Trump Promises Copyright Crackdown as DoJ Takes Aim at Streaming Pirates

President Trump says the US is “acting swiftly on intellectual property theft”, noting that the country cannot “allow this to happen as it has for many years.” Coincidentally, or not, a panel in Capitol Hill yesterday discussed the streaming box threat, with the MPAA revealing that the Department of Justice is looking at “a variety of candidates” for criminal action.

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

For the past several years most of the world has been waking up to the streaming piracy phenomenon, with pre-configured set-top boxes making inroads into millions of homes.

While other countries, notably the UK, arrested many individuals while warning of a grave and looming danger, complaints from the United States remained relatively low-key. It was almost as if the stampede towards convenient yet illegal streaming had caught the MPAA and friends by surprise.

In October 2017, things quickly began to change. The Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment sued Georgia-based Tickbox TV, a company selling “fully-loaded” Kodi boxes. In January 2018, the same anti-piracy group targeted Dragon Media, a company in the same line of business.

With this growing type of piracy now firmly on the radar, momentum seems to be building. Yesterday, a panel discussion on the challenges associated with piracy from streaming media boxes took place on Capitol Hill.

Hosted by the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), ‘Unboxing the Piracy Threat of Streaming Media Boxes’ went ahead with some big name speakers in attendance, not least Neil Fried, Senior Vice President, Federal Advocacy and Regulatory Affairs at the MPAA.

ITIF and various industry groups tweeted many interesting comments throughout the event. Kevin Madigan from Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property told the panel that torrent-based content “is becoming obsolete” in an on-demand digital environment that’s switching to streaming-based piracy.

While there’s certainly a transition taking place, 150 million worldwide torrent users would probably argue against the term “obsolete”. Nevertheless, the same terms used to describe torrent sites are now being used to describe players in the streaming field.

“There’s a criminal enterprise going on here that’s stealing content and making a profit,” Fried told those in attendance.

“The piracy activity out there is bad, it’s hurting a lot of economic activity & creators aren’t being compensated for their work,” he added.

Tom Galvin, Executive Director at the Digital Citizens Alliance, was also on the panel. Unsurprisingly, given the organization’s focus on the supposed dangers of piracy, Galvin took the opportunity to underline that position.

“If you go down the piracy road, those boxes aren’t following proper security protocols, there are many malware risks,” he said. It’s a position shared by Fried, who told the panel that “video piracy is the leading source of malware.”

Similar claims were made recently on Safer Internet Day but the facts don’t seem to back up the scare stories. Still, with the “Piracy is Dangerous” strategy already out in the open, the claims aren’t really unexpected.

What might also not come as a surprise is that ACE’s lawsuits against Tickbox and Dragon Media could be just a warm-up for bigger things to come. In the tweet embedded below, Fried can be seen holding a hexagonal-shaped streaming box, warning that the Department of Justice is now looking for candidates for criminal action.

What form this action will take when it arrives isn’t clear but when the DoJ hits targets on home soil, it tends to cherry-pick the most blatant of infringers in order to set an example with reasonably cut-and-dried cases.

Of course, every case can be argued but with hundreds of so-called “Kodi box” sellers active all over the United States, many of them clearly breaking the law as they, in turn, invite their customers to break the law, picking a sitting duck shouldn’t be too difficult.

And then, of course, we come to President Trump. Not usually that vocal on matters of intellectual property and piracy, yesterday – perhaps coincidentally, perhaps not – he suddenly delivered one of his “something is coming” tweets.

Given Trump’s tendency to focus on problems overseas causing issues for companies back home, a comment by Kevin Madigan during the panel yesterday immediately comes to mind.

“To combat piracy abroad, USTR needs to work with the creative industries to improve enforcement and target the source of pirated material,” Madigan said.

Interesting times and much turmoil in the streaming world ahead, it seems.

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

PAL-V: Abheben mit dem Flugauto

Das niederländische Unternehmen PAL-V zeigt in Genf ein Flugauto. Der Gyrocopter mit Heckpropeller kann bis zu 550 Kilometer weit fliegen und danach auf der Straße die Reise fortsetzen. Von Dirk Kunde (Flugauto, Technologie)

Das niederländische Unternehmen PAL-V zeigt in Genf ein Flugauto. Der Gyrocopter mit Heckpropeller kann bis zu 550 Kilometer weit fliegen und danach auf der Straße die Reise fortsetzen. Von Dirk Kunde (Flugauto, Technologie)

Grafikschnittstelle: Vulkan 1.1 unterstützt DRM und Multi-GPU

Mit Vulkan 1.1 hat die Khronos Group eine aktualisierte Grafikschnittstelle vorgestellt. Das API integriert vor allem bisher als Erweiterungen verfügbare Features. (Vulkan, Grafikhardware)

Mit Vulkan 1.1 hat die Khronos Group eine aktualisierte Grafikschnittstelle vorgestellt. Das API integriert vor allem bisher als Erweiterungen verfügbare Features. (Vulkan, Grafikhardware)

Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending February 24, 2018

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending February 24, 2018 are in. A whole lot of dads show up in this sequel, which ended up being the top selling new release and top seller overfall for the week. Find o…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending February 24, 2018 are in. A whole lot of dads show up in this sequel, which ended up being the top selling new release and top seller overfall for the week. Find out which movie it is in our weekly DVD,Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

Switching from Windows 10 S to Windows 10 will remain free of charge

Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore is spelling out some more details about how Windows 10 S Mode will work moving forward. First, as mentioned earlier, soon Windows 10 S won’t be a standalone version of Windows. Instead, it’ll be available as a “mode” for Window…

Microsoft’s Joe Belfiore is spelling out some more details about how Windows 10 S Mode will work moving forward. First, as mentioned earlier, soon Windows 10 S won’t be a standalone version of Windows. Instead, it’ll be available as a “mode” for Windows 10 Home, Pro, or Enterprise editions. Second, Belfiore says users who want to […]

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Lame Google Play apps that attack users with Windows malware is still a thing

Researchers find 150 Ramnit-infected apps a year after a similar batch was discovered.

Enlarge (credit: portal gda)

Last year, researchers discovered 132 Android apps in the Google Play market that lamely attempted to infect users with... Windows malware. On Wednesday, researchers with a different security company reported finding 150 more.

The latest batch of apps, like the ones 12 months ago, were spawned from a variety of different developers. The common thread among all the apps: their code was written on programming platforms infected with malware known as Ramnit. Although the Ramnit botnet of 3.2 million computers was dismantled in 2015, infections on local machines live on.

The malware adds malicious iframes to every HTML file stored on an infected computer. Those iframes then got appended to files that were included in the Android apps. Researchers at security firm Zscaler said almost all of the 150 infected apps were detected using common antivirus engines.

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Science in a bottle: 132-year-old experiment washed ashore in Australia

In the name of science, German vessels threw thousands of bottles into the oceans.

Enlarge / The ship on which this message was placed into its bottle. (credit: Deutsches Schiffahrtsmuseum-Unterweser)

A 132-year-old message in a bottle turned up on an Australian beach earlier this year, but it’s not a love note or a treasure map: it’s a science experiment.

Tonya Illman was walking the beach with a friend while they waited for her son’s car to be dug out from the soft sand. That’s when she saw it. “I saw something sticking out of the sand, so I went to take a closer look,” she told the Western Australian Museum. “It just looked like a lovely old bottle, so I picked it up thinking it might look good in my bookcase. My son’s girlfriend was the one who discovered the note when she went to tip the sand out.”

When the Illmans unrolled the damp sheet of paper, they found a printed form, filled out in very faint handwriting—in German.

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Wanna limit global warming to 1.5°C? Get cracking

Analysis breaks down what it would take—and it’s a lot.

Enlarge / Coal: it’s not an option. (credit: Kym Farnik)

One surprise in the international Paris Agreement on greenhouse gas emissions was the addition of the aspirational goal of limiting global warming to just 1.5 degrees Celsius. Nations have long stated that their aim was to avoid exceeding 2-degree warming (though they've largely failed to follow through with actions that would make that possible), and so scientists have studied that scenario in great detail. But nobody had been promising to keep this a 1.5-degree world, so the information was lacking.

A new study led by Joeri Rogelj of the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis digs into this problem, providing a breakdown of plausible scenarios that will form the basis of future research efforts. This work uses computer models of the global economy to simulate the costs and effects of things like transitioning away from fossil fuels at different paces.

Scenario building

The simulations rely on a set of five scenarios that represent different socioeconomic futures. This includes idealistic scenarios like a world built around sustainability, with a global population of just 7 billion at the end of this century, rather than the expected 10 billion. At the other extreme, there's an all-consuming world in which energy demand grows rapidly and is fulfilled almost entirely by fossil fuels. This system is a little easier to wrap your head around than scenarios based purely on greenhouse gas concentrations because you can picture what these worlds are really like.

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Reader pics show Tesla Semi on I-680, en route from Gigafactory to Fremont

Tesla doing what it does best: creating ways to serve tangential markets.

Matt Beckman

Update: We received the above photos of Tesla Semis in the wild from a reader. The trucks are traveling along I-680, which connects I-80 to the Bay Area.

Original Story: On Wednesday, Tesla CEO Elon Musk posted a picture on Instagram of two Tesla Semis at the Sparks, Nevada Gigafactory. The trucks are apparently full of battery packs and are making their way to the Tesla factory in Fremont, California.

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Robot smashes Rubik’s Cube record with 0.38-second solve

“The machine can definitely go faster,” inventor says.

Rubik's Cube record

Hardware hackers Ben Katz and Jared Di Carlo have smashed the previous record for solving the Rubik's cube robotically. Their machine solved the puzzle in 0.38 seconds—a 40-percent improvement over the previous record of 0.637.

"We noticed that all of the fast Rubik's Cube solvers were using stepper motors and thought that we could do better if we used better motors," Di Carlo wrote in a blog post.

A custom-built motor controller allows a single turn of the Rubik's Cube to be completed in around 10 milliseconds. With a a typical Rubik's Cube solution taking 19 to 23 turns, that should allow a cube to be solved in around 0.25 seconds—but the pair say the current iteration of the machine makes a move every 15 milliseconds instead.

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