Verkehr: Karlsruhe baut ein Testfeld für autonomes Fahren auf

Die Infrastruktur wird eingerichtet, die Bürger sind gespannt: In Karlsruhe laufen die Vorbereitungen für einen Feldversuch zum autonomen Fahren. Start soll noch in diesem Jahr sein. (Autonomes Fahren, Wissenschaft)

Die Infrastruktur wird eingerichtet, die Bürger sind gespannt: In Karlsruhe laufen die Vorbereitungen für einen Feldversuch zum autonomen Fahren. Start soll noch in diesem Jahr sein. (Autonomes Fahren, Wissenschaft)

Smarte Lautsprecher: Sonos bringt One-Lautsprecher mit Alexa-Integration

One heißt der erste Sonos-Lautsprecher mit Alexa-Integration. Eine Google-Assistant-Integration ist ebenfalls geplant. Bestehende Sonos-Lautsprecher können mit Hilfe eines Skills über einen anderen Alexa-Lautsprecher mit der Stimme bedient werden. (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

One heißt der erste Sonos-Lautsprecher mit Alexa-Integration. Eine Google-Assistant-Integration ist ebenfalls geplant. Bestehende Sonos-Lautsprecher können mit Hilfe eines Skills über einen anderen Alexa-Lautsprecher mit der Stimme bedient werden. (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

Tesla: Elektrischer Lkw kommt und kommt und kommt nicht

Tesla-Chef Elon Musk hat die Vorstellung seines Sattelschleppers mit Elektroantrieb erneut verschoben – auf November. Zu groß seien die Probleme beim Model 3 und die Bemühungen, Puerto Rico zu helfen. (Tesla, Technologie)

Tesla-Chef Elon Musk hat die Vorstellung seines Sattelschleppers mit Elektroantrieb erneut verschoben - auf November. Zu groß seien die Probleme beim Model 3 und die Bemühungen, Puerto Rico zu helfen. (Tesla, Technologie)

General Motors: Surus bringt Brennstoffzellen in autonome Lkws

Surus ist ein geländegängiges Fahrgestell mit Elektromotoren und einer autonomen Fahrfunktion von General Motors. Die Plattform wird mit Brennstoffzellen betrieben und kann nicht nur ihre Akkus laden, sondern auch als Aggregat dienen. Die Reichweite soll bei bis zu 640 km liegen. (Brennstoffzelle, Technologie)

Surus ist ein geländegängiges Fahrgestell mit Elektromotoren und einer autonomen Fahrfunktion von General Motors. Die Plattform wird mit Brennstoffzellen betrieben und kann nicht nur ihre Akkus laden, sondern auch als Aggregat dienen. Die Reichweite soll bei bis zu 640 km liegen. (Brennstoffzelle, Technologie)

Produktionsverzögerungen: Tesla Model 3 muss per Hand gefertigt werden

Statt in einer automatischen Fabrik und von Maschinen wird Teslas Model 3 per Hand gebaut. Wegen der Probleme sind bisher nur einige Hundert statt Tausende der Elektroautos fertig geworden. (Tesla, Technologie)

Statt in einer automatischen Fabrik und von Maschinen wird Teslas Model 3 per Hand gebaut. Wegen der Probleme sind bisher nur einige Hundert statt Tausende der Elektroautos fertig geworden. (Tesla, Technologie)

TCL launches BlackBerry Motion touchscreen smartphone

As expected, the latest BlackBerry phone is the first to feature a waterproof design. The BlackBerry Motion also has the biggest battery of any Blackberry-branded smartphone to date, thanks to the 4,000 mAh battery. Like most recent BlackBerry-branded devices, the Motion is actually built by Chinese device maker TCL. But the Android smartphone ships with […]

TCL launches BlackBerry Motion touchscreen smartphone is a post from: Liliputing

As expected, the latest BlackBerry phone is the first to feature a waterproof design. The BlackBerry Motion also has the biggest battery of any Blackberry-branded smartphone to date, thanks to the 4,000 mAh battery. Like most recent BlackBerry-branded devices, the Motion is actually built by Chinese device maker TCL. But the Android smartphone ships with […]

TCL launches BlackBerry Motion touchscreen smartphone is a post from: Liliputing

After a month off, SpaceX returns with two launch attempts in three days

Company remains on pace for 20 launches this year, smashing previous records.

Enlarge / SpaceX's last mission for Iridum, in June, launched amid foggy conditions in California. (credit: SpaceX)

SpaceX has made 13 successful launches this year, and with every additional flight it continues to add to its record for total number of missions in a calendar year. The company's previous high-water mark for launches came in 2016, with eight. But SpaceX flew no additional missions after Sept. 1 last year, standing down following a fueling mishap that destroyed a Falcon 9 rocket and its payload on the launch pad.

Now, SpaceX is going for two launches in three days. On Monday, the company will attempt to launch 10 satellites into orbit about 700km above the Earth for Iridium. Scheduled for 8:37a.m. ET, the launch will take place from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. This is SpaceX's third of eight launches for Iridium, which is establishing a new constellation of communications satellites known as Iridium NEXT. After launching, SpaceX will attempt a return landing of the first stage aboard the "Just Read the Instructions” droneship in the Pacific Ocean. The webcast below should begin 15 to 20 minutes before the launch attempt.

Then, on Wednesday, SpaceX is scheduled to attempt a launch from Kennedy Space Center at 4:30pm ET. This mission will put the SES-11/EchoStar 105 satellite into geostationary orbit. One of the highlights of this flight is that SpaceX will be flying a "used" first stage booster—only the third time the company has attempted this. A droneship landing attempt in the Atlantic Ocean is anticipated.

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SOPA Ghosts Hinder U.S. Pirate Site Blocking Efforts

US music and movie industry companies helped to get pirate sites blocked in many countries but on their home turf, legal action is surprisingly absent. For years we have wondered why local ISPs are being left alone and we now have an answer. Former RIAA executive Neil Turkewitz says that SOPA’s ghosts have been a major stumbling block.

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

Website blocking has become one of the entertainment industries’ favorite anti-piracy tools.

All over the world, major movie and music industry players have gone to court demanding that ISPs take action, often with great success.

Internal MPAA research showed that website blockades help to deter piracy and former boss Chris Dodd said that they are one of the most effective anti-tools available.

While not everyone is in agreement on this, the numbers are used to lobby politicians and convince courts. Interestingly, however, nothing is happening in the United States, which is where most pirate site visitors come from.

This is baffling to many people. Why would US-based companies go out of their way to demand ISP blocking in the most exotic locations, but fail to do the same at home?

We posed this question to Neil Turkewitz, RIAA’s former Executive Vice President International, who currently runs his own consulting group. Turkewitz left the RIAA last year, and before that, he witnessed the foreign ISP blocking discussions from the inside.

The main reason why pirate site blocking requests have not yet been made in the United States is down to SOPA. When the proposed SOPA legislation made headlines five years ago there was a massive backlash against website blocking, which isn’t something copyright groups want to reignite.

“The legacy of SOPA is that copyright industries want to avoid resurrecting the ghosts of SOPA past, and principally focus on ways to creatively encourage cooperation with platforms, and to use existing remedies,” Turkewitz tells us.

Instead of taking the likes of Comcast and Verizon to court, the entertainment industries focused on voluntary agreements, such as the now-defunct Copyright Alerts System. However, that doesn’t mean that website blocking and domain seizures are not an option.

“SOPA made ‘website blocking’ as such a four-letter word. But this is actually fairly misleading,” Turkewitz says.

“There have been a variety of civil and criminal actions addressing the conduct of entities subject to US jurisdiction facilitating piracy, regardless of the source, including hundreds of domain seizures by DHS/ICE.”

Indeed, there are plenty of legal options already available to do much of what SOPA promised. ABS-CBN has taken over dozens of pirate site domain names through the US court system. Most recently even through an ex-parte order, meaning that the site owners had no option to defend themselves before they lost their domains.

ISP and search engine blocking is also around the corner. As we reported earlier this week, a Virginia magistrate judge recently recommended an injunction which would require search engines and Internet providers to prevent users from accessing Sci-Hub.

Still, the major movie and music companies are not yet using these tools to take on The Pirate Bay or other major pirate sites. If it’s so easy, then why not? Apparently, SOPA may still be in the back of their minds.

Interestingly, the RIAA’s former top executive wasn’t a fan of SOPA when it was first announced, as it wouldn’t do much to extend the legal remedies that were already available.

“I actually didn’t like SOPA very much since it mostly reflected existing law and maintained a paradigm that didn’t involve ISP’s in creative interdiction, and simply preserved passivity. To see it characterized as ‘copyright gone wild’ was certainly jarring and incongruous,” Turkewitz says.

Ironically, it looks like a bill that failed to pass, and didn’t impress some copyright holders to begin with, is still holding them back after five years. They’re certainly not using all the legal options available to avoid SOPA comparison. The question is, for how long?

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

Xposed Framework for Android Nougat released (officially)

Xposed Framework is a system that allows you to change the behavior of Android phones, tablets, and other devices in some pretty powerful ways. It brings the sort of features that used to require a custom ROM to phones, tablets, and other devices that have been rooted… but which are still running the software that […]

Xposed Framework for Android Nougat released (officially) is a post from: Liliputing

Xposed Framework is a system that allows you to change the behavior of Android phones, tablets, and other devices in some pretty powerful ways. It brings the sort of features that used to require a custom ROM to phones, tablets, and other devices that have been rooted… but which are still running the software that […]

Xposed Framework for Android Nougat released (officially) is a post from: Liliputing

Saying goodbye to the proto-social network of AOL Instant Messenger

Long before Facebook and Twitter, there were Away Messages and AIM profiles.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Getty)

Many people remember specific, weird things about September 11, 2001. For me, it was a headline about stamps tucked into the chaos.

As I started to absorb the horror of the day through TV and online news sources that Tuesday morning, I noticed an odd inflection point highlighted on the Washington Post's list of "Top News" links. While the first three stories were blaring headlines about the terrorist attacks, I remember clearly that the fourth was a news brief about the threat of postal stamp rate increase, the last trivial story published before all other news got pushed aside indefinitely.

I wanted to quickly share this lighthearted observation with my circle of friends, and in 2001 I only had one easy, surefire way to do that online. I brought up AOL Instant Messenger, opened the menu, and chose "Edit Profile." That's where I shared links to the Post's top four stories at the time and warned my friends not to miss the important postal news amid the other stuff going on (I also included a semi-apologetic note that I hoped the lighthearted joke would be a welcome distraction on such a dark day).

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