First thing we do, let’s kill all the experts

Tom Nichols’ book describes how experts are no longer ignored—they’re attacked.

Timeworn headstones in Donegal Cemetery.

Enlarge / Here lies an expert (maybe). (credit: Nicolas Raymond / Flickr)

There is a Climate Science Legal Defense Fund. Take a moment to consider the implications of that fact. The inhabitants of what, under other circumstances, would be an obscure academic backwater need legal defense. Non-scientists have convinced themselves so thoroughly that these experts have to be wrong that they claim the whole field is swimming in fraud and have engaged in legal assaults to try to confirm their beliefs. The scientists need legal defense because their opponents are convinced they can provide evidence of the fraud—if only they could see every email the scientists have ever sent.

Climate scientists may suffer from an extreme example of this sort of vilification, but they're hardly alone. The US has had a long history of mistrust in highly educated professionals, but we seem to have shifted to a situation in which expertise has become both a disqualification and a reason for attack.

That's the central argument of Tom Nichols' recent book, The Death of Expertise, which has recently come out in a paperback edition. Nichols is a professor at the Naval War College and an expert himself, having done graduate studies about the former Soviet Union. While he's gained some prominence as a never-Trump conservative, the arguments in his book are evenhanded at distributing blame. And they make disturbing reading for anyone in science who's interested in engaging the public—especially in the science arena.

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Hoher Schaden: Das passiert beim Einschlag einer Drohne in ein Flugzeug

Forscher haben im Labor simuliert, was beim Einschlag eines handelsüblichen Quadcopters in ein kleines Privatflugzeug passiert. Sie waren überrascht, wie groß der Schaden durch das relativ kleine Fluggerät war. (Luftfahrt, Technologie)

Forscher haben im Labor simuliert, was beim Einschlag eines handelsüblichen Quadcopters in ein kleines Privatflugzeug passiert. Sie waren überrascht, wie groß der Schaden durch das relativ kleine Fluggerät war. (Luftfahrt, Technologie)

Grafikkarte: Nvidia setzt RX 590 eine GTX 1060 mit GDDR5X entgegen

Als Reaktion auf die bald erscheinende Radeon RX 590 arbeiten Nvidia und dessen Partner offenbar an einer Geforce GTX 1060 mit GDDR5X-Videospeicher. Es wäre die fünfte Version der Grafikkarte. (Nvidia Pascal, AMD)

Als Reaktion auf die bald erscheinende Radeon RX 590 arbeiten Nvidia und dessen Partner offenbar an einer Geforce GTX 1060 mit GDDR5X-Videospeicher. Es wäre die fünfte Version der Grafikkarte. (Nvidia Pascal, AMD)

Core i9-9900K: AMD erklärt die richtige Durchführung von Benchmarks

Nach der offiziellen Vorstellung des Core i9-9900K hat sich AMD zu den vorab von Intel in Auftrag gegebenen Benchmarks geäußert: Der Ryzen-Entwickler kritisiert das Testfahren und macht Verbesserungsvorschläge. (Benchmark, Prozessor)

Nach der offiziellen Vorstellung des Core i9-9900K hat sich AMD zu den vorab von Intel in Auftrag gegebenen Benchmarks geäußert: Der Ryzen-Entwickler kritisiert das Testfahren und macht Verbesserungsvorschläge. (Benchmark, Prozessor)

Sony Promotes Kodi Streaming Add-Ons as Ideal for its Android TVs

Companies including Sony have been doing their best to shut down developers who create Kodi add-ons that facilitate access to infringing content. Given this background, it’s perhaps a little surprising that Sony Australia is recommending users of its Android TVs to download Kodi to access addons “that provide access to popular internet streaming media services.”

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Despite always operating within the law, the team behind the popular Kodi media player have found themselves at the middle of huge piracy controversy.

While a stock Kodi installation is entirely legal, millions of users install special third-party add-ons that grant access to huge libraries of infringing content. This isn’t recommended by the official Kodi team but there’s little doubt that most Kodi users now connect the media player with free movies, TV shows, and live sports.

To counter this threat, the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment – a coalition of 30 media giants including the MPAA, Netflix, Amazon, Disney, and Sony – has been targeting developers of third-party add-ons that provide access to infringing content. Many have stopped their activities following legal threats but the ecosystem remains lively and as a result, Kodi remains popular with the public.

With this in mind, it’s perhaps a little surprising that Sony Australia is actively encouraging users of its range of Android-based smart TVs to install Kodi on their devices.

As the image from Sony’s website shows, the company not only places Kodi in the number one spot for recommended Android TV apps, it highlights that “community-created addons” can be used to “provide access to popular internet streaming media services.”

Kodi streaming addons are where it’s at…

The hyperlink in Sony’s recommendation links to the official Kodi wiki which in turn links to official addons (which shouldn’t cause any legal issues) and unofficial repositories, which aren’t guaranteed to be problem-free by the Kodi team.

However, the same page also offers a list of banned addons, which are mostly used to access infringing content. They can’t be downloaded or installed from the wiki page but they do provide a handy guide for users looking for an entry point into the darker parts of the Kodi world.

At this point, it should be reiterated that stock Kodi is entirely legal and there’s nothing fundamentally wrong with Sony’s promotion of Kodi or legal addons. However, seeing Sony recommending Kodi’s ability to utilize third-party add-ons is somewhat of a surprise, given Sony’s efforts as part of ACE to discourage people from using those that infringe.

Of course, that’s where the problem lies.

The vast majority of users of Kodi and/or Sony’s TVs will not know which add-ons they are supposed to use and which ones are legal and which ones are not. That said, it’s almost inevitable that they’ll gravitate towards the ones offering the most exciting content, which means precisely the type of addon being targeted by ACE and by default, Sony Pictures.

Still, if Sony is happy to recommend third-party Kodi add-ons to get the best out of its televisions, it must be confident that its customers will do the right thing. There are plenty of legal addons available but good luck to the layman when it comes to filtering them out.

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GTA Developer Goes After Cheat Makers

Makers of cheats for the online version of Grand Theft Auto will have their homes searched, computers seized and assets frozen thanks to a lawsuit filed by GTA’s developer and publisher.Rockstar Games and Take-Two Interactive filed the lawsuit in the F…



Makers of cheats for the online version of Grand Theft Auto will have their homes searched, computers seized and assets frozen thanks to a lawsuit filed by GTA's developer and publisher.

Rockstar Games and Take-Two Interactive filed the lawsuit in the Federal Court of Australia, and the court has issued a range of orders, including forbidding the named defendants from cheating or helping others cheat, with the possibility of imprisonment if they do not comply.

The named defendants, Christopher Anderson, Cycus Lesser, Sfinktah, Koroush Anderson, and Koroush Jeddian, will also have their homes searched, computer equipment seized, and assets up to $AUD286,609.80 ($USD204,066.18) frozen.

According to information obtained by TorrentFreak, the searches have already been carried out last month, but the freezing order has remained in place.

Rockstar Games and Take-Two Interactive are suing on copyright grounds and will most likely be seeking damages. The defendants have been accused of developing cheat tools that allowed gamers to teleport themselves to various locations within the GTA Online universe, manipulating the virtual currency in the game, activating a "god" mode feature and implementing something called a "super jump".

Game developers and publishers rely heavily on income from online games, and cheating is a serious problem that turns off other legitimate players from the game, as well as denying publishers income from the sale of virtual items paid for by virtual and real currency.

[via TorrentFreak]

Intellivision Amico retro-style game console on the way for under $180

As promised, Intellivision Entertainment is rising from the ashes with a new game console. Sort of. The upcoming Intellivision Amico is a new product that pays homage to the e classic game system. It’s being developed b what seems to be a new com…

As promised, Intellivision Entertainment is rising from the ashes with a new game console. Sort of. The upcoming Intellivision Amico is a new product that pays homage to the e classic game system. It’s being developed b what seems to be a new company with the rights to the Intellivision name. And it’s not expected […]

The post Intellivision Amico retro-style game console on the way for under $180 appeared first on Liliputing.

Rapidvideo Responds to MPAA’s Piracy Claims: “We’re Totally Legal”

Every year the major Hollywood studios report a list of the most notorious pirate sites to the US Government. While the listed targets usually don’t respond, there is some serious pushback recently. After CDA.pl dismissed the piracy claims against it earlier this week, RapidVideo follows suit today, stressing that it has already taken several voluntary measures, including an upload filter to prevent pirated content from being reuploaded.

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A few weeks ago the MPAA, together with several other trade groups, submitted its annual list of ‘notorious markets’ to the US Trade Representative (USTR).

These submissions help to guide the U.S. Government’s position toward foreign countries when it comes to copyright enforcement, putting significant pressure on the mentioned sites.

The MPAA’s submission included many of the usual targets including The Pirate Bay and Fmovies, but also several hosting sites or cyberlockers.

The latter category is interesting. While there are unmistakenly several “rogue” hosting platforms that don’t care about copyright holders, not all fit the billing. One of the bad actors according to the Hollywood group, however, is Rapidvideo.

“Rapidvideo.com is a streaming/download cyberlocker with a global Alexa ranking of 999. Rapidvideo.com had 21.66 million worldwide unique visitors in August 2018 according to SimilarWeb data,” the MPAA wrote.

“The site incentivizes users to upload content with an affiliate program. The site pays from $7.50 to $60 USD per 10,000 views depending on the country in which the viewer is located,” the Hollywood group added.

As is usual in these reports, there is virtually no detail about any alleged copyright-infringing activity. While we’re pretty certain that Rapidvideo stores some pirated videos, this is no different from Google Drive or Dropbox, for example.

The MPAA’s report does mention that some hosting sites don’t remove infringing files, but only the reported links to these files. On top of that, many sites don’t respond well to takedown notices at all.

So that must be the case with Rapidvideo then? Well, the site’s owner wholeheartedly disagrees.

“We have a DMCA agent guy working with us, who also works with the MPAA and other rightsholders. He was happy with our anti-piracy methods, but the MPAA reported our site to the government nonetheless,” Rapidvideo’s Alex informs TorrentFreak.

As it turns out, Rapidvideo doesn’t fit the MPAA’s description at all.

The site processes takedown requests, has a designated DMCA agent, a repeat infringer policy, and it even implemented an MD5 hash filter system to ensure that flagged files are not re-uploaded.

While the company is incorporated in Belize, it believes that it’s fully compliant with US, Canadian and EU law. It even complies with the proposed ‘upload filter’ the EU may implement in the near future.

In recent months Rapidvideo was approached several times by a representative of an anime video distributor. Many of the recent enforcement changes were implemented as a result between the distributor and Rapidvideo’s copyright agent.

This was also communicated to other rightsholders, including MPAA members, the site’s owner says. However, that didn’t prevent the listing on the MPAA’s most recent overview of rogue sites.

“After the whole procedure, we learned that we would appear on the list submitted by the MPAA to the U.S. Government. This, despite that everything was correctly implemented in compliance with the regulations and rules, including the DMCA,” Alex says.

Rapidvideo was told that they didn’t process all notices correctly. While the site admits that some reports were set aside, those were all inaccurate takedown notices. For example, they lacked details that are actually legal requirements.

“They said that we did not correctly handle all DMCA notices, but those were not fully correct, as required by the DMCA law. Many parts were missing, such as a signature of the rightsholder representative or the names of the infringing works.”

The video hosting site feels that if the copyright holders push them to comply with the law, those companies should be held to the same standards. Also, none of the rightsholders complained about the rejections directly.

Rapidvideo hasn’t sent an official rebuttal to the USTR, so it could very well be listed in the official overview of Notorious Markets early next year.

The video hosting site is fully confident that its policies and procedures are compliant with copyright law. They are not intimidated by the MPAA’s report, and with their upload filter, they have nothing to fear from the EU either, according to the owner.

“We have everything fully ready for the EU upload filter. We are also a legal company that pays taxes and complies with all rules and regulations, so we are not afraid of any possible outcomes,” Alex concludes.

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

Hack on 8 adult websites exposes oodles of intimate user data

A recovered 98MB file underscores the risks of trusting personal info to strangers.

One of the hacked websites, wifelovers.com, as it appeared on October 12.

Enlarge / One of the hacked websites, wifelovers.com, as it appeared on October 12. (credit: Internet Archive)

A recent hack of eight poorly secured adult websites has exposed megabytes of personal data that could be damaging to the people who shared pictures and other highly intimate information on the online message boards. Included in the leaked file are (1) IP addresses that connected to the sites, (2) user passwords protected by a four-decade-old cryptographic scheme, (3) names, and (4) 1.2 million unique email addresses, although it’s not clear how many of the addresses legitimately belonged to actual users.

Robert Angelini, the owner of wifelovers.com and the seven other breached sites, told Ars on Saturday morning that, in the 21 years they operated, fewer than 107,000 people posted to them. He said he didn’t know how or why the almost 98-megabyte file contained more than 12 times that many email addresses, and he hasn’t had time to examine a copy of the database that he received on Friday night.

Still, three days after receiving notification of the hack, Angelini finally confirmed the breach and took down the sites on early Saturday morning. A notice on the just-shuttered sites warns users to change passwords on other sites, especially if they match the passwords used on the hacked sites.

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