#Bentgate: Apple war Biegsamkeit des iPhone 6 bekannt

Das iPhone 6 und iPhone 6 Plus waren übermäßig biegsam, was Apple aber nicht zugeben wollte. Nun stellt sich heraus, dass Apple sehr früh von den Problemen wusste, aber nicht reagierte. (iPhone 6 Plus, Apple)

Das iPhone 6 und iPhone 6 Plus waren übermäßig biegsam, was Apple aber nicht zugeben wollte. Nun stellt sich heraus, dass Apple sehr früh von den Problemen wusste, aber nicht reagierte. (iPhone 6 Plus, Apple)

DSGVO: Datenschutz ist die neue Mülltrennung

Nach einer Übergangsfrist von zwei Jahren ist die EU-Datenschutz-Grundverordnung in Kraft getreten. Sie gibt dem Datenschutz einen neuen Stellenwert. Doch es bleibt zu hoffen, dass es bei der Durchsetzung die Richtigen trifft. Eine Analyse von Friedhel…

Nach einer Übergangsfrist von zwei Jahren ist die EU-Datenschutz-Grundverordnung in Kraft getreten. Sie gibt dem Datenschutz einen neuen Stellenwert. Doch es bleibt zu hoffen, dass es bei der Durchsetzung die Richtigen trifft. Eine Analyse von Friedhelm Greis (Angela Merkel, Wordpress)

Flexibles Display: BOE lässt hauchdünnes Panel im Luftstrom flattern

Um seine flexiblen Displays zu demonstrieren, hat BOE ein besonders dünnes Display gezeigt. Es ist zugleich so flexibel, dass es im Luftstrom flattern kann. (Display Week 2018, Display)

Um seine flexiblen Displays zu demonstrieren, hat BOE ein besonders dünnes Display gezeigt. Es ist zugleich so flexibel, dass es im Luftstrom flattern kann. (Display Week 2018, Display)

500 Autos pro Tag: Tesla behebt Engpass beim Model 3

Tesla macht Fortschritte bei der Produktion des Model 3. In dieser Woche sollen 500 Autos pro Tag gefertigt worden sein. Das entspricht 3.500 pro Woche – und ist immer noch weit vom Ziel entfernt, Ende des nächsten Quartals wöchentlich 5.000 Stück zu b…

Tesla macht Fortschritte bei der Produktion des Model 3. In dieser Woche sollen 500 Autos pro Tag gefertigt worden sein. Das entspricht 3.500 pro Woche - und ist immer noch weit vom Ziel entfernt, Ende des nächsten Quartals wöchentlich 5.000 Stück zu bauen. (Tesla Model 3, Technologie)

Valve says Apple rejected its Steam Link app for iOS

Earlier this month Valve announced it was developing Steam Link apps that would let you stream PC games over a home network to a phone, tablet, or TV. A week later the company released the Android version. And a week after that… the company annou…

Earlier this month Valve announced it was developing Steam Link apps that would let you stream PC games over a home network to a phone, tablet, or TV. A week later the company released the Android version. And a week after that… the company announced that an iOS version might not be coming anytime soon. […]

The post Valve says Apple rejected its Steam Link app for iOS appeared first on Liliputing.

Apple has rejected iOS version of Steam Link app, Valve says

Denial cites “business conflicts” despite approval of other desktop sharing apps.

Enlarge / A screenshot from the beta version of the Steam Link app, which has been denied approval by Apple. (credit: Steam)

Valve says Apple has denied approval for the iOS version of its Steam Link app—which allows users to stream PC games from a computer on the same home network—after Apple initially approved the app earlier this month.

"On Monday, May 7, Apple approved the Steam Link app for release," Valve said in a statement sent to Ars. "On Wednesday, May 9, Valve released news of the app. The following morning, Apple revoked its approval citing business conflicts with app guidelines that had allegedly not been realized by the original review team."

Valve says it appealed that decision on the basis that "the Steam Link app simply functions as a LAN-based remote desktop similar to numerous remote desktop applications already available on the App Store." That includes an official Windows Remote Desktop app from Microsoft, third-party apps from LogMeIn and GoToMyPC, and many more. There are even streaming apps for iOS which use Nvidia's GameStream technology to remotely play titles running on a PC, just like the Steam Link app.

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Bloomberg: Essential cancels its next smartphone, company might be up for sale

Less than a year after releasing its first smartphone, it looks like Essential Products might be going out of business. Bloomberg reports that the company, which was started by Android co-founder Andy Rubin, has cancelled development of its next phone,…

Less than a year after releasing its first smartphone, it looks like Essential Products might be going out of business. Bloomberg reports that the company, which was started by Android co-founder Andy Rubin, has cancelled development of its next phone, and may be looking for a buyer interested in acquiring the company. The Essential PH-1 […]

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Gamers involved in December’s “swatting” death just got indicted

Gamers charged with obstruction for deleting possibly incriminating messages.

Enlarge / This screenshot from local television station KWCH Channel 12 shows Barriss at a recent court appearance. (credit: KWCH Channel 12)

Federal prosecutors have unsealed an indictment against three men involved in the December death of a Kansas man, Andrew Finch. Finch was shot by police officers after one of the defendants, Tyler Barriss, made a call to 911 dispatchers about a completely made-up hostage situation at Finch's address.

County prosecutors in Kansas have already charged Barriss with manslaughter. Now he faces a slew of additional charges at the federal level, including cyberstalking, making threats across state lines, wire fraud, and conspiracy. And while the county charges targeted Barriss alone, the feds are also charging two others involved in the incident.

According to the indictment, Shane Gaskill, 19, and Casey Viner, 18, were playing Call of Duty: World War II on December 28, when they got into a dispute over events in the game. Viner became so upset that he asked Barriss—who had a reputation for making SWAT calls—to "swat" Gaskill.

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Movie Studios Sue Founder & Distributors of Popular ‘Pirate’ App Showbox

A large coalition of independent movie studios, including the makers of Dallas Buyers Club, has filed a lawsuit against the alleged ‘founder’ and several distributors of the popular movie streaming application Showbox. In their complaint, they brand the Android application as a pirate tool that’s used to mislead the public.

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

For many years media companies have focused their anti-piracy efforts on pirate sites, including torrent and streaming portals.

More recently, these efforts expanded to streaming boxes, with the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment (ACE) targeting several vendors of such devices.

This week, a group of independent movie studios has targeted yet another largely overseen element of the piracy ecosystem. Dallas Buyers Club, Cobbler Nevada, Bodyguard Productions, and several other studios are going after the popular Android-based app Showbox.

Showbox hasn’t caught many headlines, but the tool is used by hundreds of thousands, if not millions of people. It allows users to stream movies and TV shows via torrents and direct sources, all through a Netflix-style interface.

In a lawsuit filed at the US District Court of Hawaii, the movie companies are now taking action against several people and sites which distribute the application.

This includes the alleged founder and developer ‘Andrew Crow,’ Showboxappdownload.co founder ‘Mark Willow,’ and the people behind Showboxappdownload.com and Showbox.en.uptodown.com/android.

In addition, the complaint also targets the persons who made the application available on Rawapk.com/showbox-apk-download/, a repository of APK files.

“Plaintiffs bring this action to stop the massive piracy of their motion pictures brought on by the software application Show Box app,” the complaint reads.

“The Defendants misleadingly promote the Show Box app as a legitimate means for viewing content to the public, who eagerly install the Show Box app to watch copyright protected content, thereby leading to profit for the Defendants.”

The lawsuit follows on the heels of another case where a phone store employee was accused of promoting the Showbox app. Similar to that case, the current lawsuit also relies on input from an alleged user of the application. In this case, that’s Hawaiian resident James Sosa.

“I visited the website showboxappdownload.com and followed the instructions on the website to download the Show Box app to my Dell tablet,” Sosa testifies. “The language on the website led me to believe that I could use the Show Box app to watch free movies legally.”

From the complaint

According to the movie studios, most of which have thus far been very active in filing lawsuits against individual BitTorrent downloaders, Showbox is a pirate tool, plain and simple.

“Defendants promote the use of the Show Box app user for overwhelmingly, if not exclusively, infringing purposes, and that is how the users use the Show Box app,” the studios write.

The defendants all stand accused of contributory copyright infringement. The studios are asking the court for actual or statutory damages to compensate their losses, as well as temporary, preliminary and permanent injunctions to stop the allegedly infringing activities.

In addition, the studios also request an order preventing internet search engines, hosting companies, domain-name registrars, and domain name registries to stop facilitating access to the allegedly infringing domain names and websites.

The two recent Showbox related cases reveal an interesting trend. Where many of these movie studios were previously engaged in so-called copyright trolling lawsuits, they are now going after the people who promote, develop, and distribute a popular streaming app. It will be interesting to see if this trend continues.

A copy of the complaint filed by Venice PI, Headhunter, MON, LHF Productions, Cook Productions, Glacier Films, Colossal Movie Productions, Automata Productions, Criminal Productions, Dallas Buyers Club, Clear Skies Nevada, Bodyguard Productions, I.T. Productions, SVZ Productions, Splintered, Cobbler Nevada and Justice Everywhere Productions 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.

The DoJ is reportedly probing the murky world of bitcoin trading

Bitcoin and ether’s rollercoaster rides will be investigated, Bloomberg reports.

Enlarge / A 12-month snapshot of bitcoin prices. (credit: xe.com)

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies have taken a wild ride over the past 18 months. Now, according to Bloomberg News, the US Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into whether price manipulations have contributed to the meteoric rises and crushing falls.

The coins prosecutors are examining include bitcoin and ether, which have both bounced up and down over the past 18 months. In 2017, after bitcoin began the year with a price of about $1,000, it soared to just below $20,000 in December and then finished out the year at about $13,900. Ether followed an even steeper trajectory, beginning 2017 at about $8 and finishing at about $747. Prices for both currencies have experienced major volatility over the past six months.

Spoofing and wash trades

The DoJ probe is focused on whether those price swings were caused by illegal trading practices that have long manipulated securities prices in more traditional markets, Bloomberg reported, citing four people familiar with the probe. One of the practices is known as spoofing. That's when a trader floods an exchange with orders and then cancels them once the market price has moved in the desired direction. Another practice, known as wash trades, occurs when people transact trades with themselves to give the market a false impression of demand.

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