Apple: Kurzbefehle-App für iOS 12 verrechnet sich nicht mehr

Apple hat eine aktualisierte Version der Kurzbefehle-App mit iPad-Pro-Unterstützung vorgestellt, die zahlreiche Fehler der Version 2.1 behebt, darunter eine Rechenschwäche und Probleme mit dem LED-Blitz. (iOS 12, Apple)

Apple hat eine aktualisierte Version der Kurzbefehle-App mit iPad-Pro-Unterstützung vorgestellt, die zahlreiche Fehler der Version 2.1 behebt, darunter eine Rechenschwäche und Probleme mit dem LED-Blitz. (iOS 12, Apple)

LiveWire: Harley-Davidson stellt sein Elektro-Motorrad vor

Harley hat die Serienversion seines lange versprochenen Elektromotorrads vorgestellt. Das weiter als Livewire bezeichnete Motorrad sieht der Studie aus dem Jahr 2014 sehr ähnlich. Wie weit das Akkupack reicht, ließ Harley offen. (Elektromobilität, Tech…

Harley hat die Serienversion seines lange versprochenen Elektromotorrads vorgestellt. Das weiter als Livewire bezeichnete Motorrad sieht der Studie aus dem Jahr 2014 sehr ähnlich. Wie weit das Akkupack reicht, ließ Harley offen. (Elektromobilität, Technologie)

Project Concord: VMware und die quelloffene Blockchain-Lösung

Die schlechte Energiebilanz von Blockchain-Transaktionen ist für VMware Grund, ein eigenes System anzubieten. Eine erste Betaversion von Project Concord ist quelloffen und soll energieeffizienter sein. Es setzt trotzdem auf gängige Systeme wie Ethereum…

Die schlechte Energiebilanz von Blockchain-Transaktionen ist für VMware Grund, ein eigenes System anzubieten. Eine erste Betaversion von Project Concord ist quelloffen und soll energieeffizienter sein. Es setzt trotzdem auf gängige Systeme wie Ethereum und Hyperledger. (Ethereum, Virtualisierung)

Blu-ray, Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats for the week ending October 27, 2018

The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 27, 2018 are in. The singing and dancing are back in this well received sequel. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD,Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray s…



The results and analysis for DVD, Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales for the week ending October 27, 2018 are in. The singing and dancing are back in this well received sequel. Find out what movie it was in our weekly DVD,Blu-ray and Ultra HD Blu-ray sales stats and analysis feature.

Kazakhstan chooses SpaceX over a Russian rocket for satellite launch

“The reason for using a Falcon 9 for this launch is that it will be less expensive.”

A Falcon 9 rocket launches in September 2018.

Enlarge / A Falcon 9 rocket launches in September 2018. (credit: SpaceX)

The first satellite launched into orbit, Sputnik, launched from a spaceport in Baikonur, Kazakhstan. The Central Asian country was then a Soviet republic. Later, the first human to fly into space, Yuri Gagarin, also launched from Kazakhstan. Today, despite its independence, this spaceport remains the primary launch site for the Russian space program.

However, when Kazakhstan wanted to get a small scientific satellite named KazSaySat and a technology satellite called KazistiSat into space, the country didn't select a Russian rocket. Instead, it chose the US-based launch company SpaceX to reach orbit.

In an article published by the Russia-based wire service Interfax on Tuesday, the press secretary of the Ministry of Defense and Aerospace Industry, Aset Nurkenov, explained why. "The reason for using a Falcon 9 for this launch is that it will be less expensive," he said. "The total cost is a commercial confidentiality we can not reveal at the request of the American launch provider." (The Interfax article was translated for Ars by Robinson Mitchell).

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Elephone PX smartphone has a dual-camera pop-up selfie shooter

Smartphone makers have been coming up with creative solutions to the question of where you hide the camera on a bezel-free phone. Apple (and a lot of other companies) stuck it in a notch in the screen. Vivo created a phone with a pop-up camera. And Opp…

Smartphone makers have been coming up with creative solutions to the question of where you hide the camera on a bezel-free phone. Apple (and a lot of other companies) stuck it in a notch in the screen. Vivo created a phone with a pop-up camera. And Oppo, Xiaomi, Huawei, and Lenovo opted for a slide-down screen […]

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AT&T steps up copyright enforcement, kicks customers off network

AT&T’s action against alleged pirates comes after purchase of Time Warner.

An AT&T logo above the entrance to an AT&T store.

Enlarge / The entrance to an AT&T store in San Francisco, California. (credit: Getty Images | Robert Alexander )

AT&T is terminating the broadband service of more than a dozen customers who were accused multiple times of copyright infringement, according to a report by Axios today.

"It's the first time AT&T has discontinued customer service over piracy allegations since having shaped its own piracy policies last year, which is significant given it just became one of America's major media companies [with the purchase of Time Warner]," Axios wrote.

Axios' report is based partly on anonymous sources, but AT&T also confirmed the news in official statements to Axios and Ars. The allegedly pirating customers will receive their disconnection notices within a week or so; each one already "received at least nine separate notifications with allegations of copyright infringement from content owners," Axios wrote.

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Google Pixel Slate shipping in late November, available for pre-order now for $599 and up

Google’s first real Chrome OS tablet is now up for pre-order for $599 and up, and it should ship in a few weeks. The Google Pixel Slate features a 12.3 inch, 3000 x 2000 pixel touchscreen display, a fingerprint sensor, two USB Type-C ports, and s…

Google’s first real Chrome OS tablet is now up for pre-order for $599 and up, and it should ship in a few weeks. The Google Pixel Slate features a 12.3 inch, 3000 x 2000 pixel touchscreen display, a fingerprint sensor, two USB Type-C ports, and support for optional Pen and keyboard accessories. But it’s first and […]

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The Asus ZenBook 2018 lineup goes up for pre-order (with Whiskey Lake-U chips)

It’s been a few months since Intel introduced its 15 watt Whiskey Lake-U processors for laptops. But there aren’t actually very many notebooks you can buy with Core i5-8265U or Core i7-8565U chips yet. Dell, Lenovo, and HP have a few models…

It’s been a few months since Intel introduced its 15 watt Whiskey Lake-U processors for laptops. But there aren’t actually very many notebooks you can buy with Core i5-8265U or Core i7-8565U chips yet. Dell, Lenovo, and HP have a few models, and Huawei just announced a new Whiskey Lake-powered laptop today. Now it looks […]

The post The Asus ZenBook 2018 lineup goes up for pre-order (with Whiskey Lake-U chips) appeared first on Liliputing.

AT&T to Terminate First Customers Over Piracy Accusations

Internet provider AT&T plans to terminate the accounts of over a dozen subscribers who were repeatedly flagged for copyright infringements. This is reportedly the first time the company has taken this measure, which is based on copyright holder complaints.

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

For roughly two decades, copyright holders have been sending ISPs takedown notices to alert account holders that their connections are being used to share copyrighted material.

These notices are traditionally nothing more than a warning, hoping to scare file-sharers into giving up their habit. In recent years, this has slowly changed.

In the past, AT&T and other ISPs said that they would never terminate accounts of customers without a court order, arguing that only a court can decide what constitutes a repeat infringement.

However, after rightsholders filed several high profile lawsuits against ISPs, many companies have revised their policies. This also appears to be the case at AT&T, which reportedly plans to terminate its first customers over piracy allegations.

The ISP, which is the third-largest broadband provider in the US, plans to terminate over a dozen persistent ‘pirates’ next week, Axios reports.

The customers in question have received repeated warnings. AT&T states that it reached out to educate them about copyright infringement and prevent the issue from reoccurring, apparently without result.

“A small number of customers who continue to receive additional copyright infringement notifications from content owners despite our efforts to educate them, will have their service discontinued,” an AT&T spokesperson said, commenting on the news.

AT&T is by no means the only ISP that terminates persistent pirates, but it’s a noteworthy step since the company is no longer convinced that a court order is required to do so.

This lack of clarity is, in part, due to the language in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) that deals with takedown notices.

The DMCA requires ISPs to “… adopt and reasonably implement a policy that provides for the termination in appropriate circumstances of subscribers and account holders of the service provider’s system or network who are repeat infringers.”

The term “repeat infringer” is open to interpretation. Are these infringers by a court’s standards, or merely based on allegations from copyright holders?

Where AT&T previously said that a court order was needed, it will now terminate customers based on allegations from copyright holders.

There is little doubt that many of the repeatedly flagged subscribers have a ‘pirate’ in their household. That said, without a proper judicial review of the evidence, there’s more room for error.

AT&T and several other ISPs previously took part in the Copyright Alert System. Together with the MPAA and RIAA, they agreed to send warning notices to alleged pirates, escalating repeat infringers through a series of “mitigation” measures.

Ironically, this scheme didn’t require any of the ISPs to terminate any subscribers, although AT&T threatened to do so.

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