Die Woche im Video: Mehr Handys als Hände

Apples iPhone X ist verfügbar, HTC stellt noch schnell zwei neue Modelle vor, Razer debütiert mit einem Gamer-Phone. Und wir testen dann noch Smartphone-Kameras und einen Akku-Mod! Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, …

Apples iPhone X ist verfügbar, HTC stellt noch schnell zwei neue Modelle vor, Razer debütiert mit einem Gamer-Phone. Und wir testen dann noch Smartphone-Kameras und einen Akku-Mod! Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Switch to Outsell Wii U By Next March, Says Nintendo

Nintendo’s latest console will sell more units in a year than its predecessor, the Wii U, sold in more than five.This is according to Nintendo’s latest estimates, which predicts 14 million Switch units being sold before the end of March 2018. The Wii U…



Nintendo's latest console will sell more units in a year than its predecessor, the Wii U, sold in more than five.

This is according to Nintendo's latest estimates, which predicts 14 million Switch units being sold before the end of March 2018. The Wii U only managed to sell 13.56 million units in its entire five year run.

While Nintendo experimented with the "second screen" format with the Wii U, it was never a huge success following the wildly popular Wii. With the Switch, Nintendo decided to, to want a better phrase, switch it up by introducing a hybrid console that bridges the divide between portable and home gaming. The Switch can be used as a standalone portable console, but when placed in the supplied dock, can be used like any home console.

The Switch also included an innovative controller that can be taken out and used for portable multi-player gaming on just the one console, something that hasn't been possible with portable consoles before.

The success of the Switch has allowed Nintendo to double its profit forecast for the fiscal year ending in March, and has allowed it to dominate console sales in North America and other regions.

The major obstacle in Nintendo's way in trying to reach the 14 million unit target may be lack of available stock, as production has only just been ramped up to meet the demand. The holiday sales period, the strongest sales period for video games, will also test both the console's popularity as well as Nintendo's ability to keep up with the demand.

"The true power of the Switch would be tested during the upcoming holiday season," said Nintendo President Tatsumi Kimishima during an earnings briefing.

[via BGR]

Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending October 21, 2017

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 21, 2017 are in. An A-list release in the form of Spider-Man: Homecoming helped Blu-ray revenue and weekly market share rise to a recent high.
Re…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 21, 2017 are in. An A-list release in the form of Spider-Man: Homecoming helped Blu-ray revenue and weekly market share rise to a recent high.

Read the rest of the stats and analysis to find out how DVD, Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray did.

Critical Tor flaw leaks users’ real IP address—update now

TorMoil threatens Mac and Linux versions of Tor browser; Windows and Tails not affected.

Enlarge

Mac and Linux versions of the Tor anonymity browser just received a temporary fix for a critical vulnerability that leaks users' IP addresses when they visit certain types of addresses.

TorMoil, as the flaw has been dubbed by its discoverer, is triggered when users click on links that begin with file:// rather than the more common https:// and http:// address prefixes. When the Tor browser for macOS and Linux is in the process of opening such an address, "the operating system may directly connect to the remote host, bypassing Tor Browser," according to a brief blog post published Tuesday by We Are Segment, the security firm that privately reported the bug to Tor developers.

On Friday, members of the Tor Project issued a temporary work-around that plugs that IP leak. Until the final fix is in place, updated versions of the browser may not behave properly when navigating to file:// addresses. They said both the Windows versions of Tor, Tails, and the sandboxed Tor browser that's in alpha testing aren't vulnerable.

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In new Waymo v. Uber order, judge pounds on Waymo

One trade secret, one expert, and Otto Trucking—all kicked out of the case.

Enlarge / A customized Waymo minivan being shown off at the 2017 North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan. (credit: Photo by Bill Pugliano/Getty Images)

The final details are falling into place as Waymo v. Uber approaches trial later this month. While Uber has been on the receiving end of plenty of harsh words from US District Judge William Alsup, who is overseeing the litigation, this week it became Waymo's turn to feel the heat—and face new limits on its case.

In an order (PDF) published yesterday, Alsup dismissed Otto Trucking, a holding company created by Anthony Levandowski, from the case. The judge stated on the record his suspicions that Waymo intended to improperly use the company as a stand-in for Levandowski, who is not a defendant in the case. The order also throws out one of Waymo's nine alleged trade secrets. Separately, Alsup will unveil an order tomorrow that apparently will kick out Waymo's damages expert.

The Waymo v. Uber litigation began in February, when Waymo accused Levandowski, the chief of Uber's self-driving car project, of stealing more than 14,000 files shortly before he resigned from Google. He founded a startup called Otto, which was sold to Uber within months for $680 million in stock and cash. Levandowski—who is, again, not a defendant in the case—has pleaded the Fifth Amendment and avoided answering questions about the accusations. Uber denies that any secrets ended up on the company's servers and says its lidar technology was built independently.

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Blizzard: World of Warcraft bekommt Classic-Server und neues Add-on

Auf seiner Hausmesse hat Blizzard angekündigt, selbst eigene Classic-Server mit der Ursprungsversion von World of Warcraft anzubieten. Wer es neuer mag, für den entsteht derzeit die Erweiterung Battle for Azeroth. Außerdem gibt es demnächst eine Free-t…

Auf seiner Hausmesse hat Blizzard angekündigt, selbst eigene Classic-Server mit der Ursprungsversion von World of Warcraft anzubieten. Wer es neuer mag, für den entsteht derzeit die Erweiterung Battle for Azeroth. Außerdem gibt es demnächst eine Free-to-Play-Version von Starcraft 2. (WoW, Rollenspiel)

US government climate report: Climate change is real and our fault

Report appears to have cleared federal review despite censorship fears.

Enlarge / Projected average temperature change by the last three decades of the 21st century for two greenhouse gas emissions scenarios. (credit: NCA4)

Information about the science and consequences of climate change has been removed from a number of federal agency websites since the Trump Administration took over. But some agencies like NASA seem to have continued their work unhindered. And today saw the release of the fourth National Climate Assessment—an official summary of the current state of knowledge about climate change.

The heavily peer-reviewed report, following the last edition in 2014, is coordinated by NOAA, NASA, the Department of Energy, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the US Global Change Research Program. A group of US climate scientists volunteered to write the report, which gathers together the most recent peer-reviewed research into digestible conclusions about the causes and impacts of climate change.

No interference

A June 2017 draft was shared with The New York Times by someone who feared it might be censored by federal agencies during the final approval process. But in a call with media, NOAA’s David Fahey (one of three coordinating lead authors of the report) responded to questions about censorship by saying he was “quite confident” that there had been no political interference with the contents of the report. An initial review of the highlighted main points of the report’s “executive summary” shows only a few insignificant wording changes from the June 2017 draft.

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Blizzard finally relents to years of fan pressure with World of Warcraft Classic

Shock announcement comes at outset of annual Blizzcon event.

Enlarge / We were wondering when they'd finally get around to this. (credit: Blizzard Entertainment)

Blizzard's annual Blizzcon event in Anaheim, California kicked off on Friday with various game-related announcements, but the most surprising one dug back into the company's history. Finally, fans' requests for a major turn back of the World of Warcraft clock are coming to life in the form of World of Warcraft Classic.

"Before I get to the big news today, I want to talk about ice cream," WoW executive producer J. Allen Brack told the Blizzcon crowd. "I understand that for some of you, your favorite flavor is vanilla."

This was a reference to "vanilla" WoW servers, which players have logged into behind Blizzard's official back to play earlier, pre-expansion versions of WoW. After countless shutdowns, arguments, and meetings over the past few years, along with petitions begging the company to make a paid version of what they wanted, Blizzard is finally relenting with its own official take on the concept.

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US Court Disarms Canada’s Global Site Blocking Order Against Google

A federal court in California has rendered an order from the Supreme Court of Canada unenforceable. The order in question required Google to remove a company’s websites from search results globally, not just in Canada. This ruling violates US law and puts free speech at risk, the California court found.

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

Google regularly removes infringing websites from its search results, but the company is also wary of abuse.

When the Canadian company Equustek Solutions requested the company to remove websites that offered unlawful and competing products, it refused to do so globally.

This resulted in a legal battle that came to a climax in June, when the Supreme Court of Canada ordered Google to remove a company’s websites from its search results. Not just in Canada, but all over the world.

With options to appeal exhausted in Canada, Google took the case to a federal court in the US. The search engine requested an injunction to disarm the Canadian order, arguing that a worldwide blocking order violates the First Amendment.

Surprisingly, Equustek decided not to defend itself and without opposition, a California District Court sided with Google yesterday.

During a hearing, Google attorney Margaret Caruso stressed that it should not be possible for foreign countries to implement measures that run contrary to core values of the United States.

The search engine argued that the Canadian order violated Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which immunizes Internet services from liability for content created by third parties. With this law, Congress specifically chose not to deter harmful online speech by imposing liability on Internet services.

In an order, signed shortly after the hearing, District Judge Edward Davila concludes that Google qualifies for Section 230 immunity in this case. As such, he rules that the Canadian Supreme Court’s global blocking order goes too far.

“Google is harmed because the Canadian order restricts activity that Section 230 protects. In addition, the balance of equities favors Google because the injunction would deprive it of the benefits of U.S. federal law,” Davila writes.

Rendering the order unenforceable is not just in the interest of Google, the District Court writes. It’s also best for the general public as free speech is clearly at stake here.

“Congress recognized that free speech on the internet would be severely restricted if websites were to face tort liability for hosting user-generated content. It responded by enacting Section 230, which grants broad immunity to online intermediaries,” Judge Davila writes.

“The Canadian order would eliminate Section 230 immunity for service providers that link to third-party websites. By forcing intermediaries to remove links to third-party material, the Canadian order undermines the policy goals of Section 230 and threatens free speech on the global internet.”

The preliminary injunction

The Court signed a preliminary injunction which prevents Equustek enforcing the Canadian order in the United States, which is exactly what Google was after. Since the Canadian company chose not to represent itself in the US case, this will likely stand.

The ruling is important in the broader scheme. If foreign courts are allowed to grant worldwide blockades, free speech could be severely hampered. Today it’s a relatively unknown Canadian company, but what if the Chinese Government asked Google to block the websites of VPN providers?

A copy of the full order is available here (pdf).

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

Bloomberg: Broadcom may buy Qualcomm

Broadcom and Qualcomm are two of the world’s biggest chip makers… and according to a report from Bloomberg, they could soon become one of the world’s biggest chip makers. According to Bloomberg’s sources, Broadcom is exploring t…

Broadcom and Qualcomm are two of the world’s biggest chip makers… and according to a report from Bloomberg, they could soon become one of the world’s biggest chip makers. According to Bloomberg’s sources, Broadcom is exploring the possibility of buying Qualcomm. The move would further consolidate the market. Qualcomm is currently in the process of absorbing […]

Bloomberg: Broadcom may buy Qualcomm is a post from: Liliputing