Asus ROG GT-AX11000: Gaming-Router soll “erster 10-GBit/s-WLAN-Router” sein

Asus’ neuer Gaming-Router GT-AX11000 ist ein neues Mitglied der Sparte Republic of Gamers und richtet sich mit aggressivem Design genau an diese Zielgruppe. Markante Versprechungen wie ein 10-GBit-WLAN-Signal sind reine Werbung. Andere sinnvolle Aussta…

Asus' neuer Gaming-Router GT-AX11000 ist ein neues Mitglied der Sparte Republic of Gamers und richtet sich mit aggressivem Design genau an diese Zielgruppe. Markante Versprechungen wie ein 10-GBit-WLAN-Signal sind reine Werbung. Andere sinnvolle Ausstattung wie den 2,5-GBit-Ethernet-Port gibt es aber. (Asus, WLAN)

Security Alert: NSA security education posters from the Cold War

Old NSA security posters available for use in telling your coworkers to shut up already.

In February of 2016, the people behind the website Government Attic made an unusual Freedom of Information Act request to the National Security Agency: "A digital/electronic copy of the NSA's old security posters from the 1950s and 1960s." It took more than two years, but the NSA finally got around to honoring the request—providing digital images of more than 100 posters from NSA's Security Education Program, spanning from the agency's early days in the 1950s up to the 1970s (with some minor redactions, of course).

The posters are a time capsule of Cold War era government secrecy culture, and they use every possible approach in the propaganda and advertising book to hammer home the need for security awareness. Posters from the 1950s heavily played on the threat of the Soviets to life, liberty, and religion—with a heavy emphasis on the role of Christianity in the lives of good, God-fearing Americans of the time. Others focused on patriotism and on the need to protect the American way of life.

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GM settles with motorcyclist struck by Cruise self-driving car

Cruise CEO has called San Francisco testing “challenging but necessary.”

Enlarge / GM workers assembling a test car for Cruise. (credit: Cruise)

A motorcyclist who walked away from a collision with a General Motors self-driving car in San Francisco has settled his lawsuit with the automaker, court records show. The settlement was announced in a court filing last week and was reported by Jalopnik on Friday.

The crash occurred last December. Oscar Nilsson was riding his motorcycle along a three-lane, one-way road in San Francisco's Lower Haight neighborhood. A self-driving car from Cruise, GM's autonomous vehicle division, was ahead of him.

The Cruise car was in the middle lane and saw an opening between two cars in the left lane. The Cruise car began shifting to the left, but as it did so the gap in the left lane started to close. The Cruise car aborted the lane change and returned to the middle lane.

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Deals of the Day (6-04-2018)

More than half a year after it first hit the streets, Google’s Pixelbook is still one of the best Chromebooks money can buy. It’s also still one of the most expensive, with a list price of $999 and up. But right now Google, Amazon, Best Buy…

More than half a year after it first hit the streets, Google’s Pixelbook is still one of the best Chromebooks money can buy. It’s also still one of the most expensive, with a list price of $999 and up. But right now Google, Amazon, Best Buy, and other retailers are selling the Pixelbook for $749 […]

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Judgment Day Nears for EU’s ‘Piracy Filters’

The EU’s plans to modernize copyright law in Europe are moving ahead. With a crucial vote coming up later this month, protests from various opponents are on the rise as well. They warn that the proposed plans will result in “Internet filters” which threaten people’s ability to freely share content online. According to Pirate Party MEP Julia Reda, these filters will hurt regular Internet users, but also creators and businesses.

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

September 2016, the European Commission published its proposal for a modernized copyright law. Among other things, it proposed measures to require online services to do more to fight piracy.

Specifically, Article 13 of the proposed Copyright Directive will require online services to track down and delete pirated content, in collaboration with rightsholders.

The Commission stressed that the changes are needed to support copyright holders. However, many legal scholars, digital activists, politicians, and members of the public worry that they will violate the rights of regular Internet users.

Last month the EU Council finalized the latest version of the proposal. This means that the matter now goes to the Legal Affairs Committee of the Parliament (JURI), which must decide how to move ahead. This vote is expected to take place in two weeks.

Although the term “filter” is commonly used to describe Article 13, it is not directly mentioned in the text itself.

According to Pirate Party Member of Parliament (MEP) Julia Reda, the “filter” keyword is avoided in the proposal to prevent a possible violation of EU law and the Charter of Fundamental Rights. However, the outcome is essentially the same.

In short, the relevant text states that online services are liable for any uploaded content unless they take “effective and proportionate” action to prevent copyright infringements, identified by copyright holders. That also includes preventing these files from being reuploaded.

The latter implies some form of hash filtering and continuous monitoring of all user uploads. Several companies, including Google Drive, Dropbox, and YouTube already have these types of filters, but many others don’t.

A main point of critique is that the automated upload checks will lead to overblocking, as they are often ill-equipped to deal with issues such as fair use.

“The proposal would require platforms to filter all uploads by their users for potential copyright infringements – not just YouTube and Facebook, but also services like WordPress, TripAdvisor, or even Tinder. We know from experience that these algorithmic filters regularly make mistakes and lead to the mass deletion of legal uploads,” Julia Reda tells TF.

“Especially small independent creators frequently see their content taken down because others wrongfully claim copyright on their works. There are no safeguards in the proposal against such cases of copyfraud.”

Besides affecting uploads of regular Internet users and smaller creators, many businesses will also be ‘hit’. They will have to make sure that they can detect and prevent infringing material from being shared on their systems.

This will give larger American Internet giants, who already have these filters in place, a competitive edge over smaller players and new startups, the Pirate Party MEP argues.

“It will make those Internet giants even stronger, because they will be the only ones able to develop and sell the filtering technologies necessary to comply with the law. A true lose-lose situation for European Internet users, authors and businesses,” Reda tells us.

Based on the considerable protests in recent days, the current proposal is still seen as a clear threat by many.

Tell your MEP…

In fact, the “Save your Internet” campaign, backed by prominent organizations such as Creative Commons, EFF, and Open Media, is ramping up again. They urge the European public to reach out to their Members of Parliament before it’s too late.

“Should Article 13 of the Copyright Directive proposal be adopted, it will impose widespread censorship of all the content you share online. The European Parliament is the only one that can step in and Save your Internet,” they write.

The full Article 13 text includes some language to limit its scope. The nature and size of online services must be taken into account, for example. This means that a small and legitimate niche service with a few dozen users might not be directly liable if it operates without these anti-piracy measures.

Similarly, non-profit organizations will not be required to comply with the proposed legislation, although there are calls from some member states to change this.

In addition to Article 13, there is also considerable pushback from the public against Article 11, which is regularly referred to as the “link tax.”

At the moment, several organizations are planning a protest day next week, hoping to mobilize the public to speak out. A week later, following the JURI vote, it will be ‘judgment day.’

If they pass the Committee the plans will progress towards the final vote on copyright reform next Spring. This also means that they’ll become much harder to stop or change. That has been done before, such as with ACTA, but achieving that type of momentum will be a tough challenge.

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

Trump grants Democrats’ request for a new FCC commissioner

FCC staffer Geoffrey Starks to fill commission’s empty Democratic seat.

Enlarge / Democrats vs. Republicans. (credit: Getty Images | Linda Braucht)

President Donald Trump has nominated Democrat Geoffrey Starks to fill the open seat on the Federal Communications Commission.

Starks, assistant chief of the FCC's Enforcement Bureau, was recommended by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. By tradition, the president appoints opposite-party commissioners based on recommendations from the opposing party, and Trump has kept up that practice. The White House confirmed Trump's nomination of Starks on Friday.

If approved by the Senate for a term ending in June 2022, Starks will replace recently departed Commissioner Mignon Clyburn. Republicans will maintain a 3-2 majority led by Chairman Ajit Pai, with Starks and Democratic Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel representing the minority party.

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ROG Phone: Asus’ Gaming-Smartphone hat einen extra Lüfter

Das ROG Phone nutzt einen übertakteten Snapdragon-Chip, weist einen 90-Hz-OLED-Bildschirm auf und hat 8 GByte RAM. Als Zubehör verkauft Asus unter anderem einen Lüfter und eine Docking-Station. (Asus, Smartphone)

Das ROG Phone nutzt einen übertakteten Snapdragon-Chip, weist einen 90-Hz-OLED-Bildschirm auf und hat 8 GByte RAM. Als Zubehör verkauft Asus unter anderem einen Lüfter und eine Docking-Station. (Asus, Smartphone)

Microsoft is buying GitHub for $7.5 billion

Microsoft has embraced open source software in a number of ways in recent years. The company has added native support for command-line Linux tools to Windows 10 in an effort to court developers and other GNU/Linux enthusiasts. And, acknowledging that t…

Microsoft has embraced open source software in a number of ways in recent years. The company has added native support for command-line Linux tools to Windows 10 in an effort to court developers and other GNU/Linux enthusiasts. And, acknowledging that the full Windows kernel might not be the right tool for every situation, Microsoft even […]

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Code-Hosting: Microsoft übernimmt Github für 7,5 Milliarden US-Dollar

Wie erwartet, hat Microsoft die Codehosting-Plattform Github übernommen – für 7,5 Milliarden US-Dollar. Microsoft will Github unabhängig arbeiten lassen, neuer Chef wird der Xamarin-Gründer Nat Friedman. (Github, Microsoft)

Wie erwartet, hat Microsoft die Codehosting-Plattform Github übernommen - für 7,5 Milliarden US-Dollar. Microsoft will Github unabhängig arbeiten lassen, neuer Chef wird der Xamarin-Gründer Nat Friedman. (Github, Microsoft)

Microsoft snaps up GitHub for $7.5 billion

Biggest open source hosting service joins biggest proprietary software company.

Enlarge

Microsoft has reached an agreement to buy GitHub, the source repository and collaboration platform, in a deal worth $7.5 billion. The all-stock deal is expected to close by the end of the year, subject to regulatory approval in the US and EU.

Decade-old GitHub is built on Git, the open source version control software originally written by Linux creator Linus Torvalds. Git is a distributed version control system: each developer has their own repository that they make changes to, and these changes can be propagated between repositories to share those changes. GitHub provides a repository hosting service: a place to put those repositories so that other developers can readily access them. Since its inception it has become a mainstay of the open source world, with countless projects—including Microsoft projects such as the Visual Studio Code text editor and the .NET runtime—using GitHub repositories as a place to publish their code to the world and coordinate collaborative development. In total, some 28 million developers use GitHub, with 85 million code repositories.

On top of its core Git foundation, GitHub has built its own workflows ("pull requests") to ease the merging of changes from one repository to another. It also has integrated issue tracking, a Web front-end for browsing repositories, and a marketplace for a wide range of commercial add-ons and extensions.

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