iPhone: Apple soll auf Qualcomm-Modems verzichten

Qualcomm fliegt raus, Intel bleibt und Mediatek kommt eventuell rein: Apple soll an neuen iPads und iPhones arbeiten, deren LTE-Modems nicht mehr vom bisherigen Hauptlieferanten stammen. Ein Problem könnte dabei aber die Geschwindigkeit sein. (iPhone, …

Qualcomm fliegt raus, Intel bleibt und Mediatek kommt eventuell rein: Apple soll an neuen iPads und iPhones arbeiten, deren LTE-Modems nicht mehr vom bisherigen Hauptlieferanten stammen. Ein Problem könnte dabei aber die Geschwindigkeit sein. (iPhone, Apple)

‘Pirate’ IPTV Provider Loses Case, Despite Not Offering Content Itself

A company that sold Kodi-based software which accessed infringing TV, movie and sports streams has lost an interesting case featuring Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN. MovieStreamer claimed that it only provided a referral service to third-party content through a series of links but the court found that despite the convoluted process, it still communicated copyrighted works to the public.

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

In 2017, there can be little doubt that streaming is the big piracy engine of the moment. Dubbed Piracy 3.0 by the MPAA, the movement is causing tremendous headaches for rightsholders on a global scale.

One of the interesting things about this phenomenon is the distributed nature of the content on offer. Sourced from thousands of online locations, from traditional file-hosters to Google Drive, the big challenge is to aggregate it all into one place, to make it easy to find. This is often achieved via third-party addons for the legal Kodi software.

One company offering such a service was MovieStreamer.nl in the Netherlands. Via its website MovieStreamer the company offered its Easy Use Interface 2.0, a piece of software that made Kodi easy to use and other streams easy to find for 79 euros. It also sold ‘VIP’ access to thousands of otherwise premium channels for around 20 euros per month.

MovieStreamer Easy Interface 2.0

“Thanks to the unique Easy Use Interface, we have the unique 3-step process,” the company’s marketing read.

“Click tile of choice, activate subtitles, and play! Fully automated and instantly the most optimal settings. Our youngest user is 4 years old and the ‘oldest’ 86 years. Ideal for young and old, beginner and expert.”

Of course, being based in the Netherlands it wasn’t long before MovieStreamer caught the attention of BREIN. The anti-piracy outfit says it tried to get the company to stop offering the illegal product but after getting no joy, took the case to court.

From BREIN’s perspective, the case was cut and dried. MovieStreamer had no right to provide access to the infringing content so it was in breach of copyright law (unauthorized communication to the public) and should stop its activities immediately. MovieStreamer, however, saw things somewhat differently.

At the core of its defense was the claim that did it not provide content itself and was merely a kind of middleman. MovieStreamer said it provided only a referral service in the form of a hyperlink formatted as a shortened URL, which in turn brought together supply and demand.

In effect, MovieStreamer claimed that it was several steps away from any infringement and that only the users themselves could activate the shortener hyperlink and subsequent process (including a corresponding M3U playlist file, which linked to other hyperlinks) to access any pirated content. Due to this disconnect, MovieStreamer said that there was no infringement, for-profit or otherwise.

A judge at the District Court in Utrecht disagreed, ruling that by providing a unique hyperlink to customers which in turn lead to protected works was indeed a “communication to the public” based on the earlier Filmspeler case.

The Court also noted that MovieStreamer knew or indeed ought to have known the illegal nature of the content being linked to, not least since BREIN had already informed them of that fact. Since the company was aware, the for-profit element of the GS Media decision handed down by the European Court of Justice came into play.

In an order handed down October 27, the Court ordered MovieStreamer to stop its IPTV hyperlinking activities immediately, whether via its Kodi Easy Use Interface or other means. Failure to do so will result in a 5,000 euro per day fine, payable to BREIN, up to a maximum of 500,000 euros. MovieStreamer was also ordered to pay legal costs of 17,527 euros.

“Moviestreamer sold a link to illegal content. Then you are required to check if that content is legally on the internet,” BREIN Director Tim Kuik said in a statement.

“You can not claim that you have nothing to do with the content if you sell a link to that content.”

Speaking with Tweakers, MovieStreamer owner Bernhard Ohler said that the packages in question were removed from his website on Saturday night. He also warned that other similar companies could experience the same issues with BREIN.

“With this judgment in hand, BREIN has, of course, a powerful weapon to force them offline,” he said.

Ohler said that the margins on hardware were so small that the IPTV subscriptions were the heart of his company. Contacted by TorrentFreak on what this means for his business, he had just two words.

“The end,” he said.

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

What it’s like to ride in a Waymo driverless car

Ars visits Waymo’s secret testing facility and rides in a driverless car.

Enlarge (credit: Waymo)

ATWATER, Calif.—I've never ridden in a car with no one in the driver's seat before. Still, I wasn't exactly blown away.

We've known for several years now that Waymo's (previously Google's) cars can handle most road conditions without a safety driver intervening. Last year, the company reported that its cars could go about 5,000 miles on California roads, on average, between human interventions.

On Monday, I was one of several reporters invited out to Waymo's secret testing facility at the Castle Air Force Base in California's Central Valley. There, I got a chance to ride in one of Waymo's newest self-driving cars.

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Apple: iPad 3 bekommt keine Ersatzteile und Reparaturen mehr

Apple hat das iPad 3, das als erstes Tablet mit dem hochauflösenden Retina-Display ausgestattet war, auf die Liste der abgekündigten Produkte gesetzt. Das bedeutet: Es gibt keine Ersatzteile und Reparaturen mehr. Für das ältere iPad 2 gilt das nicht. (…

Apple hat das iPad 3, das als erstes Tablet mit dem hochauflösenden Retina-Display ausgestattet war, auf die Liste der abgekündigten Produkte gesetzt. Das bedeutet: Es gibt keine Ersatzteile und Reparaturen mehr. Für das ältere iPad 2 gilt das nicht. (iPad 3, Apple)

AMD, which lost over $2.8B in 5 years, takes a hit after new report

Morgan Stanley: demand for graphics chips, video game consoles will slow in 2018.

Enlarge / Texas Governor Greg Abbott (center) tests the Oculus virtual reality device at Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) in Austin as AMD CEO Lisa T. Su (r) watches following an Abbott bill signing that reduced Texas' franchise tax by 25 percent in June 2015. (credit: Robert Daemmrich Photography Inc/Corbis via Getty Images))

On Monday, AMD’s stock price plunged nearly 9 percent after a report by Morgan Stanley, a major investment bank, which found that "microprocessor momentum" has slowed.

According to CNBC, a new report by analyst Joseph Moore found that "cryptocurrency mining driven sales for AMD's graphics chips will decline by 50 percent next year or a $250 million decline in revenue. He also forecasts video game console demand will decline by 5.5 percent in 2018."

Once a veritable competitor to Intel, AMD has struggled in recent years, although it has had some modest success’—as measured by a rise in its stock price—in 2016 and 2017.

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GrubHub “gig economy” trial ends with judge calling out plaintiff’s lies

Small details of a part-time actor’s delivery job have become a federal case.

Enlarge

SAN FRANCISCO—The first trial over the status of "gig economy" workers drew to a close here, as a man who worked for GrubHub for several months seeks to prove that he should have been classified as an employee, not an independent contractor.

Shannon Liss-Riordan, representing plaintiff Raef Lawson, didn't get 20 minutes into her closing argument when US Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley interrupted her to say that her client was untruthful, and that her decision would reflect that. He produced a "fabricated resume," and lied on an application to GrubHub that he submitted after filing the lawsuit.

Despite her harsh assessment of the plaintiff in the case, it's not at all clear that GrubHub will prevail. On almost every point that would prove that he's an independent contractor, Corley had tough questions for GrubHub lawyers.

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Facebook, YouTube admit to wider-ranging campaigns by Russian “state actors”

Disclosure of even bigger numbers comes ahead of Tuesday testimony on Capitol Hill.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Ahead of a Tuesday hearing on Capitol Hill, a combination of leaked statements and official blogs confirmed wider-ranging impact by Russian "state actors" on platforms operated by Facebook and Google than the companies had previously disclosed.

Reports from the Washington Post and Recode separately claim that Facebook's Tuesday testimony will state that up to 126 million people were exposed to Russian operations on its site during the 2016 Presidential election season. Facebook's official statements have previously focused solely on the reach of paid advertisements. This new, larger number is due to Facebook now counting non-ad operations conducted by the Internet Research Agency, a disinformation organization with Russian ties. Reports have pointed to the IRA creating seemingly legitimate American accounts with aims of indirect political disruption.

According to reports, Facebook will say on Tuesday that this "troll farm" posted 80,000 times between 2015 and 2017, which resulted in 29 million direct appearances on Facebook news feeds. Thanks to real users liking, sharing, and commenting on these posts, the IRA campaign's total reach is somewhere between 87 and 126 million impressions, according to Facebook's estimations.

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Microsoft cans Outlook.com Premium as it rolls its features into Office 365

Big inboxes, ad-free interfaces, and premium support will now apply to Outlook.com.

Enlarge (credit: Alexander Savin)

Microsoft is shaking up its consumer-oriented e-mail offerings, further improving the value of its Office 365 subscriptions as it continues to push customers away from perpetual licenses.

Features formerly part of the Outlook.com Premium scheme, an annual subscription to Microsoft's consumer e-mail and calendaring service, are now rolled into the Office 365 Home and Personal subscriptions. But there's a downside to this: Outlook.com Premium is being discontinued (as spotted by Paul Thurrott). At least for now, that service includes features not found in Office 365 Home or Personal.

Consumer editions of Office 365, unlike their corporate counterparts, don't come with an Exchange account for e-mail. Rather, Microsoft's consumer e-mail solution is Outlook.com, an ad-supported free-mail provider. Separately from Office 365, Microsoft also sold Outlook.com Premium. This removed the ads, increased the size of your inbox, and allowed the use of Outlook.com mail with a custom domain name.

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Appeals court keeps alive the never-ending Linux case, SCO v. IBM

SCO says IBM released a “sham” version of Monterey OS to prop up AIX for Power.

Enlarge / The IBM logo is seen on its building's headquarters in New York on Tuesday, December 22, 2015. (credit: Richard Levine/Corbis via Getty Images)

A federal appeals court has now partially ruled in favor of the SCO Group, breathing new life into a lawsuit and a company (now bankrupt and nearly dead) that has been suing IBM for nearly 15 years.

Last year, US District Judge David Nuffer had ruled against SCO (whose original name was Santa Cruz Operation) in two summary judgment orders, and the court refused to allow SCO to amend its initial complaint against IBM.

SCO soon appealed. On Monday, the 10th US Circuit Court of Appeals found that SCO’s claims of misappropriation could go forward while also upholding Judge Nuffer's other two orders.

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Animation entfernt: Apple behebt Taschenrechner-Bug mit iOS 11.2 Beta

Apple hat einen peinlichen Fehler in iOS entfernt, der beim schnellen Tippen auf dem Taschenrechner zu Fehlern führte. Das geschah selbst bei einfachen Rechenoperation wie 1+2+3. Eine bremsende Animation wurde kurzerhand abgeschaltet. (iOS 11, Apple)

Apple hat einen peinlichen Fehler in iOS entfernt, der beim schnellen Tippen auf dem Taschenrechner zu Fehlern führte. Das geschah selbst bei einfachen Rechenoperation wie 1+2+3. Eine bremsende Animation wurde kurzerhand abgeschaltet. (iOS 11, Apple)