Gynecologist Dr. Drai can use name, even if Dr. Dre doesn’t like it, judge says

Trademark judge finds that no one is going to confuse rapping for medical services.

Enlarge / Dr. Dre performs onstage with Eminem during the 2018 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival Weekend 1 at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California. (credit: Christopher Polk/Getty Images for Coachella)

A federal trademark judge has ruled in favor of a Pennsylvania-based gynecologist who goes by the name Dr. Drai—finding that use of this name does not violate the trademark of Dr. Dre, the famed rapper.

The case, which was filed in October 2015 to the United States Patent and Trademark Office’s Trademark Trial and Appeal Board (TTAB), claimed that Dr. Draion M. Burch's efforts to use the "Dr. Drai" moniker in a trademark were a "close approximation" of the stage name of Andre Young. Dre's lawyers wanted the Drai trademark, which was first filed in 2011, to be annulled.

"Applicant has admitted that DR. DRAI sounds identical to DR. DRE (Burch Tr. at 154:20-155:1), and, thus, a consumer hearing them would think they are the same. As to appearance, the names look remarkably similar," lawyers representing Dre wrote in a November 2017 court filing.

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Nokia X details (and pictures) show up at TENAA

HMD is scheduled to launch its next smartphone on May 16th. It’s probably called the Nokia X, or maybe the Nokia X6. Either way, we now have a pretty good idea of what to expect thanks to a listing at China’s TENAA website, not to mention l…

HMD is scheduled to launch its next smartphone on May 16th. It’s probably called the Nokia X, or maybe the Nokia X6. Either way, we now have a pretty good idea of what to expect thanks to a listing at China’s TENAA website, not to mention leaked hands-on photos. Like a lot of recent Nokia-branded […]

The post Nokia X details (and pictures) show up at TENAA appeared first on Liliputing.

Blast und Megablast: Alexa-Lautsprecher erhalten Spotify-Sprachsteuerung

Die beiden Alexa-Lautsprecher Blast und Megablast haben neue Funktionen erhalten. Neuerdings kann Spotify auf Zuruf verwendet werden und es gibt einen Equalizer. (Smarter Lautsprecher, Amazon)

Die beiden Alexa-Lautsprecher Blast und Megablast haben neue Funktionen erhalten. Neuerdings kann Spotify auf Zuruf verwendet werden und es gibt einen Equalizer. (Smarter Lautsprecher, Amazon)

Bell/TSN Letter to University Connects Site-Blocking Support to Students’ Futures

An email sent to Brock University in which Bell-owned TSN requested backing for a site-blocking regime in Canada is raising eyebrows. The document notes TSN’s past support for the university, while linking the proposed regime’s success to the future of the university’s graduates. A return letter of support from the university’s vice-president was subsequently countered by one of opposition from the Brock University Faculty Association.

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

In January, a coalition of Canadian companies called on local telecoms regulator CRTC to implement a website-blocking regime in Canada.

The coalition, Fairplay Canada, is a collection of organizations and companies with ties to the entertainment industries and includes Bell, Cineplex, Directors Guild of Canada, Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment, Movie Theatre Association of Canada, and Rogers Media. Its stated aim is to address Canada’s online piracy problems.

While CTRC reviews FairPlay Canada’s plans, the coalition has been seeking to drum up support for the blocking regime, encouraging a diverse range of supporters to send submissions endorsing the project. Of course, building a united front among like-minded groups is nothing out of the ordinary but a situation just uncovered by Canadian law Professor Micheal Geist, one of the most vocal opponents of the proposed scheme, is bound to raise eyebrows.

Geist discovered a submission by Brian Hutchings, who works as Vice-President, Administration at Brock University in Ontario. Dated March 22, 2018, it notes that one of the university’s most sought-after programs is Sports Management, which helps Brock’s students to become “the lifeblood” of Canada’s sport and entertainment industries.

“Our University is deeply alarmed at how piracy is eroding an industry that employs so many of our co-op students and graduates. Piracy is a serious, pervasive threat that steals creativity, undermines investment in content development and threatens the survival of an industry that is also part of our national identity,” the submission reads.

“Brock ardently supports the FairPlay Canada coalition of more than 25 organizations involved in every aspect of Canada’s film, TV, radio, sports entertainment and music industries. Specifically, we support the coalition’s request that the CRTC introduce rules that would disable access in Canada to the most egregious piracy sites, similar to measures that have been taken in the UK, France and Australia. We are committed to assist the members of the coalition and the CRTC in eliminating the theft of digital content.”

The letter leaves no doubt that Brock University as a whole stands side-by-side with Fairplay Canada but according to a subsequent submission signed by Michelle Webber, President, Brock University Faculty Association (BUFA), nothing could be further from the truth.

Noting that BUFA unanimously supports the position of the Canadian Association of University Teachers which opposes the FairPlay proposal, Webber adds that BUFA stands in opposition to the submission by Brian Hutchings on behalf of Brock University.

“Vice President Hutching’s intervention was undertaken without consultation with the wider Brock University community, including faculty, librarians, and Senate; therefore, his submission should not be seen as indicative of the views of Brock University as a whole.”

BUFA goes on to stress the importance of an open Internet to researchers and educators while raising concerns that the blocking proposals could threaten the principles of net neutrality in Canada.

While the undermining of Hutching’s position is embarrassing enough, via access to information laws Geist has also been able to reveal the chain of events that prompted the Vice-President to write a letter of support on behalf of the whole university.

It began with an email sent by former Brock professor Cheri Bradish to Mark Milliere, TSN’s Senior Vice President and General Manager, with Hutchings copied in. The idea was to connect the pair, with the suggestion that supporting the site-blocking plan would help to mitigate the threat to “future work options” for students.

What followed was a direct email from Mark Milliere to Brian Hutchings, in which the former laid out the contributions his company makes to the university, while again suggesting that support for site-blocking would be in the long-term interests of students seeking employment in the industry.

On March 23, Milliere wrote to Hutchings again, thanking him for “a terrific letter” and stating that “If you need anything from TSN, just ask.”

This isn’t the first time that Bell has asked those beholden to the company to support its site-blocking plans.

Back in February it was revealed that the company had asked its own employees to participate in the site-blocking submission process, without necessarily revealing their affiliations with the company.

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

Star Trek: Bridge Crew wird um The Next Generation erweitert

Künftig können Spieler mit und ohne VR-Headset an Bord der Enterprise NCC-1701-D durchs All sausen. Die Erweiterung The Next Generation für Star Trek – Bridge Crew bietet außerdem neue Missionsarten und ein frisches Besatzungsmitglied. (Star Trek, Ubis…

Künftig können Spieler mit und ohne VR-Headset an Bord der Enterprise NCC-1701-D durchs All sausen. Die Erweiterung The Next Generation für Star Trek - Bridge Crew bietet außerdem neue Missionsarten und ein frisches Besatzungsmitglied. (Star Trek, Ubisoft)

Smartwatch: Zweite Vorschau von Wear OS bringt neuen Akkusparmodus

Google hat eine zweite Entwicklervorschau für das Smartwatch-Betriebssystem Wear OS veröffentlicht. Diese bringt unter anderem die Unterstützung für Android Actions sowie einen sehr strikten Akkusparmodus. (I/O 2018, Google)

Google hat eine zweite Entwicklervorschau für das Smartwatch-Betriebssystem Wear OS veröffentlicht. Diese bringt unter anderem die Unterstützung für Android Actions sowie einen sehr strikten Akkusparmodus. (I/O 2018, Google)

Latest Windows build brings a dark theme to Explorer

More and more parts of Windows are supporting dark mode.

Enlarge / The dark Explorer theme. (credit: Microsoft)

As long-time practitioners of the "dark theme" concept—it's still an option here at Ars for those who prefer light text on dark backgrounds—we're excited to see that Microsoft is extending the reach of its dark theme to include Explorer.

Windows 10 has a toggle to switch between the standard regular (dark text/light background) theme and the inverted dark theme.
For those who routinely use their computers in poorly lit rooms, the dark theme offers relief from the more traditional eye-searing white of the standard theme. For the most part, the only applications that follow this are new, modern applications built using the Universal Windows Platform. The latest Insider build, version 17666, extends that to Explorer, one of the most important and widely used traditional Win32 applications.

The new build has some other bits and pieces too, including greater use of Microsoft's "Fluent" design language, but really, it's the dark Explorer that's exciting.

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Signal’s “disappearing messages” live on in macOS notifications

Default notification setting lets messages persist in a database long after they “self-delete”

Enlarge / You may want to nicely ask your friends who use Signal on the Mac desktop to change their notification settings.

Signal, the privacy-focused voice and text messaging application, offers an attractive bit of operational security: ephemeral text messages that "self-delete" after a predetermined amount of time. There is just one small problem, however, with that feature on the Mac desktop version of the application, as information security consultant Alec Muffett discovered: if you sent a self-deleting message to someone using the macOS application, the message lives on in macOS's Notifications history.

Ars reproduced the problem, which Patrick Wardle of Objective See conducted a particularly deep dive on—revealing that the problem is in part a bug in the way Signal handles calls to the macOS notification system, and in part is just how macOS notifications work.

Messages that self delete from Signal still show up in notifications

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Star Trek: The Next Generation’s Enterprise-D is coming to Bridge Crew

The DLC will hit PlayStation first and PC a bit later.

Red Storm Entertainment

Red Storm Entertainment will soon add the ship and bridge from Star Trek: The Next Generation to the Star Trek: Bridge Crew game, along with several other TNG-themed additions like the Borg.

In a post on the PlayStation Blog, Red Storm Entertainment designer Hunter Janes outlined all the new features and content coming as DLC to the game. Bridge Crew started out as a VR game (hence the PlayStation blog's specific interest; it's one of the top-selling games on PlayStation VR), but it was recently updated to be playable outside of VR as well.

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Supercomputers are driving a revolution in hurricane forecasting

Five-day forecasts are as good now as two-day forecasts were in 1998.

Enlarge / A man rides his bicycle through a damaged road in Toa Alta, west of San Juan, Puerto Rico, on September 24, 2017 following the passage of Hurricane Maria. (credit: RICARDO ARDUENGO/AFP/Getty Images)

Back in 1998, the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts housed the 27th most-powerful supercomputer in the world, with 116 cores providing a maximum performance of 213 teraflops. Today, the ECMWF forecasting center has the world's 27th and 28th most powerful supercomputers, each with 126,000 cores and 20 times the computing power of its machine two decades ago.

This dramatic increase in computing power at the European center—as well as similar increases at US-based and other international numerical modeling centers—helps to explain the dramatic increase in hurricane-forecast accuracy over the same time period.

Based upon new data from the National Hurricane Center for hurricanes based in the Atlantic basin, the average track error for a five-day forecast fell to 155 nautical miles in 2017. That is, the location predicted by the hurricane center for a given storm was just 155 nautical miles away from the actual position of the storm five days later. What is incredible about this is that, back in 1998, this was the average error for a two-day track forecast.

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