Over a decade, Google handsomely paid 3 men accused of misconduct, per report

The New York Times explores the sordid tale of Andy Rubin and two other men.

Founder and CEO of Essential Products Andy Rubin speaks onstage at WIRED Business Conference at Spring Studios on June 7, 2017 in New York City.

Enlarge / Founder and CEO of Essential Products Andy Rubin speaks onstage at WIRED Business Conference at Spring Studios on June 7, 2017 in New York City. (credit: Brian Ach/Getty Images for Wired)

The famed creator of Android was ushered from Google in October 2014 when the company found allegations against him of having committed sexual misconduct against a co-worker to be credible, according to The New York Times. Upon his departure from the industry giant, Andy Rubin was still given a $150 million stock grant, to be paid out over several years, along with a $90 million exit package. Rubin's alleged misdeeds were first reported in November 2017.

In an account that left us thunderstruck, The New York Times reported Thursday that Andy Rubin is just one of three top executives who have received massive payouts over the past decade despite being accused of similar behavior.

"Each time Google stayed silent about the accusations against the men," the newspaper concluded, noting that the company had the option of dismissing them with far less recompense or even nothing at all.

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A Rick and Morty writer will take Star Trek where no Trek has gone before—comedy

CBS announces Star Trek: Lower Decks, the second new Trek series revealed this fall.

CBS

Do you maintain a soft spot for the beloved yet campy 1970s staple, Star Trek: The Animated SeriesHave you lost more than one afternoon reading old script outlines and scanning concept art for the forgotten mid-2000s project, Star Trek: The Final FrontierToday, Trek cartoon fanatics, may be your lucky day.

According to Variety, CBS has officially ordered two seasons of Star Trek: Lower Decks, a new animated Trek series eventually coming to the CBS All-Access streaming service. The new project is being developed by Mike McMahan, a writer on Rick and Morty, and it will focus on the support crew working on one of the other Starfleet ships.

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Daily Deals (10-25-2018)

Once again eBay is running a site-wide sale. This time you can get 10 percent off most purchases when you use the coupon code PICKUPTEN before 8:00AM Eastern on Friday, October 26th. There’s no minimum purchase required, but the most you can save…

Once again eBay is running a site-wide sale. This time you can get 10 percent off most purchases when you use the coupon code PICKUPTEN before 8:00AM Eastern on Friday, October 26th. There’s no minimum purchase required, but the most you can save is $100. Some categories are excluded, including coins, gift cards, and real estate. […]

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Palm’s new phone goes on sale next week (Verizon only)

The Palm is a smartphone with a 3.3 inch, 720p display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 435 processor, 3GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a $350 price tag. It’s the first Palm-branded smartphone to be announced since 2010, but this isn’t the same Palm …

The Palm is a smartphone with a 3.3 inch, 720p display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 435 processor, 3GB of RAM, 32GB of storage, and a $350 price tag. It’s the first Palm-branded smartphone to be announced since 2010, but this isn’t the same Palm that brought us PalmOS and webOS. The new Palm smartphone runs Google […]

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Xiaomi’s Mi Mix 3 is an all-screen magnetic slider phone with 10GB of RAM

Xiaomi is resurrecting the slider phone, complete with magnetically assisted snap action.

Xiaomi

Slider phones are making a comeback! The quest to maximize smartphone screen space has created all sorts of strange compromises in the design of slab phones. The screen can only get so big before it encroaches on the space meant for the front-facing camera, and then what? Lately the answer has been to carve out a chunk of the screen to make room, but what if you just didn't put the front-facing camera on the front? A new trend is arising that puts the camera on a slide-out or pop-up mechanism. Chinese smartphone giant BBK started the trend with the Vivo Nex and Oppo Find X. Huawei will soon be jumping on board with the Honor Magic 2, and, today, Xiaomi is making its official entry with the Xiaomi Mi Mix 3.

With no camera to worry about, the front of the Xiaomi Mi Mix 3 can house a 6.39-inch, 2340×1080 Samsung-made AMOLED display and... not much else. The screen is rectangular with no blemishes or interruptions. There's a speaker grill on the top edge of the phone and then the bezels rapidly fall off, leaving you with basically an all-screen phone. Xiaomi says the Mi Mix 3 has a 93.4-percent screen-to-body ratio (although the company has provided inaccurate measurements of this stat in the past).

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Ars on your lunch break: How to survive competing with China

Our talk with Chris Anderson wraps with a nuanced look at China as a competitive force.

Women soldering components at a factory in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China.

Enlarge / Women soldering components at a factory in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province, China. (credit: Yann Layma / Getty Images)

Today we present the third and final installment of my interview with Chris Anderson. He was Wired magazine’s editor-in-chief for 12 years and then started one of the most influential companies in the brief history of consumer drones. Please check out parts one and two if you missed them. Otherwise, press play on the embedded player or pull up the transcript—both of which are below.

Today’s episode starts in the greener pastures that Chris’ startup, 3DR, found after Chinese behemoth DJI annihilated his drone manufacturing business. 3DR is now all about construction. Few points on our planet change more on a daily basis than construction sites. These sites also have masses of expensive inputs lying around in the open for months or even years. All of which creates boundless opportunities for drones to audit progress, detect pilfering, and more. We discuss all this in detail.

We then explore Chris’ nuanced take on China as a competitive force. He’s extremely fair-minded—even generous—toward the company that all but liquidated his startup. This stems from his unusually sophisticated understanding of Chinese business. Chris has ample frontline experience with this, as he spent four years living in China and covering the emergence of its mighty commercial sector for The Economist.

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Datenskandal: Britische Datenschutzbehörde verurteilt Facebook

Im Skandal um Cambridge Analytica hat die britische Datenschutzbehörde die Höchststrafe von 500.000 Pfund verhängt. Facebook habe einen schweren Verstoß gegen geltendes Recht zugelassen. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Im Skandal um Cambridge Analytica hat die britische Datenschutzbehörde die Höchststrafe von 500.000 Pfund verhängt. Facebook habe einen schweren Verstoß gegen geltendes Recht zugelassen. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Court Orders “ZemTV” Kodi Addon Developer to Pay $650,000 Piracy Damages

American satellite and broadcast provider Dish Network has won a default judgment of $650,000 against the man behind the defunct third-party Kodi-addon ZemTV. UK-based developer “Shani” is liable for copyright infringement because his addon, which was distributed via TVAddons, retransmitted Dish’s content.

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

Last year, American satellite and broadcast provider Dish Network targeted two well-known players in the third-party Kodi add-on ecosystem.

In a complaint filed in a federal court in Texas, the persons behind the ZemTV addon and the TVAddons library were accused of copyright infringement.

Following a confidential settlement, last month Dish Network dismissed its lawsuit against TVAddons founder Adam Lackman. However, ZemTV developer Shahjahan Durrani, Shani for short, remained at risk.

The UK-based Kodi-addon programmer initially planned to defend himself but had to give up this fight due to the high costs. As a result, Dish moved for a default judgment which has now been granted.

Without a proper defense, US District Court Judge Vanessa Gilmore agreed that Shani is indeed liable for the copyright infringements that were carried out through his addon.

“Defendant developed ZemTV and then distributed and supported it through [..TVAddons..], resulting in his unauthorized retransmission of the Protected Channels and causing injury to Plaintiff throughout the United States. Therefore, Defendant is liable for direct copyright infringement,” Judge Gilmore writes.

“Defendant engaged in these illegal activities for more than 16 months, despite having received Plaintiff‘s notices of infringement from his service providers and Tvaddons.”

Dish previously argued that ZemTV’s infringing activities were willful and asked for the maximum statutory damages of $150,000 per infringed work. This would serve as a clear deterrent to Shani and other infringing Kodi-addon developers, the company said.

The Judge doesn’t want to go that far though. Instead, the developer is ordered to pay a third of the requested amount, which adds up to $650,000.

“The amount consisting of $50,000.00 for each of its thirteen registered, copyrighted works that Defendant willfully infringed by retransmitting these copyrighted works without authorization on ZemTV,” Judge Gilmore writes.

A negative outcome was nearly unavoidable as the developer didn’t defend himself. In addition to the damages, Shani is also barred from distributing ZemTV or any similar addons in the future.

TorrentFreak reached out to Shani who is not convinced that Dish is ‘winning’ anything with this verdict, as the external sources that were used by his addon remain online.

“Dish are still at the same place they started. They didn’t lose any money due to the addon and the sources which the addon scanned still are online. The Zem addon is not maintained so obviously it won’t work, but the apps and servers it scanned are still working.

“Based on their complaint, we should see a 10-fold increase in their subscriptions. Well, I won’t hold my breath, Shani tells us.

Whether Dish will actually recoup any of the damages has yet to be seen. The addon developer gave up the legal fight due to a lack of funds, so it seems unlikely that he can pay $650,000, if he intends to pay at all.

The default judgment wraps up the Dish lawsuit, which was one of the first enforcement efforts related to Kodi piracy. While Kodi itself is perfectly legal software, the entertainment industry is determined to root out the piracy links.

This and other efforts appear to have had some effect, as Comparitech highlights that Kodi-related search traffic has dropped significantly over the past year. Google’s autocomplete ban likely plays a role here, but it seems plausible that the various anti-piracy efforts are paying off too.

A copy of the default judgment issued yesterday by Texas US District Court Judge Vanessa Gilmore 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.

Microsoft is bringing all-you-can-play Game Pass subscription to PC

Few details offered during off-handed earnings call announcement.

The arrow is pointing to a PC that's just off-frame to the right.

Enlarge / The arrow is pointing to a PC that's just off-frame to the right.

Microsoft says PC players will be able to access a version of its all-you-can-download Xbox Game Pass subscription service some time in the future.

The news comes from CEO Satya Nadella, who mentioned the move offhandedly in response to a question about cloud gaming in a recent earnings call. Nadella said "increasing the strength of the community" around the Xbox brand is important to the company's bottom line and that "obviously, bringing Game Pass to even the PC is going to be a big element of that."

It's not clear which PC games exactly would be included with such a subscription or whether PC games would require their own separate subscription on top of the existing console Game Pass. For years, Microsoft has been promoting its "Play Anywhere" initiative for games that you buy once and play across PC and console, though we've run into trouble with that compatibility in practical testing.

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One Mix 2S mini PC with Amber Lake CPU goes up for pre-order in China

A little over a week after the One Mix 2 Yoga went up for pre-order, the folks at One Netbook have started taking pre-orders for a slightly more powerful version called the One Mix 2S. It’s up for pre-order from Chinese retailer JD.com and comes …

A little over a week after the One Mix 2 Yoga went up for pre-order, the folks at One Netbook have started taking pre-orders for a slightly more powerful version called the One Mix 2S. It’s up for pre-order from Chinese retailer JD.com and comes in two versions: black and silver. The black model sells […]

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