Net neutrality foe Marsha Blackburn gets 85% of the vote in GOP Senate primary

Blackburn faces tough general election against net neutrality supporter.

Enlarge / President Donald Trump and Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) at a campaign rally at the Nashville Municipal Auditorium on May 29, 2018. (credit: Getty Images | Drew Angerer )

US Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) is a step closer to the US Senate after winning yesterday's Tennessee Republican primary.

Blackburn has been one of the most prominent opponents of net neutrality rules in the House of Representatives, where she chairs a key subcommittee that oversees telecommunications.

Her primary win was no surprise—she took 84.5 percent of the vote, with 610,884 votes, easily defeating Republican Aaron Pettigrew, who had no previous political experience.

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Red Dead Redemption 2: Gesprengte Erwartungen und ein Kriegsbeil

Von GTA 5 dürfte Rockstar Games inzwischen mehr als 100 Millionen Exemplare verkauft haben: jetzt wendet sich der Hersteller verstärkt dem Quasi-Nachfolger Red Dead Redemption 2 zu: Für Spieler gibt’s ein Stein-Kriegsbeil, für Aktionäre stark steigende…

Von GTA 5 dürfte Rockstar Games inzwischen mehr als 100 Millionen Exemplare verkauft haben: jetzt wendet sich der Hersteller verstärkt dem Quasi-Nachfolger Red Dead Redemption 2 zu: Für Spieler gibt's ein Stein-Kriegsbeil, für Aktionäre stark steigende Kurse. (Red Dead Redemption 2, Take-Two)

Fortnite is coming to Android… but not to the Google Play Store

Fortnite is one of the most popular video games on the market right now, which makes it one of the only games that might have a chance of pulling off what developer Epic Games is planning to do next. The company already offers Fortnite for PC, Mac, Pla…

Fortnite is one of the most popular video games on the market right now, which makes it one of the only games that might have a chance of pulling off what developer Epic Games is planning to do next. The company already offers Fortnite for PC, Mac, PlayStation, Xbox, and Switch. And Epic launched Fortnite […]

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Gene editing crunches an organism’s genome into single, giant DNA molecule

The yeast seem to grow just fine with all their genes on a single piece of DNA.

Enlarge / Individual chromosomes (right) have a complex organization when packed inside a cell's nucleus (left). (credit: Thomas Ried/NIH)

Complex organisms have complex genomes. While bacteria and archaea keep all of their genes on a single loop of DNA, humans scatter them across 23 large DNA molecules called chromosomes; chromosome counts range from a single chromosome in males of an ant species to more than 400 in a butterfly.

There have been indications that chromosomes matter for an organism's underlying biology. Specialized structures within them influence the activity of nearby genes. And studies show that areas on different chromosomes will consistently be found next to each other in the cell, suggesting their interactions are significant.

So how do we square these two facts? Chromosome counts vary wildly and sometimes differ between closely related species, suggesting the actual number of chromosomes doesn't matter much. Yet the chromosomes themselves seem to be critical for an organism's genome to function as expected. To explore this issue, two different groups tried an audacious experiment: using genome editing, they gradually merged a yeast's 16 chromosomes down to just one giant molecule. And, unexpectedly, the yeast were mostly fine.

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After Five Years of Blocking Sites, Russia’s No Closer to Beating Piracy

Five years ago this week, Russia embarked on a site-blocking regime that was designed to drastically slow the piracy phenomenon. Currently, more than 5,000 sites remain blocked on copyright grounds, but is the country any closer to a solution than it was in 2013?

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

For reasons best known to rightsholders internationally, site-blocking is now one of the most favored anti-piracy mechanisms.

Five years ago, Russia decided that it too would join the movement, hoping to put a dent in rampant online sharing of copyrighted content.

August 1, 2013, new legislation came into force which allowed rightsholders to block video content that had been posted online illegally. A year later, the same protections were extended to other kinds of intellectual property, excluding photographic works.

In the months that followed, it became clear that some sites were being reported for copyright infringement on multiple occasions. This led to calls for repeat offenders to receive special treatment from the courts. On May 1, 2015, new rules made it possible for sites to be permanently blocked. Thousands of platforms have been affected.

Last October yet more legislative amendments came into force. These allowed rightsholders to target so-called ‘mirrors’, platforms that are functionally similar to sites that have already been blocked but manage to evade that fate. According to figures supplied by telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor and published by Russia’s RBC, 2,421 mirror sites have been blocked under the legislation.

Just a month later during November 2017, Russia tightened the law up once again, this time targeting VPN and anonymizer services that provide access to blocked sites. These must now connect to a national register of blocked sites to ensure they don’t facilitate access to such platforms. If they fail to do so, they can also be blocked.

Search engines haven’t escaped the clutches of the authorities either. They too must interface with government systems listing blocked sites in order to prevent any from appearing in search engine results. After a period of uncertainty as to how this should be carried out, search engines should be fully compliant by the end of September.

During the five years between Aug 1, 2013 and Aug 1, 2018, Roscomnadzor reports that it received 3,702 blocking orders from the Moscow City Court following 8,454 complaints by rightsholders.

“In total, the Moscow City Court’s rulings and applications by rightholders concerned 116,298 sites or pages of websites,” the watchdog reports.

“After receiving a notification from Roskomnadzor to prevent violation of the law, the vast majority of Internet resources remove pirated copies of films, music, etc.”

Roscomnadzor says that access is currently limited to around 8% (5,058) of web pages that previously had measures taken against them. The owners of 60,834 other web pages independently took measures to restrict access to pirated content, without waiting to be blocked by the authorities.

According to RBC, the Gazprom-Media owned channel TNT was the most active rightsholders over the past five years. The broadcaster filed 447 applications at the Moscow City Court for interim measures and 489 full claims.

The majority of respondents in cases handled by the Court were foreign hosting companies. However, getting these companies to appear in Russia seems to have proven impossible in the majority of cases.

“Neither foreign hosting providers, nor the overwhelming majority of their domestic colleagues bothered to attend the sessions of the Moscow City Court. For example, from August 2013 to August 2014, only three cases were recorded, when the defendant appeared in court,” RBC reports.

The defendant listed on most occasions in connection with blocking efforts was US-based CDN company Cloudflare. The company was named in 554 lawsuits with a further 300 relating to Russia-based hoster, uCoz and British Virgin Islands-based Compubyte. Hosting provider Inferno Solutions appeared in third place.

But despite many thousands of actions, it appears that copyright holders remain unhappy with the system.

“There are results, but there is no effectiveness,” says Dmitry Sychugov, general director of Amedia TV, a company that filed 169 applications for interim measures plus 60 lawsuits.

“In technical terms, [tools for rightsholders] are far behind the advanced solutions of pirates. The majority of users still turn to pirated sites for viewing video content.”

With other rightsholders describing the current system as effective as a “sieve”, Roscomnadzor is trying to remain upbeat.

“For five years anti-piracy legislation was supplemented by new norms, the implementation of which increased the effectiveness of copyright protection on the Internet,” the watchdog concludes.

It’s interesting to note that despite Russia’s site and content blocking system being one of the toughest in the world, rightsholders still aren’t happy. Whether additional legislative measures will move into place during the next five years will remain to be seen but until then, content will continue to leak through the mesh, at pace.

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

Salt-infused graphene creates an infrared cloaking device

Infrared emissions that are controlled by salt infusion make good camouflage.

Enlarge / That's not a Warhol. That's the material described here, showing fine control over whether it's hotter or colder than its surroundings.

I love light and the various manners in which we can control it. It's a good time for me, as we are truly in a golden age of light control. We can manipulate it to see details that would otherwise be invisible. We can guide it around objects so that they are invisible. Light has been made to stand still and dance on the pointy end of pins.

All this control of light is indirect, coming via our control of materials that the light interacts with. Now, researchers have crafted a material that adapts its properties so that its infrared appearance is either hotter or colder than the object it encloses. In other words, hot objects appear cold, or cold objects can appear hot—it's infrared camouflage.

It’s all about those electrons

So, do you make yourself some infrared camo gear? The basic procedure is to control the efficiency with a material that can emit infrared radiation. Take gold as an example. Gold is a nearly perfect metal: it has high conductivity and does not absorb infrared radiation very easily. That means it will reflect incoming radiation; this is why emergency blankets have a thin gold coating: the gold reflects your own infrared radiation back to you to keep you warm.

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Samsung Galaxy Note 9 leaked again (by Samsung), will support up to 1TB of storage (kind of)

Samsung is holding an event next week where the company is expected to launch the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 smartphone, a new Galaxy Watch, and maybe a few other gadgets. But the company seems to be having a hard time keeping a lid on things until next wee…

Samsung is holding an event next week where the company is expected to launch the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 smartphone, a new Galaxy Watch, and maybe a few other gadgets. But the company seems to be having a hard time keeping a lid on things until next week. The latest leak comes from Samsung New […]

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Original Star Wars movies blocked from Disney streaming until 2024

Turner Broadcasting bought the rights in 2016, doesn’t want to sell them back.

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A little under a year ago, news broke that Disney was planning its own streaming service for a 2019 launch. The logic from Disney's perspective is hard to avoid: why let someone else get rich streaming its content? Between Disney's vast back catalog of animated features plus the Star Wars and Marvel franchises, it's got a lot of greatest hits, after all. A month later it was therefore no surprise when it revealed it would not renew a deal with Netflix that has allowed the latter to stream some of the biggest blockbusters of the decade.

But there's a snag to this plan, as is often the case when intellectual property is at stake. On Thursday afternoon, Bloomberg reported that in 2016, when Disney sold the TV broadcast rights for the original Star Wars films to Turner Broadcasting, it also sold it the streaming rights. Until 2024. And the AT&T-owned broadcaster has no desire to give them back early—at least not at a price that the House of Mouse considers palatable.

That's somewhat of a blow for Disney. The Star Wars franchise features heavily in what we know so far about its plans for the streaming service, with live action and animated series already in the works. But for the first five years of its existence, it won't be able to stream any of the first six Star Wars films themselves.

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Compulsive gambling, sex from popular drug? Answer to 100s of lawsuits looms

After three bellwether cases settle, hundreds near deadline for “global settlement.”

Enlarge / Bottles of Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. Abilify brand medication sits on a pharmacy shelf in Princeton, Illinois, on Wednesday, October 22, 2014. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

Makers of the blockbuster drug Abilify have until September 1 to come up with a way to settle more than 800 lawsuits that claim the anti-psychotic and anti-depressive drug spurred uncontrollable urges to gamble, binge eat, shop, and have sex—all without any warning.

The deadline for that “global settlement” was ordered recently by Judge M. Casey Rodgers in the Northern District Court of Florida, which is handling all the lawsuits in a lumped process called multidistrict litigation (MDL).

Judge Rodgers made the call after Abilify’s makers, Bristol-Myers Squibb and Otsuka, settled three lawsuits from the MDL individually earlier this year. All three were settled for undisclosed sums. Those cases had been carefully selected by the court and used as so-called bellwether trials. That is, they were test cases for the rest, thus they set a precedent for settlement. In the event that Bristol-Myers Squibb and Otsuka fail to come up with a way to settle the rest by the deadline, the court will move a fresh batch of lawsuits from the MDL to trial.

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People buried at Stonehenge may have come from as far away as Wales

Some may have hailed from the same area as the bluestones, new analysis suggests.

Enlarge / Archaeologists excavate ancient human remains re-interred in Aubrey Hole 7 in the 1920s. (credit: Adam Stanford of Aerial-Cam Ltd)

New chemical analysis of cremated remains unearthed at Stonehenge suggests that several of the people buried there came from farther west, possibly even from the same area of Wales as the “bluestones,” the shorter, bluish-gray stones that form the inner ring of the monument.

Over the last century, archaeologists have pored over the details of Stonehenge’s construction, but they’ve largely ignored the 58 people interred in a ring of 56 shallow pits, now called Aubrey holes, around the monument. Until recently, the cremated remains of these ancient Britons didn’t have much to tell archaeologists, because the heat of cremation tends to destroy most of the evidence about where people came from and how they lived.

But strontium turns out to withstand the heat, and it’s giving archaeologists new clues about where the people buried at Stonehenge spent the last few years of their lives.

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