Orico Enclosure im Test: Die NVMe-SSD wird zum USB-Stick

Wer eine ältere NVMe-SSD über hat, kann diese immer noch als sehr schnellen USB-Stick verwenden: Preiswerte Gehäuse wie das Orico Enclosure nehmen M.2-Kärtchen auf, der Bridge-Chip könnte aber flotter sein. Ein Test von Marc Sauter (Solid State Drive, …

Wer eine ältere NVMe-SSD über hat, kann diese immer noch als sehr schnellen USB-Stick verwenden: Preiswerte Gehäuse wie das Orico Enclosure nehmen M.2-Kärtchen auf, der Bridge-Chip könnte aber flotter sein. Ein Test von Marc Sauter (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Bus: Volkswagen elektrifiziert den alten Bulli

Der Volkswagen Bulli Typ 2 war der erste Kleinbus von Volkswagen aus den 60er Jahren. In Kalifornien wurde einer der Oldtimer nun vom konzerneigenen Innovation and Engineering Center California (IECC) elektrifiziert und auch optisch ein wenig verändert…

Der Volkswagen Bulli Typ 2 war der erste Kleinbus von Volkswagen aus den 60er Jahren. In Kalifornien wurde einer der Oldtimer nun vom konzerneigenen Innovation and Engineering Center California (IECC) elektrifiziert und auch optisch ein wenig verändert. (VW, Technologie)

Formel-1-Rekord ins Visier: VW ID.R soll beim Goodwood Festival of Speed antreten

VWs elektrische Rekordjagd geht weiter: Der französische Rennfahrer Romain Dumas soll mit dem VW ID.R beim Goodwood Festival of Speed antreten und zeigen, dass ein Elektroauto auf der Strecke einen Benziner schlagen kann – aus der Formel 1. (Elektroaut…

VWs elektrische Rekordjagd geht weiter: Der französische Rennfahrer Romain Dumas soll mit dem VW ID.R beim Goodwood Festival of Speed antreten und zeigen, dass ein Elektroauto auf der Strecke einen Benziner schlagen kann - aus der Formel 1. (Elektroauto, Technologie)

Elektroautos: Tesla Model 3 im Crashtest mit Bestwert

Beim Euro-NCAP-Crashtest hat das Model 3 von Tesla die höchste Bewertung von fünf Sternen sowie in der Kategorie Sicherheitsunterstützung die beste Wertung aller Fahrzeuge bisher erhalten. (Tesla Model 3, Technologie)

Beim Euro-NCAP-Crashtest hat das Model 3 von Tesla die höchste Bewertung von fünf Sternen sowie in der Kategorie Sicherheitsunterstützung die beste Wertung aller Fahrzeuge bisher erhalten. (Tesla Model 3, Technologie)

The Internet broke today: Facebook, Verizon, and more see major outages

Verizon, Cloudflare, Microsoft, Facebook, and Twitter are all having problems.

The Internet this week, more or less

Enlarge / The Internet this week, more or less (credit: torange.biz (modified))

Last week, Verizon caused a major BGP misroute that took large chunks of the Internet, including CDN company Cloudflare, partially down for a day. This week, the rest of the Internet has apparently asked Verizon to hold its beer.

Cloudflare went down again for half an hour yesterday, and this time, it was the company's own fault—we're still waiting on a full post-mortem, but the short version is that a firewall regular expression rule targeting malicious Javascript spiked the firewalls' CPU usage, crippling throughput and causing widespread HTTP 502 errors. Microsoft's Office365 also seems to have experienced a multi-hour partial outage yesterday, with the service working over some ISPs and routes but not others for about four hours.

Facebook and its properties WhatsApp and Instagram have suffered widespread outages relating to image display for most of today. The problem seems to be bad timestamp data being fed to the company's CDN in some image tags; when I looked into the broken images littering my own Facebook timeline, I discovered different timestamp arguments embedded in the same URLs. Loading an image from fbcdn.net with bad "oh=" and "oe=" arguments—or no arguments at all—results in an HTTP 403 "Bad URL timestamp".

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FaceTime feature in iOS 13 feigns eye contact during video calls

Is this FaceTime feature a nifty improvement for video chats, or is it just creepy?

Front of an iPhone XS Max

Enlarge / The cameras on iPhones are getting (selectively) smarter. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple introduced several of the headlining features of its upcoming iOS 13 during WWDC, but people playing with the closed beta version have uncovered some additional tools. One newly found addition is FaceTime Attention Correction, which adjusts the image during a FaceTime video call to make it look like a person is looking into the camera rather than at their device’s screen.

In practice, that means that while both you and your contact are looking at each other’s faces, you’ll both appear to be making direct eye contact. Mike Rundle and Will Sigmon were the first to tweet about the find, and they describe it as uncanny, “next-century shit.” Another beta tester, Dave Schukin, posited that the feature relies on ARKit to make a map of a person’s face and use that to inform the image adjustments.

The feature appears to only be rolling out to the iPhone XS and iPhone XS Max with the current beta testing. It will get a wider release to the general public when iOS 13 officially goes live, which will likely be sometime this fall.

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Alaskan permafrost warming experiment produces surprising results

New measurement method showed 5 percent of permafrost carbon is released each year.

The study took place near Denali National Park, pictured here.

Enlarge / The study took place near Denali National Park, pictured here. (credit: faungg's photos / flickr)

Emissions from burning fossil fuels, cutting down forests, and agricultural practices aren't the only things that control how high atmospheric CO2 will go in the future. There are also feedbacks in the Earth's climate system, where warming temperatures cause the release of carbon into the atmosphere. One of these is the release of carbon from permafrost as it thaws and decays.

Unlike emissions, which we can control through actions like retiring a coal-burning power plant, humans can only indirectly change the behavior of these feedbacks—the sooner we halt warming, the smaller their emissions will be. Figuring out exactly how much (and how fast) those feedbacks will emit is a major challenge for climate science.

A striking new study led by César Plaza works on the first step of this challenge: measuring how much carbon is being lost from permafrost right now.

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Neanderthals’ history is as complicated as ours

New study hints at Neanderthal population turnover in Siberia 90,000-120,000 years ago.

The upper and lower jawbones of a juvenile Neanderthal girl who lived in Belgium around 127,000 years ago.

Enlarge / The upper and lower jawbones of a juvenile Neanderthal girl who lived in Belgium around 127,000 years ago. (credit: Peyrégne et al. 2019)

DNA preserved in ancient bones and teeth has recently helped scientists reconstruct how groups of ancient humans migrated and mingled, and a new study now does the same thing for Neanderthals. Neanderthals lived in Eurasia for around 400,000 years, and it would be a huge stretch to assume they spent all that time as one big homogeneous population or that different groups of Neanderthals never migrated and mixed.

Thanks to ancient DNA, we can now begin to see how Neanderthal groups moved around Eurasia long before Homo sapiens entered the mix.

Neanderthals on the move

Evolutionary geneticist Stéphane Peyrégne and his colleagues recently sequenced DNA from two Neanderthals, both just over 120,000 years old. One set of DNA comes from the upper jaw of a Neanderthal woman from Scladina Cave in Belgium (we’ll call her Scladina), and the other comes from the thighbone of a Neanderthal man from Hohlenstein-Stadel Cave in Germany (HST for short). Both are around the same age as the Altai Neanderthal, a fossil from the famous Denisova Cave in Siberia.

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Charter Profited From Ignoring Piracy, Music Companies Tell Court

A group of major music outfits say that Charter Communications profited from ignoring pirating subscribers. The companies, including Capitol Records, Warner Bros. and Sony Music, counter the ISP’s motion to dismiss their vicarious liability claim, which is part of an ongoing lawsuit, and hope the court will agree.

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

In March several major music companies sued Charter Communications, one of the largest Internet providers in the US with 22 million subscribers.

Helped by the RIAA, Capitol Records, Warner Bros, Sony Music, and others accused Charter of deliberately turning a blind eye to its pirating subscribers.

Among other things, they argued that the ISP failed to terminate or otherwise take meaningful action against the accounts of repeat infringers, even though it was well aware of them.

Last month Charter responded to these allegations. The company denied that it plays an active role in any infringing activities and believes the music companies’ arguments are flawed.

The labels sued the ISP for two types of secondary liability for copyright infringement; contributory infringement and vicarious liability. While Charter is confident that both claims will ultimately fail, it has only asked the court to dismiss the latter.

In its motion, Charter stressed that there is no evidence that it directly profits from copyright infringement. In addition, the ISP said that it doesn’t have a right and ability to control any infringements either, which negates another element of vicarious liability.

The music companies clearly disagree with Charter’s arguments. In a new reply submitted this week, they reiterate that the ISP failed to terminate repeat infringers, suggesting that it was motivated by profit.

“Since 2012, hundreds of thousands of defendant Charter Communications, Inc.’s subscribers have illegally distributed Plaintiffs’ music through online file-sharing programs like BitTorrent, with some users pirating hundreds of Plaintiffs’ songs,” the music outfits start, setting the tone right away.

Charter previously argued that it couldn’t control or stop piracy. Even if it terminated the accounts of subscribers, this would do little to stop infringement. After all, those people could simply sign up elsewhere and continue their infringing activities there.

The music companies reply that this argument misses the mark. They note that they’re not holding Charter liable for all hypothetical piracy on the Internet. Instead, their claim applies to a specific subset of pirate activities that previously took place on the ISP’s network.

At the very least, Charter had the “contractual right” and “practical ability” to limit piracy by its subscribers by terminating persistent infringers, the music companies argue.

“Pursuant to its terms of service, Charter reserves the right to terminate users’ accounts if they engage in copyright infringement. As courts have repeatedly held, it does not matter that Charter cannot prevent users from accessing infringing material online through other means.”

In addition to the control part, the music companies also state that the Internet provider profited from the alleged infringements, which is another crucial element of vicarious liability.

The music companies and other rightsholders sent the ISP many infringement notices, identifying the accounts of specific subscribers. Even though Charter had the ability to terminate the accounts of frequent offenders, it took no action, allegedly for a profit motive.

“The reason for Charter’s refusal to act is simple: by tolerating users’ infringement, Charter reaps millions of dollars in subscription fees that it would have to forgo if it terminated infringing users’ accounts,” the music companies argue.

This failure to terminate pirates then acted as a ‘draw’ for other potential pirates, the music companies add.

“From Charter’s failure to act, users came to understand that they could infringe Plaintiffs’ works with impunity, which constituted a further draw to the service,” they write.

Based on the above, the music companies argue that Charter’s motion to dismiss the vicarious liability claims should be denied. This would also allow the rightsholders to obtain further evidence for their arguments during discovery. 

The Colorado federal court will now review the arguments from both sides and make a decision whether the case should continue based on the allegations of both vicarious liability and contributory infringement, or just the latter.

In tandem with this case, the music companies have also filed a complaint against Charter subsidiary Bright House in a Florida court. Bright House previously responded to this lawsuit with a near identical motion to dismiss, which was followed with a similar reply from the music companies this week.

A copy of the music companies’ opposition to Charter Communications’ motion to dismiss the claim for vicarious liability 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.

T-Mobile enemy Dish could help save the T-Mobile/Sprint merger

Dish could resell T-Mobile/Sprint network access in deal to save merger.

A technician in a hard hat stands next to a Dish Network service vehicle.

Enlarge / A field service specialist for Dish Network prepares to install a satellite TV system at a residence in Denver, Colorado, on Aug. 6, 2013. (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg)

T-Mobile US and Sprint are reportedly near a deal to sell spectrum, wholesale network access, and Sprint's Boost Mobile subsidiary to Dish as part of an attempt to gain government approval of their merger. But US antitrust officials reportedly want bigger concessions before they'll approve the T-Mobile/Sprint combination.

T-Mobile's purchase of Sprint would leave the US with three instead of the current four major wireless carriers. The Department of Justice, which could sue to block the deal, has apparently pushed T-Mobile to make divestitures that would set up a fourth major carrier to replace Sprint. That has left T-Mobile negotiating with Dish, which opposed the T-Mobile/Sprint merger. The companies' feud is a two-way street, with T-Mobile repeatedly criticizing Dish for buying spectrum and not using it.

"[T-Mobile owner] Deutsche Telekom, Dish, and the DOJ are close to an agreement, and a deal could be finalized by next week, according to people familiar with the matter," CNBC reported yesterday.

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