Mavic 2 Enterprise: DJI macht Drohne zum Such- und Rettungsflieger

Die Mavic 2 Enterprise ist die neue Drohne von DJI, die mit Zubehör für kleine Such- und Rettungsmissionen ausgerüstet ist. An Bord sind Suchscheinwerfer, Lautsprecher und eine Heizung. (DJI, Technologie)

Die Mavic 2 Enterprise ist die neue Drohne von DJI, die mit Zubehör für kleine Such- und Rettungsmissionen ausgerüstet ist. An Bord sind Suchscheinwerfer, Lautsprecher und eine Heizung. (DJI, Technologie)

LattePanda Alpha Hackintosh: you can install macOS on this tiny PC

The LattePanda Alpha is a tiny computer that measures about 4.3″ x 3.1″ x 0.5″ and a starting price of $298, but which has the same processor as an entry-level 2016 MacBook or 2017 Microsoft Surface Pro. LattePanda ran  a Kickstarter …

The LattePanda Alpha is a tiny computer that measures about 4.3″ x 3.1″ x 0.5″ and a starting price of $298, but which has the same processor as an entry-level 2016 MacBook or 2017 Microsoft Surface Pro. LattePanda ran  a Kickstarter campaign last year to raise money for the Alpha, and earlier this month the company […]

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SKY Celebrates Court Victory Against Piracy-Configured Kodi Box Seller

SKY TV in New Zealand is celebrating a big win against the supplier of Kodi-powered Android devices that were pre-configured to receive ‘pirate’ streams. The High Court ruled that the promotion and sale of such devices is illegal. A full trial in 2019 will take place to determine damages, which could run into millions of dollars.

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

In 2016, an article appeared in New Zealand media featuring a declaration from company boss Krish Reddy that his ‘My Box’ Kodi-powered Android devices were shaking up the content market.

His US$182 product enabled customers to access movies, TV shows and live channels for free, something that Reddy said was completely legal.

“Why pay NZ$80 minimum per month for Sky when for one payment you can have it free for good?” the company’s promotional material read.

Given this blatant taunt, SKY TV was prompted to respond. During 2017, the company took legal action against My Box and Reddy, claiming that his devices broke local law. The company sought a ruling from the Court under the Fair Trading Act that Reddy was making “misleading and deceptive” claims about his devices.

Early 2018, the Auckland High Court heard the case against My Box with Judge Warwick Smith reserving his judgment and Reddy still maintaining that his business was completely legal. The businessman claimed that sales were booming, with 20,000 devices sold to customers in 12 countries.

Now, however, Reddy’s claims have fallen apart. A ruling from the Auckland High Court states that his My Box devices cannot be represented as legal and that his device and others like it that receive unlicensed content are illegal.

“This decision, along with the recent ruling against Fibre TV boxes in Christchurch, sends a very clear message to New Zealanders that these services are not all they are cracked up to be,” says SKY General Counsel, Sophie Moloney.

“Essentially these boxes have been marketed and sold as legal options for accessing sports and entertainment for a one-off fee, when all they do is find and broadcast pirate streams.”

SKY says they were concerned that New Zealanders were being duped into buying the devices on the basis they were legally able to receive SKY content. Online forums were littered with complaints about the My Box devices, the broadcaster added.

“We took action against My Box and Mr Reddy under the Fair Trading Act, as we knew they were making claims to New Zealanders that were misleading and incorrect,” Moloney adds

According to SKY, around 5% of New Zealanders use piracy-configured devices like the My Box to stream pirated content for free. SKY says the decision of the High Court clears up any ambiguity and clarifies that receiving content in this manner is illegal.

“Fair-minded New Zealanders can now know the truth about these types of services and instead look to all of the legal services available online in New Zealand from the free apps of TVNZ On Demand and ThreeNow through to the subscription services of Netflix, NEON, LightBox and FAN PASS,” SKY notes.

While the ruling is welcome, this isn’t the end of the road for the case. A full trial is expected to take place early next year to determine damages but that process may not be entirely straightforward.

SKY says it doesn’t know precisely how many My Box devices Reddy sold, so it previously had to rely on public statements made by the businessman in the run-up to the case. The discovery process should yield more information that will allow SKY to formulate a more accurate claim, however.

While the case was brought under the Fair Trading Act, the High Court also determined that My Box and Reddy “communicated” copyrighted works to the public in breach of the Copyright Act, meaning that SKY is entitled to an injunction to restrain the defendants from making any further claims that My Box devices are legal.

That being said, SKY’s application for an injunction to prevent the promotion and supply of My Box devices failed, after the Court decided that such an application should have been sought under the Copyright Act. SKY said that its action under the Fair Trading Act was considered to be a quicker route to achieving its aims.

“In order to take action under the current Copyright Act, we (and other affected copyright holders) would first have to ‘establish copyright’ in each individual piece of content infringed by My Box. Doing so would have added layers of complication, cost and delay,” the company said in a statement.

“The Associate Judge upheld SKY’s approach by finding that the sale of My Box units, and using them to view copyright content, amounted to a breach of the Copyright Act, regardless of who owned the copyright. Accordingly, he made orders that include a final injunction preventing My Box and Mr Reddy from continuing to market the units as legal. This fulfilled SKY’s primary objective in bringing the legal action.”

In order to streamline similar cases in the future, SKY says local legislation should be amended to reflect the protections available under the UK’s Copyright, Designs and Patents Act.

“A provision like this in New Zealand law would be helpful in cases (like My Box) where the infringing conduct affects a wide group of rights-holders and consumers. The Government is undertaking a review of the Copyright Act and we encourage them to include this matter in the scope of the review,” SKY concludes.

During April 2018, Reddy claimed he’d sold his company to a mystery Chinese buyer for an eye-watering US$8.8m. As a result, he said he’d close down his company and make his staff redundant.

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

UK set to impose new “tech tax” on Silicon Valley giants

London wants Google, Amazon and others to “shoulder the burden of this new tax.”

LONDON - Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond poses with the budget box at 11 Downing Street before the announcement of the Autumn Budget Statement in the House of Commons on October 29, 2018.

Enlarge / LONDON - Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond poses with the budget box at 11 Downing Street before the announcement of the Autumn Budget Statement in the House of Commons on October 29, 2018. (credit: Wiktor Szymanowicz / Barcroft Media via Getty Images)

Britain's top financial official has included a new "tech tax" in the country's latest budget that would affect some of the world’s largest firms, including Apple, Google, Facebook, and others.

Called the "UK Digital Services Tax," Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond said that this new tax would be "narrowly-targeted" to go after the "UK-generated revenues" of these firms. The tax appears to attempt to legally offset efforts by numerous tech and other corporate giants to drastically minimize their tax burden in the United Kingdom and elsewhere.

In 2012, a British parliamentary committee chided executives from Amazon, Google, and even Starbucks for employing such tactics. Margaret Hodge, then the public accounts committee chair, slammed Google's Northern European operations chief, saying, "We're not accusing you of being illegal; we are accusing you of being immoral."

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These are the 20 games included on the $100 PlayStation Classic (available December 3rd)

Sony’s PlayStation Classic is a small game system that looks like a classic PlayStation game console, only smaller. It launches December 3rd and it will sell for $100. Unlike the original, the new model features an HDMI port that will let you hoo…

Sony’s PlayStation Classic is a small game system that looks like a classic PlayStation game console, only smaller. It launches December 3rd and it will sell for $100. Unlike the original, the new model features an HDMI port that will let you hook it up to modern TVs… but it’s 45 percent smaller than the […]

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Archaeologists find 300,000-year-old stone tools in Saudi Arabia

At the time, the Arabian Peninsula was a grassland dotted with lakes.

Archaeologists find 300,000-year-old stone tools in Saudi Arabia

Enlarge (credit: Roberts et al. 2018)

Stone tools unearthed in Saudi Arabia’s inhospitable Nefud Desert indicate that members of our genus Homo had ventured beyond the familiar borders of Africa and the Levant sometime between 300,000 and 500,000 years ago. And according to climate data captured in the bones of animals found at the site, the environment they moved into may not have been that different from the one they left behind in East Africa. That may help anthropologists better understand the role of environment—and the ability to adapt to challenging new landscapes—in shaping human evolution and global expansion.

The things they left behind

Archaeologist Patrick Roberts of the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and his colleagues recently discovered a handful of stone tools in a sandy layer of soil beneath the dry traces of a shallow Pleistocene lake at Ti’s al Ghadah, in the Nefud Desert of northern Saudi Arabia. The soil layer dated to between 300,000 and 500,000 years ago, and it also contained fossilized remains of grazing animals, water birds, and predators like hyena and jaguar. Many of the bones seem to bear the marks of butchering by tool-wielding hominins.

Archaeologists had found other fossils at the site with possible cut marks, but, without stone tools, it’s difficult to determine if a notch in a fossil rib was put there by a human hand and not another predator or natural process. The tools—six sharp brown chert flakes and a scraper—make a much clearer case. Roberts and his colleagues say they’re the oldest radiometrically dated hominin artifacts in the Arabian Peninsula, edging out the previous contender by 100,000 years.

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Big transistor senses the arrival of a single molecule

Single molecule’s one-part-in-a-trillion effect amplified to one part in five.

Maybe you can detect a single molecule with pen and paper, but it's <em>hard</em> in real-life physics.

Enlarge / Maybe you can detect a single molecule with pen and paper, but it's hard in real-life physics. (credit: SSPL/Getty Images)

In science, there are results that are ho-hum and results that make everyone go ooooh. (There are also a few ho-hum results that still make everyone go ooooh.) In physics, that last category is dominated by single-molecule detection experiments.

Single-molecule detection is, basically, the limit for diagnosis. Imagine being able to pick up and read a single DNA strand or figure out if someone has an infection from the presence of a single protein. That is the noble objective. A lot of single-molecule detection results, however, are impressive but ultimately useless because they involve completely impractical conditions. This may be changing with a recent publication of single-molecule detection without any cheating.

Chris: Stop being mean

First off, single molecules are really hard to find. They are small and generally don’t have much effect on the world. Yet we know that in biology, single molecules can have a huge influence—neurons are sensitive to single molecules. Some types of sperm get directional information from sensing single molecules. Nature, when needed, seems to have no trouble with single-molecule detection.

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Linux: Sicherheitslücke in Systemd

Mit präparierten Paketen kann im DHCPv6-Client von Systemd ein Pufferüberlauf erzeugt werden. Ubuntu ist in der Standardinstallation betroffen. Ein Update steht zur Verfügung. (Systemd, Ubuntu)

Mit präparierten Paketen kann im DHCPv6-Client von Systemd ein Pufferüberlauf erzeugt werden. Ubuntu ist in der Standardinstallation betroffen. Ein Update steht zur Verfügung. (Systemd, Ubuntu)

Fujitsu: Augsburg will IT-Experten in der Stadt halten

Der letzte große Computerhersteller in Europa hat die Schließung angekündigt. Die Bürgermeisterin von Augsburg will die IT-Experten, die Fujitsu in Augsburg entlassen wird, in der Stadt halten. (Fujitsu, Industrie 4.0)

Der letzte große Computerhersteller in Europa hat die Schließung angekündigt. Die Bürgermeisterin von Augsburg will die IT-Experten, die Fujitsu in Augsburg entlassen wird, in der Stadt halten. (Fujitsu, Industrie 4.0)

Raumfahrt: Chinesische Rakete bei Testflug erfolgreich gelandet

Raketen, die starten und wieder landen, kennt man längst von SpaceX. Aber auch in China wird an der Technologie gearbeitet. Aufnahmen des chinesischen Staatsunternehmens CASC zeigen bei einem Testflug eine erfolgreiche Landung. (Raumfahrt, Internet)

Raketen, die starten und wieder landen, kennt man längst von SpaceX. Aber auch in China wird an der Technologie gearbeitet. Aufnahmen des chinesischen Staatsunternehmens CASC zeigen bei einem Testflug eine erfolgreiche Landung. (Raumfahrt, Internet)