Samsung is offering same-day repairs for busted Galaxy phones across the US

Partnership will cover “more than 300” locations in US; nearly 200 more planned.

Enlarge / The Galaxy S9(+) looks a lot like the S8. (credit: Ron Amadeo)

Samsung wants to make it easier to get your broken Galaxy phone fixed. The electronics maker on Wednesday announced that it is partnering with uBreakiFix, an independent repair chain, to bring same-day, in-person repair service for more users of Galaxy handsets in the US.

The partnership goes into effect on Thursday, one day before Samsung’s new Galaxy S9 phone formally starts shipping. Samsung says the program will cover “more than 300” authorized service locations in the US, which are said to reach “the majority of the continental US population, within a 30-mile radius.” uBreakiFix’s website says the company runs just under 380 stores across the country. Samsung and uBreakiFix say they plan to add “nearly 200” more authorized locations by early 2019.

The companies say they will welcome walk-in customers in addition to those who schedule an appointment online for free in-warranty repairs. Samsung says “most repairs” will be completed in two hours or less. Samsung typically puts a one-year manufacturer’s warranty on its Galaxy flagships. The company says out-of-warranty issues like liquid damage and corrosion won’t be eligible for same-day service but that other out-of-warranty damages, like cracked screens, can still be fixed at a uBreakiFix store. It won’t be free in that case, of course, but Samsung says all repairs from an authorized uBreakiFix store will be under warranty for at least 90 days.

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Kite modular DIY smartphone kit heading to Kickstarter soon

Have a hard time finding a smartphone with just the features you need and none of the ones you don’t? If you could build your own phone then you might have a bit more control over choosing the hardware you do and don’t need… and that’s sort of what the…

Have a hard time finding a smartphone with just the features you need and none of the ones you don’t? If you could build your own phone then you might have a bit more control over choosing the hardware you do and don’t need… and that’s sort of what the upcoming Kite phone could let […]

The post Kite modular DIY smartphone kit heading to Kickstarter soon appeared first on Liliputing.

SEC charges Theranos with “massive fraud,” CEO Holmes stripped of control

Holmes will pay $500,000 penalty and return 18.9 million shares.

Enlarge / Founder & CEO of Theranos, Elizabeth Holmes. (credit: Getty | Gilbert Carrasquillo)

The once-darling Silicon Valley start-up that promised to revolutionize the blood-testing industry and fetched a valuation of $9 billion may have finally been dealt a deathblow.

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday charged Theranos Inc., its founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes, and former President Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani with “massive fraud” after a lengthy investigation. The SEC alleges that they raised $700 million in investments by orchestrating an “elaborate, years-long fraud in which they exaggerated or made false statements about the company’s technology, business, and financial performance.”

Without admitting or denying wrongdoing, Theranos and Holmes have agreed to settle the charges. As part of the settlement, Holmes will: pay a $500,000 penalty; be barred from serving as a director or officer of a public company for 10 years; return her remaining 18.9 million shares obtained during the alleged fraud; and relinquish her voting control of Theranos. If Theranos is sold or liquidated, Holmes will not profit until more than $750 million is returned to allegedly defrauded investors and other shareholders.

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Raspberry Pi 3 B+ has faster CPU, Wi-Fi, and easier compliance testing

Keeps the same form factor and $35 price.

Raspberry Pi Foundation

The Raspberry Pi Foundation has announced a new version of its modular compute platform: the Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+.

The B+ has the same form factor and dimensions as the Pi 2 B and Pi 3 B, making it a drop-in replacement but with a better processor and connectivity. Compared to the Pi 3 B, the B+ adds many hundreds of MHz—it runs its quad core 64-bit Cortex-A53 processor at 1.4GHz, up from 1.2GHz—along with dual band 2.4/5GHz 802.11b/g/n/ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.2, up from 2.4GHz and Bluetooth 4.1.

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Cloudflare’s Cache Can ‘Substantially Assist’ Copyright Infringers, Court Rules

Cloudflare has suffered a setback in the piracy liability case filed against it by adult publisher ALS Scan. A federal court in California ruled that the CDN provider can substantially assist copyright infringements by hosting cached copies of files. Whether Cloudflare did this and if it’s indeed liable, is now a matter for a jury to decide.

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

As one of the leading CDN and DDoS protection services, Cloudflare is used by millions of websites across the globe.

This includes thousands of “pirate” sites, including the likes of The Pirate Bay, which rely on the U.S.-based company to keep server loads down.

Many rightsholders have complained about Cloudflare’s involvement with these sites and in 2016 adult entertainment publisher ALS Scan took it a step further by dragging the company to court.

ALS accused the CDN service of various types of copyright infringement, noting that several customers used Cloudflare’s servers to distribute pirated content. While Cloudflare managed to have several counts dismissed, the accusation of contributory copyright infringement remains.

With the case heading to trial, both sides have submitted motions for partial summary judgment on this contributory infringement claim. This week California District Court Judge George Wu ruled on the matter, denying the CDN provider’s motion in its entirety.

One of Cloudflare’s arguments was that it did not substantially assist copyright infringements because the sites would remain online even if they were terminated from the service. It can’t end the infringements entirely on its own, the company argued.

The Court disagreed with this assessment, noting that Cloudflare’s cache can be seen as a substantial infringement by itself, which is something the company has control over.

“First of all, as to the infringements that are the cache copies, Cloudflare does appear to have the master switch,” Judge Wu writes.

“Second of all, just because the infringing images will remain online, does not mean the assistance is insubstantial. If that were true, then liability based on server space would rely on whether or not an infringing site had, or could acquire a backup server.”

Cloudflare also stressed that there are no simple measures it could take in response to alleged copyright infringements. Removing a cached copy based on a takedown notice is not an option, the company argued, as that leaves sites and their users vulnerable to malicious attacks.

Judge Wu didn’t deny that terminating service to sites such as ‘bestofsexpics.com and cumonmy.com’ could cause security issues but added that this doesn’t mean that it’s okay for Cloudflare to support illegal activity.

“[I]f Cloudflare’s logic were accepted, there would be no web content too illegal, or dangerous, to justify termination of its services. While Cloudflare may do amazing things for internet security, the Court would have a hard time accepting that Cloudflare’s security features give it license to assist in any online activity,” Judge Wu writes.

From the order

Moving on to ALS’ motion, which was also denied in part, the Court brings more bad news for Cloudflare. While the CDN provider keeps its safe harbor defense at trial, the Court ruled that the existence of cache copies can be sufficient to prove that Cloudflare assisted in the alleged copyright infringements.

“The Court would find that, as a legal matter, Cloudflare’s CDN Network, to the extent it is shown to have created, stored, and delivered cache copies of infringing images, substantially assisted in infringement,” the order reads.

“The reason is straightforward: without Cloudflare’s services those cache copies would not have been created and served to end users,’ a footnote clarifies.

The order doesn’t draw any conclusions about actual infringements. However, if ALS can prove to the jury that specific images were in Cloudflare’s cache, without permission, the “substantial assistance” element required for contributory liability is established.

If that happens, the only remaining element at trial is whether Cloudflare was aware of these infringements, which is where the takedown notices would come in.

The case will soon be in the hands of the jury and can still go in either direction. However, the order puts Cloudflare at a disadvantage as it can no longer argue that cached copies of infringing content by themselves are non-infringing. This will obviously be a concerns to other CDN providers as well, which makes this a landmark case.

A copy of Judge Wu’s ruling, obtained by TorrentFreak, is available here (pdf).

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

Senior Equifax executive charged with insider trading

CIO allegedly sold $1 million worth of stock 10 days before public learned of breach.

Enlarge / A monitor displays Equifax Inc. signage on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on Friday, September 15, 2017. (credit: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Federal authorities have charged a senior Equifax executive with insider trading for allegedly selling almost $1 million worth of company stock 10 days before officials disclosed a website hack that exposed sensitive information for more than 143 million US consumers.

Jun Ying was CIO of Equifax's United States Information Systems business unit in the months leading up to Equifax's bombshell announcement on September 7 that the breach exposed Social Security numbers, birth dates, and other sensitive data for as many as 143 million people. According to a complaint filed Wednesday by the US Securities and Exchange Commission, Ying's first indication his employer had been breached came on August 25 when he and colleagues received an email alerting them to a "very large breach opportunity" that would require additional capacity from IT systems to process. To keep the Equifax breach confidential, the email and subsequent discussions didn't name Equifax as the victim and instead suggested it involved an Equifax client.

Putting 2 and 2 together

Ying only needed a few hours, however, to suspect his employer was the one that had been breached, prosecutors said. At 5:27 that afternoon, after speaking privately with the CIO of the main Equifax company, Ying allegedly sent a text message to one of his employees that read: "On the phone with [global CIO]. Sounds bad. We may be the one breached... Starting to put 2 and 2 together."

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New report highlights limitations of Cruise self-driving cars

“Cruise cars frequently swerve and hesitate,” according to one insider.

Enlarge (credit: GM)

Cruise, the driverless car startup that's now a subsidiary of General Motors, has announced plans to launch a fully driverless taxi service by the end of next year. But a new report from The Information suggests that the company still needs to make a lot of progress to hit this ambitious target.

In recent months, Cruise has been ramping up testing efforts in a roughly 20-square-mile area of downtown San Francisco. Sources familiar with that testing effort told The Information's Amir Efrati that Cruise vehicles still had significant limitations.

"Cruise cars frequently swerve and hesitate," Efrati reports. "They sometimes slow down or stop if they see a bush on the side of a street or a lane-dividing pole, mistaking it for an object in their path." In one case, Efrati says, Cruise employees trimmed a bush ahead of a demonstration for journalists to make sure the car wouldn't swerve while driving past it.

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The new Firefox lets you stop websites from asking to send you notifications

The update also includes performance updates and screenshot features.

Enlarge (credit: Mozilla)

The Mozilla Foundation released a new version of Firefox this week—release number 59. It treads further down the performance improvement path that November's Quantum release began, but its most interesting feature is a quality-of-life one: Firefox 59 users can prevent some websites from popping up requests to send notifications to your device or from requesting to use your camera unexpectedly.

Specifically, the update notes say:

Added settings in about:preferences to stop websites from asking to send notifications or access your device's camera, microphone, and location, while still allowing trusted websites to use these features

Numerous websites, especially news sites and other publishers, request to send these notifications so the notification center of, say, your Mac will be filled with news stories with enticing headlines for you to click, driving more traffic. It's annoying, and it muddies the waters of the Web browser's user experience. You can add trusted websites as exceptions, but all such requests will be blocked otherwise.

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The traffic signals in Washington, DC, can now talk to your car—if it’s an Audi

Vehicle-to-infrastructure communication comes to the nation’s capital.

Enlarge (credit: Audi)

On Wednesday, Audi announced that the traffic lights in Washington, DC, can now communicate with the company's cars. The nation's capital joins Las Vegas, Nevada; Dallas and Houston, Texas; the California cities of Palo Alto and Arcadia; Denver, Colorado; and Portland, Oregon, as locations where Audi vehicles equipped with the company's Connect Prime service will be able to tell drivers how long they have to wait for that red light to turn green.

The feature is called Traffic Light Information, and we first explored it when it was rolled out to Las Vegas in 2016. Briefly, Audi has been working with Traffic Technology Services to connect municipalities' traffic management systems with vehicles via 4G LTE. If an equipped vehicle is waiting at a red light, the car's instrument cluster will let the driver know how long it will be before the light changes.

"This initiative represents the kind of innovation that is critical for us to advance the traffic safety goals of Vision Zero," said DC Mayor Muriel Bowser. "We look forward to building on this and similar partnerships as we continue to build a safer, stronger, and smarter DC." More than 600 DC intersections will communicate with Traffic Light Information, adding to roughly 1,000 intersections in the seven other cities that are also covered.

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Skyrim VR is coming to PC, and it marks a Bethesda first: Oculus approval

Follows Skyrim VR‘s launch on PlayStation VR last holiday season.

Bethesda's promised trilogy of virtual reality releases in 2017 actually came to fruition, with the company's Doom, Fallout, and Elder Scrolls series each getting a VR port by year's end. This release schedule, unfortunately, came with one caveat: in Skyrim VR's case, that version would be limited to a PlayStation VR launch as opposed to a more modular release on powerful gaming PCs.

That situation changes next month. On Wednesday, Bethesda formally announced the April 3 launch of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim VR for SteamVR on Windows PCs.

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