50 years on, we’re living the reality first shown at the “Mother of All Demos”

Douglas Engelbart changed computer history forever on December 9, 1968.

Douglas Engelbart during his 1968 demonstration.

Douglas Engelbart during his 1968 demonstration. (credit: SRI International)

A half century ago, computer history took a giant leap when Douglas Engelbart—then a mid-career 43-year-old engineer at Stanford Research Institute in the heart of Silicon Valley—gave what has come to be known as the "mother of all demos."

On December 9, 1968 at a computer conference in San Francisco, Engelbart showed off the first inklings of numerous technologies that we all now take for granted: video conferencing, a modern desktop-style user interface, word processing, hypertext, the mouse, collaborative editing, among many others.

Even before his famous demonstration, Engelbart outlined his vision of the future more than a half-century ago in his historic 1962 paper, "Augmenting Human Intellect: A Conceptual Framework."

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Scammers Use Facebook and Google to Spread Malicious ‘Pirate’ Files

Scammers and spammers are using user-generated content sites to distribute links to malware and viruses. The malicious content is advertised as pirated software and games, in an attempt to lure users. The issue is plaguing many platforms but appears to be rather persistent on Facebook and Google groups.

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

Last weekend we reported how scammers were sending DMCA notices to downrank game piracy sites.

Presumably, this was done to give their malware-infested pirate sites a better ranking in search results.

While our previous article focused on the abuse of takedown notices, the problem is much broader. In addition to removing content, scammers are also spamming many sites with messages that link people to their dubious pirate sites.

We spoke to a source who has followed this activity for quite a while and actively reported spam he found on medium.com, change.org, wattpad.com, github.com, bitly.com, deviantart.com, zendesk.com, soundcloud.com, ghost.org, hashnode.com, and elsewhere.

Most of these sites were very cooperative and cleaned up the mess soon after they were alerted.

“The list is really long, but what was great is that all these services immediately responded to my reports. Some of them implemented spam filters and medium.com even sent a t-shirt to thank me,” says our source, who prefers to remain anonymous.

Zendesk’s response

With any type of spam, it’s impossible to eliminate the problem completely. However, our source says that some platforms are more receptive to reports than others. At Facebook and Google, this didn’t go so easily.

For months, scammers have used Facebook events to promote their malware or trojan links out in the open, through numerous accounts. In some cases, these events have been online for months, such as with this Fix Problem account.

This account lists many hundreds of events, which presumably link to pirated software, games, and other content. There are no events of course, but these listings help to increase SEO and give the associated sites a boost in traffic as well.

Fix problem?

The problem is rather persistent. Our source says that he reported the issue in detail to Facebook, but that there’s been little improvement. Many of the reported events are still online today, and new ones keep appearing too.

A targeted search for “Just Cause” Facebook events created over the past week, shows dozens of results.

Targeted Google search

Initially, the Facebook posts linked directly to the sites where the malware-content could be downloaded, but more recently they switched to Google groups. Perhaps because these links are harder to detect automatically.

People who follow these links don’t get a copy of free software, games, or movies. Instead, they’re downloading malware-infested files, although the landing page suggests otherwise.

A Just Cause landing page

Facebook events appears to be one of the favorite spamming tools, but Google groups are also frequently used. This issue was brought to Google’s attention weeks ago, in a rather detailed post in the webmaster help forum.

For weeks, many of the reported groups remained online and some still are at the time of writing. New ones are still appearing too, as shown below.

Just Cause?

More recently, Google has flagged several postings but instead of removing them entirely, Google added a warning message.

TorrentFreak followed a few of the links that were provided in these spam posts and these indeed point to suspicious malware files, or worse. While this type of spamming activity is not new, Google, Facebook and others may want to take a closer look at how this can be dealt with properly.

Our source has made it somewhat of a personal crusade to go after the scammers. As he runs a pirate site of his own, he a has stake in the matter. Previousy his own links were taken down from Google and, as reported last week, he believes that this was a targeted action by the scammers.

A very detailed accounting of evidence and other information, shared with us, suggests that’s indeed the case, at least in some instances. It could of course be that there are more rogue actors.

In the background, this takedown issue has added fuel to a rivalry between ‘real’ pirate sites. Accusations were made back and forth, which resulted in one site shutting down and much more drama on top.

It’s impossible to verify any of the claims or accusations and there may be more things going on at once. What we can say, however, is that our source directly linked the takedown efforts to the type of scamming activity on Google, Facebook, and other sites.

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

Science: Trump admin. report justifying fuel economy rollback is flawed

EPA made incorrect assumptions in 2016 and 2018; most recent are more damaging.

In this week's edition of Science, eleven researchers from prominent universities around the US criticized the federal government's justification for rolling back vehicle fuel economy standards. They wrote that the economic assumptions made in the government's 2018 report resulted in a "flawed" analysis that will likely result in more traffic fatalities, more congestion, and more greenhouse gases emitted.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under Trump has moved to rescind a number of environmentally-minded regulations instituted under the Obama Administration. One of the first in its crosshairs was the EPA's Greenhouse Gas (GHG) standards for light trucks and passenger vehicles, which paralleled the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). These two regulations (the GHG and CAFE rules) both aimed to force automakers to adhere to gradually-tightening fuel efficiency standards, which were detailed out to 2025.

The EPA under Administrator Scott Pruitt spent most of 2017 laying the groundwork to rescind the GHG rules, saying the rules were onerous for automakers. But it's hard to rescind and replace existing law—agencies need to justify their decisions with robust studies showing that a rules change will improve the livelihood of Americans, whether in health or in jobs.

Read 17 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Greenland’s melting snow makes new a hockey stick (graph)

The last 20 years were no natural fluke.

Staring down the barrel of an ice core drill.

Enlarge / Staring down the barrel of an ice core drill. (credit: Sarah Das / WHOI)

The Greenland Ice Sheet’s unhealthy and rapid weight loss—and contribution to sea level rise—occurs by a handful of mechanisms. In short, ice at the edge of the glacier can melt or break off into icebergs, and surface snow farther inland can melt. That snow melt is a bit like rainfall, in that it can either soak into the snow or runoff in streams.

Where it trickles down into the denser snow beneath, it refreezes and forms a stubborn layer that will continue to be visible when that snow is compressed into glacial ice. That means that drilling an ice core can give you a record of past surface melting events.

Greenland has experienced a remarkable amount of surface melting over the past couple decades, including the record-setting summer of 2012 that saw virtually the entire ice sheet melting at the surface. Because surface melting had historically been an unusual event akin to newsworthy heat wave, glaciologists wanted to put this into context. How much of Greenland’s recently accelerating ice loss was due to natural variability, and how much was due to human-caused trends?

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

IFPI Slams Pirate MEP For ‘Lobbying’ Kids, Forgets a Decade of Rightsholders Doing Just That

Yet another war of words on Twitter over Article 13 has delivered one of the great ironies of recent times. After Pirate MEP Julia Reda called on kids to ‘lobby’ their parents over the controversial legislation, she got a “shame on you” from IFPI for “manipulating minors”. Trouble is, the entertainment industries have been doing the same for well over a decade.

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

As the controversy over the EU’s Article 13 proposals continue, Twitter appears to be the communications weapon of choice for parties on both sides.

While the debate has often been well thought out and considered, at times it has descended into a chorus of potty-mouthed name-calling that at times has proven embarrassing to read. But that’s the Internet, of course.

As one of the main opponents of Article 13 and in particular its requirement for upload filtering, Julia Reda MEP has been a frequent target for proponents. Accused of being a YouTube/Google shill (despite speaking out loudly against YouTube’s maneuvering), Reda has endured a lot of criticism. As an MEP, she’s probably used to that.

However, a recent response to one of her tweets from music giant IFPI opens up a somewhat ironic can of worms that deserves a closer look.

Since kids will be affected by Article 13, largely due to their obsessiveness with YouTube, Reda recently suggested that they should “lobby” their parents to read up on the legislation. In tandem with pop-ups from YouTube advising users to oppose Article 13, that seemed to irritate some supporters of the proposed law.

As the response from IFPI’s official account shows, Reda’s advice went down like a lead balloon with the music group, a key defender of Article 13.

It’s working!

“Shame on you: Do you really approve of minors being manipulated by big tech companies to deliver their commercial agenda?” the IFPI tweet reads.

While Reda reaching out to kids probably irritated whoever was behind the keyboard at IFPI, it can’t have helped that the example given in Reda’s tweet was a response from UK Labour MP Jess Phillips. She’s one of the most plain-talking MPs in the UK currently and has a great sense of humor, even when it comes to her own kids offering education on copyright law.

Joking aside though, it’s pretty ironic that IFPI has called out Reda for informing kids about copyright law to further the aims of “big tech companies”. As we all know, the music and movie industries have been happily doing exactly the same to further their own aims for at least ten years and probably more.

Digging through the TF archives, there are way too many articles detailing how “big media” has directly targeted kids with their message over the last decade. Back in 2009, for example, a former anti-piracy consultant for EMI lectured kids as young as five on anti-piracy issues.

That same year, it was revealed that the Copyright Alliance (of which the RIAA is a member) was pushing a pro-copyright curriculum to schools in the US. Then, in 2012, the French anti-piracy agency HADOPI, which has ties to the entertainment industries, put forward proposals to target children at the Kidexpo exhibition in Paris.

In 2013, both the RIAA and MPAA began teaching copyright classes in California public schools after developing a curriculum targeted at kids from kindergarten through sixth grade.

More recently in 2016, the Creative Content UK initiative, which is backed by the copyright industries, hit classrooms in an effort to educate children about the dangers of piracy.

Then, just this year, a special campaign targeted directly at kids tried to deter them from using ‘pirate’ sites by feeding them questionable information about malware.

TL;DR Glass houses and black pots.

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

2nd Life: Ausgemusterte Bus-Akkus speichern jetzt Solarenergie

Was wird mit den Unmengen von entsorgten Akkus aus Elektroautos und Bussen passieren? Volvo macht in Schweden bei einem Forschungsprojekt mit, bei dem gebrauchte Bus-Akkus in ihrer zweiten Lebenshälfte als Stromspeicher von Photovoltaikanlagen dienen. …

Was wird mit den Unmengen von entsorgten Akkus aus Elektroautos und Bussen passieren? Volvo macht in Schweden bei einem Forschungsprojekt mit, bei dem gebrauchte Bus-Akkus in ihrer zweiten Lebenshälfte als Stromspeicher von Photovoltaikanlagen dienen. (Elektromobilität, Technologie)

Paketlieferungen per Drohne: Amazon hat sein Versprechen nicht gehalten

Da hat sich Amazon-Chef Jeff Bezos verkalkuliert. Vor fünf Jahren hatte er angekündigt, dass allerspätestens ab diesem Jahr Drohnen Amazon-Pakete zu den Kunden fliegen. Der Plan wird weiter verfolgt – die Deutsche Post ist aber skeptisch. (Prime-Air, A…

Da hat sich Amazon-Chef Jeff Bezos verkalkuliert. Vor fünf Jahren hatte er angekündigt, dass allerspätestens ab diesem Jahr Drohnen Amazon-Pakete zu den Kunden fliegen. Der Plan wird weiter verfolgt - die Deutsche Post ist aber skeptisch. (Prime-Air, Amazon)

Fehler, Absturz oder Problem: Verbotene Wörter im Apple Store

Absturz, Fehler oder Problem: Diese Wörter sind für Mitarbeiter im Apple Store tabu, wenn es um technische Fehler von Apple-Produkten geht. Stattdessen sollen die Mitarbeiter zwar verständnisvoll sein, aber keinesfalls die Produkte als Grund für die Pr…

Absturz, Fehler oder Problem: Diese Wörter sind für Mitarbeiter im Apple Store tabu, wenn es um technische Fehler von Apple-Produkten geht. Stattdessen sollen die Mitarbeiter zwar verständnisvoll sein, aber keinesfalls die Produkte als Grund für die Probleme benennen. (Apple Store, Apple)

Paketzusteller planen Preiserhöhungen: Hermes will Lieferung bis zur Haustür verteuern

Die drei großen deutschen Paketzusteller DHL, DPD und Hermes wollen demnächst die Preise für die Paketlieferung erhöhen. Auch die Zustellung bis zur Haustür will Hermes bald teurer machen. (E-Commerce, Onlineshop)

Die drei großen deutschen Paketzusteller DHL, DPD und Hermes wollen demnächst die Preise für die Paketlieferung erhöhen. Auch die Zustellung bis zur Haustür will Hermes bald teurer machen. (E-Commerce, Onlineshop)