Auftragsfertiger: Globalfoundries stoppt 7-nm-Verfahren

Weil große Kunden wie AMD fehlen, hat der Auftragsfertiger Globalfoundries alle Arbeiten am 7-nm-FinFet-Node eingestellt. Stattdessen konzentriert sich der Hersteller auf 14 nm und auf SOI-basierte Prozesse wie 12FDX. AMD fertigt daher künftig bei der …

Weil große Kunden wie AMD fehlen, hat der Auftragsfertiger Globalfoundries alle Arbeiten am 7-nm-FinFet-Node eingestellt. Stattdessen konzentriert sich der Hersteller auf 14 nm und auf SOI-basierte Prozesse wie 12FDX. AMD fertigt daher künftig bei der TSMC. (Globalfoundries, Prozessor)

IP Address is Not Enough to Identify Pirate, US Court of Appeals Rules

The owner of an adult foster care home who operated an open WiFi network has booked a big win against a copyright troll. Thomas Gonzales was accused of downloading the Adam Sandler movie The Cobbler but won $17k last year after being wrongfully targeted. The case went to appeal and in a ruling handed down yesterday by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Gonzales emerged victorious again.

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

Copyright trolling is a messy business with an extremely poor reputation but that hasn’t stopped dozens of companies trying to profit from it.

Plenty of cases go the trolls’ way, settled privately for large sums before ever reaching a courtroom. But, every now and again, things go bad for them in an extremely big way.

In Oregan during 2016, a case filed by the makers of the Adam Sandler movie The Cobbler against an alleged pirate received a big set back. A judge dismissed a direct infringement complaint against Thomas Gonzales when it became clear that the defendant probably wasn’t the infringer.

Gonzales’ case is an interesting one. Rather being targeted in his home as many alleged infringers are, his alleged wrongdoing took place in the adult foster care home he runs. His Comcast account, which was connected to an open WiFi network, had allegedly been used to download and share the movie. Due to the network’s open nature, anyone could’ve carried out the infringement.

Due to concerns over privacy, Gonzales refused to hand over the names of other individuals with access to the WiFi network unless Cobbler obtained a court order. The district court subsequently granted leave to depose Gonzales but the process did not reveal the identity of the infringer.

This important set of circumstances didn’t deter the trolls, who pushed ahead with the case regardless. The decision was a poor one. Early 2017, District Judge Michael Simon ruled that the plaintiffs could not claim direct or indirect infringement and should pay Gonzales’ legal fees of $17,222.

“The Court will issue a Judgment dismissing with prejudice Plaintiff’s indirect infringement claim and without prejudice Plaintiff’s direct infringement claim against Mr. Gonzales,” the Judge wrote.

By shifting the costs onto the rightsholders, the Court hoped to send the message that bringing cases without solid evidence can prove costly. However, that message must’ve got lost in translation as the trolls doubled down and took the case to appeal. That decision also proved to be a poor one.

In a ruling handed down yesterday by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Judge Margaret McKeown makes it crystal clear that Cobbler Nevada LLC, the owner of the copyright in question, has no case against Gonzales.

“In this copyright action, we consider whether a bare allegation that a defendant is the registered subscriber of an Internet Protocol (‘IP’) address associated with infringing activity is sufficient to state a claim for direct or contributory infringement,” the Judge writes.

“We conclude that it is not.”

Cobbler Nevada claimed that Gonzales had directly infringed their rights or, in the alternative, contributed to another person’s infringement by failing to secure his open WiFi. The district court, which previously heard the case, dismissed these claims. The Ninth Circuit agreed that was the correct decision.

“The direct infringement claim fails because Gonzales’s status as the registered subscriber of an infringing IP address, standing alone, does not create a reasonable inference that he is also the infringer,” the Judge notes.

“Because multiple devices and individuals may be able to connect via an IP address, simply identifying the IP subscriber solves only part of the puzzle. A plaintiff must allege something more to create a reasonable inference that a subscriber is also an infringer.”

Cobbler’s backup plan, that failing a direct infringement claim it could claim contributory infringement, also crashed and burned. Since the rightsholder couldn’t show that Gonzales had done anything to encourage the downloading and sharing of the movie, the claim was dismissed.

“[W]ithout allegations of intentional encouragement or inducement of infringement, an individual’s failure to take affirmative steps to police his internet connection is insufficient to state a claim,” the decision reads.

In an additional analysis, Judge McKeown notes that while finding an infringing IP address is usually pretty straightforward, it’s not always easy for copyright holders to find out who was behind the address at the relevant times.

“The reasons are obvious — simply establishing an account does not mean the subscriber is even accessing the internet, and multiple devices can access the internet under the same IP address,” the Judge writes.

“Identifying an infringer becomes even more difficult in instances like this one, where numerous people live in and visit a facility that uses the same internet service. While we recognize this obstacle to naming the correct defendant, this complication does not change the plaintiff’s burden to plead factual allegations that create a reasonable inference that the defendant is the infringer.”

It will be interesting to see how this ruling affects other similar cases moving forward. Many homes and businesses have WiFi that is accessible to several residents, workers, or visitors. Identifying who was at the helm at the time of an alleged infringement will be challenging at best, impossible at worst.

The Ninth Circuit ruling 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.

Raspberry Pi PoE HAT: Platine gibt Raspberry Pi Lüfter und Power over Ethernet

Den Bastelrechner mit PoE betreiben: Das neue Zubehör der Raspberry Foundation erweitert den kleinen Bastelrechner Raspberry Pi um eine alternative Energiequelle. Außerdem sorgt der zusätzliche Lüfter für eine bessere Kühlung – allerdings ist nur das a…

Den Bastelrechner mit PoE betreiben: Das neue Zubehör der Raspberry Foundation erweitert den kleinen Bastelrechner Raspberry Pi um eine alternative Energiequelle. Außerdem sorgt der zusätzliche Lüfter für eine bessere Kühlung - allerdings ist nur das aktuelle Modell dazu kompatibel. (Raspberry Pi, PoE)

EU-Ratsspitze: Auch Fingerabdrücke von Kindern sollen in Ausweise

Die österreichische Ratspräsidentschaft will es den EU-Mitgliedstaaten erlauben, sogar die digitalen Fingerabdrücke von Kindern unter zwölf Jahren in Personalausweise einzubauen. Außen vor bleiben nur Personen, bei denen es physikalisch unmöglich ist, …

Die österreichische Ratspräsidentschaft will es den EU-Mitgliedstaaten erlauben, sogar die digitalen Fingerabdrücke von Kindern unter zwölf Jahren in Personalausweise einzubauen. Außen vor bleiben nur Personen, bei denen es physikalisch unmöglich ist, die biometrischen Merkmale zu erheben. Von Stefan Krempl (Biometrie, Internet)

Pirate Bay Suffers Downtime, Tor Domain is Up

The Pirate Bay has been hard to reach for more than a day, causing concern among some BitTorrent users. The outage is likely due to ‘technical’ issues, so the site is expected to resurface soon. Meanwhile, some of the site’s proxies and its Tor domain are still working fine.

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

pirate bayThe Pirate Bay has been hard to reach since last weekend.

For most people, the site currently displays a CloudFlare error message across the entire site, with the CDN provider mentioning that a “bad gateway” is causing the issue.

As usual, no further details are available to us and there is no known ETA for the site’s full return. However, judging from past experience, it’s likely a small technical issue that needs fixing.

TPB 502 Cloudflare error

The Pirate Bay has had quite a few stints of downtime in years. The popular torrent site usually returns after several hours, but outages of more than a day have become more common recently.

Amid the downtime, there’s still some good news for those who desperately need to access the notorious torrent site.

TPB is still available via its .onion address on the Tor network, accessible using the popular Tor Browser, for example. The site’s Tor traffic goes through a separate server and works just fine. Several dedicated TPB proxies are still up as well.

The Pirate Bay team has a status page in the forums where people can check to see if an outage is affecting everyone or not. This also shows that the Tor version of the site is working fine, and that new torrents are still coming through.

The main .org domain will probably be back in action soon enough, but seasoned TPB users will probably know the drill by now…

TPB Status

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

Entwickler-Charaktere: Ninja oder Zauberer?

Wenn IT-Projekte scheitern, liegt das oft am Ärger zwischen allzu verschiedenen Köpfen im Team. Zwei Informatiker haben Charakterprofile für Entwickler geschaffen, die helfen sollen. Von Maja Hoock (IT-Jobs, Softwareentwicklung)

Wenn IT-Projekte scheitern, liegt das oft am Ärger zwischen allzu verschiedenen Köpfen im Team. Zwei Informatiker haben Charakterprofile für Entwickler geschaffen, die helfen sollen. Von Maja Hoock (IT-Jobs, Softwareentwicklung)

Windows 10: Juli-Update legt Touchscreen einiger Surface Pro 4 lahm

Weder Stift noch Touchscreen funktionieren nach dem Update vom 24. Juli 2018 für Windows 10. Anscheinend hat sich ein Fehler eingeschlichen, durch den entsprechende Treiber nicht mehr starten. Bisher kommt die einzige temporäre Lösung aus der Community…

Weder Stift noch Touchscreen funktionieren nach dem Update vom 24. Juli 2018 für Windows 10. Anscheinend hat sich ein Fehler eingeschlichen, durch den entsprechende Treiber nicht mehr starten. Bisher kommt die einzige temporäre Lösung aus der Community und nicht von Microsoft selbst. (Surface, Microsoft)

Standortverlauf: Bundesregierung fordert Klarstellung von Google

Die umfangreiche Speicherung von Standortdaten durch Google ruft die Bundesregierung auf den Plan. In einem Brief an das Unternehmen soll das Justizministerium aber unterschiedliche Vorwürfe verwechselt haben. (Facebook, Smartphone)

Die umfangreiche Speicherung von Standortdaten durch Google ruft die Bundesregierung auf den Plan. In einem Brief an das Unternehmen soll das Justizministerium aber unterschiedliche Vorwürfe verwechselt haben. (Facebook, Smartphone)

Uber, Toyota sign $500M deal to put self-driving tech into Sienna minivans

Uber pulled its own AVs off the road months ago; it’s now trying to work with others.

Enlarge / The interior of the 2017 Toyota Sienna minivan is seen during the 2017 North American International Auto Show in Detroit, January 10, 2017. (credit: SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)

On Monday, news emerged that Toyota has reportedly signed a $500 million deal with Uber regarding self-driving technology. The Japanese automaker will integrate Uber's autonomous driving technology into some of its Sienna minivans, which—if all goes well—will enter service at some future date as ride-hailing vehicles accessed through Uber's platform. This deal follows a $300 million investment in Uber by Toyota in 2016.

Toyota is one of three OEMs linked with Uber. In August 2016, Uber signed a $300 million deal with Volvo to develop self-driving vehicles and announced plans in late 2017 to buy 24,000 XC90 SUVs from the Swedish company. And in January 2017, Daimler (which owns Mercedes-Benz) revealed that it plans to eventually use Uber's network to offer rides in autonomous vehicles that it is developing.

Toyota's progress in autonomous-vehicle technology has been lagging behind many other such programs. The consulting firm Navigant Research ranked it 12th out of 19 such efforts at the beginning of the year, far behind GM and Waymo. This is despite a hefty patent portfolio and a $1 billion investment in Jaybridge Robotics in 2016.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Liliputing Huawei MateBook D 14″ laptop giveaway

The Huawei MateBook D is a laptop with a 14 inch, full HD IPS touchscreen display, an AMD Ryzen 5 2500U processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 256GB solid state drive. Huawei launched the laptop this summer, and it’s currently available from Walmart for $6…

The Huawei MateBook D is a laptop with a 14 inch, full HD IPS touchscreen display, an AMD Ryzen 5 2500U processor, 8GB of RAM, and a 256GB solid state drive. Huawei launched the laptop this summer, and it’s currently available from Walmart for $630. At that price, the laptop offers a lot of bang […]

The post Liliputing Huawei MateBook D 14″ laptop giveaway appeared first on Liliputing.