Google Looks to Pre-Emptive Blocking, a.I. For Future of Anti-Piracy

Google is hoping that one day, artificial intelligence will be able to assist the search engine giant in dealing with its piracy problem.For now, Google has revealed a new way to block pirated content in its search index: before they are even indexed!T…



Google is hoping that one day, artificial intelligence will be able to assist the search engine giant in dealing with its piracy problem.

For now, Google has revealed a new way to block pirated content in its search index: before they are even indexed!

Typically, copyright holders identify an infringing link in Google's search results, and they submit this link, along with others to Google via a DMCA take-down notice. Google then processes these notices and removes all valid infringing links. At the time of writing, Google has already processed and removed more than 3.1 billion links in this manner.

In an article written for Landslide, the American Bar Association's publication, Google's copyright counsel Caleb Donaldson revealed that Google are now accepting take-down URLs that haven't even been added to Google's index yet.

"Google has critically expanded notice and takedown in another important way: We accept notices for URLs that are not even in our index in the first place. That way, we can collect information even about pages and domains we have not yet crawled," Donaldson writes.

"We process these URLs as we do the others. Once one of these not-in-index URLs is approved for takedown, we prophylactically block it from appearing in our Search results, and we take all the additional deterrent measures listed above."

This marks a small but significant shift in Google's stance towards piracy take-downs, and is a step closer to the "take down, stay down" favoured by rights-holders.

As for the distinct possibility of a pre-emptive take-down system being abused, Donaldson assures everyone that Google will be one step ahead of any attempts to abuse the "new" system.

"Google will push back if we suspect a notice is mistaken, fraudulent, or abusive, or if we think fair use or another defense excuses that particular use of copyrighted content," states Donaldson.

But all of this could become redundant in a future where artificial intelligence takes over the duty of removing pirated links. Google's Donaldson was vague when it came to how A.I. would be used to help Google take on piracy, but either as a way to process and approve/reject take-down notices, or as a way to proactively seek and destroy pirated content, it will no doubt add to the controversy surround what Google is willing to do to keep piracy out of its search results.

[via TorrentFreak]

Dell launches 2018 XPS 13 laptop (this time it’s even thinner)

Dell helped kick off the thin-bezel laptop trend in 2015 when the company launched a Dell XPS 13 laptop with a 13.3 inch display stuffed into a laptop the size of a typical 11.6 inch model. Since then, Dell has updated the XPS 13 several times by upgra…

Dell helped kick off the thin-bezel laptop trend in 2015 when the company launched a Dell XPS 13 laptop with a 13.3 inch display stuffed into a laptop the size of a typical 11.6 inch model. Since then, Dell has updated the XPS 13 several times by upgrading the processor and other internal components. But […]

Dell launches 2018 XPS 13 laptop (this time it’s even thinner) is a post from: Liliputing

Dell launches 2018 XPS 13 laptop (this time it’s even thinner)

Dell helped kick off the thin-bezel laptop trend in 2015 when the company launched a Dell XPS 13 laptop with a 13.3 inch display stuffed into a laptop the size of a typical 11.6 inch model. Since then, Dell has updated the XPS 13 several times by upgra…

Dell helped kick off the thin-bezel laptop trend in 2015 when the company launched a Dell XPS 13 laptop with a 13.3 inch display stuffed into a laptop the size of a typical 11.6 inch model. Since then, Dell has updated the XPS 13 several times by upgrading the processor and other internal components. But […]

Dell launches 2018 XPS 13 laptop (this time it’s even thinner) is a post from: Liliputing

New white and rose gold Dell XPS 13 laptop features 8th-gen Intel CPUs

The svelte $999 notebook has a new fingerprint sensor, too.

Valentina Palladino

Companies may be producing more premium convertibles than regular laptops, but Dell is giving its less-flexible XPS 13 some love ahead of this year's Consumer Electronics Show. The company announced an updated version of the XPS 13 laptop which features a new white-and-gold finish, a slimmer frame, 8th-generation Intel CPUs, and other upgrades. Dell released the XPS 13 2-in-1 last year, but this is the most significant update the XPS 13 laptop has seen in some time.

The new laptop comes in a black and silver configuration, but the white and rose gold model is totally new for Dell. Over the past year or two, we've seen PC OEMs embrace the lighter side of hardware design with cream and soft gold accents, but Dell has been a holdout until now. The new white and rose gold model features a woven glass palm rest that has a slight texture to it, differentiating it from the black model's smooth palm rest. It's finished with a titanium oxide coating for shine, and the anti-stain coating should protect the palm rest from turning yellow.

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XPS 13 (9370): Dells Ultrabook wird dünner und läuft kürzer

Neues Design mit drei USB-C-Buchsen: Dell verpasst dem XPS 13 die größte Überarbeitung seit Jahren. Klassische Anschlüsse fallen weg, die Akkukapazität schrumpft und das Gerät wird flacher. (Dell XPS 13, USB 3.0)

Neues Design mit drei USB-C-Buchsen: Dell verpasst dem XPS 13 die größte Überarbeitung seit Jahren. Klassische Anschlüsse fallen weg, die Akkukapazität schrumpft und das Gerät wird flacher. (Dell XPS 13, USB 3.0)

Samsung introduces Exynos 9810 processor with AI and multimedia enhancements

Smartphone chips keep getting faster, but it takes more than speed to stand out these days. So Samsung isn’t just talking about how its new Exynos 9810 chip is faster than its predecessors. The company says the new chip also has a faster LTE mode…

Smartphone chips keep getting faster, but it takes more than speed to stand out these days. So Samsung isn’t just talking about how its new Exynos 9810 chip is faster than its predecessors. The company says the new chip also has a faster LTE modem and enhanced support for “deep learning enhanced image processing,” among […]

Samsung introduces Exynos 9810 processor with AI and multimedia enhancements is a post from: Liliputing

It takes 17 hours for an image to burn in on the iPhone X, test shows

Samsung phones didn’t perform as well, but their owners shouldn’t worry either.

Enlarge / The iPhone X's display, with rounded edges and the sensor housing—also called the notch. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Korean tech site and phone marketplace Cetizen tested OLED displays on the iPhone X, the Samsung Galaxy Note 8, and the Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge for 510 hours to measure burn-in as part of its ongoing iPhone X review. In all three cases, maintaining a static image for far longer than a normal use case was necessary to produce noticeable burn-in. The iPhone X took longer to exhibit distracting burn-in than the other two phones.

The site left the phone screens displaying a static image at maximum brightness for the test's entire duration. The iPhone X first showed signs of burn-in at 17 hours, but even then the image retention was not bad enough to be noticeable in normal use. The Galaxy Note 8 took longer to exhibit retention, but by 62 hours it was more significant than what was seen on the iPhone X, such that a general user could identify the burned-in spots on the Note 8 at that time, but not on the iPhone X.

By the end of the 510-hour test, all three phones had very noticeable image retention that could potentially be permanent. Cetizen did not report trying any methods of clearing the image up. In OLED TVs, retention can occur after several hours—especially with things like network logos on broadcast TV, or persistent UI elements in video games—but it is usually easily reversible with the help of image retention remedies included in the TV's software. But the OLED panels in phones are made very differently than those in TVs, so it's unclear how much the retention is reversible in phones. It could vary from device to device.

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“Meltdown” and “Spectre”: Every modern processor has unfixable security flaws

Immediate concern is for Intel chips, but everyone is at risk.

Windows, Linux, and macOS have all received security patches that significantly alter how the operating systems handle virtual memory in order to protect against a hitherto undisclosed flaw. This is more than a little notable; it's been clear that Microsoft and the Linux kernel developers have been informed of some non-public security issue and have been rushing to fix it. But nobody knew quite what the problem was, leading to lots of speculation and experimentation based on pre-releases of the patches.

Now we know what the flaw is. And it's not great news, because there are in fact two related families of flaws with similar impact, and only one of them has any easy fix.

The flaws have been named Meltdown and Spectre. Meltdown was independently discovered by three groups—researchers from the Technical University of Graz in Austria, German security firm Cerberus Security, and Google's Project Zero. Spectre was discovered independently by Project Zero and independent researcher Paul Kocher.

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Intel, AMD, and ARM weigh in on Spectre and Meltdown security vulnerabilities, discovered by Google’s Project Zero

After news broke a little ahead of schedule about a major security vulnerability affecting most Intel processors released in the past decade, Intel issued a brief statement stating, among other things, that it’s not the only company whose product…

After news broke a little ahead of schedule about a major security vulnerability affecting most Intel processors released in the past decade, Intel issued a brief statement stating, among other things, that it’s not the only company whose products are affected. Now more details have been released and it looks like Google’s Project Zero security […]

Intel, AMD, and ARM weigh in on Spectre and Meltdown security vulnerabilities, discovered by Google’s Project Zero is a post from: Liliputing

Tesla Model 3 numbers disappoint again, but Tesla says it’s hit a stride

Company adjusts projection down to 2,500 Model 3s per week in Q1 2018.

Enlarge (credit: Tesla)

In a statement on Wednesday, Tesla said that it had delivered 1,550 Model 3 vehicles in the fourth quarter of 2017. This is a step up from the 260-odd vehicles that had been delivered in Q3 after the delayed model was launched in July, but a significant distance short of what industry-watchers had hoped.

Tesla said in last quarter's financial call that the disappointing Q3 Model 3 production numbers were the result of production bottlenecks caused by a sub-contractor at the Gigafactory, the company's massive battery factory outside of Reno, Nevada. But Tesla CEO Elon Musk said that, by the end of Q1 2018, the company would be churning out Model 3s at a rate of 5,000 cars per week.

In today's statement, however, Tesla adjusted that projection downward.

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