A packed grid of prototypes battles it at a record-breaking Daytona 24-hour race

Megastars from F1, IndyCar, and the world of racing gathered in Florida this weekend.

Brian Cleary/Getty Images

This weekend, the cream of the racing world gathered in Daytona Beach, Florida, to kick off the 2018 racing season at the Rolex 24. It was a grid the likes of which we hadn't seen in a long time. Veteran megastars from the worlds of Formula 1 and IndyCar, rising young hotshots making their names in GP2 and Formula E, and true talents from endurance racing came together in a field of 20 prototypes and 30 GT cars to fight for supremacy over 24 hours on the banking and infield at Daytona International Speedway.

When the checkered flag waved on Sunday afternoon, the winning car—the #5 Mustang Sampling Cadillac DPi-V.R of Joao Barbosa, Filipe Albuquerque, and Christian Fittipaldi had covered a record-breaking distance: 808 laps and 2,876.48 miles (4,629.2km). Such a furious pace is unusual for the Rolex 24; mixed grids and the endurance format often breed incidents and lots of yellow-flag running behind a safety car. But 2018 wasn't like that. There was drama a-plenty, and even some heavy rainfall, but only a handful of cautions made this year a 24-hour sprint for the finish and a sign that, while other racing series might have their problems, the IMSA WeatherTech Sportscar Championship is definitely one to keep an eye on this year.

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Udemy Targets ‘Pirate’ Site Giving Away its Paid Courses For Free

Online learning platform Udemy is taking on FreeTutorials.us, a site making available a wide range of paid courses and tutorials for free. A California court has ordered Cloudflare to hand over all the information it has on FreeTutorials’ operators but the site says it will continue its mission to provide free education for everyone.

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

While there’s no shortage of people who advocate free sharing of movies and music, passions are often raised when it comes to the availability of educational information.

Significant numbers of people believe that learning should be open to all and that texts and associated materials shouldn’t be locked away by copyright holders trying to monetize knowledge. Of course, people who make a living creating learning materials see the position rather differently.

A clash of these ideals is brewing in the United States where online learning platform Udemy has been trying to have some of its courses taken down from FreeTutorials.us, a site that makes available premium tutorials and other learning materials for free.

Early December 2017, counsel acting for Udemy and a number of its individual and corporate instructors (Maximilian Schwarzmüller, Academind GmbH, Peter Dalmaris, Futureshock Enterprises, Jose Marcial Portilla, and Pierian Data) wrote to FreeTutorials.us with DMCA takedown notice.

“Pursuant to 17 U.S.C. § 512(c)(3)(A) of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (‘DMCA’), this communication serves as a notice of infringement and request for removal of certain web content available on freetutorials.us,” the letter reads.

“I hereby request that you remove or disable access to the material listed in Exhibit A in as expedient a fashion as possible. This communication does not constitute a waiver of any right to recover damages incurred by virtue of any such unauthorized activities, and such rights as well as claims for other relief are expressly retained.”

A small sample of Exhibit A

On January 10, 2018, the same law firm wrote to Cloudflare, which provides services to FreeTutorials. The DMCA notice asked Cloudflare to disable access to the same set of infringing content listed above.

It seems likely that whatever happened next wasn’t to Udemy’s satisfaction. On January 16, an attorney from the same law firm filed a DMCA subpoena at a district court in California. A DMCA subpoena can enable a copyright holder to obtain the identity of an alleged infringer without having to file a lawsuit and without needing a signature from a judge.

The subpoena was directed at Cloudflare, which provides services to FreeTutorials. The company was ordered to hand over “all identifying information identifying the owner, operator and/or contact person(s) associated with the domain www.freetutorials.us, including but not limited to name(s), address(es), telephone number(s), email address(es), Internet protocol connection records, administrative records and billing records from the time the account was established to the present.”

On January 26, the date by which Cloudflare was ordered to hand over the information, Cloudflare wrote to FreeTutorials with a somewhat late-in-the-day notification.

“We received the attached subpoena regarding freetutorials.us, a domain managed through your Cloudflare account. The subpoena requires us to provide information in our systems related to this website,” the company wrote.

“We have determined that this is a valid subpoena, and we are required to provide the requested information. In accordance with our Privacy Policy, we are informing you before we provide any of the requested subscriber information. We plan to turn over documents in response to the subpoena on January 26th, 2018, unless you intervene in the case.”

With that deadline passing last Friday, it’s safe to say that Cloudflare has complied with the subpoena as the law requires. However, TorrentFreak spoke with FreeTutorials who told us that the company doesn’t hold anything useful on them.

“No, they have nothing,” the team explained.

Noting that they’ll soon dispense with the services of Cloudflare, the team confirmed that they had received emails from Udemy and its instructors but hadn’t done a lot in response.

“How about a ‘NO’? was our answer to all the DMCA takedown requests from Udemy and its Instructors,” they added.

FreeTutorials (FTU) are affiliated with FreeCoursesOnline (FCO) and seem passionate about what they do. In common with others who distribute learning materials online, they express a belief in free education for all, irrespective of financial resources.

“We, FTU and FCO, are a group of seven members assorted as a team from different countries and cities. We are JN, SRZ aka SunRiseZone, Letap, Lihua Google Drive, Kaya, Zinnia, Faiz MeemBazooka,” a spokesperson revealed.

“We’re all members and colleagues and we also have our own daily work and business stuff to do. We have been through that phase of life when we didn’t have enough money to buy books and get tuition or even apply for a good course that we always wanted to have, so FTU & FCO are just our vision to provide Free Education For Everyone.

“We would love to change our priorities towards our current and future projects, only if we manage to get some faithful FTU’ers to join in and help us to grow together and make FTU a place it should be.”

TorrentFreak requested comment from Udemy but at the time of publication, we were yet to hear back. However, we did manage to get in touch with Jonathan Levi, an Udemy instructor who sent this takedown notice to the site in October 2017:

“I’m writing to you on behalf of SuperHuman Enterprises, LLC. You are in violation of our copyright, using our images, and linking to pirated copies of our courses. Remove them IMMEDIATELY or face severe legal action….You have 48 hours to comply,” he wrote, adding:

“And in case you’re going to say I don’t have evidence that I own the files, it’s my fucking face in the videos.”

Levi says that the site had been non-responsive so now things are being taken to the next level.

“They don’t reply to takedowns, so we’ve joined a class action lawsuit against FTU lead by Udemy and a law firm specializing in this type of thing,” Levi concludes.

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

Linuxboot: Google und Facebook ersetzen Server-UEFI mit Linux

Die Arbeiten einzelner Angestellter, um proprietäre Firmware gegen freie Software zu ersetzen, bündeln Google und Facebook nun in dem Projekt Linuxboot unter dem Dach der Linux Foundation. Die beteiligten Entwickler sind bekannte Firmware-Hacker und ar…

Die Arbeiten einzelner Angestellter, um proprietäre Firmware gegen freie Software zu ersetzen, bündeln Google und Facebook nun in dem Projekt Linuxboot unter dem Dach der Linux Foundation. Die beteiligten Entwickler sind bekannte Firmware-Hacker und arbeiten bereits länger an dem Projekt. (Open Source, Instant Messenger)

New Windows patch disables Intel’s bad Spectre microcode fix

Registry keys can also be used to selectively enable or disable the microcode fix.

Enlarge / A closeup shot of an Intel Haswell die, with a pin for size reference. (credit: Intel)

Microsoft has released a new Windows patch to disable Intel's hardware-based mitigation for the Spectre attack due to bugs introduced by Intel's mitigation.

In the wake of the Spectre and Meltdown attacks that use the speculative execution behavior of modern processors to leak sensitive information, Intel released a microcode update that offers operating systems additional controls over the processor's ability to predict branches. When paired with corresponding operating system changes, the extra controls can prevent the unwanted information disclosure.

Unfortunately, Intel discovered earlier this month that the microcode updates are causing machines to reboot. Initially this was confirmed to be the case for Haswell and Broadwell chips; Intel later confirmed that it also applied to Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, Skylake and Kaby Lake parts. Intel's advice was to stop deploying the microcode. A week ago the company said that it had isolated the root cause of reboots, at least for Haswell and Broadwell processors, and that it would soon begin testing a new version.

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NEC LaVie Note Mobile is a 2018 fanless laptop with a 2016 CPU

Japanese device maker NEC is updating its line of thin and light laptops with a new model that sports a 12.5 inch touchscreen display and a fanless design. The new NEC LaVie Note Mobile weighs just about 2 pounds and measures about two thirds of an inc…

Japanese device maker NEC is updating its line of thin and light laptops with a new model that sports a 12.5 inch touchscreen display and a fanless design. The new NEC LaVie Note Mobile weighs just about 2 pounds and measures about two thirds of an inch thick. But while the laptop is brand new, […]

NEC LaVie Note Mobile is a 2018 fanless laptop with a 2016 CPU is a post from: Liliputing

Report: Trump administration considers building a national 5G network (but Trump’s FCC chair isn’t a fan)

US wireless carriers have already started working to build 5G networks which will deliver high-speed mobile broadband to devices including phones, automobiles, and millions of other “Internet of Things” devices in the coming years. But it l…

US wireless carriers have already started working to build 5G networks which will deliver high-speed mobile broadband to devices including phones, automobiles, and millions of other “Internet of Things” devices in the coming years. But it looks like they’re not the only ones thinking about building out a nationwide 5G network. According to a report […]

Report: Trump administration considers building a national 5G network (but Trump’s FCC chair isn’t a fan) is a post from: Liliputing

Cloud Imperium Games: Squadron 42 bekommt Bastelhelden

Die Hauptfigur von Squadron 42 kann der Spieler nach eigenen Wünschen gestalten – mit einem Editor, der demnächst für Star Citizen erscheint: Chefentwickler Chris Roberts hat darüber gesprochen, wie das Einzelspielerabenteuer und die Onlinewelt miteina…

Die Hauptfigur von Squadron 42 kann der Spieler nach eigenen Wünschen gestalten - mit einem Editor, der demnächst für Star Citizen erscheint: Chefentwickler Chris Roberts hat darüber gesprochen, wie das Einzelspielerabenteuer und die Onlinewelt miteinander verbunden werden. (Star Citizen, Games)

Smartphone: Apple soll iPhone-X-Produktion halbieren wollen

Auch aufgrund schlechter Weihnachtsverkäufe soll Apple vorhaben, die geplante Produktionszahl des iPhone X zu halbieren. Zulieferer sollen laut Medienberichten bereits über die Reduzierung benachrichtigt worden sein. (iPhone X, Apple)

Auch aufgrund schlechter Weihnachtsverkäufe soll Apple vorhaben, die geplante Produktionszahl des iPhone X zu halbieren. Zulieferer sollen laut Medienberichten bereits über die Reduzierung benachrichtigt worden sein. (iPhone X, Apple)

FTTB: Keymile will mit G.fast einmal 40 GBit/s bieten

Keymile wird auf der FTTH Conference 2018 vom 13. bis 15. Februar im spanischen Valencia neue Produkte zeigen. Sie sind schon für künftige G.fast-Technik vorbereitet. (G.fast, Glasfaser)

Keymile wird auf der FTTH Conference 2018 vom 13. bis 15. Februar im spanischen Valencia neue Produkte zeigen. Sie sind schon für künftige G.fast-Technik vorbereitet. (G.fast, Glasfaser)

Lobby: Spieleverband BIU schließt sich zum Game zusammen

Der BIU ist rund um die Gamescom recht präsent, ab sofort müssen sich Spieler an einen neuen Namen gewöhnen: Die Interessen der Publisher und Entwickler werden ab sofort in Deutschland vom “Game – Verband der deutschen Games-Branche” vertreten. (Games,…

Der BIU ist rund um die Gamescom recht präsent, ab sofort müssen sich Spieler an einen neuen Namen gewöhnen: Die Interessen der Publisher und Entwickler werden ab sofort in Deutschland vom "Game - Verband der deutschen Games-Branche" vertreten. (Games, Gamescom)