Betriebssystem: Apple patcht WatchOS und iOS

Nutzer von Apples mobilen Betriebssystemen haben gegebenenfalls eine Update-Benachrichtigung auf ihren Geräten. Apple hat sowohl für die Apple Watch als auch für iPhone, iPod Touch und iPad ein neues Betriebssystem freigegeben. Unter iOS wird dabei auc…

Nutzer von Apples mobilen Betriebssystemen haben gegebenenfalls eine Update-Benachrichtigung auf ihren Geräten. Apple hat sowohl für die Apple Watch als auch für iPhone, iPod Touch und iPad ein neues Betriebssystem freigegeben. Unter iOS wird dabei auch eine Sicherheitslücke geschlossen. (WatchOS, Apple)

Werbefinanziertes Videostreaming: Amazons IMDb TV kommt in die IMDb-App

Amazon integriert die werbefinanzierten Inhalte von IMDb TV in die IMDb-App für Android- und iOS-Geräte. Das vereinfacht die mobile Nutzung des Videostreamingdienstes. Noch in diesem Jahr soll IMDb TV auch nach Europa kommen. (Amazon-Video, Amazon)

Amazon integriert die werbefinanzierten Inhalte von IMDb TV in die IMDb-App für Android- und iOS-Geräte. Das vereinfacht die mobile Nutzung des Videostreamingdienstes. Noch in diesem Jahr soll IMDb TV auch nach Europa kommen. (Amazon-Video, Amazon)

Ferdinand Piëch dies, father of the Porsche 917 and Bugatti Veyron

He ran Porsche’s race department, then Audi, then Volkswagen Group itself.

Ferdinand Piech, 1937-2019

Ferdinand Piech, 1937-2019 (credit: Audi )

Ferdinand Piëch, an icon of the German auto industry, has died at age 82, according to Bild. As the grandson of Ferdinand Porsche, he was certainly set up to follow in the family footsteps, but even so, it's hard to argue with his accomplishments.

His automotive career began at Volkswagen in 1952, with an apprenticeship building engines before going to boarding school in Switzerland. In 1963, armed with a masters degree in engineering, he joined Porsche, at first working on the 911 road car.

In 1966, Piëch was promoted to run Porsche's Experimental Department, a post he would hold until 1971. During those years, the company put out a succession of world-beating race cars, culminating in the Porsche 917, which did so well in endurance and CanAm racing in the early 1970s.

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Some CBD extracts are totally legal, DEA confirms

Agency says it still wants to expand cannabis research and notes that CBD is now legal.

A close up of a hand holding a small marijuana leaf in front of a blurred background

Enlarge / A marijuana leaf. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

The US Drug Enforcement Administration cleared the air around cannabis Monday, reaffirming its plans to expand cannabis research and confirming that some products containing the popular cannabis-derived component cannabidiol (CBD) are now legal.

Three years ago, the agency said it wanted to expand cannabis research by letting more entities grow marijuana. Right now, there’s only one approved grower—the University of Mississippi. It has had an exclusive deal to be the federal government’s cannabis supplier for more than 50 years.

With the recent boom in cannabis products and legalization by states, federally funded researchers have been clamoring for more cannabis products than Ole Miss can supply, particularly products that resemble those that patients and consumers can buy at dispensaries. In August 2016, the DEA said it would oblige and began accepting applications from entities to be new growers.

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Macron claims deal to end digital service tax fight with the US

Trump shows no sign of ending feud over 3% tax on digital services.

France's President Emmanuel Macron (R) and US President Donald Trump shake hands during a joint-press conference in Biarritz, France, on August 26, 2019.

Enlarge / France's President Emmanuel Macron (R) and US President Donald Trump shake hands during a joint-press conference in Biarritz, France, on August 26, 2019. (credit: LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP/Getty Images)

The United States and France have reached a deal over the taxation of digital services, French President Emmanuel Macron said at a Monday news conference alongside US President Donald Trump. But later in the same conference, Trump pointedly declined to confirm that a deal had been reached—leaving the state of the negotiations unclear.

"We have reached a very good agreement," Macron said, speaking through a translator.

The two leaders have been feuding since last month, when Trump threatened to slap retaliatory tariffs on French products. "I've always said American wine is better than French wine," Trump tweeted.

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Movie Company Sues Hawaiian ISP Over ‘Repeatedly Pirating’ Hotel

Movie company Bodyguard Productions is suing the Hawaiian ISP Pacific DirectConnect, accusing it of contributory and direct copyright infringement. The copyright holder argues that the ISP knowingly failed to terminate the account of a popular Honolulu hotel, which was repeatedly flagged for piracy activity.

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

The “repeat infringer” issue is a hot topic in US Courts that has resulted in several lawsuits already.

Under the DMCA, companies are required to implement a reasonable policy to deal with frequent offenders. Those who don’t, risk being held liable.

Thus far we have seen lawsuits targeting ISPs including Cox Communications, Charter, and Grande Communications. These companies were all sued by music industry companies and most cases remain ongoing.

In Hawaii, a new ISP was targeted a few days ago, this time by a movie outfit. In a complaint filed at a Hawaiian federal court, Bodyguard Productions accuses Internet provider Pacific DirectConnect of failing to terminate a repeat infringer.

The movie outfit, which is the copyright holder of “The Hitman’s Bodyguard,” is a familiar player in US courts. The company has previously sued many individual BitTorrent pirates. With the latest lawsuit, it breaks from this trend by going after the Internet provider itself.

Pacific DirectConnect is not a typical consumer ISP. It mainly targets hotels and resorts in Hawaii, offering integrated network solutions including Internet access. According to the complaint, one of these clients is Aston Waikiki Sunset, a large hotel in Honolulu.

According to the movie company, one of the hotel’s IP-addresses was repeatedly caught pirating. The ISP was made aware of this, both directly and through notices that were sent to its own bandwidth supplier, but apparently failed to take any meaningful action in response.

“Despite multiple notifications of infringements from Plaintiff, Hawaiian Telcom and third parties, Defendant has failed and steadfastly refused to terminate the account of subscriber Aston,” the complaint reads.

“Said infringements would have been stopped if Defendant merely terminated subscriber Aston’s service,” the movie company adds.

Bodyguard Productions argues that the ISP purposely failed to terminate the account of the Hawaiian hotel, despite knowing that it was a repeat
infringer. As such, the company is liable for the copyright infringements of its ‘subscriber.’

Through the lawsuit, the movie company requests an injunction requiring the ISP to terminate the account of the hotel. It accuses the company of both contributory and direct copyright infringement, asking the court to grant “any and all other relief” that’s appropriate in this case.

According to the complaint, Pacific DirectConnect is not protected by the DMCA’s safe harbor because it willingly failed to terminate the alleged repeat infringer. In addition, the ISP doesn’t have a registered DMCA agent, which is a requirement to enjoy safe harbor protection.

As far as we know, this is the first time that an ISP has been sued for providing Internet services to a hotel. This sets the case apart from the other repeat infringer cases that mostly deal with ordinary consumer providers.

Needless to say, the lawsuit has the potential to create another shockwave in the industry. If an Internet provider can indeed be liable for servicing hotels, resorts, or other large companies that have hundreds of users themselves, it will have to be much more careful.

The complaint doesn’t mention whether Bodyguard Productions reached out to the resort directly to address the repeat infringer issue.

A copy of the complaint filed by Bodyguard Productions against Pacific DirectConnect 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.

iOS vulnerability that let you jailbreak your iPhone is once again dead

Previously fixed bug, which somehow came back in iOS 12.4, is patched for a second time.

iOS vulnerability that let you jailbreak your iPhone is once again dead

(credit: Michael Coghlan / Flickr)

The iOS vulnerability that made it possible for users and hackers to jailbreak fully up-to-date iPhones and iPads is no more, following an update Apple released on Monday that patches the highly unusual bug.

The security advisory accompanying the release of iOS version 12.4.1 says it patches a kernel vulnerability that allows malicious apps to execute code that runs with the highest of privileges. (The use-after-free vulnerability was first fixed in iOS 12.3.) Then, last weekend, researchers noticed that version 12.4, released in June, was once again vulnerable. Jailbreak enthusiasts—who like the freedom that such vulnerabilities permit—quickly capitalized on the Apple developer mistake by releasing exploits that worked on fully patched devices.

Jailbreaking phones allows users to do all kinds of things that aren't normally possible, including installing unauthorized apps. But that freedom can potentially work to the favor of malicious hackers. Jailbreaking may weaken iOS protections that prevent an app from reading or modifying another app's data.

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Australia plans to block sites hosting extremist content during attacks

The March Christchurch attack increased worries about extremist content online.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison (left) with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson during this weekend's G7 summit in France. The Australian government announced the new censorship proposal in conjunction with the gathering.

Enlarge / Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison (left) with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson during this weekend's G7 summit in France. The Australian government announced the new censorship proposal in conjunction with the gathering. (credit: Neil Hall- Pool/Getty Images)

Australia is working on capabilities to quickly block websites hosting terrorist material during crisis events, officials announced on Sunday, according to Reuters.

The governments of Australia and New Zealand have been particularly concerned about the risk of extremist content online after a man killed more than 50 Muslims in a mosque shooting—and streamed a portion of his grisly crime on Facebook.

Now, Australian officials are planning to develop new infrastructure for quickly responding to events like this in the future. According to Reuters, the Australian government plans to "establish a framework to block domains hosting such material. Australia's eSafety Commissioner would determine on a case-by-case basis what should be censored and was working with industry on arrangements to quickly block access during an attack."

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Hardkernel Launches ODROID-N2 Media Center Edition Starting at $65

Hardkernel released the Amlogic S922X- powered ODROID-N2 dev board back in February of this year. Now the company has teamed up with the developers at CoreELEC to offer up a plug-and-play set top box built around the N2. The board itself hasn’t c…

Hardkernel released the Amlogic S922X- powered ODROID-N2 dev board back in February of this year. Now the company has teamed up with the developers at CoreELEC to offer up a plug-and-play set top box built around the N2. The board itself hasn’t changed. It features the same hexa-core processor with four 1.8 GHz ARM Cortex-A73 […]

The post Hardkernel Launches ODROID-N2 Media Center Edition Starting at $65 appeared first on Liliputing.

Google defends tracking cookies—some experts aren’t buying it

Google: Banning tracking cookies “jeopardizes the future of the vibrant Web.”

Google defends tracking cookies—some experts aren’t buying it

Enlarge (credit: Leni Tuchsen)

Google's Chrome team is feeling pressure from competitors over ad tracking. Apple has long offered industry-leading protection against tracking cookies, while Mozilla recently announced that Firefox will begin blocking tracking cookies by default. Microsoft has been experimenting with tracking protection features in Edge, too.

But Google has a problem: it makes most of its money selling ads. Adopting the same aggressive cookie blocking techniques as its rivals could prevent Google's customers from targeting ads—potentially hurting Google's bottom line.

So in a blog post last week, Google outlined an alternative privacy vision—one that restricts some forms of user tracking without blocking the use of tracking cookies any time soon.

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