Calif. Senate approves net neutrality rules, sends bill to governor

Governor has until September 30 to sign net neutrality bill into law.

A night-time view of the California State Capitol building in Sacramento.

Enlarge / California State Capitol building in Sacramento. (credit: Getty Images | joe chan photography)

The California Senate today voted to approve the toughest state-level net neutrality bill in the US, one day after the California Assembly took the same action.

With both legislative houses having approved the bill, California Governor Jerry Brown has until September 30 to sign it into law.

The vote was 23-11 as of this writing, with all yes votes coming from Democrats and all no votes coming from Republicans. In the Assembly yesterday, six Republicans joined 55 Democrats to pass the bill in a 61-18 vote.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Lilbits 332: Slide-out cameras are officially a thing

First there was the Vivo Nex with its pop-out front camera. Then there was the Oppo Find X, with its sliding mechanism that allowed the front and rear cameras to hide inside the phone when they’re not in use. Now it looks like those two phones we…

First there was the Vivo Nex with its pop-out front camera. Then there was the Oppo Find X, with its sliding mechanism that allowed the front and rear cameras to hide inside the phone when they’re not in use. Now it looks like those two phones were just the beginning. This week Huawei gave us a […]

The post Lilbits 332: Slide-out cameras are officially a thing appeared first on Liliputing.

Lead in US school water “disturbing”—Detroit just shut off all fountains

Most schools don’t test their water, but a big chunk of those that do find lead.

Article intro image

Enlarge / Drink with caution. (credit: Getty | Yoko Inoue)

Students returning to school in Detroit next week will find their water fountains entirely shut off over concerns of elevated lead and copper levels—something that federal lawmakers say is part of a “disturbing and unacceptable” nationwide issue.

The decision to shut off the drinking water in Detroit was based on a first round of results from testing that the school district carried out in its 106 schools earlier this year. The results from just 24 schools so far surfaced 16 that had water sources tainted with excessive levels of lead, copper, or both. For instance, tests at the district’s Academy of the Americas Elementary school found a kitchen and drinking faucet in a basement cafeteria that had lead levels of 182 micrograms per liter (ug/L) and 154 ug/L, respectively. Those are more than ten times the Environmental Protection Agency’s recommended limit of 15 ug/L. The full testing results can be found here.

Nikolai Vitti, superintendent of the Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD), announced the shutoff Wednesday. In a statement to the Detroit Free Press, Vitti explained:

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

EU Commission President supports ending seasonal time changes

Europe is one step closer to stopping time changes.

Article intro image

Enlarge / A picture taken on April 16, 2018 shows the pediment of the main entrance of the "Palais Bourbon" headquarters of the French National Assembly in Paris. / AFP PHOTO / GERARD JULIEN (credit: Getty Images)

On Friday, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said he would recommend that the EU end seasonal time changes in favor of staying on summer time throughout the year.

The Commission requested public comment on the matter over the summer after EU Parliament voted in February to review the usefulness of Daylight Saving Time.

Of the 4.6 million comments that the EU Commission received, more than 80 percent were in favor of ending time changes, according to The Guardian.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Nubia–α concept is a smartphone you wear like a bracelet

ZTE-owned Nubia is showing off a concept for a smartwatch that’s more phone than watch.. The nubia–α concept has a flexible display that wraps around a portion of the wristband, giving you plenty of space to interact with apps, contacts, an…

ZTE-owned Nubia is showing off a concept for a smartwatch that’s more phone than watch.. The nubia–α concept has a flexible display that wraps around a portion of the wristband, giving you plenty of space to interact with apps, contacts, and other menu items. It’s unclear if or when the nubia-a will ever see the […]

The post Nubia–α concept is a smartphone you wear like a bracelet appeared first on Liliputing.

Exclusive: Valve walks us through Artifact’s new demo, leaves us wanting more

Video: We talk to Richard Garfield (of Magic fame) and examine Artifact‘s first public demo.

Article intro image

Enlarge / Getting one's Artifact on. (credit: Valve Software)

Editor's note: This feature's two videos include transcripts, and many of their details appear in the article's text and galleries. So however you want to learn about Valve's latest video game, Ars has your back.

BELLEVUE, Washington—Right as this article goes live, Valve Software is taking the wraps off its next video game, Artifact, in a major way. At this weekend's PAX West expo in Seattle, lines of eager fans are currently waiting to play the first public demo of Valve's online trading card game (TCG), and they have good reason to be excited.

I say that not just because of the game's pedigree—designed in part by the creator of the world's biggest TCG, Magic: The Gathering, and supercharged by the fantasy world and characters of the Valve smash Dota 2. I say it because Ars already went hands-on with this PAX West demo, thanks to an exclusive invite to Valve's headquarters ahead of the show. I had a blast. Plus, unlike PAX's attendees, I had quite the guide sitting over my shoulder: MtG's creator and Artifact lead designer Richard Garfield.

Read 40 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Boeing wins competition to build Navy drone tanker prototypes

Four MQ-25 “Stingray” prototypes will set course for active carrier drones by 2024.

Article intro image

Enlarge / A Boeing MQ-25 demonstrator during deck-handling is an unmanned combat aircraft system designed to provide refueling capability to extend the combatBoeing’s MQ-25 unmanned aerial refueler, known as T1, is currently being tested at Boeing’s St. Louis site. T1 has completed engine runs and deck handling demonstrations designed to prove the agility and ability of the aircraft to move around within the tight confines of a carrier deck. (Photo: Eric Shindelbower, Boeing) (credit: Boeing )

The US Navy has awarded Boeing an $805 million contract to construct four prototypes of its design for the MQ-25 “Stingray." The uncrewed, carrier-based tanker aircraft will help extend the range of the Navy’s future carrier air wings and keep carriers themselves out of range of coastal defenses.

Boeing beat out Lockheed Martin and General Atomics for the contract. Northrop Grumman—which built the Navy’s first carrier-based drone prototype , the X-47B Unmanned Combat Air System-Demonstration (UCAS-D)—dropped out of the competition last year. The prototype contract is the first step toward delivering “initial operating capability,” a first production run of the drones, by 2024.

The MQ-25’s design requirements called for an aircraft capable of launching from a carrier deck and delivering 14,000 pounds (6,300 kg) of fuel to aircraft 500 nautical miles (926 km) away. That capacity and range, along with the low-observable shape of the drone, could essentially double the range of  F/A-18 Super Hornet and F-35C Joint Strike Fighter attack missions. Eventually, Boeing could deliver up to 72 Stingrays at a cost of $13 billion.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

US Supreme Court Petitioned to Fix Repeat Infringer ‘DMCA Disarray’

Adult content producer Ventura Content has petitioned the court to clarify how and when the DMCA protects online services from piracy liability. According to Ventura, the lower courts have “given birth to a new monster,” the online service provider that is “brazenly rich only from others’ content.”

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

The DMCA’s “repeat infringer” issue is a hot topic in US courts, leading to much uncertainty among various Internet services.

Under the DMCA, companies are required to implement a reasonable policy to deal with frequent offenders.

This applies to residential ISPs but also to websites that host user-uploaded content, such as video and image hosting platforms. Services that fail to implement a repeat infringer policy risk being held liable for the piracy activities of their users.

This is what happened to Cox previously. While the ISP settled its case last week, the issue is not off the agenda. In fact, a related matter is currently before the US Supreme Court.

The petition was submitted by adult content producer Ventura Content. The company previously lost its case against the video upload site Motherless.com, through which hundreds of thousands of copyright infringing videos were made public.

Ventura argued that the sole operator of the site was liable, as he failed to write down the details of the site’s repeat infringer termination policy. However, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit disagreed.

The fact that the details of the policy were not spelled out doesn’t mean that Motherless has no safe harbor protection, the Court concluded, noting that this may be different for large companies. In addition, Motherless was not required to keep a log of all infringements, as long as the operator keeps track of these in his head.

The adult company was obviously not happy with this outcome. It requested an ‘en banc’ rehearing review of the published opinion, but that was denied as well. The next logical step, therefore, was to take the matter to the Supreme Court.

“Plain and simple, the lower courts are in a state of DMCA disarray,” Ventura writes in its recent Supreme Court petition.

“The result of the DMCA disarray is that abject bootlegging in the offline, brick-and-mortar world remains unlawful, but the same conduct online by an OSP-turned publisher garners absolute summary judgment immunity.”

From the petition

The adult company is asking the Supreme Court to take on the case, noting that various circuit courts have issued conflicting decisions. For example, in the present case an “I Know It When I See It” policy was good enough for a summary judgment in its favor, while MP3tunes was previously denied the same because it failed to monitor users.

Ventura asks the Supreme Court to clearly define a standard which can be uniformly applied by lower courts. At the moment it appears that there is too much room for interpretation, which causes confusion and seemingly conflicting decisions.

This vagueness has been recognized in previous “repeat infringer” cases. To illustrate this, even judges themselves are not clear what a repeat infringer actually is, as the DMCA doesn’t clearly define it.

“How does somebody know a third party is an infringer? ‘Cause you say so?” Judge Shedd previously said in a BMG vs. Cox hearing.

The adult producer obviously hopes that if the Supreme Court takes on the case, which is far from certain, it will work out in its favor. If not, they fear that things will only get worse.

“The lower courts, acting out of a fear of derailing the internet’s development have instead given birth to a new monster: the OSP publisher that is brazenly rich only from others’ content, never pays for any content it publishes, knows the content is infringing, has full control over what is published on its platform, does not have to terminate known repeat infringers because unwritten ‘I Know Repeat Infringement When I See It’ policies suffice, and thus enjoys full immunity from copyright law,” Ventura writes.

“It is time for this Court to bring balance to the DMCA, which never intended, nor facially permits, such staggering dissonance between online and offline liability standards,” the company concludes.

A copy of Ventura Content’s petition to the US Supreme Court 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.

Daily Deals (8-31-2018)

This week Ultimate Ears launched the Boom 3 and Megaboom 3 Bluetooth speakers with an updated design and a new “Magic Button” that lets you start streaming tunes from Apple Music or Deezer Premium without touching your phone. But with price…

This week Ultimate Ears launched the Boom 3 and Megaboom 3 Bluetooth speakers with an updated design and a new “Magic Button” that lets you start streaming tunes from Apple Music or Deezer Premium without touching your phone. But with prices starting at $150, these aren’t exactly the cheapest UE speakers around. The good news […]

The post Daily Deals (8-31-2018) appeared first on Liliputing.

Medieval artisans built a glass-walled palace in the desert

New analysis of glass from Samarra reveals local manufacturing and long-range trade.

Article intro image

Enlarge / A) Mosaic tesserae; (B) glass inlays; (C) fragment of millefiori glass tile; D) cobalt blue flask neck; (E) rim fragment of painted glass bowl. (credit: Schibille et al. 2018)

In 836 CE, Abbasid caliph al-Mu’tasim ordered the construction of a new capital city on the east bank of the Tigris River, in modern-day Iraq. Since 762, al-Mu’tasim’s predecessors had ruled from Baghdad, but the presence of the caliph’s newly-formed Turkish regiments had stirred unrest in the city, so he wanted to pack up his troops and move to a new capital. This also allowed him to build his own grand palace complex with walls of inlaid glass and intricate mosaics.

Archaeologist Nadine Schibille of the University of Orleans and her colleagues recently analyzed fragments of the glass that once decorated the gleaming walls of Samarra’s palaces and mosques, and their chemical composition offers some hints about the gritty reality of the industry and trade that built the glass palaces.

Fit for a Caliph

Glass inlays of clear and purple geometric shapes and multicolored millefiori tiles, along with elaborate mosaics, decorated the walls of the audience chamber at Dar al-Kilafa palace. That glittering opulence may have been an allusion to the story of King Solomon’s glass palace, but the appearance of al-Mu’tasim’s audience chamber also created a physical manifestation of the caliph’s power. The awe and wonder that visitors experienced when they stepped into the glass-walled audience chamber were meant to transfer to the ruler himself.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments