Dealmaster: Get post-Christmas deals on Amazon devices, iPads, and more

Including discounts on Apple gift cards, Bose headphones, and Anker batteries.

Dealmaster: Get post-Christmas deals on Amazon devices, iPads, and more

Enlarge (credit: TechBargains)

Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our friends at TechBargains, we have another round of deals to share. The Dealmaster hopes you and yours have had a wonderful holiday season, and now that most Christmas gifts have been opened it's time to begin the annual cycle of discounts anew.

Predictably, there aren't a ton of good tech deals going on in this awkward period between Christmas and New Year's Day, but we've still rounded up a few noteworthy discounts on the likes of Amazon Echo and Fire devices, iPads, Apple Watches, Apple gift cards, the Google Home Hub, Anker portable batteries, HDMI cables, and much more. Have a look for yourself below.

Note: Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

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Musk lawyers move to dismiss cave explorer lawsuit over “pedo guy” tweets

Lawyers call Twitter a “website famous for invective and hyperbole.”

Elon Musk speaks in Austin, Texas, on March 10, 2018.

Enlarge / Elon Musk speaks in Austin, Texas, on March 10, 2018. (credit: FilmMagic/FilmMagic for HBO)

On Wednesday, lawyers representing Elon Musk asked a federal judge to dismiss a defamation lawsuit brought by a British cave explorer whom Musk called a "pedo guy" on Twitter. The motion to dismiss, filed in US District Court in California's Central District, argues that Twitter is simply a "website famous for invective and hyperbole," and no one who read Musk's claims took them seriously.

Tangled tweets

The dispute began in July, when Musk began tweeting about using a team of SpaceX engineers to find a way to rescue 12 boys who were trapped in a cave in Thailand as monsoon waters flooded the cave. The team's solution was to develop a child-sized submarine that could keep the children safe as experienced divers guided it through the long and dangerous passage out of the cave.

But several days later, a team of experienced divers and cave explorers were able to rescue all of the children without Musk's help. A Thai official later said that Musk's solution "was not practical for this mission."

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AI invents New Year fireworks names that sound more like the end of humanity

Blast off with Green Event Shorts, Far Exploring Palm, None Star Thunder, and more.

Today, in robots-and-fireworks news.

Enlarge / Today, in robots-and-fireworks news. (credit: Getty Images)

When AI isn't scaring us by way of generating more realistic fakes than we ever thought possible, it's coming up with really stupid names for everyday items. Today, we took a dip back into one of our favorite resources on the surprisingly robust sector of neural-network nerdiness: the work of research scientist Janelle Shane. (You may remember her work in 2017 on training an AI to invent entirely new and strange names for colors.)

Shane's Thursday update stood out both for its timeliness and its particularly dark sense of humor. Readers and fans send requests for types of everyday human objects, Shane explains, but one list she recently received stood out for its possibilities: the names of fireworks, just in time for New Year's Eve.

One reader sent her a list of 3,000 actual names of fireworks, all collected from a Dutch repository that combined English and Dutch names of products. (The use of Dutch product names such as Kinder Pakket Groot XXL "just made it more interesting," Shane notes.) With no other background data to go on, Shane's chosen neural-network solution, a toolset known as textgenrnn, accepted the giant list of real-life firework names and got to work creating its own list.

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Daily Deals (12-27-2018)

Did you get a new computer, tablet, smartphone, or eReader over the holidays? Then you might be looking for some apps, games, or digital media to fill it up with. Tomorrow might be a good time to do that — Amazon’s going to be running a &#8…

Did you get a new computer, tablet, smartphone, or eReader over the holidays? Then you might be looking for some apps, games, or digital media to fill it up with. Tomorrow might be a good time to do that — Amazon’s going to be running a “Digital Day” sale. But you don’t have to wait […]

The post Daily Deals (12-27-2018) appeared first on Liliputing.

US-Wahlen: USA sollen papierlose Wahlcomputer ausmustern

Nach Ansicht eines Sicherheitsexperten hätten die Zwischenwahlen in den USA durchaus stärker manipuliert werden können. Für 2020 hofft er auf bessere Vorkehrungen der Behörden. Doch das kostet viel Geld. (Wahlcomputer, Sicherheitslücke)

Nach Ansicht eines Sicherheitsexperten hätten die Zwischenwahlen in den USA durchaus stärker manipuliert werden können. Für 2020 hofft er auf bessere Vorkehrungen der Behörden. Doch das kostet viel Geld. (Wahlcomputer, Sicherheitslücke)

Google Pixel 3 Lite phones may be coming to America in early 2019

Russian bloggers have been posting details about a few unannounced Google Pixel 3 “Lite” phones for the past month or so, but so far we haven’t seen any details about if or when you’ll actually be able to buy one. Now Android Po…

Russian bloggers have been posting details about a few unannounced Google Pixel 3 “Lite” phones for the past month or so, but so far we haven’t seen any details about if or when you’ll actually be able to buy one. Now Android Police reports that the Google Pixel 3 Lite and Pixel 3 XL Lite […]

The post Google Pixel 3 Lite phones may be coming to America in early 2019 appeared first on Liliputing.

Urban farms could be incredibly efficient—but aren’t yet

Casual farmers overwork, buy fertilizer, and use municipal water.

Image of a building with crops on its roof.

Enlarge / Rooftop farming in Brooklyn. (credit: Brooklyn Grange Rooftop Farm)

The green revolution that transformed modern agriculture has generally increased its scale. There's tremendous potential for efficiencies in the large-scale application of mechanization, fertilization, and pesticide use. But operating at that level requires large tracts of land, which means sources of food have grown increasingly distant from the people in urban centers who will ultimately eat most of it.

In some ways, hyper-local food is a counterculture movement, focused on growing herbs and vegetables in the same dense urban environments where they will be eaten. It trades the huge efficiencies of modern agriculture for large savings in transportation and storage costs. But is urban farming environmentally friendly?

According to researchers at Australia's University of New England, the answer is pretty complex. Within their somewhat limited group of gardeners, urban agriculture is far more productive for the amount of land used, but isn't especially efficient with labor and materials use. But the materials issue could be solved, and the labor inefficiency may be a product of the fact that most urban farmers are hobbyists, and are doing it for fun.

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Bryan Adams: Longer Copyright Term Enriches Intermediaries, Not Creators

Following a new trade deal with the US and Mexico, Canada is set to expand its copyright term to 70 years after the creator’s death. According to the Canadian singer Bryan Adams, large intermediaries such as record labels stand to benefit the most, not creators themselves. He, therefore, calls for a simple change that would allow creators to terminate their copyright assignments after 25 years.

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

After long negotiations, the Canadian Government agreed earlier this year that the country’s current copyright term will be extended by 20 years.

This change was part of the trade deal negotiations with the US and Mexico. By extending copyright protection to life plus 70 years, ‘rightsholders’ will be able to generate more profit, the argument goes.

While that may work in theory, Canadian singer Bryan Adams believes that large intermediaries such as the major record labels will benefit the most. Creators often sign away their rights early on, which means that they don’t benefit from any extensions.

In a brief to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, Adams notes that copyright law is out of balance. As such, large companies stand to benefit more from a copyright extension than individual creators.

One of the problems, according to Adams, is the fact that intermediaries hold the bigger bargaining chip. Creators who want to earn a living may sign away their rights in their first deal, something they may regret later on.

“Creators deal with one or few intermediaries; they sign up creators all the time. Creators striking a first deal sign anything that is presented to them; an intermediary rarely needs to sign up this creator,” Adams writes.

“Copyright law is about balance, a balance which was and remains at risk between creators and intermediaries. Copyright law works not so much for creators as for intermediaries; extending the duration of copyright will benefit them, not creators.”

The imbalance can be easily addressed, according to Adams. While it may be too late to revert the agreed copyright extension, there’s a change that will put more power in the hands of creators. And it only requires changing one word in the Copyright Act.

Right now, Canadian copyright reverts to a creator’s heirs 25 years after “death.” By changing the word “death” to “assignment”, creators terminate a copyright assignment while they’re still alive.

This means that the starting artists who signed away their rights to an album to a major label at 20 years of age, can get those rights back at 45. It’s a major change, but not unprecedented, as the US has a similar copyright-termination policy after 35 years.

Adams’ recommendation

Adams already discussed the proposal earlier this year when he appeared before the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, but the brief he submitted discusses the advantages in great detail.

Among other things, he stresses that the change in termination policy would empower creators, which will also be good in light of the planned copyright extension.

“Including a termination right in Canadian copyright law would help to ensure that real world copyright law works more in favor of creators. It would also help reduce some of the unintended effects of the upcoming extension of copyright.

“Canada is now more or less duty-bound to increase copyright protection by 20 years, to ‘life + 70’. Extending the duration of copyright essentially enriches large firms of intermediaries. It does not put money in the pockets of most creators,” Adams notes.

By granting a copyright termination right the expected benefits of an extension don’t go to the intermediaries. At the same time, creators will be able to profit more from their work. It’s a giant step forward and only requires changing a single word in the Copyright Act.

A full copy of Adams’ brief, first highlighted by professor Michael Geist, 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.

Bryan Adams: Longer Copyright Term Enriches Intermediaries, Not Creators

Following a new trade deal with the US and Mexico, Canada is set to expand its copyright term to 70 years after the creator’s death. According to the Canadian singer Bryan Adams, large intermediaries such as record labels stand to benefit the most, not creators themselves. He, therefore, calls for a simple change that would allow creators to terminate their copyright assignments after 25 years.

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

After long negotiations, the Canadian Government agreed earlier this year that the country’s current copyright term will be extended by 20 years.

This change was part of the trade deal negotiations with the US and Mexico. By extending copyright protection to life plus 70 years, ‘rightsholders’ will be able to generate more profit, the argument goes.

While that may work in theory, Canadian singer Bryan Adams believes that large intermediaries such as the major record labels will benefit the most. Creators often sign away their rights early on, which means that they don’t benefit from any extensions.

In a brief to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, Adams notes that copyright law is out of balance. As such, large companies stand to benefit more from a copyright extension than individual creators.

One of the problems, according to Adams, is the fact that intermediaries hold the bigger bargaining chip. Creators who want to earn a living may sign away their rights in their first deal, something they may regret later on.

“Creators deal with one or few intermediaries; they sign up creators all the time. Creators striking a first deal sign anything that is presented to them; an intermediary rarely needs to sign up this creator,” Adams writes.

“Copyright law is about balance, a balance which was and remains at risk between creators and intermediaries. Copyright law works not so much for creators as for intermediaries; extending the duration of copyright will benefit them, not creators.”

The imbalance can be easily addressed, according to Adams. While it may be too late to revert the agreed copyright extension, there’s a change that will put more power in the hands of creators. And it only requires changing one word in the Copyright Act.

Right now, Canadian copyright reverts to a creator’s heirs 25 years after “death.” By changing the word “death” to “assignment”, creators terminate a copyright assignment while they’re still alive.

This means that the starting artists who signed away their rights to an album to a major label at 20 years of age, can get those rights back at 45. It’s a major change, but not unprecedented, as the US has a similar copyright-termination policy after 35 years.

Adams’ recommendation

Adams already discussed the proposal earlier this year when he appeared before the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, but the brief he submitted discusses the advantages in great detail.

Among other things, he stresses that the change in termination policy would empower creators, which will also be good in light of the planned copyright extension.

“Including a termination right in Canadian copyright law would help to ensure that real world copyright law works more in favor of creators. It would also help reduce some of the unintended effects of the upcoming extension of copyright.

“Canada is now more or less duty-bound to increase copyright protection by 20 years, to ‘life + 70’. Extending the duration of copyright essentially enriches large firms of intermediaries. It does not put money in the pockets of most creators,” Adams notes.

By granting a copyright termination right the expected benefits of an extension don’t go to the intermediaries. At the same time, creators will be able to profit more from their work. It’s a giant step forward and only requires changing a single word in the Copyright Act.

A full copy of Adams’ brief, first highlighted by professor Michael Geist, 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.

Jahresergebnis: Huawei steigert den Umsatz trotz US-Konfrontation

“Gelinde gesagt, war es ein ereignisreiches Jahr”, sagte der Huawei-Chef, nachdem die USA eine Kampagne gegen den chinesischen Konzern gestartet haben. Dennoch stieg der Umsatz um über 20 Prozent. (Huawei, Handy)

"Gelinde gesagt, war es ein ereignisreiches Jahr", sagte der Huawei-Chef, nachdem die USA eine Kampagne gegen den chinesischen Konzern gestartet haben. Dennoch stieg der Umsatz um über 20 Prozent. (Huawei, Handy)