Linux-Smartphones: Purism erreicht Konvergenz von Laptop- und Smartphone-UI

Der auf Laptops und Smartphones mit vorinstalliertem Linux spezialisierte Hersteller Purism kündigt an, dass die Nutzeroberflächen seiner Systeme nun vollständig konvergent sind. Das haben zuvor andere Hersteller nicht geschafft. (Purism, Smartphone)

Der auf Laptops und Smartphones mit vorinstalliertem Linux spezialisierte Hersteller Purism kündigt an, dass die Nutzeroberflächen seiner Systeme nun vollständig konvergent sind. Das haben zuvor andere Hersteller nicht geschafft. (Purism, Smartphone)

Leica Q2: Kompaktkamera für knapp 4.800 Euro mit Vollformat-Sensor

Leica hat mit der Q2 den Nachfolger des in die Jahre gekommen Modells Q vorgestellt. Die Kompaktkamera mit 35mm-Sensor und einem lichtstarken Weitwinkelobjektiv erreicht eine Auflösung von 47,3 Megapixeln. Wetterfest ist sie auch und nimmt Videos in 4K…

Leica hat mit der Q2 den Nachfolger des in die Jahre gekommen Modells Q vorgestellt. Die Kompaktkamera mit 35mm-Sensor und einem lichtstarken Weitwinkelobjektiv erreicht eine Auflösung von 47,3 Megapixeln. Wetterfest ist sie auch und nimmt Videos in 4K auf. (Leica, OLED)

Quad: Eqooder mit Elektromotor als Autoersatz für 2 Personen

Der Eqooder ist ein Quad mit motorradähnlichen Rädern, der die Grenzen zwischen Elektroauto, Motorrad oder Roller verwischt. Das Fahrzeug von Quadro Vehicles soll eine Reichweite von 150 km aufweisen und zwei Personen transportieren. (Elektromobilität,…

Der Eqooder ist ein Quad mit motorradähnlichen Rädern, der die Grenzen zwischen Elektroauto, Motorrad oder Roller verwischt. Das Fahrzeug von Quadro Vehicles soll eine Reichweite von 150 km aufweisen und zwei Personen transportieren. (Elektromobilität, Technologie)

European Parliament’s Pro-Article 13 Video Has Backfired

Last week, the European Parliament tweeted a video about Article 13, informing the public that their memes are safe. The video was criticized for being inaccurate and this week, things got worse. It turns out that the video was created by a major media company, which lobbied extensively in favor of the EU Copyright Directive.

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

Later this month, Members of the European Parliament will cast their final vote on the EU Copyright Directive.

This includes the controversial Article 13 which is praised or condemned, depending on which side you’re on.

With just days to go, both camps are doing all they can to have their voices heard. Various rightsholder groups are calling on the public to support the livelihoods of artists and creators, for example. On the other hand, opponents are organizing protests, both on and offline.

Interestingly, the European Commission and Parliament also got involved, both with a clear pro Article 13 stance. The Commission started mid-February by referring to opponents of the proposed legislation as a “Mob.” This article was later deleted, as it was apparently “misunderstood” by the public at large.

Then last week, the European Parliament chimed in by publishing a pro Article 13 and Article 11 video. This was an odd move, as it’s clear that not all Members of the European Parliament are in favor of the proposals. There still is a final vote, after all.

Making matters worse, the video includes all kinds of misleading or plain false information, as Pirate Party MEP Julia Reda highlighted.

“The video says a lighter regime applies to platforms that have a turnover below 10 Million *or* less than 5 million unique visitors. This is just wrong. Actually, the lighter regime only applies if both criteria are met, and platforms are also younger than 3 years old.”

These errors only served to rile up the “mob” of opponents, instead of convincing them that all was fine. While that was enough reason for concern already, things took a turn for the worse yesterday. At least, from a PR perspective.

Reda decided to use her privileges as an MEP to look into the origin of the video. She found out that it wasn’t created by the European Parliament itself but was outsourced to a third-party contractor, Agence France-Presse (AFP).

This isn’t unusual in itself. External contractors are used all the time and AFP is a reputable news agency. However, in this case, it certainly looks bad, as the same organization was the driving force behind a pro Article 11 lobbying campaign last September.

“The video by the European Parliament to inform the public about the Copyright Directive was made by an organization which has a massive conflict of interest,” says Reda, summarizing her findings.

Even if all the wording in the video came directly from Parliament, involving a third-party stakeholder doesn’t look good PR-wise. Especially when the video itself is highly controversial and in part misleading.

In all fairness, there has also been plenty of misinformation from some opponents of Article 13. There are always extremes on both sides. Ideally, however, the European Parliament should remain as objective as possible, at least until the final votes are cast.

With its video, the European Parliament only riled up the opposition, something which runs completely counter to its intentions.

Something similar also happened when Volker Rieck, managing director of the anti-piracy firm File Defense Service, released ‘evidence’ of a smoking gun recently.

In the past Rieck has frequently accused US tech companies of funding Article 13 opposition, describing it as an assault on politics.  This belief was strengthened by a study which looked at the location of people who Tweeted in opposition of the Copyright Directive, including the  #saveyourinternet tag.

The research, which used the social media analytics tool Talkwalker, revealed that a disproportionate amount of all tweets came from the United States, mostly from Washington DC. In some cases, more tweets came from the US than the EU.

From the report (now removed)

These findings, which led to the suggestion that US corporate interests are influencing EU politics, were shared in a letter to Members of the EU Parliament. However, soon after it was sent it became apparent that the data is far from perfect.

It turns out that Talkwalker attributes tweets to Washington DC when the user doesn’t share his or her location. This explains why the tweets of Julia Reda and others ‘appeared’ to come from the US, when they were clearly not.

While there is no sign of any deliberate intent to mislead in this instance, the whole episode was rather unfortunate. And again, it only added fuel to the fire for those who are staunchly against Article 13. After being branded a ‘mob’ they were now branded as ‘bots.’

This inspired some people to take their protests to the streets. In Berlin, Germany, people protested at the headquarters of the CDU party this week, shouting  “We are no bots!” And they certainly didn’t travel all the way from Washington DC.

During the weeks to come there are more offline demonstrations planned throughout Europe, mostly Germany.

Responding to questions from the public on Reddit, Julia Reda called on people from other countries to get involved as well. These demonstrations make a bigger impact than writing to MEPs or tweeting a message.

“This is the most powerful proof that people really do care about it, and it has led many MEPs to change their minds. But we can’t win this vote with protests in Germany alone, they need to spread to other countries,” Reda said.

Those in favor of Article 13 are not sitting still either and are continuing to both lobby and protest.

Whether it’s wise for the European Parliament to get actively involved any further is doubtful. The video has shown that such efforts are not going to convince those who have made up their mind. On the contrary, in this case, it completely backfired.

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

Ladesäule: Tesla bringt Supercharger V3 mit Wasserkühlung in Position

Tesla hat mit dem Supercharger V3 eine Ladestation neuen Typs für seine Elektrofahrzeuge vorgestellt. Die Geräte laden mit bis zu 250 kW und weisen einen höheren Wirkungsgrad auf. Außerdem wird der Akku vorgeheizt, wenn der Tesla-Fahrer auf dem Weg zum…

Tesla hat mit dem Supercharger V3 eine Ladestation neuen Typs für seine Elektrofahrzeuge vorgestellt. Die Geräte laden mit bis zu 250 kW und weisen einen höheren Wirkungsgrad auf. Außerdem wird der Akku vorgeheizt, wenn der Tesla-Fahrer auf dem Weg zum Supercharger ist. (Tesla, Technologie)

Flash-Preisverfall: Die 2-TByte-SSD für 130 Euro ist denkbar

Die SSD-Preise sinken weiter. Bald könnten Überkapazitäten beim Flash-Speicher erreicht sein. Festplatten lohnen sich immer weniger. Eine Analyse von Andreas Sebayang (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Die SSD-Preise sinken weiter. Bald könnten Überkapazitäten beim Flash-Speicher erreicht sein. Festplatten lohnen sich immer weniger. Eine Analyse von Andreas Sebayang (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Biometrie: Wie eintätowierte Passwörter

Die EU will Fingerabdrücke auf neuen Personalausweisen speichern. Doch die Biometrie-Systeme sind unsicherer, als ihre Verfechter glauben machen wollen. Von Max Muth (Biometrie, CCC)

Die EU will Fingerabdrücke auf neuen Personalausweisen speichern. Doch die Biometrie-Systeme sind unsicherer, als ihre Verfechter glauben machen wollen. Von Max Muth (Biometrie, CCC)

Wetell: Mobilfunk mit Öko und Datenschutz

Ökostrom, Datenschutz und Transparenz: Das Startup Wetell möchte nachhaltige Mobilfunktarife anbieten. Das erste Crowdfunding-Ziel ist bereits erreicht. Aber das reicht noch nicht. Von Moritz Tremmel (Mobilfunktarif, GreenIT)

Ökostrom, Datenschutz und Transparenz: Das Startup Wetell möchte nachhaltige Mobilfunktarife anbieten. Das erste Crowdfunding-Ziel ist bereits erreicht. Aber das reicht noch nicht. Von Moritz Tremmel (Mobilfunktarif, GreenIT)

A “serious” Windows zeroday is being actively exploited in the wild

Unpatched flaw used in combination with Chrome exploit doesn’t work against Win 10.

As a reminder, here's what the default Start menu looked like in Windows 7.

As a reminder, here's what the default Start menu looked like in Windows 7. (credit: Microsoft)

Google security officials are advising Windows users to ensure they’re using the latest version 10 of the Microsoft operating system to protect themselves against a “serious,” unpatched vulnerability that attackers have been actively exploiting in the wild.

Unidentified attackers have been combining an exploit for the unpatched local privilege escalation in Windows with one for a separate security flaw in the Chrome browser that Google fixed last Friday. While that specific exploit combination won’t be effective against Chrome users who are running the latest browser version, the Windows exploit could still be used against people running older versions of Windows. Google researchers privately reported the vulnerability to Microsoft, in keeping with its vulnerability disclosure policy.

“Today, also in compliance with our policy, we are publicly disclosing its existence, because it is a serious vulnerability in Windows that we know was being actively exploited in targeted attacks,” Clement Lecigne, a member of Google’s Threat Analysis Group, wrote in a blog post published Thursday. “The unpatched Windows vulnerability can still be used to elevate privileges or combined with another browser vulnerability to evade security sandboxes. Microsoft have told us they are working on a fix.”

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Windows 10 passes 800 million devices

Microsoft’s billion-user milestone is slowly coming into view.

Everywhere Windows 10 can be. And on the server, too, though there it gets a different branding.

Everywhere Windows 10 can be. And on the server, too, though there it gets a different branding. (credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft says that Windows 10 has reached more than 800 million devices. This is 100 million more than it had six months ago

When Windows 10 was launched—and when Windows on phones was expected to add tens of millions of devices—Microsoft set itself a target of one billion devices within two to three years. The end of its smartphone ambitions put paid to that hope, but Windows 10 is nonetheless the fastest-growing version of Windows of all time.

If it can continue to grow at 100 million devices every six months, then the one billion target should be about a year away. There's a good chance that the growth rate might actually tick up over the next year, due to Windows 7's impending end of support. In nine months, the operating system released in 2009 will drop out of free support (though paid support options will remain), and many hundreds of millions of corporate users are still using it. While some users will inevitably keep with what they know, most are likely better served by upgrading.

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