GTA V’s Take-Two Wants ‘Lying Cheat Maker’ to Pay Up

Last month a New York federal court ordered the creator of two popular GTA V cheats to stop creating and distributing the code. However, that doesn’t end the case in question. Take-Two wants tens of thousands of dollars to cover its costs and doesn’t buy the cheater’s claim that the $100,000 he earned is all gone.

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

There’s a bit of a trend emerging in which gaming companies use copyright legislation against cheaters.

Take-Two Interactive Software, the company behind ‘Grand Theft Auto V’ (GTA V), is one of the players. The company has filed several lawsuits in the US targeting alleged cheaters.

In one case, a New York court recently issued a preliminary injunction ordering a man to stop working on and distributing the ‘Menyoo’ and ‘Absolute’ cheats.

The defendant, Georgia resident David Zipperer, didn’t deny his involvement and said he had already ceased working on the cheats. However, he had to find a lawyer as Take-Two was not letting the case go easily.

Following a referral from the EFF, Zipperer received “pro bono” help from attorney Joel Rothman. That didn’t last long. After a failed attempt to transfer the case to another district or otherwise resolve the case, the attorney is withdrawing from the case.

According to the attorney, Take-Two is increasing the costs and time for Zipperer’s defense, to “shake him free” of his pro bono counsel.

“I do not have the resources to go up against Kirkland & Ellis in scorched-earth discovery in a pro bono case. I cannot afford the time and money to fly around the country taking the depositions of Take-Two employees,” Rothman wrote to the court.

The attorney discussed a possible settlement with Take-Two, but the “tens of thousands” of dollars the company wants is not something his client can pay, he says.

“My client has no money. He swore to this Court that the money he earned from selling ‘cheat menus’ was used to support his family, that the money is gone, and that he has none left.

“He is an unemployed day laborer with a ninth-grade education who taught himself to write code. I have told this over and over to Take-Two’s lawyers, but they continue to demand a pound of flesh from Zipperer.”

Rothman, therefore, asked the Court to halt the discovery proceedings for thirty days so his client can find a new attorney, or prepare to represent himself.

Take-Two clearly sees things differently. A day after the attorney’s request was filed the company submitted a scathing reply, painting an opposing picture. According to the company, Zipperer has repeatedly misled the Court regarding his financial situation.

Through a subpoena, they learned that the defendant’s profits exceed $100,000 and that the most recent payment only dates a few months back. Some of the profits were spent on expensive electronic equipment and other personal purchases.

“Mr. Zipperer clearly has significantly more resources than he has repeatedly represented to this Court. We believe that these PayPal records reflect only a small fraction of the proceeds Mr. Zipperer has received from his illegal businesses,” the company writes.

Take-Two says that the case should not be delayed any further, also because there’s a chance that this will help the defendant to hide his assets.

“There are many litigants who need legal services and who legitimately do not have the means to pay for them. Mr. Zipperer is not one of them,” the company informs the Court.

“He is a man that has collected over a hundred thousand dollars by distributing an infringing work that harmed Take-Two and its customers who wanted to play Take-Two’s game without being ‘griefed’.”

After reviewing the submissions from both sides the Court sided with Take-Two (pdf), which means that the case won’t be delayed.

While Take-Two’s approach, in this case, may seem aggressive, it’s not always that way. Earlier this week it settled its case with Christopher Pei, who worked on the Infamous and Menyoo cheats. While Pei admits the infringing activities, both parties agreed to pay their own costs.

Meanwhile, Take-Two also filed a new lawsuit late last week. The company sued (pdf) Florida resident Jhonny Perez, accusing him of copyright infringement by creating and distributing the cheating tool “Elusive.”

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

Dell Precision 5530 mobile workstation now available with Ubuntu

All of the Dell Precision mobile workstations launched earlier this year are now available with a choice of Windows or Ubuntu Linux. Dell has announced that the Precision 5530 mobile workstation is the latest of its mobile workstation-class computers t…

All of the Dell Precision mobile workstations launched earlier this year are now available with a choice of Windows or Ubuntu Linux. Dell has announced that the Precision 5530 mobile workstation is the latest of its mobile workstation-class computers to be available as a Linux-powered Developer Edition computer. It’s currently on sale for $1185 and […]

The post Dell Precision 5530 mobile workstation now available with Ubuntu appeared first on Liliputing.

The secret to successful BBQ pork butt and brisket is science

How to beat the infamous “stall” and other tricks of experienced pit masters

Article intro image

Enlarge / The secret to yummy brisket and ribs lies in food chemistry and phase transitions. (credit: TayFos/Getty Images)

Imagine this nightmare Labor Day scenario. You've invited a large group of friends over for pulled BBQ pork or a delicious beef brisket. That morning, you confidently place your meat in the smoker, handy digital thermometer in place so you'll know just when the internal temperature reaches the perfect point. Everything seems fine for the first two hours, but suddenly the temperature stops rising. And it stays constant for hours and hours, as your friends get hungrier and hungrier, and you're forced to order pizza in desperation.

You've just encountered the bane of aspiring pit masters everywhere: the Stall (also known as the Zone or the Plateau), a common phenomenon in low-temperature cooking. What, precisely, causes the stall is a perennial topic of debate among BBQ enthusiasts. Is it a protein called collagen in the meat, which combines with water to convert to gelatin at the 160°F point? Or is it due to the fat rendering, turning lipids to liquid?

Several years ago, Greg Blonder, a Boston College professor, did the experiments and came up with a definitive answer: evaporative cooling. The meat sweats as it cooks, releasing the moisture within, and that moisture evaporates and cools the meat, effectively canceling out the heat from the BBQ. These days, Blonder is the resident science advisor and myth buster at the popular BBQ and grilling site called Amazing Ribs. "I spend a lot of my time settling bar fights, basically," he joked.

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My kid and I wrote a letter to NASA, and a very nice scientist wrote back

Not only did NASA’s David Williams reply, but he drew some awesome diagrams of Europa.

Article intro image

Enlarge / The puzzling, fascinating surface of Jupiter's icy moon Europa looms large in this newly-reprocessed color view, made from images taken by NASA's Galileo spacecraft in the late 1990s. This is the color view of Europa from Galileo that shows the largest portion of the moon's surface at the highest resolution. (credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SETI Institute)

I grew up on space books, Star Trek, and occasionally going to the Santa Monica College Planetarium. Space continues to fascinate me as it does many of us.

So as my daughter has gotten older (she's now almost 5), we've been trying to read some space books together. If you're curious, Ars resident space expert Eric Berger recommended The Jupiter Stone—it's great.

Lately though, my daughter and I have been diving into some more non-fiction works geared towards her age group. We've torn through Astronaut, Caroline's Comets, and The International Space Station. And on occasion, we tip toe into YouTube to learn about NASA and other space agencies.

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PAX hands-on: Retro sequels Streets of Rage 4, Windjammers 2 take us back to ‘94

Behind-closed-doors demo sees two huge 2D returns to ’90s arcade halls.

Promotional image for Streets of Rage 4

Enlarge (credit: DotEmu)

SEATTLE—PAX West has overtaken Seattle's downtown convention center with roughly 4,000 new and in-development games across its giant expo halls. Yet somehow, it's the kind of ragtag show where titans like Spider-Man, Artifact, and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate can stand toe-to-toe with promising indies like Due Process and Risk of Rain 2.

But before we post our usual best-of-the-best PAX wrap-up, we got a day-one opportunity to try two games that are quite unusual owing to their incredibly early status, their behind-closed-doors nature, and their "holy cow, these exist?" flavor: Streets of Rage 4 and Windjammers 2.

Axel to grind

Yes, the two PAX West games with arguably the biggest time gaps between sequels—24 years for both, if you're counting—shared a press-only hotel suite mere blocks away from the PAX show floor. Both games will be published by the French publisher DotEmu, and both are clearly not ready for public consumption, thanks to missing assets and incomplete polish.

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$600 Chromebooks are a dangerous development for Microsoft

Chrome OS is set to expand beyond the education market.

Lenovo

Among the new hardware launched this week at IFA in Berlin are a couple of premium Chromebooks. Lenovo's $600 Yoga Chromebook brings high-end styling and materials to the Chromebook space, along with well-specced internals and a high quality screen. Dell's $600 Inspiron Chromebook 14 has slightly lower specs but is similarly offering better styling, bigger, better quality screens, and superior specs to the Chromebook space.

These systems join a few other premium Chromebooks already out there. HP's Chromebook x2 is a $600 convertible hybrid launched a few months ago, and Samsung has had its Chromebook Plus and Pro systems for more than a year now. And of course, Google's Pixelbook is an astronomically expensive Chrome OS machine.

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Kin: If you can’t pick your family, hopefully you can find space weapons

The plot? Well, there’s a poor kid, a destructive bro… plus future soldiers and rayguns.

Ars talks with Kin's filmmaking team: co-directors Josh and Jonathan Baker and screenwriter Daniel Casey. (Transcript available here.) (video link)


"Sixty grand and a space gun—who the hell are you people?"

Out of context, that mid-film Zoë Kravitz quote sounds ridiculous. But Kin, a new sci-fi adventure meets broken-family societal drama from a pair of first-time filmmakers, proves to be far more grounded in heady real-world issues than you'd expect any "kid finds alien" adventure to be. Trying to combine peanut-butter-and-kimchi this way (filmmaking-ly speaking) presents a lot of obvious challenges, from tone to maintaining a logical narrative. But filmmakers Josh and Jonathan Baker have somehow made a movie that combines all of it in a manner that never feels forced.

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Microsoft: Nächstes großes Update für Windows 10 erscheint im Oktober

Statt Redstone 5 nennt Microsoft die nächste große Aktualisierung für sein Betriebssystem nun Windows 10 October 2018 Update – was auch das Wichtigste über den Veröffentlichungstermin verrät. Es enthält unter anderem Verbesserungen bei der Benutzerfüh…

Statt Redstone 5 nennt Microsoft die nächste große Aktualisierung für sein Betriebssystem nun Windows 10 October 2018 Update - was auch das Wichtigste über den Veröffentlichungstermin verrät. Es enthält unter anderem Verbesserungen bei der Benutzerführung. (Windows 10, Microsoft)

Pirate IPTV Provider Might “Offload” Premier League Matches

Anti-piracy action taken by the Premier League could force a change in business model for a ‘pirate’ IPTV provider supplying content to the UK. A source familiar with the operation says that blocking is causing problems for all of its customers, not just those interested in Premier League matches. This could potentially lead to football being “offloaded” from its service.

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

In March 2017, the Premier League obtained a blocking injunction from the High Court which compelled UK ISPs including BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media to block ‘pirate’ streams in real-time.

The order, granted under Section 97a of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, allowed the Premier League to target illegal streams including those consumed by Kodi users and premium IPTV subscribers.

Encouraged by the success of this pioneering action, the football organization obtained a second order in July 2017, one which quickly began causing disruption for unauthorzied providers.

This July, the Premier League obtained an extension from the Hight Court and as soon as the new season began, a new wave of blocking was launched. Judging by the number of complaints being aired online, the negative effects of the scheme are widespread.

Sources familiar with the IPTV landscape inform TF that the Premier League and its anti-piracy partners wasted no time, with stream interference reported within minutes of the opening match of the season getting underway. The problems are persisting too, with IPTV providers previously unaffected by the measures now being blocked by UK-based ISPs.

The solution to most of these problems is for IPTV subscribers to get themselves a VPN, which hides their traffic from their ISPs and bypasses all of the Premier League’s blocking measures. However, this is not always as straightforward as one might think.

While experienced torrent and streaming site users are familiar with VPNs, it appears that large numbers of more casual fans “who just want to watch the footy” are struggling with the learning curve. We’re told that huge numbers of blocked users are filing support tickets with providers when streams go off, only to balk at the notion of buying another service (a VPN) on top of their IPTV subscription.

For those prepared to fork out a bit more cash, the VPN solution is just a few minutes away. However, it seems clear that large numbers of people don’t really understand VPNs and don’t know how to set them up, particularly those trying to watch on set-top devices that require much more effort to configure than a desktop PC, mobile phone, or tablet.

Also causing problems is the decision by some IPTV providers not to enable VPN access to their service by default. Although their customers are being blocked from accessing their service in the UK, some still refuse to allow VPN access, until the customer opens a support ticket asking for it. This is causing frustration.

All that being said, some IPTV providers are finding ways to avoid the measures. None wish to speak about them publicly but there appears to be a mix of technical solutions combined with the ability to remain under the radar.

One source told us that some smaller IPTV outfits are getting through unhindered by being more obscure. However, this means they’re risking their heads appearing above the parapet when they try to grow their customer bases. This makes any form of advertising an accident waiting to happen since “one bad subscriber [an anti-piracy operative] ruins it for everyone.”

Perhaps one of the most interesting aspects to the disruption is how widespread it is, considering how targeted it’s supposed to be.

The Premier League’s action is supposedly designed to prevent unauthorized streams of Premier League copyrighted content, i.e football matches, reaching the public. However, it is crystal clear that it is actually blocking all or most streams of the services it targets, meaning that people who use IPTV services to watch any other content are being affected as well.

A source with experience of this problem told us that discussions aimed at countering the blocks are always taking place but there is a growing feeling that Premier League content is a golden goose drinking from a poisoned chalice.

Football is some of the most popular content on IPTV services as far as UK subscribers are concerned but transmitting it ensures that all of a provider’s content gets blocked, something which upsets all users, no matter what they’re watching.

This situation has prompted at least one supplier to consider moving away from Premier League matches in order to safeguard the rest of its service.

While this will definitely be bad for business short term, we’re told that extra effort could be put into trying to attract more customers from outside the UK, since they’re less likely to be buying the service with the primary aim of watching Premiership football. Another option is to segregate football content “in other ways” but TF’s questions on what that might mean went unanswered.

Whatever the outcome, it seems clear that as planned, the Premier League is having an overall negative effect on the illegal streaming market. Of course, that only happens when live football is underway, which may be a sacrifice some providers and subscribers will be prepared to endure.

Nevertheless, providing and streaming live football is not the cakewalk it once was.

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

Blaulicht: China kämpft mit Spielebeschränkungen gegen Kurzsichtigkeit

Der chinesische Spielemarkt könnte vor einer ernsthaften Krise stehen: Die Regierung des Landes plant offenbar ernsthafte Beschränkungen der Spielzeit. Es geht nicht wie früher um die Suchtproblematik – sondern darum, vor allem Kinder vor Kurzsichtigke…

Der chinesische Spielemarkt könnte vor einer ernsthaften Krise stehen: Die Regierung des Landes plant offenbar ernsthafte Beschränkungen der Spielzeit. Es geht nicht wie früher um die Suchtproblematik - sondern darum, vor allem Kinder vor Kurzsichtigkeit zu schützen. (Games, Medizin)