to federal authorities, David Ryan Burchard was one of the largest online merchants of marijuana and cocaine—he sold over $1.4 million worth of narcotics.

Burchard was prosecuted in federal court in the Eastern District of California, which has quietly become a hub of cases against dealers from those notorious and now-shuttered Dark Web marketplaces.

According to Lauren Horwood, a spokeswoman for the US Attorney’s Office in Sacramento, one of the primary hubs of this federal judicial district, there are currently 11 Silk Road and AlphaBay-related prosecutions underway. Four of the defendants have pleaded guilty, and, of those, two have already been sentenced, while the others’ cases are still ongoing.

Read 21 remaining paragraphs | Comments