With Amazon Key’s launch, customers and lawyers have lots of questions

Prof: “Why would anyone want to give Amazon access to their home?”

Enlarge / IoT products like Amazon Key come with a whole set of risks that consumers aren't equipped to assess themselves. (credit: Amazon)

Last week, Amazon announced a new voluntary service that allows its own contracted delivery personnel to temporarily access customers' homes through a new service dubbed "Amazon Key" which begins Wednesday, November 8.

Privacy experts wonder what kind of avenue putting such a camera in the home could mean for law enforcement, particularly given last year's episode when Amazon refused to help law enforcement in a murder case in Arkansas. There, investigators attempted to get the company to hand over data collected by a nearby Alexa. If that instance is any indication, Amazon may resist a legal demand to open up an Amazon Key lock.

Beyond concerns about the police, many on Twitter are fundamentally uncomfortable with Amazon Key.

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In Amazon’s game engine, voice actors can now be replaced with robots

Just after actor strike ends, Lumberyard update adds a full text-to-speech pipeline.

Enlarge / There's nothing creepy about this disembodied head used to demo a robot-powered voice service, Amazon. Nothing creepy at all. (credit: Amazon)

Want to add voice acting to your next epic video game but don't want to deal with those pesky real-life actors to populate your virtual towns and castles? Amazon has your money-saving back.

The company's Lumberyard game engine now supports a full text-to-speech pipeline in its 1.11 version, which is now live for any of its developers. A demonstration video shows how built-in tools allow game developers to attach text to any interaction in a game, which can be spoken in one of 50 "voices" in 24 different languages. What's more, the engine's toolset will also automatically render a lip-synced animation for any voiced 3D characters in your game project.

Amazon Lumberyard creators demonstrate the engine's new text-to-speech pipeline.

Amazon's brief demo video of the feature only includes a select few voice samples and a very brief demonstration of the lip sync feature, which looks serviceable but limited. (For a comparison point, it looks about as so-so as, say, the system in 2011's Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim.) In the case of the latter, Amazon showed a character with separately animated facial and eye systems, which may obscure Lumberyard's automatic lip-sync capabilities.

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Lenovo Miix 520 2-in-1 tablet with Kaby Lake-R is now available

The Lenovo Miix 520 is a tablet with a 12.2 inch full HD display, a detachable keyboard, and support for pen input. It’s also one of the first 2-in-1 tablets to feature an 8th-gen Intel Core Kaby Lake-R quad-core processor. Lenovo unveiled the ne…

The Lenovo Miix 520 is a tablet with a 12.2 inch full HD display, a detachable keyboard, and support for pen input. It’s also one of the first 2-in-1 tablets to feature an 8th-gen Intel Core Kaby Lake-R quad-core processor. Lenovo unveiled the new tablet in August, and now it’s up for order in the […]

Lenovo Miix 520 2-in-1 tablet with Kaby Lake-R is now available is a post from: Liliputing

Apple is working on an AR headset with a new OS, report says

The project is one of many at a thriving AR group called T288 internally.

Bloomberg reported today that Apple is working on an augmented reality headset that it hopes to bring to market in 2020. The headset would feature its own display rather than relying on an iPhone, and it would run a new spin-off from iOS in the vein of watchOS or tvOS, currently called rOS internally, for "reality operating system."

The project is one of many AR-related initiatives that fall under the internal code name T288, all made by a team of "several hundred engineers" led by former Dolby Labs engineering head Mike Rockwell. Earlier this year, Apple hired an accomplished VR and AR researcher named Doug Bowman from Virginia Tech, too. The team has already produced ARKit, a software development toolkit for iOS that takes care of a lot of the heavy lifting for third-party developers who want to make AR apps.

In fact, the same team is also working on a new version of ARKit that would add persistence tracking features and lay better groundwork for multiplayer AR experiences and games.

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Call of Duty: WWII review—A rearguard action

Stripping out years of feature creep, but doesn’t have anything to replace it.

Enlarge / Setting all else aside, the game is usually nice to look at.

Call of Duty: WWII certainly has some interesting timing. It has the dubious duty of returning the landmark first-person series to its titular roots at a time when any game centered on fascism, nationalism, and especially Nazism is under extra scrutiny. And it just so happened to release a week after another game dealt with that same subject matter head-on.

The change in setting follows the powerfully negative reaction to last year's spacey Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare, with World War II representing a hard return to the series' slightly less bombastic roots. There are no spaceships, powered exoskeletons, robots, or drones in WWII. There's no wall-running or double-jumping. There are just guns and the people who hold and shoot them.

That ends up being just the start of the game's problems, though. As much as WWII peels away at the bloat surrounding the long-running series, it doesn't really replace it. Its campaign starts with the US invasion of Normandy and hits every other European theatre cliché from there. It strikes those clichés so sharply on the nose that their own mother wouldn't recognize them (even with the aid of the same Band of Brothers DVD box set the developers seemed to use for reference).

Deja vu is a French phrase

Your primary playable character is "Texas farmboy" Red Daniels, who just wants to be a hero and clings to a photo of his girl back home. His commanding officer is a shady jerk who made a mysterious, questionable decision with his last platoon. At some point your squad finds civilians but can't decide what to do with them. You snipe some people from a church bell tower. If none of this is familiar, may I suggest one of the millions of pieces of media about World War II?

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Cryptojacking craze that drains your CPU now done by 2,500 sites

Android apps with millions of Google Play downloads also crash the party.

Enlarge / A music streaming site that participated in Coinhive crypto mining maxes out the visitor's CPU. (credit: Malwarebytes)

A researcher has documented almost 2,500 sites that are actively running cryptocurrency mining code in the browsers of unsuspecting visitors, a finding that suggests the unethical and possibly illegal practice has only picked up steam since it came to light a few weeks ago.

Willem de Groot, an independent security researcher who reported the findings Tuesday, told Ars that he believes all of the 2,496 sites he tracked are running out-of-date software with known security vulnerabilities that have been exploited to give attackers control. Attackers, he said, then used their access to add code that surreptitiously harnesses the CPUs and electricity of visitors to generate the digital currency known as Monero. About 80 percent of those sites, he added, also contain other types of malware that can steal visitors' payment card details.

"Apparently, cyberthieves are squeezing every penny out of their confiscated assets," he said.

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Perbix: Tesla kauft seinen Roboterhersteller

Der derzeit gebeutelte Elektroauto-Hersteller Tesla hat Perbix übernommen. Das Unternehmen hat Roboter-Montagebänder entwickelt, die von Tesla bereits eingesetzt werden. Die Gründe will Tesla lieber nicht nennen. (Tesla, Elektroauto)

Der derzeit gebeutelte Elektroauto-Hersteller Tesla hat Perbix übernommen. Das Unternehmen hat Roboter-Montagebänder entwickelt, die von Tesla bereits eingesetzt werden. Die Gründe will Tesla lieber nicht nennen. (Tesla, Elektroauto)

Russia Plans Instant Movie Pirate Site Blockades, Without Court Order

The Russian Ministry of Culture has tabled a new proposal that will allow filmmakers to have pirate sites blocked within 24 hours, without a court order. Officials say that new measures are needed to better protect the revenues of the local movie industry. Interestingly, the plan applies only to local content so major Hollywood productions are not covered.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

A decade ago online pirates had more or less free rein in Russia, but much has changed in recent years.

With the introduction of several new laws, the country has been very aggressive in its anti-piracy approach, outpacing the United States and other western countries in several key areas.

At the center of many of these efforts is Rozcomnadzor. The controversial Russian Government body is responsible for managing web-blockades against pirate portals and other disruptive sites, which are censored on a broad scale.

In addition to regular pirate sites, Rozcomnadzor also has the power to block their proxies and mirrors, and even VPN services which can be used to circumvent these measures. However, according to a recent proposal from the Russian government, this is not enough.

A new amendment that that was published by the Ministry of Culture proposes to allow for near-instant pirate site blockades to protect the local movie industry, Vedomosti reports.

Russian officials state that people often skip a visit to the movie theater when a pirated copy is available, depriving the makers of a crucial source of income. While filmmakers and other copyright holders can already report infringing sites, it’s a relatively slow process.

At the moment, website owners are given three days to remove infringing content before any action is taken. Under the new proposal, site blockades would be implemented less than 24 hours after Rozcomnadzor is alerted. Website owners will not get the chance to remove the infringing content and a court order isn’t required either.

Vladimir Medinsky, Russia’s Minister of Culture, has been a proponent of such pre-judicial blockades for a while, but his previous proposals didn’t receive support in the State Duma.

The new blocking plans go further than any of the previous legislation, but they will only apply to movies that have “a national film certificate” from Russian authorities, as HWR points out. This doesn’t cover any Hollywood movies, which typically top the local box office.

Hollywood’s industry group MPAA is not going to appreciate being left out, but its critique isn’t new. Despite all the new anti-piracy laws, the group is generally critical of Russia’s copyright enforcement policies.

“Russia needs to increase its enforcement activity well beyond current levels to provide adequate and effective enforcement of IPR violations, including the imposition of criminal deterrent penalties,” the MPAA wrote in its recent trade barriers report.

That said, the group was positive about the new law that allows rightsholders to have proxy sites and mirrors banned.

“The recently-enacted amendment to the Anti-Piracy law should constrain the ability of wrongdoers to simply modify their internet sites and continue to operate in violation of the law,” the MPAA added.

From a Hollywood perspective, it certainly beats blocking no sites at all, which is largely the case in the US at the moment.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN discounts, offers and coupons

As epidemic rages, ER study finds opioids no better than Advil and Tylenol

Opioids currently only suggested for acute pain, but they may not even be best for that.

Enlarge (credit: Getty | Roberto Machado Noa )

The easiest way to avoid getting hooked on opioids may be to never take them in the first place. After all, an initial prescription of just a few days' worth of pills can trap patients into using the highly addictive, often deadly drugs for a year or more. But despite the dangers, many patients don’t have the luxury of passing on potent pain killers—for instance, those stumbling into a hospital emergency room with a broken or badly bloodied limb.

At least, that’s what doctors assumed.

In a randomized, double-blind clinical trial—the gold standard of trials—a combination of ibuprofen (Advil) and acetaminophen (Tylenol) was just as effective at treating patients with acute pain in an extremity as three other pain-killer combinations containing opioids. The authors of the study, which was published Tuesday in JAMA, suggest that emergency room doctors may be able to simply skip the opioids during and after urgent treatment.

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Piaggio: Erste Elektrovespa kommt nächstes Jahr

Piaggos “Kunstwerk”, ein Elektroroller, braucht Zeit. Die italienische Marke hatte zwar schon im letzten Jahr ein Konzept angekündigt, doch dann wurde es ruhig. Nun hofften viele, dass jetzt eine E-Vespa kommt, doch daraus wird erst 2018 etwas. (Elektr…

Piaggos "Kunstwerk", ein Elektroroller, braucht Zeit. Die italienische Marke hatte zwar schon im letzten Jahr ein Konzept angekündigt, doch dann wurde es ruhig. Nun hofften viele, dass jetzt eine E-Vespa kommt, doch daraus wird erst 2018 etwas. (Elektroauto, Technologie)