Google bans cryptomining Chrome extensions because they refuse to play by the rules

Google continues to try to keep its browser running smoothly in spite of others’ efforts.

Enlarge / Mining: no longer welcome in Chrome. (credit: Jeremy Buckingham / Flickr)

After a policy that previously permitted them, Google has decided to remove any and all Chrome extensions that mine for cryptocurrencies after finding that too many developers didn't play by the company's rules.

Google allowed Chrome extensions that performed mining with the proviso that the extensions clearly disclosed that they performed mining and performed no activity but mining. About 10 percent of extensions that mined within the browser followed these rules, but some 90 percent didn't. Instead, they mined surreptitiously, driving up people's electricity bills and running down their batteries without any informed consent on the user's behalf.

In response to this continued misbehavior, Google has decided to ban any and all cryptomining extensions. Effective immediately, the Chrome Web Store will no longer accept any extensions that mine for cryptocurrencies and, starting in June, will remove any existing extensions that mine.

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YouTube staffers say there’s an active shooter in their headquarters

“Heard shots and saw people running while at my desk,” one staffer tweeted.

Enlarge (credit: Jennifer 8. Lee / Flickr)

A shooter is active at YouTube's headquarters in San Bruno, according to police, and hospital authorities have confirmed multiple dead as a result.

"We are responding to an active shooter," the San Bruno Police Department tweeted on Tuesday afternoon. "Please stay away from Cherry Ave & Bay Hill Drive." That's the location of YouTube's San Bruno offices.

Before the city's official press release was released, a San Bruno dispatch call during the active shooting described an "X-ray" suspect (a dispatch code for female) "down" with a "gun recovered" and an indication of an ongoing hunt for a possible male suspect. San Bruno's city manager later issued a statement claiming "no further threat to the community" as of 2:19 pm local time.

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Hosting Provider Steadfast is Not Liable for ‘Pirate’ Site

Hosting provider Steadfast is not liable for the copyright-infringing activities that took place on the server of a customer. A California District Court has dismissed all copyright and trademark infringing claims filed by ALS Scan, concluding that the hosting provider did enough to curb copyright infringement.

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

In 2016, adult entertainment publisher ALS Scan dragged several third-party Internet services to court.

The company targeted companies including CDN provider CloudFlare and the Chicago-based hosting company Steadfast, accusing them of copyright infringement because they offered services to pirate sites.

ALS argued that Steadfast refused to shut down the servers of the image sharing platform Imagebam.com, which was operated by its client Flixya. The hosting provider had been targeted with dozens of DMCA notices, and ALS accused Steadfast of turning a blind eye to the situation.

Steadfast denied these allegations. The hosting provider did indeed lease servers to Flixya for ten years but said that it forwarded all notices to its client. The hosting company could not address individual infringements, other than shutting down the entire site, which would have been disproportionate in their view.

With a trial getting closer, the hosting company submitted a motion for summary judgment, arguing that it can’t be held liable for copyright infringement. A few days ago California District Court Judge George Wu ordered on the matter, bringing good news for Steadfast.

Judge Wu dismissed all claims against Steadfast, including contributory copyright infringement, vicarious copyright infringement, and contributory trademark infringement, which is a clear win.

Dismissed

The order clarifies that hosting providers such as Steadfast can be held liable for pirate sites. This is also the case when these sites are hosted on servers that are leased by a company which itself has a takedown policy, something Steadfast contended.

In this case, it is clear that Steadfast knew of the infringements. It could have shut down imagebam.com but failed to do so, and continued to provide server space to known copyright infringers on the site. All these arguments could, in theory, weigh against the hosting provider.

However, in order to be liable for contributory copyright infringement, ALS Scan needed to show that Steadfast failed to take simple steps to prevent the copyright infringements at issue. This is where the adult entertainment publisher’s arguments failed.

Steadfast forwarded all notices to its customer Flixya which resulted in the removal of the infringing images. In other words, the hosting provider took simple steps that prevented further copyright infringements.

“Given these undisputed facts, the Court would find that Steadfast did not ‘[fail] to take simple measures’ to prevent the specific acts of infringement of which it was aware. Steadfast took simple steps that resulted in all of the at-issue images being removed,” Judge Wu writes.

ALS argued that Steadfast should have shut down the entire server of its customer to prevent future infringements, but this isn’t necessarily the case. Service providers only have to take measures if they know that infringements occurred or will occur in the future. The latter was not obvious here.

“As such, the Court is not convinced that Steadfast had any reason, legal or practical, to terminate Flixya’s account and power down its servers,” the order reads.

Steadfast founder and CEO Karl Zimmerman is happy with the outcome of the case. He agrees that hosting providers have a responsibility to respond to copyright infringement complaints, but stresses that his company already has the right procedures in play.

“We already check and assure the content is removed, and yes, if the content simply stays up, that is concerning and shows that more could be done,” Zimmerman informs TF.

“We took action in forwarding the complaints, tracking those complaints, and validating the content had been removed. We did what was required of us, which is why I thought it was odd we were in this case in the first place.”

Hosting providers should take measures to help curb copyright infringement, according to Steadfast. However, shutting down entire services of customers who take down infringing links when they’re asked too, goes too far. Zimmerman is glad that Judge Wu agreed with this.

“To me, it simply does not seem reasonable to have to shut down a customer just because future infringement of their users is possible, when every indication is that the customer is completely law-abiding and I’m glad the judge agreed with that,” he says.

A copy of United States District Court Judge George Wu’s order is available here (pdf).

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

Feds: There are hostile stingrays in DC, but we don’t know how to find them

There’s also “anomalous activity”—probably stingrays—in other US cities, too.

Enlarge / US Capitol Building in Washington, DC. (credit: Getty | Tetra Images | Henryk Sadura)

The federal government has formally acknowledged for the first time that it has located suspected and unauthorized cell-site simulators in various parts of Washington, DC.

The revelation, which was reported for the first time on Tuesday by the Associated Press, was described in a letter recently released from the Department of Homeland Security to the offices of Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Oregon).

"Overall, [DHS' National Protection and Programs Directorate] believes the malicious use of IMSI catchers is a real and growing risk," wrote Christopher Krebs, DHS' acting undersecretary, in a March 26, 2018 letter to Wyden.

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Dealmaster: Get an Apple Watch Series 1 for $149

Plus deals on the Google Home, Galaxy S9 bundles, Dell laptops, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our friends at TechBargains, we have another round of deals to share. Today's list is led by a discount on the Apple Watch Series 1, the 38mm and 42mm models of which are down to $149 and $179, respectively, at Walmart. That's $100 off Apple's standard retail price either way.

The Series 1 is more than a year old at this point, so it's a step behind the increased water resistance, GPS, and optional LTE support of the newer Apple Watch Series 3. But it looks just about identical, gets the same 18-ish hours of battery life, and still tracks most workouts. While it's certainly not as fast as the Series 3, it's not sluggish. Smartwatches are probably never going to be for everyone, but if you've ever found the idea appealing (or just want a smarter fitness tracker), this might be a good point to jump in.

If you'd rather not, though, we also have deals on the Google Home, Amazon Fire HD 10, Samsung Galaxy S9 bundles, a few video games, and various PCs. Take a look for yourself below.

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Dealmaster: Get an Apple Watch Series 1 for $149

Plus deals on the Google Home, Galaxy S9 bundles, Dell laptops, and more.

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our friends at TechBargains, we have another round of deals to share. Today's list is led by a discount on the Apple Watch Series 1, the 38mm and 42mm models of which are down to $149 and $179, respectively, at Walmart. That's $100 off Apple's standard retail price either way.

The Series 1 is more than a year old at this point, so it's a step behind the increased water resistance, GPS, and optional LTE support of the newer Apple Watch Series 3. But it looks just about identical, gets the same 18-ish hours of battery life, and still tracks most workouts. While it's certainly not as fast as the Series 3, it's not sluggish. Smartwatches are probably never going to be for everyone, but if you've ever found the idea appealing (or just want a smarter fitness tracker), this might be a good point to jump in.

If you'd rather not, though, we also have deals on the Google Home, Amazon Fire HD 10, Samsung Galaxy S9 bundles, a few video games, and various PCs. Take a look for yourself below.

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Tearing down the new iPad offers little comfort to concerned educators

It’s mostly the same as last year’s iPad, with just a few notable differences.

iFixit

iFixit has published its teardown of the new iPad that Apple revealed at its education event in Chicago last week. Apple didn't go into too many technical details about this iPad at the event, so this teardown is an opportunity to answer a few key questions: how different is this model from last year's model, apart from the inclusion of a faster processor and support for Apple Pencil? And what did Apple do to make this device more appealing to educational organizations?

The new iPad has a model number of A1893, and the teardown determined that it's mostly the same as the fifth generation iPad internally. The key differences are the inclusion of the A10 chip—the same found in the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus from 2016—and two Broadcom BCM15900B0 touchscreen controller chips. Those Broadcom chips are also found in the 10.5- and 12.9-inch iPad Pro models, suggesting that they're key for Apple Pencil support.

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Tearing down the new iPad offers little comfort to concerned educators

It’s mostly the same as last year’s iPad, with just a few notable differences.

iFixit

iFixit has published its teardown of the new iPad that Apple revealed at its education event in Chicago last week. Apple didn't go into too many technical details about this iPad at the event, so this teardown is an opportunity to answer a few key questions: how different is this model from last year's model, apart from the inclusion of a faster processor and support for Apple Pencil? And what did Apple do to make this device more appealing to educational organizations?

The new iPad has a model number of A1893, and the teardown determined that it's mostly the same as the fifth generation iPad internally. The key differences are the inclusion of the A10 chip—the same found in the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus from 2016—and two Broadcom BCM15900B0 touchscreen controller chips. Those Broadcom chips are also found in the 10.5- and 12.9-inch iPad Pro models, suggesting that they're key for Apple Pencil support.

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Intel won’t release Spectre patches for some older chips after all

Intel has been rolling out microcode updates meant to help protect users from attacks based on the recently disclosed Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities. But while most Intel chips released in the past decade or so are vulnerable, Intel has decided n…

Intel has been rolling out microcode updates meant to help protect users from attacks based on the recently disclosed Spectre and Meltdown vulnerabilities. But while most Intel chips released in the past decade or so are vulnerable, Intel has decided not to released some previously promised updates for certain chips released between 2007 and 2009. […]

The post Intel won’t release Spectre patches for some older chips after all appeared first on Liliputing.

Training plus a placebo may make a drug more effective

Your brain and immune system can work together to turn a memory into a drug.

Enlarge (credit: Ben Harvey)

The placebo effect can be incredibly powerful, performing nearly as well as carefully designed and tested drugs, substituting for actual surgeries and even generating side effects. But it's a tricky thing to apply outside of experiments. After all, not everyone will have a strong placebo response, so it's unethical to use it in place of actual treatments.

Now, some researchers in Germany have figured out a way to harness the placebo effect to increase the impact of a normal drug treatment. The procedure involves getting patients to associate a taste with a powerful drug that has problematic side effects. Once the association is made, the patients were given a mix of normal drugs and a placebo, along with the flavor they'd associated with the drug. This experiment enhanced their response to the drug, providing an avenue to potentially reduce its dose and, thus, its side effects. And the whole thing worked despite the fact that the patients knew exactly what was going on.

The drug at issue, cyclosporine A, is a powerful suppressor of the immune system, which makes it useful for patients who have received organ transplants or who have a strong autoimmune disorder. But the immune system isn't the only system affected by this drug; it also kills off kidney and nerve cells and causes heart problems and hypertension. These effects are independent of any changes to the immune system, but nobody has figured out a way to target the body's response specifically to immune cells. As a result, people taking this drug have to carefully balance its useful features against its toxicity.

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