First trailer for Artemis Fowl might make you believe in fairies

Director Kenneth Branagh brings Eoin Colfer’s popular sci-fi/fantasy novel to life.

Artemis Fowl (Ferdia Shaw) and his loyal protector, Butler (Nonso Anozie), stumble onto the world of fairies while searching for his missing father.

Enlarge / Artemis Fowl (Ferdia Shaw) and his loyal protector, Butler (Nonso Anozie), stumble onto the world of fairies while searching for his missing father. (credit: Disney)

A 12-year-old criminal mastermind gets embroiled in the world of fairies in the first trailer for Disney's film adaptation of sci-fi/fantasy novel Artemis Fowl. And we're not talking Tinkerbell. These are badass fairies with neutrino handguns, capable of stopping time. It all makes for some spectacular eye-candy, and having Kenneth Branagh (Thor) at the helm bodes well for the film's success.

There are eight books in the Artemis Fowl series by Irish author Eoin Colfer, detailing the extensive exploits of the titular character. The debut novel received generally positive reviews and a few comparisons to J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series, although Colfer's books have never achieved the same stratospheric commercial success. Disney is betting there's an equally strong appetite for the Artemis Fowl series on the big screen.

The comparison understandably irritates Colfer, who describes his novels as being more like "Die Hard with fairies." That's a fairly accurate description. Artemis is the anti-Harry Potter. He's a thief and a kidnapper, among other misdeeds, and he is largely untroubled by remorse. That's part of his charm.

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Google expands Fast Pair to streamline setup of Bluetooth audio devices

A year after rolling out technology designed to make it easier (and faster) to pair Bluetooth accessories with Android devices, Google is expanding its Fast Pair ecosystem in a few key ways. First, Google says more Bluetooth headphones and speakers wil…

A year after rolling out technology designed to make it easier (and faster) to pair Bluetooth accessories with Android devices, Google is expanding its Fast Pair ecosystem in a few key ways. First, Google says more Bluetooth headphones and speakers will support Fast Pair soon. Second, the company is bringing Fast Pair to Chromebooks. And third, […]

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Microsoft explains one Azure authentication outage as another one happens

Three different problems came together to break authentication earlier this month.

Microsoft explains one Azure authentication outage as another one happens

Enlarge (credit: followtheseinstructions)

In a stroke of bad timing that would be comical if it weren't so annoying, Microsoft's multifactor authentication (MFA) system, used for Azure, Office 365, and Dynamics, has gone down for a second time this month, just hours after the company published its findings into a 14-hour outage on November 19.

The Azure Active Directory Multifactor Authentication services went offline just before 05:00 UTC and remained nonfunctional until just before 19:00 UTC. The servers initially affected were those servicing the Europe and the Middle East region and the Asia-Pacific region; as those regions woke up and tried to authenticate, the servers overloaded and went down. Microsoft tried to redirect some authentication attempts to US servers, but this merely had the effect of overloading those, too.

The company's subsequent analysis has shown that three individual bugs came together to cause the problems. On November 19, a code change that had been progressively deployed over the previous six days provoked a cascade of failures. Above a certain traffic level, the new code caused a significant increase in latency between front-end servers and cache servers. This in turn revealed a race condition in the back-end servers, causing them to reset the front-end servers over and over. That then revealed a third issue: the back-end servers would create more and more processes, eventually starving themselves of resources and leaving them unresponsive.

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Google employees demand that Google stop work on censored Chinese search

Google employees are getting bolder about publicly protesting Google policies.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai in 2017.

Enlarge / Google CEO Sundar Pichai in 2017. (credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Dozens of Google employees have signed on to an open letter demanding that Google stop work on Project Dragonfly, a censored version of Google's search engine that could be deployed in mainland China.

The project's existence was revealed by the Intercept back in August. Shortly afterward, Google CEO Sundar Pichai insisted that the company was "not close to launching a search product" in China, but it hasn't ruled out doing so in the future.

If Google were to launch a censored search engine, it would represent a dramatic about-face for a company that shuttered its Chinese search engine over censorship concerns back in 2010.

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Music Industry Asks US Govt. to Reconsider Website Blocking

US companies have successfully lobbied and litigated extensively for pirate site blockades around the world. On their home turf, the issue was categorically avoided following the SOPA outrage several years ago. It now appears that this position is slowly beginning to change.

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

At the start of this decade, US lawmakers drafted several controversial bills to make it easier for copyright holders to enforce their rights online.

These proposals, including SOPA and PIPA, were met with fierce resistance from the public as well as major technology companies. They feared that the plans, which included pirate site-blocking measures, went too far.

The public protests columnated in a massive Internet blackout. This had the desired effect, as the bills were eventually shelved early 2012.

In the many years that followed, the “site blocking” issue was avoided like the plague. The aversion was mostly limited to the US, as website blocking became more and more common abroad, where it’s one of the entertainment industries’ preferred anti-piracy tools.

Emboldened by these foreign successes, it appears that rightsholders in the US are now confident enough to bring the subject up again, albeit very gently.

Most recently the site-blocking option was mentioned in a joint letter from the RIAA and the National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA), which contained recommendations to the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (IPEC) Vishal Amin.

The IPEC requested input from the public on the new version of its Joint Strategic Plan for Intellectual Property Enforcement. According to the music industry groups, website blocking should be reconsidered an anti-piracy tool.

“There are several changes that should be made legislatively to help legal authorities and third parties better protect intellectual property rights,” the music groups write.

“These include fixing the DMCA, making it a felony to knowingly engage in unauthorized streaming of copyrighted works, and investigating the positive impact that website blocking of foreign sites has in other jurisdictions and whether U.S. law should be revised accordingly.”

The RIAA and NMPA choose their words carefully, realizing that it’s a sensitive issue. In a single sentence, however, they hint at bringing back SOPA-like blocking powers, including criminalizing online streaming.

A lot has changed in recent years though. The music groups point out that site-blocking has proven to be an effective enforcement tool abroad which has helped to decrease piracy and boost legal consumption.

According to the music industry groups, there is a pressing need for additional tools to stop pirate sites which increasingly use foreign domain names and bulletproof hosting. Blocking could be the right answer.

As such, now could be a good time to put the issue on the political agenda again.

“As website blocking has had a positive impact in other countries without significant unintended consequences, the U.S. should reconsider adding this to its anti-piracy tool box,” the RIAA and NMPA write.

From the RIAA/NMPA submission

The RIAA and NMPA are not the only ones to hint at these measures. The Copyright Alliance, which describes itself as the “unified voice of the copyright community,” also references site-blocking. Again, very subtly.

The group notes that IPEC may want to “observe how other countries are enforcing copyright laws, and whether those enforcement efforts are effective.”

There’s only one suggestion that’s specifically mentioned in this regard, and that’s site-blocking. The Copyright Alliance points out that this has been rather effective abroad and that the US could learn from these efforts.

“In addition to learning what remedies are effective, much can be learned from other countries in ensuring such remedies are proportionate and do not result in overblocking or other unwanted consequences,” they write.

The submissions suggest that after seven years copyright holders are gearing up to call for US blocking proposals again.

While these will undoubtedly be met with protests, a full comeback is inevitable. In recent years US rightsholders have lobbied and litigated for site blocking measures in dozens of countries, while the issue was left untouched on their home soil.

This is now starting to change, very slowly.

Here are the above -referenced copies of the RIAA/NMPA (pdf) and Copyright Alliance (pdf) submissions to the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator, which both cover a wide range of topics.

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

Daily Deals (11-27-2018)

Cyber Monday is over and Giving Tuesday is here. But retailers are continuing to offer sales. HP, Dell, and Lenovo are all still running some form of “Cyber Week” sale. And Amazon’s got a few nice bundle deals going. Today you can pic…

Cyber Monday is over and Giving Tuesday is here. But retailers are continuing to offer sales. HP, Dell, and Lenovo are all still running some form of “Cyber Week” sale. And Amazon’s got a few nice bundle deals going. Today you can pick up a 2-pack of Amazon Fire TV Sticks for $50 or a […]

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Drilling on US public lands causes 24 percent of the nation’s CO2 emissions

But lifecycle emissions have decreased slightly between 2005 and 2014.

Last week, the US Geological Survey (USGS) released a report (PDF) concluding that fossil fuels extracted from public lands account for 23.7 percent of the nation's carbon dioxide emissions. Those numbers include carbon dioxide that's released during the drilling and coal mining process, as well as carbon dioxide that's released when the oil, gas, or coal that comes from public lands is processed and burned.

Drilling and mining in the US can occur on private land, or fossil fuel companies can seek leases from the federal government to drill and mine. Offshore oil drilling, a contentious topic among coastal states that are reluctant to see another Deepwater Horizon disaster ruin their beachfront property, counts as drilling on federal land.

The significance of the role that federal land leases play in contributing to climate change will likely be ignored by the Trump administration. Last week, the US federal government tried to bury a report on the dire effects that climate change will have on the nation's economy and health.

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Benchmarks: Intel Core i7-8750H vs Core i7-8559U

The Intel Core i7-8750H is a 45 watt, 6-core processor that’s proven popular with PC makers in recent months. It shows up in a lot of gaming notebooks and mobile workstations, and it’s the chip that powers the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 laptop I pi…

The Intel Core i7-8750H is a 45 watt, 6-core processor that’s proven popular with PC makers in recent months. It shows up in a lot of gaming notebooks and mobile workstations, and it’s the chip that powers the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 laptop I picked up during a pre-Black Friday sale last week (it’s still on […]

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Moto G7 Play pops up at the FCC with notch design, dramatically smaller battery

Moto moves from a Snapdragon 427 to a 632 and from a 4000mAh battery to 2820mAh.

FCC

After Nokia, there's not a lot of companies to choose from in the low- to mid-range smartphone category. Lenovo's Motorola division is one of the few groups that produces a contender every year, with the G Play series usually coming in at around $200. Recently, the Moto G7 Play stopped by the FCC, and thanks to our government disregarding Motorola's confidentiality request, we now have lots of device pictures!

The images, which were first spotted by Droid Life, show a phone that looks like a continuation of the Motorola One design that debuted earlier this year. There's a wide, iPhone X-style notch along the top, which houses a front camera, front flash, and a speaker. The manual shows rounded screen corners and a large "Motorola" logo emblazoned on the bottom bezel, which hasn't yet been applied to the FCC's pre-release devices. The back looks a lot like the Moto G6 Play, with a rear fingerprint reader that doubles as a second Motorola logo, and a round camera bump with a single camera and LED flash.

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Trump proposes a government-run TV news network to counter CNN

Trump wants “Worldwide Network to show the World the way we really are, GREAT!”

President Donald Trump at a press conference, pointing his finger and talking to CNN journalist Jim Acosta.

Enlarge / President Donald Trump gets into an exchange with CNN reporter Jim Acosta during a news conference a day after the midterm elections on November 7, 2018. (credit: Getty Images News)

President Donald Trump yesterday proposed creating a government-run TV network that would broadcast globally to show the world how great America is.

Trump pitched the state-run network as an alternative to CNN. "Throughout the world, CNN has a powerful voice portraying the United States in an unfair and false way," Trump wrote on Twitter. "Something has to be done, including the possibility of the United States starting our own Worldwide Network to show the World the way we really are, GREAT!"

Law professor Richard Painter, who was the chief White House ethics counsel in the Bush administration from 2005 to 2007, tweeted that Trump's proposed network sounds "Just like Pravda, the Reich Propaganda Ministry and other fine examples of state-run media."

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