Telekom: Magenta-TV-App für Fire TV erschienen – mit Einschränkungen

Die Deutsche Telekom hat die Magenta-TV-App für Amazons Fire-TV-Geräte veröffentlicht. Die wichtigsten Funktionen des Fernsehstreaming-Dienstes fehlen aber. Wie lange die App unfertig bleibt, ist unklar. (Telekom, IPTV)

Die Deutsche Telekom hat die Magenta-TV-App für Amazons Fire-TV-Geräte veröffentlicht. Die wichtigsten Funktionen des Fernsehstreaming-Dienstes fehlen aber. Wie lange die App unfertig bleibt, ist unklar. (Telekom, IPTV)

Detective Pikachu film review: This is how you adapt a video game for theaters

A game adaptation so good, I almost forgot to compliment Ryan Reynolds’ hilarious work.

How do you know it's <em>Detective</em> Pikachu, not just standard Pikachu? Clues: the hat, the magnifying glass, the lush fur.

Enlarge / How do you know it's Detective Pikachu, not just standard Pikachu? Clues: the hat, the magnifying glass, the lush fur. (credit: Warner Bros. / The Pokemon Company)

Pokémon: Detective Pikachu is the best video game adaptation I've ever seen in a theater. And it's even better than that weak praise might imply.

We could spend this entire article regretting the existence of Uwe Boll or arguing the merits of the Tomb Raider and Resident Evil film series, but Detective Pikachu is such a fun, polished film that those comparison points really don't make sense. The more important comparison point is Pokémon itself—and the many feature-length cartoons that it has already been attached to.

Detective Pikachu is brisk, whimsical, and family-friendly, but it particularly wins out—and survives its pitfalls—by doing something really surprising: fully breaking from the Pokémon game-plot paradigm.

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28 years later, hacker fixes rampant slowdown on SNES‘ Gradius III

Original SA-1 enhancement chip leads to 2-3x speed improvement on real hardware.

Behold, slowdown destroyed!

Many gamers of a certain age (this author included) remember the early '90s disappointment of buying the SNES version of hit arcade shmup Gradius III. In magazine screenshots, the game's huge, colorful sprites were a sight to behold, comparable to the 1989 arcade original. In action, though, any scene with more than a handful of enemies would slow to a nearly unplayable crawl on the underpowered SNES hardware.

Now, Brazilian ROM hacker Vitor Vilela has righted this nearly three-decade-old wrong with a ROM patch that creates a new, slowdown-free version of the game for play on SNES emulators and standard hardware.

The key to Vilela's efforts is the SA-1 chip, an enhancement co-processor that was found in some late-era SNES cartridges like Super Mario RPG and Kirby Super Star. Besides sporting a faster clock speed than the standard SNES CPU (up to 10.74 Mhz versus 3.58 Mhz for the CPU), SA-1 also opens up faster mathematical functions, improved graphics manipulation, and parallel processing capabilities for SNES programmers.

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D9VK: Flüssigere D3D9-Spiele unter Linux dank Vulkan

Nach DXVK nun D9VK: Das steht für D3D9 to Vulkan und beschreibt einen Wrapper, der Aufrufe von Microsofts DirectX- für die offene Vulkan-Grafikschnittstelle übersetzt. So laufen ältere Windows-Spiele unter Linux deutlich flüssiger als mit der bisherige…

Nach DXVK nun D9VK: Das steht für D3D9 to Vulkan und beschreibt einen Wrapper, der Aufrufe von Microsofts DirectX- für die offene Vulkan-Grafikschnittstelle übersetzt. So laufen ältere Windows-Spiele unter Linux deutlich flüssiger als mit der bisherigen OpenGL-Implementierung von Lutris oder Wine. (Vulkan, Wine)

Katamaran Energy Observer: Kaffee zu kochen, heißt zwei Minuten später anzukommen

Schiffe müssen keine Dreckschleudern sein: Victorien Erussard und Jérôme Delafosse haben ein Boot konstruiert, das ohne fossilen Treibstoff auskommt. Es kann sogar auf hoher See selbst Treibstoff aus Meerwasser gewinnen. Auf ihrer Tour um die Welt wirb…

Schiffe müssen keine Dreckschleudern sein: Victorien Erussard und Jérôme Delafosse haben ein Boot konstruiert, das ohne fossilen Treibstoff auskommt. Es kann sogar auf hoher See selbst Treibstoff aus Meerwasser gewinnen. Auf ihrer Tour um die Welt wirbt die Energy Observer für erneuerbare Energien. (Schiff, Technologie)

Auktion: Netzbetreiber sind zum Kampf um 5G-Frequenzblöcke gezwungen

Der Kampf um zusammenhängende Blöcke bei der seit über sieben Wochen laufenden 5G-Auktion ist nicht unsinnig. Es geht um hohe Datenraten und gegiantische Profite mit dem neuen Netz. (Bundesnetzagentur, Telekom)

Der Kampf um zusammenhängende Blöcke bei der seit über sieben Wochen laufenden 5G-Auktion ist nicht unsinnig. Es geht um hohe Datenraten und gegiantische Profite mit dem neuen Netz. (Bundesnetzagentur, Telekom)

Ryzen 3000 (Matisse): AMDs 16-kernige CPU für Sockel AM4 gesichtet

In einer Benchmark-Datenbank ist ein Engineering Sample eines Ryzen-Prozessors mit 16 Kernen und bis zu 4,2 GHz aufgetaucht. Der 7-nm-Chip passt in den Sockel AM4 und dürfte somit die Basis für ein kommendes Topmodell aus der Ryzen-3000-Serie bilden. (…

In einer Benchmark-Datenbank ist ein Engineering Sample eines Ryzen-Prozessors mit 16 Kernen und bis zu 4,2 GHz aufgetaucht. Der 7-nm-Chip passt in den Sockel AM4 und dürfte somit die Basis für ein kommendes Topmodell aus der Ryzen-3000-Serie bilden. (AMD Zen, Prozessor)

Capcom: Iceborne-Erweiterung für Monster Hunter World im September

Capcom will den Inhalt von Monster Hunter World verdoppeln. In einer Präsentation der Erweiterung Iceborne hat der Spielentwickler nun die neue Region “Raureif-Weite” vorgestellt. Iceborne erscheint nicht nur für Konsolen, auch die PC-Version ist jetzt…

Capcom will den Inhalt von Monster Hunter World verdoppeln. In einer Präsentation der Erweiterung Iceborne hat der Spielentwickler nun die neue Region "Raureif-Weite" vorgestellt. Iceborne erscheint nicht nur für Konsolen, auch die PC-Version ist jetzt bestätigt. (Monster Hunter World, Rollenspiel)

Richtfunk im Mikrowellenbereich: Telekom und Ericsson erreichen 100 Gigabit pro Sekunde

Mit Richtfunk im Mikrowellenbereich sollen 5G-Basisstationen auch ohne Glasfaser angebunden werden können. Doch die niedrige Latenzzeit einer Glasfaserverbindung dürfte damit nicht erreicht werden. (5G, Telekom)

Mit Richtfunk im Mikrowellenbereich sollen 5G-Basisstationen auch ohne Glasfaser angebunden werden können. Doch die niedrige Latenzzeit einer Glasfaserverbindung dürfte damit nicht erreicht werden. (5G, Telekom)

Lumen Database Restricts Access to DMCA Notices But Plans to Expand

The Lumen Database, a research project designed to facilitate research on takedown notices, has made a significant change to the way it offers data. While it will still be possible for researchers to access data with a special login, regular users will have to apply via email to see the details of a notice in full. The changes have been made in preparation for an expansion of its operations.

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

With millions of takedown notices hitting Internet platforms and hosts every single week, content can often go inexplicably missing from sites and search engine indexes.

Thanks to projects like Google’s Transparency report, however, much-needed light can be shone on this murky area.

Users of Google’s service can see almost every detail of a copyright claim but when it comes to accurate research, it’s necessary to visit the Lumen Database, a research project that hosts millions of notices submitted by some of the biggest Internet companies.

The resource has become an essential tool for researchers and reporters interested in the cease-and-desist landscape. However, new changes at the resource will mean that the majority of users will now have less initial access to data.

In a nutshell, takedown notices presented in Lumen’s database will no longer list the precise URLs targeted by copyright holders. Instead, as the image below illustrates, the notices only list how many URLs were targeted at specific domains.

Lighter on detail

As is clear from the above, Lumen has removed the specific URL details, which are absolutely crucial if one is to even begin researching the effects of a particular takedown notice. However, on every redacted notice is a hyperlink which presents a system through which it is possible to get an unredacted copy.

Regular users wanting to properly research a notice now have to enter their email address to receive a single-use link to view it in full.

TorrentFreak learned that changes would be made to the system a few months ago after we discovered a development version of the platform. On a personal level, we were initially concerned at the restrictions since it is not uncommon for us to view dozens of takedown notices in preparation for a single article.

However, it now transpires that researchers and journalists will be able to obtain a special login to the Lumen Database that its operators hope will provide an experience that’s largely unchanged. That means we’ll continue to bring news on interesting takedowns and report on various trends.

That being said, the bigger question is why Lumen has taken this decision. Lumen project manager Adam Holland informs TorrentFreak that it’s all about expanding and improving the service.

“Lumen wants to remain a vibrant and valuable feature of the landscape with respect to research, journalism, and public awareness around takedown requests. We believe that we have been successful at doing this over the years and that some great work has come out of, or been predicated on, our data,” Holland says.

“But we also feel that it’s both possible and necessary for Lumen to continue to grow and improve. One obvious way in which to do so is to expand the number and type of notices we receive, as well as the range of institutions from which we receive them. We’ve heard from some companies that although they’d like to share notices with us, for a variety of idiosyncratic reasons, they don’t feel that they can do so under the current Lumen schema.”

Sensitivity over the amount of information made available by Lumen under default settings will also play an important role as the platform expands. Holland says that DMCA complaints will form just part of the project moving forward, with other forms of takedown notices from all over the world augmenting the database.

“We wish to be conscious of the concerns of those sending this broader variety of notices,” he says.

As readers will probably recall, the Lumen project has previously been subjected to criticism by copyright holders. We asked Holland if this had played a part in the decision to redact notices for more casual users of the resource, who some allege may have used it to obtain links to infringing content.

“Our traffic metrics simply don’t bear out any suggestion that the database is a viable tool for those seeking access to infringing or unauthorized content. But, we have always endeavored to strike a balance,” he explains.

“We think that the new framework allows the research community to stay informed while in no way compromising research done with the database. It also — importantly — reduces the significant workload associated with database maintenance, which will free up Lumen staff to do more productive things.”

We put it to Holland that there will probably be some members of the public who won’t enjoy jumping through additional hoops to gain full access to notices. However, he says that Lumen doesn’t really have a good sense from its traffic volumes how many people use the resource for specific reasons.

But while reduced access will probably be disappointing to some, there are those who see this development as a double-edged sword.

TorrentFreak spoke with a representative from an anti-piracy company who told us that less visibility for URLs will be welcomed by his clients.

“As a DMCA agent for copyright owners, I can say that Lumen and its predecessor Chilling Effects have long been seen as making a mockery of Google’s takedown procedure – why delist search results if those same results are all still listed in a notice linked at the bottom of the page?” he said.

“But I appreciate that the DMCA process can be and has been easily abused, so it’s important to have some kind of ability to check on potential censorship and/or erroneous takedowns.

“So while my clients will surely welcome a change that makes it trickier to access infringing material, I share the concerns of those who may feel that this places obstacles in the way of legitimate research and accountability.”

Finally, it’s worth noting the large effort expended by the Lumen team to keep the project going. The platform is currently receiving up to 70,000 notices per day (mostly filed under the DMCA) with many requiring redactions to preserve privacy.

These can be handled automatically but Holland explains that manual redactions take place frequently, with a single notice potentially taking 20 minutes or more to process.

Lumen kindly provided a list of companies and institutions that contribute (or have contributed) to the database. Any parties interesting in joining this group are invited to contact the project.

Automattic/Wordpress

Counterfeit Technology

Google

The Internet Archive

Kickstarter

Medium

Periscope

PGPSMedia [not currently sending]

Proxy.sh

Reddit [not currently sending]

Stack Exchange

Stripe [not currently sending]

Tucows

Tuebl [not currently sending]

Twitter

UC Berkeley – Infosec and policy

UC Berkeley – California Digital Library

UC Berkeley -Open Computing Facility

Vimeo

Wikia

Wikipedia/Wikimedia

YouTube

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