The slow-burn psychological horror of Castle Rock makes for must-see TV

Ars chats with Sam Shaw on that shocking twist and what’s to come as the finale looms.

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Enlarge / Attorney Henry Deaver (André Holland) returns to his childhood home and must confront terrors both past and present in Hulu's Castle Rock. (credit: Hulu)

Castle Rock, the new horror anthology series from Hulu, surprised us by becoming one of our top breakout shows this summer. Inspired by the works of Stephen King, the series has already been renewed for a second season. As we head into the last two episodes this season, Ars caught up with co-creator Sam Shaw to talk about the nature of horror, common themes, and what we can expect from the series going forward.

(Mild spoilers below for the first eight episodes.)

Shaw and co-creator Dusty Thomason previously worked together on Manh(a)ttan, a series set in the New Mexico military encampment of Los Alamos, detailing the birth of the atomic bomb in the 1940s. Despite critical raves, the show never quite found its audience and was sadly cancelled after just two seasons.

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Movie Outfits Are ‘Quietly’ Targeting Canadian File-Sharers in Court

Over the past several years, hundreds of thousands of piracy warnings have been sent out to Canadian pirates under the ‘notice-and-notice’ scheme. While these warnings are generally without consequence, several movie companies have also taken thousands of alleged “John Doe” pirates to court, demanding hefty settlement payments.

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

For more than a decade, alleged file-sharers around the world have been pressured to pay significant settlement fees.

These so-called copyright trolling efforts are pretty straightforward. Copyright holders obtain a list of ‘pirating’ IP-addresses and then request a subpoena from the court, compelling ISPs to hand over the associated customer data.

In recent years several news reports have appeared on these cases in the US, Sweden, Denmark and elsewhere. In Canada, things have remained quiet, but that doesn’t mean that these cases don’t exist there.

While the volume of lawsuits is relatively modest, thousands of Canadians have been targeted since 2016. The lawsuits in question are filed by the rightsholders of films such as The Hitman’s Bodyguard, Mechanic: Resurrection, Criminal, London Has Fallen, and Dallas Buyers Club,

These outfits are also active in other countries and many have a connection to Voltage Pictures, another familiar name. Voltage sued over 50,000 Canadian John Does in a reverse class action in 2011. This ‘Hurt Locker‘ case is still ongoing.

After the initial lawsuit, things went quiet, however. In the courts at least.

Initially, the movie companies focused their efforts on the so-called “notice-and-notice” scheme. This allows rightsholders to send settlement requests to alleged pirates through their ISPs. However, no personal details would be exposed. That meant that these could be easily ignored by the accused.

In recent years more than 300,000 of these “notice-and-notice” warnings were sent out by just one law firm, but the total could be over a million. This even grabbed the attention of lawmakers and legal experts.

What’s less known, however, is that in 2016 these movie companies and other rightsholders started taking cases to court again. Court records reveal that at least 16 separate lawsuits were filed since, with some targeting hundreds of people at once.

These cases are similar to the “copyright troll” efforts we see in other countries. They are litigated by the law firm Aird & Berlis and have fewer defendants than the initial Hurt Locker suit. Perhaps that’s why they remained largely under the radar.

The fallout is very real though. While none of the cases have gone to trial yet, some defendants have settled their cases for thousands of dollars.

TorrentFreak reached out to James Plotkin of law firm CazaSaikaley, who represented two defendants. He warns that from a consumer protection standpoint, the biggest problem is ignorance.

For example, many defendants may not realize that these cases are filed against John Does. This means that they are technically not being sued yet unless their name is added to the suit, which rarely happens. But it gets worse.

“I have also seen a number of consent judgments for $5,000. This is the maximum liability under the Copyright Act for non-commercial infringement. I am therefore puzzled as to why individuals would agree to settle for their likely maximum liability at trial,” Plotkin adds.

The latter is a particularly worrisome issue. It means that accused file-sharers admit guilt and agree to pay $5,000, which is the maximum damages amount they could get in court.

“I see no rational basis for paying that amount,” Plotkin notes, suggesting that some defendants are not represented by attorneys who know the ins and outs of IP law.

In most other countries the legal pressure is used to get Internet subscribers to pay a settlement fee. The matter rarely goes to trial. According to Plotkin, the same is likely to happen in Canada.

“It is difficult to say for certain, but I do not think any of these cases will go all the way,” Plotkin tells us.

“The business model so far seems to have been lifting off as many claims and letters as possible in the hopes of scaring out settlements. It has worked. I don’t see why the plaintiffs would jeopardize that by actually litigating one of these claims.”

Thus far the cases have been ongoing for years, without much resistance. Those who are unfortunate enough to get caught up in this should carefully research their options. Unlike the “notice-and-notice” emails, ignoring the legal paperwork is not a good option.

According to Plotkin, it would be wise to consult an attorney instead.

“Get competent legal advice. It is important to understand the legal playing field. Defendants are not helpless in these actions, so ignoring the claim and allowing the plaintiff to proceed in obtaining a default judgment is probably not the best option for most people,” Plotkin notes.

That is the type of advice one would expect from an attorney of course. However, in this case, it is certainly warranted. And the outcome could be positive as well, as Plotkin has already helped one defendant to get rid of the claim, without a settlement.

TorrentFreak also reached out to attorney Ken Clark of the law firm Aird & Berlis, which represents the movie outfits. He couldn’t provide any further details on how many people have been sued thus far and preferred not to disclose any further information.

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

This lidar/camera hybrid could be a powerful addition to driverless cars

Clever hack allows lidar to act as a low-light camera—with depth perception.

Promotional image from Ouster positions device next to branded mug.

Enlarge / Ouster's OS-1 (left) and OS-2 lidar sensors. (credit: Ouster)

Lidars and cameras are two of the three standard sensors (along with radar) on almost all self-driving cars being tested today. Lidars and cameras both operate by detecting reflected light, but cameras are passive, whereas lidars actively send out laser pulses and measure the light that gets reflected back. Cameras produce a flat two-dimensional image, while conventional lidars produce a three-dimensional "point cloud."

Lidar startup Ouster has developed a clever and potentially significant hack: the company figured out how to make the sensors already on its powerful OS-1 lidar units function as a camera, producing a panoramic two-dimensional snapshot of the sensor's surroundings.

"The OS-1's optical system has a larger aperture than most DSLRs, and the photon counting ASIC we developed has extreme low-light sensitivity," Ouster CEO Angus Pacala writes. "So we're able to collect ambient imagery even in low-light conditions."

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Daily Deals (9-04-2018)

Yesterday we noted that Lenovo was offering discounts on a bunch of laptops for Labor Day, including a 13.3 inch Lenovo IdeaPad 720s with a 13 inch display, a Ryzen 5 2500U processor, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage that was selling for $600. If you w…

Yesterday we noted that Lenovo was offering discounts on a bunch of laptops for Labor Day, including a 13.3 inch Lenovo IdeaPad 720s with a 13 inch display, a Ryzen 5 2500U processor, 8GB of RAM, and 256GB of storage that was selling for $600. If you were hoping for a model with a faster […]

The post Daily Deals (9-04-2018) appeared first on Liliputing.

Humans can perform ghost imaging, no computer required

Researchers show that the eye combines images like a slow-exposure camera.

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Enlarge / Ghostly, right? (credit: Art Institute of Chicago)

Ghost imaging involves capturing an image using photons that have never interacted with the object being imaged. Can you perform ghost imaging using the human eye as one of the detectors? The answer is, apparently, yes. Researchers stared down the barrel of one of their own imaging setups and claimed to observe images. In doing so, they’ve shown that the eye is much like any other camera.

Ghost imaging isn’t all that ghostly

In ghost imaging’s original conception, the quantum properties of light were an essential part of the imaging process. The basic idea was that two entangled photons would be separated. One would head off to bounce off the object being imaged. The other would go to a camera. The photon that bounced off the object would hit a photodiode (essentially a single pixel detector). That click would then be used to trigger the camera to record the other photon, the one that hadn't hit the object. Supposedly thanks to entanglement, an image can slowly be constructed from light that has never been near the object being imaged.

As cool as that sounds, ghost imaging isn't necessarily quantum. Images can be constructed by summing up a sequence of patterns. Each pattern is assigned a value called a weight. If a pattern contributes strongly to creating an image, then it gets a large weight, while patterns that do not contribute get a very small weight. 

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Google Chrome updates: new design, smarter omnibox and password manager

It’s been 10 years since Google introduced the first version of its Chrome web browser. Since then it’s become the world’s most popular desktop browser, and it ships on millions of Android smartphones. New versions of Chrome are relea…

It’s been 10 years since Google introduced the first version of its Chrome web browser. Since then it’s become the world’s most popular desktop browser, and it ships on millions of Android smartphones. New versions of Chrome are released every six weeks, but some updates are bigger than others. Google timed some pretty big changes […]

The post Google Chrome updates: new design, smarter omnibox and password manager appeared first on Liliputing.

Opportunity rover still MIA as dust settles on Mars

The rover has not checked in as controllers are getting ready to trigger contact.

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Enlarge (credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Cornell/Arizona State)

One of the largest dust storms we've ever seen on Mars is finally winding down, raising hopes that the Opportunity rover will soon be able to obtain enough power to resume normal contact with Earth. At this point, there's been no contact with the rover since June, and controllers are getting ready to attempt to get the rover to respond to commands sent over NASA's Deep Space Network.

Unlike the larger Curiosity rover, Opportunity is solar-powered. And as the current dust storm gradually grew to encompass the entirety of Mars' atmosphere, the sunlight that powered it gradually faded out. For several months, Opportunity hasn't been getting enough power to maintain normal function, causing it to shift into a hibernation mode. Once it underwent this shift back in June, the rover has been waiting for enough power to start checking in with its operators here on Earth.

Based on the atmospheric conditions, those operators expect that power is likely to be sufficient in the very near future. There are a number of uncertainties regarding the rover's condition that could mean it won't be making contact as expected, however. The simplest possibility is that the storm deposited enough dust on the rover's solar panels to keep them from reaching sufficient power levels. That could delay its return from hibernation until the last of the dust is out of the atmosphere, or it could even cause the power to stay low until local winds clean the panels off.

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Microsoft ditches Skype’s Snapchat feature, will optimize UI for calls and chat

The revolutionary approach of making Skype good at the things people use it for continues.

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Enlarge / The new mobile interface, with its buttons along the bottom. (credit: Skype)

In July, Microsoft made the surprising announcement that it was going to add useful new features to Skype: built-in call recording, along with the end-to-end encrypted messaging and NDI API support previously announced. Today, that drive to make Skype a better client for chat and calls continues with a new direction for the development of the user interface that emphasizes these core features.

This change in direction comes after there was vigorous pushback against Microsoft's plans to kill off legacy versions of the Skype client and unify every supported Skype platform on a single client. The new client (known as Skype for Life) is built using Web tech (it's a JavaScript application using the React framework), and it shares core code between the traditional Windows desktop application, the Windows Store application, the macOS and Linux apps, the iOS and Android mobile apps, and even the Web front-ends. With this unified client, Microsoft can add support for things like encrypted messaging without having to implement the same functionality multiple times for the multiple clients.

However, the users of the traditional, legacy Skype desktop application weren't happy with Microsoft's plans to force them to use Skype for Life. While Skype for Life is the only option for the new features, such as encryption and NDI support, it doesn't include certain legacy features, such as the ability to create multiple windows (one per chat) and a range of online statuses. Moreover, Skype for Life included and prioritized features such as Snapchat-like statuses, which haven't really caught on and which pushed the things that people do use Skype for—calling and messaging—into the background.

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Google celebrates a decade of Google Chrome, launches major redesign

The stable channel gets a new UI, a new new tab page, and more.

The very first version of Google Chrome was released September 2, 2008, which means the world's most popular browser is now 10 years old. Google is celebrating Chrome's first decade with the stable release of a major new UI revamp

Chrome's big redesign is rolling out across the desktop, Android, and iOS starting today. The new design brings Chrome more in line with Google's updated Material Design guidelines that were announced this year at I/O. You'll find a UI that is rounder, whiter, and has new icons. Tabs change from the trapezoidal shape to rectangles with rounded corners, the address bar is round, the omnibox is an actual box now, and there's a new profile button to the right of the menu.

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Man who threatened to kill Ajit Pai’s children pleads guilty, faces prison

“I will find your children and kill them,” man wrote after net neutrality repeal.

Closeup shot of handcuffs hanging from a metal bar in a prison.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Putra Kurniawan | EyeEm)

A man who threatened to kill the children of Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai pleaded guilty in federal court on Friday.

Markara Man, a 33-year-old man from California, "faces up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced Dec. 7" at US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, the Associated Press reported. Man pleaded guilty to the crime of intimidating, interfering with, or retaliating against a federal official by threatening to murder a family member.

Man sent threatening emails to Pai days after the December 2017 vote to repeal net neutrality rules, according to an FBI affidavit. One included the names and addresses of three preschools in or around Arlington, Virginia, and said, "I will find your children and I will kill them."

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