FCC tries to make Miami pirate radio station walk the plank

$144,000 fine for ignoring all requests to stop.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Priscila Zambotto)

"Pirate radio" in 2017 takes many forms, but here's one: a north Miami couple hosting a transmitter in their backyard shed while a DJ's signal is piped in over the Internet and promoted on Facebook—even after multiple warnings from the government and a gear seizure by the US Marshals. Oh—did I mention the $144,344 fine? Not that anyone's likely to pay it.

Welcome to 90.1 MHz, "Radio Touche Douce," a Haitian music station appearing to be so obviously illegal that it even has the ability to unite the current fractious set of FCC commissioners. It's not even a secret; as the Miami Herald notes, the station is "the pulse of the Haitian music industry in Miami, organizing some of the most popular big-ticket parties while promoting bands and guiding konpa music fans to the next hit." But that doesn't mean it has been easy to shut down.

Here, in statements pulled right from FCC documents, is the story of how Radio Touche Douce has operated for years right under the nose of government investigators—and how the FCC has now upped the ante.

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Some of the best Amazon Digital Day deals (12-29-2017)

Amazon’s second annual Digital Day begins at midnight Eastern Time on December 29th, 2017. Instead of marking down prices on physical items like Kindle and Fire devices, the internet retailer will be offering discounts on more than 5,000 apps, ga…

Amazon’s second annual Digital Day begins at midnight Eastern Time on December 29th, 2017. Instead of marking down prices on physical items like Kindle and Fire devices, the internet retailer will be offering discounts on more than 5,000 apps, games, movies, TV shows, and eBooks. The full list of items on sale won’t be available […]

Some of the best Amazon Digital Day deals (12-29-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Some of the best Amazon Digital Day deals (12-29-2017)

Amazon’s second annual Digital Day begins at midnight Eastern Time on December 29th, 2017. Instead of marking down prices on physical items like Kindle and Fire devices, the internet retailer will be offering discounts on more than 5,000 apps, ga…

Amazon’s second annual Digital Day begins at midnight Eastern Time on December 29th, 2017. Instead of marking down prices on physical items like Kindle and Fire devices, the internet retailer will be offering discounts on more than 5,000 apps, games, movies, TV shows, and eBooks. The full list of items on sale won’t be available […]

Some of the best Amazon Digital Day deals (12-29-2017) is a post from: Liliputing

Dealmaster: Get a pair of Sennheiser noise-cancelling headphones for $200

Plus deals on Sonos speakers, Dell and Lenovo laptops, TurboTax, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our friends at TechBargains, the Dealmaster is checking in from his cozy vacation spot to bring you another round of discounts. While the deals have slowed a bit now that Christmas has come and gone, there are still a handful of bargains worth noting.

Those include the lowest price we've seen on Amazon for Sennheiser's wireless, on-ear, noise-cancelling HD1 headphones, as well as discounts on Sonos speakers, several Dell laptops, and Amazon Echo devices. You can have a look at the full list below.

(credit: TechBargains)

Note: Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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Run Android apps on Chromebooks without pausing when they lose focus (beta)

Over the past few years Google has rolled out the ability to run Android apps on dozens of Chromebooks. But the feature’s still in beta, and there are some weird quirks: for example, while you can open multiple Android apps at once, they tend to …

Over the past few years Google has rolled out the ability to run Android apps on dozens of Chromebooks. But the feature’s still in beta, and there are some weird quirks: for example, while you can open multiple Android apps at once, they tend to freeze as soon as you click on a different window, […]

Run Android apps on Chromebooks without pausing when they lose focus (beta) is a post from: Liliputing

Gigawatts of planned natural gas plants despite low electricity prices

Especially in the northeast, shale proximity balances out low electricity prices.

Enlarge / SMITH TOWNSHIP, PENNSYLVANIA - OCTOBER 25: A view from private farmland shows a natural gas cryogenic processing plant under construction October 25, 2017 in Smith Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania. The cryogenic plant is owned by Energy Transfer Partners, ETP, one of the nation's largest natural gas and propane companies. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images) (credit: Getty Images)

Despite plummeting wholesale electricity prices in some areas of the US as well as essentially flat electricity demand in recent years, natural gas and renewable capacity is still being built.

In 2016, the Energy Information Agency (EIA) notes, natural gas-fired electric generation in the US increased by 3.4 percent; non-hydroelectric renewables like wind, solar, biomass, and geothermal increased by 15.7 percent; and conventional hydroelectric power grew by 7.5 percent. Coal electric generation, on the other hand, fell by 8.4 percent in 2016.

Those numbers only reflect the share of electricity generated by a certain type of fuel, not necessarily how many new power plants came online in 2016. But the natural gas expansion looks like it’s still gaining ground in certain areas of the country. According to The Wall Street Journal, at least two power plant companies—Invenergy and Calpine—are going all-out on building natural gas capacity in Pennsylvania and Ohio. Between those two states, Invenergy and Calpine are set to increase natural gas capacity by 8.6 gigawatts between 2018 and 2020.

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There’s still time to donate for a chance to win our Charity Sweepstakes

Help us set a new giving record and maybe win some of our swag.

In addition to that sweet mixtape, here are just some of the prizes you could win by entering this year’s sweepstakes.

As we transition from the Christmas season to the New Year's season, more than 300 Ars readers have already teamed up to give nearly $19,000 to the EFF and/or Child's Play in this year's Ars Technica Charity Drive Sweepstakes.

That means we're still a long way off from the more than $38,000 we raised last year. Luckily for those charities, there's still time for our readers to dig deep and set a new giving record for the site. Luckily for you, that also means you still have time to get an entry in for a chance to win a piece of our massive pile o' swag, which we can't keep anyway (no purchase necessary for entry).

If you haven't had a chance to give yet, follow the instructions below to get your donation counted and your entry logged for the sweepstakes. If you have given already, our deepest thanks from everyone here at Ars.

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Bacteria under pressure run reaction in reverse to sequester carbon

An enzyme that normally digests formic acid will happily make it.

Enlarge

Life performs many astonishing feats of chemistry, building complex molecules that can take us years to figure out how to synthesize. And the thermodynamics of these reactions are often fascinating—in many cases, life lives on the edge, at risk of seeing critical reactions bog down and run in reverse.

Now, some researchers have figured out a way to force bacteria to run a chemical reaction in reverse. Rather than breaking down a simple molecule into carbon dioxide, the bacteria will ingest carbon dioxide and spit out formic acid, a chemical that already has lots of uses—and could be used as fuel or to sequester carbon. The secret? Force-feed the bacteria the raw ingredients for the chemical reaction.

Enzymes and catalysis

The proteins that act as enzymes are nothing more than catalysts. The complex three-dimensional shapes of these proteins stabilize intermediate states of chemical reactions, lowering the energy required to reach them. This essentially lowers the energetic hill that has to be climbed to get between a set of reactants and a set of products. But if the overall energy of the reactants and products isn't very different, then that smaller hill will also let things run in the opposite direction: the enzyme will happily form a reaction intermediate from the product and spit out the original reactants.

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Filmmakers Want The Right to Break DRM and Rip Blu-Rays

Breaking DRM or ripping Blu-Rays discs is a crime In the United States. While there are fair use exemptions, these don’t apply to the public at large. Interestingly, filmmakers themselves are now urging the Copyright Office to lift some of the current restrictions, so that they can make the films they want.

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

The major movie studios are doing everything in their power to stop the public from copying films.

While nearly every movie and TV-show leaks on the Internet, these companies still see DRM as a vital tool to prevent piracy from spiraling out of control.

Technically speaking it’s not hard to rip a DVD or Blu-Ray disc nowadays, and the same is true for ripping content from Netflix or YouTube. However, people who do this are breaking the law.

The DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions specifically forbid it. There are some exemptions, for educational use for example, and to allow for other types of fair use, but the line between legal and illegal is not always clear.

Interestingly, filmmakers are not happy with the current law either. They often want to use small pieces of other videos in their films, but under the current exemptions, this is only permitted for documentaries.

The International Documentary Association, Kartemquin Films, Independent Filmmaker Project, University of Film and Video Association and several other organizations hope this will change.

In a comment to the Copyright Office, which is currently considering updates to the exemptions, they argue that all filmmakers should be allowed by break DRM and rip Blu-Rays.

According to the filmmakers, the documentary genre is vaguely defined. This leads to a lot of confusion whether or not the exemptions apply. They, therefore, suggest to apply it to all filmmakers, instead of criminalizing those who don’t identify themselves as documentarians.

“Since 2010, exemptions applicable to documentary filmmaking have been in effect. This exemption has helped many filmmakers, and there has been neither evidence nor any allegation that this exemption has harmed rightsholders in any way.

“There is no reason this would change if the ‘documentary’ limitation were removed. All filmmakers regularly need access to footage on DVDs and without an exemption to DVDs, many non-infringing uses simply cannot be made,” the groups add.

The submission includes letters from several filmmakers who explain why an exemption would be crucial to them.

Filmmakers Steve Boettcher and Mike Trinklein explain that they refrained from making a film how they wanted it to be, fearing legal trouble. Their film included a lot of drama elements and was not a typical documentary.

“Given the significant amount of drama in the film [we are working on], we decided early on that our storytelling toolbox could not include fair use of materials from DVD or Blu-ray, because the exemption did not cover accessing that material for use in a drama,” they write

“Already, we were hindered in our ability to tell these stories. So, there is already a chilling effect in that a drama-heavy documentary might be seen as a drama outright, and thus under a different set of rules.”

Another filmmaker, who wants to remain anonymous, plans on making a hybrid documentary/narrative feature about a famous film duo. Without ripping the clips he needs, this movie is never going to be made.

“I am unsure of whether my project would fall under the exemption because it is a combination of documentary and narrative, and my fear of a lawsuit once my project is publicly viewed and distributed stops me from ripping from these sources.”

These are just two of many examples where filmmakers show that they need to break DRM and rip content to make the work they want.

The MPAA and others have previously argued that these changes are not required. Instead, they pointed out that people could point their cameras or phones at the screen to record something, or use screen capture software.

However, these are not viable alternatives according to the filmmakers, as the quality is inferior. They, therefore, call on the Copyright Office to expand the exemption to cover all films and filmmakers.

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

Apple Lisa source code to be released in 2018

The Apple Lisa computer first hit the streets in 1983 with a list price just shy of $10,000. It had a 5 MHz processor, 1MB of RAM, and a 5MB hard drive. It was also one of the first desktop computers to feature a graphical user interface and it pave th…

The Apple Lisa computer first hit the streets in 1983 with a list price just shy of $10,000. It had a 5 MHz processor, 1MB of RAM, and a 5MB hard drive. It was also one of the first desktop computers to feature a graphical user interface and it pave the way for the much […]

Apple Lisa source code to be released in 2018 is a post from: Liliputing