FBI: We can’t listen to Facebook Messenger voice calls. Judge: Tough luck

Fresno-based federal judge won’t force Facebook to help MS-13 investigation.

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Enlarge (credit: Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

A federal judge in Fresno, California recently denied prosecutors’ request to force Facebook to wiretap voice calls by suspected gang members conducted over Messenger.

According to a Friday report by Reuters, despite already having substantive traditional wiretaps and intercepting Messenger texts between alleged MS-13 gangsters, the government wanted further access.

"Currently, there is no practical method available by which law enforcement can monitor these calls," FBI Special Agent Ryan Yetter wrote in a nearly-100-page-long affidavit submitted to the court on August 30, 2018. The three participants in those calls are now in jail, according to Reuters.

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This arcade is really vintage: Visiting San Francisco’s Musée Mécanique

A look at what arcades were like long before the days of Pac-Man—and even pinball.

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Enlarge / Look through the window and see your future! (credit: Marlowe Bangeman)

We saw a lot on our family vacation to California this summer: epic coastline views, acre after acre of almond groves, forest fires, and Venice Beach, to name a few things. Thanks to friends and colleagues, we had a long list of sites to see. One such place, suggested by Cyrus Farivar, was Musée Mécanique. Located on San Francisco's historic Fisherman's Wharf, the Musée Mécanique bills itself as one of the largest privately owned collection of antique arcade machines in the world.

For Gen Xers like me, vintage arcades conjure up images of Pac-ManDonkey Kong, Tempest, and Crazy Climber. I make regular pilgrimages to Galloping Ghost, a suburban Chicago arcade that has over 400 playable classic arcade games and pinball tables.

Musée Mécanique has some classic video games, but the focus of the collection is primarily on coin-operated mechanical arcade machines and musical instruments. According to the Musée website, most of the machines are from the private collection of fifth-generation San Franciscan Edward Zelinsky. The collecting bug bit him as a child, and he made his first purchase—a penny skill game—in 1933 at age 11. By the time he passed away in 2004 at the age of 82, he had amassed well over 300 antique coin-op machines.

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CBS Orders ‘All Stop’ to Fan Made USS Enterprise Virtual Tour

The creators behind a fan made project to recreate the decks of the illustrious USS Enterprise as an interactive tour has been sent a cease-and-desist notice to stop their project by CBS, the owners of the Star Trek franchise.A group of talented Star T…



The creators behind a fan made project to recreate the decks of the illustrious USS Enterprise as an interactive tour has been sent a cease-and-desist notice to stop their project by CBS, the owners of the Star Trek franchise.

A group of talented Star Trek: The Next Generation fans gatheredu two years ago to virtually recreate the entire USS Enterprise-D, deck by deck, using the Unreal Engine. The project, named Stage 9, has made tremendous progress, as evident by the hour long video uploaded by the team showing all the locales made famous by the TV series, including the transporter rooms, sickbay, engineering and of course, the bridge. The fully interactive tour features recreations of the original crew of the ship, allows users to play around with the ship's computer controls, and even perform a saucer separation (something that was uniquely Enterprise-D).

The project's leader, Scragnog, went into the project without any commercial aims and despite being especially careful with the potential intellectual property issues, was extremely disappointed when CBS issued a cease-and-desist order two weeks ago, and now, the project has officially shut down.

Upon getting the order to shut down, Scragnog and others tried to reach out to CBS and see if some kind of compromise could be reached. Or at the very least, they wanted to find out just which part of CBS's "fan art guidelines" had been broken by Stage 9. 

"We were hoping, perhaps naively, that the elements of Stage 9 that CBS did not approve of would be highlighted to us, so we could be sure to remove these elements from the project and create something that met with, if not their approval, then at least their acceptance," explained Scragnog.

Unfortunately, CBS were in no mood to discuss the issue and insisted that Stage 9 be shut down, or legal consequences will follow.

"It's a truly horrible situation to be in when something that tries to respect Star Trek can be eliminated without any opportunity for open dialog," Scragnog noted in is "farewell" message to fans of the project.

CBS's current actions run counter what CBS Vice President for Product Development John Van Citters said in 2016 specifically in relation to fan projects.

"We want fans to be involved, very much so," said Van Citters. "And it's going to help us evolve and bring Star Trek to a bigger and brighter future."

"They're not going to hear from us. They're not going to get a phone call, they're not going to get an email. They're not going to get anything that's going to ruin their day one way or another and make them feel bad, like they've done something wrong."

Unfortunately, Van Citter did not respond to the Stage 9 team's request for clarification or intervention.

[via TorrentFreak]

Putin Told That 6,000 Pirate Sites Have Been Blocked in Three Years

The head of Russian telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor met with President Vladimir Putin this week to discuss the country’s anti-piracy measures. Declaring Russia as no longer a safe haven for pirates, Alexander Zharov said complaints had been filed against 17,000 pirate sites, with 6,000 eventually being blocked.

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

As entertainment giants and governments in the West struggle to deal with the ongoing flood of pirate content hitting the Internet, Russia has emerged from the shadows as a surprise front-runner in the anti-piracy wars.

The country has passed several pieces of legislation over the past few years, all designed to limit the availability of pirated content. Court processes are now swift and particularly voluminous, with large numbers of sites ordered to remove illegal content or face the proposition of temporary and indeed permanent blocking.

This week, Alexander Zharov, the head of the Federal Service for Supervision in the Sphere of Communications, Information Technologies and Mass Media (better known as Roscomnadzor), met with President Vladimir Putin to provide a one-on-one update on the situation in the country.

Two topics were on the agenda – the protection of personal data held by millions of Russian companies and the thorny issue of intellectual property protection.

Putin & Zharov discussing piracy (Credit:Kremlin)

“For three years already, the law on the protection of intellectual property rights is working. Most of the complaints from copyright holders are related to movies,” Zharov told Putin.

“More than six thousand claims over three years were filed mainly by [local] companies, and a very small percentage of Western companies, that for some reason are suing at the Moscow City Court.”

The Moscow City Court is tasked with receiving lawsuits from copyright holders demanding that sites with infringing content either remove it, or face blocking procedures implemented by local ISPs.

Zharov said that three entities are involved in copyright action in Russia; the copyright holders who file the complaints, the Moscow City Court which decides on what course of action to take, and telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor, which is tasked with executing the orders of the Court. In total, complaints have been filed against 17,000 pirate sites, Zharov told the President.

“A few years ago, the Russian Internet was absolutely a safe haven for pirates. Any premiere immediately appeared on hundreds and thousands of resources, and people watched them for free, even in poor quality, but nevertheless, that’s how it was,” he said.

“Now the situation has changed dramatically: six thousand resources have been blocked and 11,000 have deleted such content. And the numbers speak for themselves.

“For the first time in the history of Russian cinematography, our very good film, the premiere of 2018, ‘Move Up’, raised about three billion rubles (US$45.5m). This is comparable, perhaps, with only one American blockbuster, which raised the same amount.”

Zharov also updated Putin on the development of legal offerings in Russia, claiming that last year legal online streaming services earned 60% more than a year earlier, to the tune of eight billion rubles (US$121.4m). Traditional cinemas are also doing well, he added, noting that 55 million people attended premieres, 40% more than a year earlier.

“We intend to continue this work with rights holders. And, in general, all the largest pirate sites are now blocked. We will continue to clean up the Internet,” he concluded.

The positive messages from the meeting with Putin follow hot on the heels of a rather less optimistic report from Group-IB.

The cyber-security company reported that in 2016, there were ‘only’ 33 Russian cinema leaks via illegal camcording. By 2017, that had increased more than 500% to 211 but in the first eight months of 2018, 280 movies had leaked online – despite site blocking.

“Almost every film released in 2018 has been pirated and leaked to the web. In 2017, the country’s cinemas showed 477 movies, and 211 of them were pirated, which is 6 times more than a year earlier,” Group-IB reported.

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

Wochenrückblick: Wolkig mit Aussicht auf Schnäppchen

Microsoft stellt auf der Ignite 2018 seine Pläne für die Azure-Cloud vor, Fotografen erfahren auf der Photokina etwas über ihre Aussichten und Xiaomi zeigt, dass Topsmartphones doch billig sein können. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Photokina)

Microsoft stellt auf der Ignite 2018 seine Pläne für die Azure-Cloud vor, Fotografen erfahren auf der Photokina etwas über ihre Aussichten und Xiaomi zeigt, dass Topsmartphones doch billig sein können. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Photokina)

Kapazitätsprobleme: Intel steckt eine Milliarde US-Dollar in 14-nm-Fabs

Um mehr Chips liefern und die Nachfrage bedienen zu können, investiert Intel eine Milliarde US-Dollar in 14-nm-Halbleiterwerke rund um die Welt. Der Fokus liegt auf dem Highend-Segment, also teure Core- und Xeon-Ableger. Zudem legt Intel einen Chip ext…

Um mehr Chips liefern und die Nachfrage bedienen zu können, investiert Intel eine Milliarde US-Dollar in 14-nm-Halbleiterwerke rund um die Welt. Der Fokus liegt auf dem Highend-Segment, also teure Core- und Xeon-Ableger. Zudem legt Intel einen Chip extra im alten 22-nm-Verfahren neu auf. (Prozessor, Intel)

Microsoft suspends development of touch-friendly Office apps for Windows

The focus is on the iOS, Android, Web, and Win32 versions of the apps.

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Microsoft has stopped developing new features for the touch-friendly Office Mobile apps for Windows 10, reports the Verge.

Word Mobile, Excel Mobile, and PowerPoint Mobile first made their debut with Windows 8.1. Their significance is twofold: they have a user interface that's designed to be touch-friendly, and they're built using Microsoft's modern UWP (Universal Windows Platform) framework. They've been regularly updated since their introduction, but no longer. The use of UWP meant that the same app core could be used on both desktop Windows and Windows 10 Mobile, but with Windows 10 Mobile no longer a going concern, this compatibility is no longer a priority.

In a statement to the Verge, Microsoft said, "We are currently prioritizing development for the iOS and Android versions of our apps; and on Windows, we are prioritizing Win32 and Web versions of our apps."

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Cloudflare gets into registrar business with wholesale domains and free privacy

Cloudflare Registrar will charge just what the TLDs and ICANN do.

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Enlarge / It's not free, but it's as close as you can get with TLDs and ICANN taking a cut. (credit: Cloudflare)

Cloudflare, the content delivery network and website security provider, has increasingly been pushing into businesses that intersect with its core missions. Earlier this year, the company rolled out a new, free DNS service to help Internet users evade censorship (including an encrypted DNS service to evade surveillance of domain address queries). Now, the company has announced a barrage of new services to celebrate its eighth "birthday"—and one of them is an at-cost domain registrar.

While Cloudflare had already been handling domain registration through the company's Enterprise Registrar service, that service was intended for some of Cloudflare's high-end customers who wanted extra levels of security for their domain names. The new domain registrar business—called Cloudflare Registrar—will eventually be open to anyone, and it will charge exactly what it costs for Cloudflare to register a domain. As Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince wrote in a blog post yesterday, "We promise to never charge you anything more than the wholesale price each TLD charges." That includes the small fee assessed by ICANN for each registration.

Prince said that he was motivated to take the company into the registrar business because of Cloudflare's own experience with registrars and by the perception that many registrars are in the business mostly to up-sell things that require no additional effort. "All the registrar does is record you as the owner of a particular domain," Prince said. "That just involves sending some commands to an API. In other words, domain registrars are charging you for being a middle-man and delivering essentially no value to justify their markup." Charging overhead for that sort of service, Prince said, "seemed as nutty to us as certificate authorities charging to run a bit of math." (Cloudflare also provides free SSL certificates.)

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Nintendo reveals it invented “Bowsette” before the Internet did

New “Art of Super Mario Galaxy” book shows official tease of a Bowser-ized Peach.

This month's major Nintendo Direct video presentation included a reveal of another New Super Mario Bros. game—a Switch port of its last Wii U installment—with one curious twist. It includes a few new playable characters, and one of those, Toadette, can don a crown power-up and turn into a Toadette-Peach hybrid dubbed Peachette.

Fans didn't take long to imagine what might happen if other Mario series characters put that same crown on and transformed into Princess Peach hybrids, particularly Bowser. Thus, Bowsette was born in a wild flurry of detailed fan art (and we thank NintendoLife for this SFW gallery of examples). But as Nintendo itself revealed on Friday, fans' creation wasn't all that original... as Nintendo had already toyed with the idea itself.

A new official book from Nintendo, titled The Art of Super Mario Odyssey, premiered in Japan this week and offers a deep dive into concept art for the colorful 2017 game. On Friday, one of the book's buyers noticed a comic-styled storyboard within the book and posted the discovery on Twitter, as shown above. This hints at an idea that didn't make it into the final game: that Odyssey's primary gimmick, which allows Mario to become other creatures by hitting them with his "Cappy" hat, would also be used by Bowser.

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Hidden fees that raise price of broadband would be banned by proposed law

Advertised telco prices would have to include all fees if Democrat’s bill passes.

Young woman expressing shock at the price of a bill.

Enlarge / Bill shock. (credit: Getty Images | Biddiboo)

US Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-Calif.) today introduced legislation that would require telecom companies to include all charges in their advertised prices, potentially ending the practice of advertising low prices and then socking customers with loads of extra fees.

The bill would also force telecom companies to justify price increases that occur during a contract term, and it would let consumers opt out of contracts without paying termination fees when prices are increased. The bill would also prohibit providers from requiring arbitration in the case of billing errors, thus preserving consumers' rights to sue the providers over price disputes.

Eshoo's TRUE Fees Act (Truth-In-Billing, Remedies, and User Empowerment over Fees) would apply to phone, TV, and home or mobile Internet providers. The bill isn't likely to get much support from Republicans in Congress, who have generally protected Internet providers from new requirements.

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