Battle Royale: Fortnite erlaubt neues Leben

Die Community inklusive Vorzeige-Streamer Ninja ist wegen Änderungen an der Balance noch sauer, da stellt Epic Games die nächste große Umstellung in Fortnite Battle Royale vor: Künftig können Spieler ihre Teamkameraden an einem Van wiederbeleben – das …

Die Community inklusive Vorzeige-Streamer Ninja ist wegen Änderungen an der Balance noch sauer, da stellt Epic Games die nächste große Umstellung in Fortnite Battle Royale vor: Künftig können Spieler ihre Teamkameraden an einem Van wiederbeleben - das System erinnert an Apex Legends. (Fortnite, Epic Games)

Wochenrückblick: Tick tack, tock, tock!

Wir verschwenden Zeit mit Amazon. Facebook leistet sich diese Woche gleich zwei Datenfails – und Openbook ist eine interessante Alternative. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Wir verschwenden Zeit mit Amazon. Facebook leistet sich diese Woche gleich zwei Datenfails - und Openbook ist eine interessante Alternative. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Lawsuit: AT&T’s DirecTV Now is a flop and AT&T lied to investors about it

AT&T failed to disclose DirecTV Now subscriber losses, class action claims.

An AT&T logo on a wall.

Enlarge / AT&T logo. (credit: Mike Mozart / Flickr)

AT&T lied to investors in order to hide the failure of its DirecTV Now streaming TV service, a proposed class action alleges.

AT&T told investors that DirecTV Now was succeeding even as its subscriber base fell due to price increases and the discontinuance of promotional discounts, said the complaint filed Monday in US District Court for the Southern District of New York. The complaint accuses AT&T and executives including CEO Randall Stephenson of violating the US Securities Act by "knowingly or recklessly" making false statements to investors and failing to disclose problems that were affecting DirecTV Now sales.

Via quarterly and annual reports, SEC filings, press releases, and other statements and documents, AT&T and its executives made statements "to securities analysts and the media that were designed to influence the market for AT&T securities," even though these statements "were materially false and misleading in that they failed to disclose material adverse information and misrepresented the truth about AT&T’s finances and business prospects," the complaint said.

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Lilbits 357: Pixel themes could make (Google’s) Android phones more customizable

The next major of Android won’t be ready for the general public until this fall, and given how long it takes most smartphone makers to release OTA updates or ship new phones with the latest version of Android, it could be another year or two befo…

The next major of Android won’t be ready for the general public until this fall, and given how long it takes most smartphone makers to release OTA updates or ship new phones with the latest version of Android, it could be another year or two before you’re likely to get it. But Google is running […]

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Wrongfully Accused ‘Pirate’ Wants Copyright Holder to Pay Her Bills

After being wrongfully accused of pirating eight ‘adult’ movies, a woman from Illinois is now seeking justice. In a relatively rare order the court allowed her request for a declaration of non-infringement. This is crucial, as it opens the door to request an award for costs and fees, to be paid by the copyright holder.

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

Every year, thousands of people are sued in the United States for allegedly sharing pirated video, mostly through BitTorrent.

These efforts, often characterized as “copyright trolling,” share a familiar pattern. After the film companies acquire a subpoena to obtain the personal details of an alleged pirate, they contact this person with a settlement request.

The cases are not intended to go to trial, however. Instead, the copyright holders often drop their complaint like a hot potato when the accused person lawyers up to fight back.

To an outsider, this may sound positive. If the complaint is dropped the legal threat is gone. However, hiring a lawyer is not cheap and without a case, the accused Internet subscriber has to pay the bills out of his or her own pocket.

This scenario has played out many times in the past but a woman from Illinois now has a chance to make the rightsholder pay her bills.

The case in question was filed by Malibu Media, a company best known for its ‘X-Art’ adult films. Malibu accused Najia Khan of pirating eight of these films using her IP-address as evidence. However, the woman fiercely denied the allegations.

With help from attorney Erin Russell, Khan fought back. She denied the claims and submitted two counterclaims. First, she accused Malibu Media of ‘abuse of process’ for suing her without proper evidence. In addition, Khan also requested a Declaratory Judgment of non-infringement.

In the past, such requests haven’t been very successful, but in Khan’s case, the trend was bucked.

In an order issued last week, US District Court Judge Harry Leinenweber dismissed the counterclaim for abuse of process. However, he ruled that the counterclaim for a Declaratory Judgment can proceed.

The Judge sided with the defense and ruled that the accused woman can pursue a final judgment. This gives Khan a chance to argue her case, clear her name, and ask for an award of costs and fees.

“There is tremendous pressure for a defendant to settle, even if the case is meritless. Khan’s counterclaim will offer protection should she choose to challenge Malibu Media’s case on the merits instead of submitting to settlement. As she points out, it also affords an opportunity for her to clear her name,” the Judge wrote.

TorrentFreak spoke to Khan’s attorney Erin Russell who sees this as a big win. If the entire case was simply dismissed, which is what usually happens, her client could only request sanctions, which would be much harder to do.

“Every time I file counterclaims I end up arguing to the judge that this is Malibu’s way of having its cake and eating it, too,” Russell says.

“They want to drag these defendants in on an IP address, then root around, force the person to defend themselves, and then when it starts to look like the defendant is innocent, they want to run off and not pay the defendant their fees.”

While most judges have dismissed such counterclaims, Judge Leinenweber deviated from this common pattern by allowing Khan to prove her innocence. Although she still has to succeed at that, her attorney is confident that she will. If that’s the case, Malibu will have to pay her legal bills.

This is obviously bad news for Malibu, and it certainly isn’t the only recent setback for the adult entertainment company.

Over at the US District Court of New York, a similar piracy case was thrown out before it got properly underway because Malibu filed the original complaint before the copyright registrations of the videos were approved. This is not allowed, as the US Supreme Court recently clarified.

Making matters worse, the court ‘slapped‘ Malibu’s attorney on the wrist for confusing the court by listing the application dates as registration dates. This is “troubling,” Judge Jesse Furman noted, adding that it’s hard to avoid the conclusion that Malibu’s use of the term was “deliberately misleading.”

In Khan’s case, all efforts will now go into proving that she is indeed innocent. This will obviously increase the legal bills, but if Malibu has to pick those up eventually, that’s not her problem.


A copy of US District Court Judge Harry Leinenweber’s order on Najia Khan’s counterclaims 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.

Period drama Warrior brings Bruce Lee’s vision to vivid life after 50 years

Shannon Lee: “It’s an honor for me to be able to have done this for my father.”

Andrew Koji plays Ah Sahm, a master martial artist who comes to San Francisco's Chinatown and gets drawn in the infamous tong wars.

Enlarge / Andrew Koji plays Ah Sahm, a master martial artist who comes to San Francisco's Chinatown and gets drawn in the infamous tong wars. (credit: HBO/David Bloomer)

There's juicy political intrigue, forbidden love, and plenty of kung-fu fighting in Warrior, a new ten-episode series from Cinemax. The series is adapted from a treatment developed by legendary kung fu master Bruce Lee nearly 50 years ago, and while it's been updated to suit contemporary tastes and trends, it still manages to capture the essence of Bruce Lee's philosophical worldview.

(Mild spoilers below.)

According to Hollywood lore, Bruce Lee pitched an idea in 1971 for a TV series about a martial artist in the Old West. Skittish studio heads passed on the project (and on Lee as its star), opting to make Kung Fu with David Carradine instead. Lee's daughter, Shannon Lee, heard these stories, too. When she took over management of her father's legacy in 2000 as president of the Bruce Lee Foundation, among the archived materials was Lee's original treatment, along with several drafts and notes. It stayed in storage for several years, until Lee mentioned its existence to executive producer Justin Lin (The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift). Lin loved the treatment and thought they could make the series that her father had always intended.

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NVIDIA quietly

PC makers are starting to ship laptops with NVIDIA’s new GeForce MX250 GPU. It’s an entry-level GPU from the company which means it’s probably not going to satisfy gamers who want advanced features like ray tracing, but should be a st…

PC makers are starting to ship laptops with NVIDIA’s new GeForce MX250 GPU. It’s an entry-level GPU from the company which means it’s probably not going to satisfy gamers who want advanced features like ray tracing, but should be a step up from the integrated graphics available from most notebooks with 15 watt Intel or […]

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A spacious plugin SUV for under $36,000? The Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV

Want a plugin SUV that isn’t also a luxury SUV? This is it.

As you're no doubt bored of hearing—I know I am—the SUV-slash-crossover has ascended to a position of automotive supremacy. Customers, we're told, like the convenience of a hatch to load their luggage and the lofty driving position that trades center of gravity for situational awareness. In response, companies are cutting back on sedans, the station wagon is almost extinct, only a handful of minivans remain in production, and cars that a decade ago would be called hatchbacks are now classified crossovers. If you want to shift metal in the US then, you better get with that program.

Similarly, it's clear to all but the most motivated reasoners that business as usual is no longer sufficient when we're talking about carbon dioxide emissions. Many OEMs—particularly the European ones—thought that diesel engines were the answer. But we all know how that one turned out; time and again car companies have been caught cheating on the tests. Even if suppliers like Bosch say they have the technology to make the engines acceptably clean, public opinion has shifted to the point where the fuel is now simply unpalatable. The answer therefore has to be electrification—it's the only remaining way for carmakers to meet Europe's incoming CO2 rules that, if applied today, would see a company like VW Group fined 75 percent of its annual global profits.

All of this makes the relative paucity of plug-in hybrid SUVs on sale in 2019 a rather damning indictment of the industry. Here in the US the pickings are slim, particularly if you don't want something from a luxury automaker with a price tag starting in the $50,000 range. There's the Kia Niro PHEV and the Subaru Crosstrek Hybrid, although neither may be considered big enough by many American consumers... which leaves us with the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV.

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Daily Deals (4-05-2019)

Sometimes you need a high-power computer for gaming, media creation, or performing complex calculations. And sometimes you just need something with a mouse, keyboard, and hopefully at least 4GB of RAM. If that’s what you’re looking for, tod…

Sometimes you need a high-power computer for gaming, media creation, or performing complex calculations. And sometimes you just need something with a mouse, keyboard, and hopefully at least 4GB of RAM. If that’s what you’re looking for, today’s a good day to pick up a cheap laptop — Best Buy is selling an Asus E203MA […]

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BMW, Daimler, and VW colluded to prevent better emissions control tech, EU says

Diesel and gas cars were affected by alleged agreements to limit emissions tech.

Four German auto executives sit at an event.

Enlarge / Right to left: Matthias Wissmann, president of the German Automobile Industry Association (VdA), Harald Krueger, CEO of German car maker BMW, Dieter Zetsche, chairman of German car maker Daimler AG and head of Mercedes-Benz cars, and Matthias Mueller, CEO of German car maker Volkswagen, take a seat to attend a so-called diesel summit on August 2, 2017 in Berlin. (credit: AXEL SCHMIDT/AFP/Getty Images)

On Friday, the European Union Commission accused BMW, Daimler, and Volkswagen Group (which makes VW, Audi, and Porsche vehicles) of colluding to limit emissions reduction technology in their diesel and gas vehicles.

The commission accused the three manufacturers of coordinating to limit the size and refill ranges of AdBlue tanks on their diesel vehicles made between 2006 and 2014. AdBlue is a urea-based liquid that is injected into exhaust gas to reduce the amount of nitrogen oxides (NOx) that are released during diesel combustion.

The commission also accused the three manufacturers of agreeing to avoid or delay the introduction of "Otto" particulate filters on gas-powered vehicles between 2009 and 2014.

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