Lebensmittelhandel: Amazon Fresh ist in München verfügbar

Amazon liefert seit dem heutigen Mittwoch auch in München Lebensmittel aus. Damit gibt es Amazon Fresh in drei deutschen Großstädten. Auch in München wird nicht das gesamte Stadtgebiet abgedeckt, die monatlichen Fixkosten sind wie in den anderen Fresh-…

Amazon liefert seit dem heutigen Mittwoch auch in München Lebensmittel aus. Damit gibt es Amazon Fresh in drei deutschen Großstädten. Auch in München wird nicht das gesamte Stadtgebiet abgedeckt, die monatlichen Fixkosten sind wie in den anderen Fresh-Städten. (Amazon Fresh, Amazon)

Sheep View 360: Schafe übernehmen Google Street View

Auf den Färöer-Inseln gibt es wenige Menschen, aber viele Schafe und vor allem unzugängliche Ecken. Nun sind Schafe für Google Street View mit Kameras ausgerüstet worden. (Google Street View, Google)

Auf den Färöer-Inseln gibt es wenige Menschen, aber viele Schafe und vor allem unzugängliche Ecken. Nun sind Schafe für Google Street View mit Kameras ausgerüstet worden. (Google Street View, Google)

Waymo: Am Steuer ist niemand mehr

Waymo hat seinen Taxidienst ohne Taxifahrer gestartet. In Arizona fahren Minivans vom Typ Chrysler Pacifica, die Nutzer autonom zum Ziel bringen. Noch handelt es sich um eine Testphase in einem dünn besiedelten Gebiet, doch der Druck auf das Taxigewerb…

Waymo hat seinen Taxidienst ohne Taxifahrer gestartet. In Arizona fahren Minivans vom Typ Chrysler Pacifica, die Nutzer autonom zum Ziel bringen. Noch handelt es sich um eine Testphase in einem dünn besiedelten Gebiet, doch der Druck auf das Taxigewerbe nimmt zu. (Autonomes Fahren, Technologie)

After admitting to new crime, ex-Secret Service agent sentenced to 2 years

Judge tells Shaun Bridges that his actions are “among the worst of crimes.”

Shaun Bridges was captured by CCTV security cameras, leaving a Secret Service field office with a large bag. The government said the bag may have contained hard drives with keys needed to access his Bitstamp wallet. (credit: US Attorney's Office San Francisco)

SAN FRANCISCO—Former United States Secret Service agent Shaun Bridges was sentenced to an additional two years of prison on Tuesday.

US District Judge Richard Seeborg said that Bridges' totality of crimes and continued dishonesty to the government was a "betrayal of trust" and was "among the worst of crimes."

In August 2017, Bridges pleaded guilty to new counts of money laundering and related forfeiture. In May 2015, Bridges was separately sentenced to 71 months in prison after he stole money from online dealers while investigating Silk Road, a now-defunct Tor-hidden underground website.

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Twitter officially doubles character count, says most 280 testers didn’t use it

Today, you can spell out “two hundred and eighty” and STILL have room to say other stuff.

Enlarge / Now you can pack so much more gibberish into a single tweet. (credit: Twitter / Sam Machkovech)

If you logged into Twitter on Tuesday to rant about the news of the day, from various elections across the United States to the launch of the Xbox One X, you may have noticed some more breathing room in your rants. That's because the social networking service's character limit has now officially doubled for all of its Roman-alphabet users.

A weeks-long test began in late September, allowing select, random users to post 280 characters per tweet instead of the default 140-character limit. (Both classes of users could still save on characters by way of shortened URLs and attached images.) In extending that change to almost all users, Twitter Product Manager Aliza Rosen published a statement that claims, among other things, that the test didn't result in an endless wave of fully packed 280-character posts.

"During the first few days of the test, many people tweeted the full 280 limit because it was new and novel, but soon after behavior normalized," Rosen wrote. "We saw when people needed to use more than 140 characters, they tweeted more easily and more often. But importantly, people tweeted below 140 most of the time, and the brevity of Twitter remained." She then posted separate internal-study articles from Twitter engineers to back up her claims, which included that only two percent of testers' tweets exceeded 190 characters, let alone got near the new 280-character limit.

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Microsoft will have game streaming within 3 years as focus shifts to software

After years of decline, Microsoft plans to invest in first-party game development.

Enlarge / A lot of tech packed into this svelte box. (credit: Kyle Orland)

Microsoft is renewing its focus on Xbox software and services, according to Xbox chief Phil Spencer speaking to Bloomberg.

The company's original ambition for the Xbox One spanned not just gaming but also a wide range of TV and media capabilities, coupled with a Steam-like download-based distribution model. Sony, in contrast, focused squarely on gaming and had somewhat more powerful hardware to boot. The reaction from the gaming community to Microsoft's plans was hostile, and while the company backtracked both on the media focus and the move away from physical media, the Xbox One has consistently trailed the PlayStation 4's sales.

Microsoft's position was further weakened by a shortage of first-party, exclusive titles. As Nintendo has demonstrated over the years, a solid stable of first-party titles can go a long way toward overcoming hardware weaknesses. But rather than expanding its development efforts, Microsoft has done the reverse: last year it shuttered UK developer Lionhead and Danish developer Press Play.

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Disney forced to backpedal after banning LA Times from Thor screening

LA Times documented lavish election spending to defend Disneyland tax breaks.

Enlarge / Bob Chapek, chairman of Walt Disney Parks and Resorts, shows of plans for Disney's forthcoming Star Wars-themed park in Anaheim. (credit: Joshua Sudock/Disney Parks)

When the Los Angeles Times wrote a two-part exposé about the tax breaks Disneyland gets from the city of Anaheim, California, Disney retaliated by banning Times reporters from screenings of Disney movies like Thor: Ragnarok. But after an outcry by the nation's film critics, Disney is backing down.

“We’ve had productive discussions with the newly installed leadership at The Los Angeles Times regarding our specific concerns, and, as a result, we’ve agreed to restore access to advance screenings for their film critics,” Disney said in a statement—conveniently not mentioning that its films were facing a widespread boycott from film critics.

The dispute began in September, when the LA Times published a story called “Is Disney paying its share in Anaheim?” The piece examined the large tax breaks Disney has gotten from the city of Anaheim in exchange for continuing to invest there. A follow-up looked at how Disney spent heavily in the 2016 election to prevent the election of Disney critics to the Anaheim city council.

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MPAA Warns Australia Not to ‘Mess’ With Fair Use and Geo-Blocking

The MPAA has submitted its 2018 list of foreign trade barriers to the U.S. Government. The document reveals that Hollywood is concerned that Australia is considering implementing fair use exceptions, allowing circumvention of geo-blocking, and expanding safe harbor provisions for online services. In addition, the MPAA notes that stiffer penalties are required to deter piracy.

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

Last year, the Australian Government’s Productivity Commission published a Draft Report on Intellectual Property Arrangements, recommending various amendments to local copyright law.

The Commission suggested allowing the use of VPNs and similar technologies to enable consumers to bypass restrictive geo-blocking. It also tabled proposals to introduce fair use exceptions and to expand safe harbors for online services.

Two months ago the Government responded to these proposals. It promised to expand the safe harbor protections and announced a consultation on fair use, describing the current fair dealing exceptions as restrictive. The Government also noted that circumvention of geo-blocks may be warranted, in some cases.

While the copyright reform plans have been welcomed with wide support from the public and companies such as Google and Wikipedia, there’s also plenty of opposition. From Hollywood, for example, which fears that the changes will set back Australia’s progress to combat piracy.

A few days ago, the MPAA submitted its 2018 list of foreign trade barriers to the U.S. Government. The document in question highlights key copyright challenges in the most crucial markets, Australia included. According to the movie industry group, the tabled proposals are problematic.

“If the Commission’s recommendations were adopted, they could result in legislative changes that undermine the current balance of protection in Australia. These changes could create significant market uncertainty and effectively weaken Australia’s infrastructure for intellectual property protection,” the MPAA writes.

“Of concern is a proposal to introduce a vague and undefined ‘fair use’ exception unmoored from decades of precedent in the United States. Another proposal would expand Australia’s safe harbor regime in piecemeal fashion,” the group adds.

The fair use opposition is noteworthy since the Australian proposal is largely modeled after US law. The MPAA’s comment suggests, however, that this can’t be easily applied to another country, as that would lack the legal finetuning that’s been established in dozens of court cases.

That the MPAA isn’t happy with the expansion of safe harbor protections for online service providers is no surprise. In recent years, copyright holders have often complained that these protections hinder progress on the anti-piracy front, as companies such as Google and Facebook have no incentive to proactively police copyright infringement.

Moving on, the movie industry group highlights that circumvention of geo-blocking for copyrighted content and other protection measures are also controversial topics for Hollywood.

“Still another would allow circumvention of geo-blocking and other technological protection measures. Australia has one of the most vibrant creative economies in the world and its current legal regime has helped the country become the site of major production investments.

“Local policymakers should take care to ensure that Australia’s vibrant market is not inadvertently impaired and that any proposed relaxation of copyright and related rights protection does not violate Australia’s international obligations,” the MPAA adds.

Finally, while it was not included in the commission’s recommendations, the MPAA stresses once again that Australia’s anti-camcording laws are not up to par.

Although several camming pirates have been caught in recent years, the punishments don’t meet Hollywood’s standards. For example, in 2012 a man connected to a notorious release group was convicted for illicitly recording 14 audio captures, for which he received an AUS$2,000 fine.

“Australia should adopt anticamcording legislation. While illegal copying is a violation of the Copyright Act, more meaningful deterrent penalties are required,” the MPAA writes. “Such low penalties fail to reflect the devastating impact that this crime has on the film industry.”

The last suggestion has been in the MPAA’s recommendations for several years already, but the group is persistent.

In closing, the MPAA asks the US Government to keep these and other issues in focus during future trade negotiations and policy discussions with Australia and other countries, while thanking it for the critical assistance Hollywood has received over the years.

MPAA’s full submission, which includes many of the recommendations that were made in previous years, is available here (pdf).

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

With deletion of one wallet, $280M in Ethereum wallets gets frozen

Parity multi-signature wallets created since July break, affecting 1M ETH.

Enlarge / What's in your Ethereum wallet? It might not matter right now. (credit: Getty Images)

Digital currencies and the wallets that hold them have become an increasingly attractive target for digital pickpockets, resulting in millions of real dollars' worth of lost currency. A $50 million heist of Ethereum currency last year exploiting weaknesses in the cryptocurrency's underlying software threatened to break the Bitcoin competitor. But a new security bug in a popular Ethereum wallet platform has caused what amounts to a bank freeze on scores of high-value wallets. Today, Parity Technologies Ltd., the developer of cryptographic "wallets" for the digital currencies Bitcoin and Ethereum, announced that an "accidental" triggering of a bug affecting certain Parity wallets had broken them, making it impossible to transfer Ethereum funds out of them.

As a result, 1 million ETH have become frozen in wallets—roughly $280 million (US) worth of digital currency. Of that, about $90 million belongs to Parity founder and former Ethereum core developer Gavin Woods' Initial Coin Offering (ICO) Polkadot, according to Tuur Demeester, editor in chief at Adamant Research.

The bug specifically affects multi-signature wallets created with a digital contract after July 20. Multi-signature wallets have cryptographic security measures that require multiple users to sign a transaction in order for it to be processed and approved—an approach that allows for escrow contracts to control payments from accounts belonging to a group.

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CrossOver on Chrome OS Beta app lets you run (some) Windows apps on (some) Chromebooks

CrossOver is a software tool that lets you run some Windows applications on non-Windows operating systems, including GNU/Linux and macOS. Last year the developers behind CrossOver launched the first technical preview for Android and Chrome OS. Now Cros…

CrossOver is a software tool that lets you run some Windows applications on non-Windows operating systems, including GNU/Linux and macOS. Last year the developers behind CrossOver launched the first technical preview for Android and Chrome OS. Now CrossOver on Chrome OS Beta is available from the Google Play Store for anyone who wants to try […]

CrossOver on Chrome OS Beta app lets you run (some) Windows apps on (some) Chromebooks is a post from: Liliputing