Azure: Microsoft versucht es mit der deutschen Cloud erneut

Daten in Deutschland speichern und trotzdem eine Verbindung zur Welt haben: Microsoft erneuert sein Angebot mit der zuvor eingestellten deutschen Cloud. Diese basiert auf Azure, soll Daten DSGVO-konform lokal speichern, aber global verfügbar machen. (M…

Daten in Deutschland speichern und trotzdem eine Verbindung zur Welt haben: Microsoft erneuert sein Angebot mit der zuvor eingestellten deutschen Cloud. Diese basiert auf Azure, soll Daten DSGVO-konform lokal speichern, aber global verfügbar machen. (Microsoft, Cloud Computing)

Azure: Microsoft versucht es mit der deutschen Cloud erneut

Daten in Deutschland speichern und trotzdem eine Verbindung zur Welt haben: Microsoft erneuert sein Angebot mit der zuvor eingestellten deutschen Cloud. Diese basiert auf Azure, soll Daten DSGVO-konform lokal speichern, aber global verfügbar machen. (M…

Daten in Deutschland speichern und trotzdem eine Verbindung zur Welt haben: Microsoft erneuert sein Angebot mit der zuvor eingestellten deutschen Cloud. Diese basiert auf Azure, soll Daten DSGVO-konform lokal speichern, aber global verfügbar machen. (Microsoft, Cloud Computing)

Unix at 50: How the OS that powered smartphones started from failure

Today, Unix powers iOS and Android—its legend begins with a gator and a trio of researchers.

Ken Thompson (sitting) and Dennis Ritchie (standing) in front of a PDP-11. Ritchie annotated this press image for Bell Labs as <a href='https://www.bell-labs.com/usr/dmr/www/picture.html'>"an amusing photo,"</a> and he joked that he had much "more luxuriant and darker hair" at the time of the photo than when it appeared in magazines like the March 1999 Scientific American (which, unfortunately, incorrectly swapped IDs for the two).

Enlarge / Ken Thompson (sitting) and Dennis Ritchie (standing) in front of a PDP-11. Ritchie annotated this press image for Bell Labs as "an amusing photo," and he joked that he had much "more luxuriant and darker hair" at the time of the photo than when it appeared in magazines like the March 1999 Scientific American (which, unfortunately, incorrectly swapped IDs for the two). (credit: Bell Labs)

Maybe its pervasiveness has long obscured its origins. But Unix, the operating system that in one derivative or another powers nearly all smartphones sold worldwide, was born 50 years ago from the failure of an ambitious project that involved titans like Bell Labs, GE, and MIT. Largely the brainchild of a few programmers at Bell Labs, the unlikely story of Unix begins with a meeting on the top floor of an otherwise unremarkable annex at the sprawling Bell Labs complex in Murray Hill, New Jersey.

It was a bright, cold Monday, the last day of March 1969, and the computer sciences department was hosting distinguished guests: Bill Baker, a Bell Labs vice president, and Ed David, the director of research. Baker was about to pull the plug on Multics (a condensed form of MULTiplexed Information and Computing Service), a software project that the computer sciences department had been working on for four years. Multics was two years overdue, way over budget, and functional only in the loosest possible understanding of the term.
Trying to put the best spin possible on what was clearly an abject failure, Baker gave a speech in which he claimed that Bell Labs had accomplished everything it was trying to accomplish in Multics and that they no longer needed to work on the project. As Berk Tague, a staffer present at the meeting, later told Princeton University, “Like Vietnam, he declared victory and got out of Multics.”

Within the department, this announcement was hardly unexpected. The programmers were acutely aware of the various issues with both the scope of the project and the computer they had been asked to build it for.

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Film & TV makers debut new feature to end the “soap opera effect” scourge

Vizio, Panasonic, and LG will include it in their new TVs.

lg oled tv 2018

Enlarge / LG's B8 OLED TV. (credit: LG)

A group of filmmakers, distributors, and electronics manufacturers called the UHD Alliance has announced a new viewing mode coming to future TVs that will among other things disable the controversial motion smoothing effect that fakes a higher frame rate when showing regular TV shows and movies.

The consortium is focused on standardizing 4K and HDR content in home theaters, and says it developed the new "Filmmaker Mode" with input from 400 filmmakers like Martin Scorsese, Christopher Nolan, Patty Jenkins, and Rian Johnson. The mode could either automatically be enabled by metadata present in the content (such as an UltraHD Blu-ray disc), or enabled by users with a single button press, without the need for digging for the setting in menus.

Filmmaker Mode would also preserve aspect ratios (that is, ensure the proper aspect ratio is displayed even if the user has set their TV to something different) and color coding. The goal is to accurately represent the artist's intent, which is often diluted or distorted by TVs bloated with features to differentiate them from other, similar TVs in the marketplace.

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Wi-Fi 6: Qualcomm kündigt zweite WLAN-Chip-Generation für 802.11ax an

802.11ax alias Wi-Fi 6 ist noch nicht mal standardisiert, da kündigt sich schon die zweite Generation für Produkte an. Qualcomm hat vier neue Chips im Angebot, die zwischen 1,7 und 6 GBit/s als Bruttodatenrate bieten. (802.11ax, WLAN)

802.11ax alias Wi-Fi 6 ist noch nicht mal standardisiert, da kündigt sich schon die zweite Generation für Produkte an. Qualcomm hat vier neue Chips im Angebot, die zwischen 1,7 und 6 GBit/s als Bruttodatenrate bieten. (802.11ax, WLAN)

SpaceX: Nur noch eine Million US-Dollar für einen Satelliten

Es geht noch viel billiger. Nur drei Wochen nach dem Mitflugprogramm für Kleinsatelliten senkt SpaceX die Preise nochmals drastisch und will Flüge monatlich anbieten statt jährlich. Es ist eine Revolution im Orbit, wenn es dabei bleibt. Eine Analyse vo…

Es geht noch viel billiger. Nur drei Wochen nach dem Mitflugprogramm für Kleinsatelliten senkt SpaceX die Preise nochmals drastisch und will Flüge monatlich anbieten statt jährlich. Es ist eine Revolution im Orbit, wenn es dabei bleibt. Eine Analyse von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Satelliten, Raumfahrt)

XPS 15 (7590) im Test: Dell lässt die OLED-Sonne aufgehen

Nachdem wir das XPS 15 (7590) von Dell das erste Mal aufgeklappt haben, staunen wir: Das OLED-Display ist sehr beeindruckend. Doch nicht nur deshalb ist das Notebook für uns eines der besten 15,6-Zoll-Geräte des Jahres. Ein Test von Oliver Nickel (Dell…

Nachdem wir das XPS 15 (7590) von Dell das erste Mal aufgeklappt haben, staunen wir: Das OLED-Display ist sehr beeindruckend. Doch nicht nur deshalb ist das Notebook für uns eines der besten 15,6-Zoll-Geräte des Jahres. Ein Test von Oliver Nickel (Dell XPS 15, Intel)

Google Play apps with 1.5 million downloads drained batteries and slowed devices

Stealthy new click-fraud technique displayed ads that were invisible to users.

Google Play apps with 1.5 million downloads drained batteries and slowed devices

Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto | Getty Images)

Researchers have discovered two Google Play apps with more than 1.5 million downloads engaging in a new form of click fraud that drained batteries, slowed performance, and increased mobile data usage of infected phones.

The apps—a notepad app called Idea Note: OCR Text Scanner, GTD, Color Notes and a fitness app with the title Beauty Fitness: daily workout, best HIIT coach—carried out the stealthy form of fraud for almost a year until it was discovered by researchers at security firm Symantec. Google removed them from Play after receiving a private report.

The newly discovered tactic positioned advertisements in places that weren’t visible to end users—specifically in messages displayed in the nether regions of infected phones' notification drawer. When a user clicked on the notification, Android’s Toast class opened the ad, but in a way that wasn’t visible to the user. The technique worked by opening a Canvas and using the translate() and dispatchDraw() methods to position the ads beyond the viewable screen area of the infected device. The result: the app could report a revenue-generating ad click even though users saw nothing.

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Mitschnitte digitaler Assistenten: Mitarbeiter hört einstündiges Telefonat, beklagt Ausbeutung

Unter welchen Bedingungen müssen Menschen arbeiten, die für die großen IT-Unternehmen Mitschnitte der digitalen Assistenten anhören? Darüber berichtet ein ehemaliger Mitarbeiter, der lange Unterhaltungen belauschen musste und ausbeuterische Arbeitsbedi…

Unter welchen Bedingungen müssen Menschen arbeiten, die für die großen IT-Unternehmen Mitschnitte der digitalen Assistenten anhören? Darüber berichtet ein ehemaliger Mitarbeiter, der lange Unterhaltungen belauschen musste und ausbeuterische Arbeitsbedingungen unterhalb des Mindestlohns beklagt. (Google Assistant, Google)

ISPs Block BitTorrent Traffic Despite EU Net Neutrality Regulation

A new study shows that some large ISPs in Europe are actively blocking BitTorrent traffic on mobile networks. One ISPs even terminates BitTorrent traffic completely. According to the researchers, the targeted practices violate EU’s net neutrality regulation, adopted a few years ago.

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

When the European Parliament adopted Europe’s first net neutrality rules in 2015, some people believed that this would put an end to BitTorrent blocking

The rules, which were included in the Telecoms Single Market (TSM) regulation, prevent ISPs from outright discrimination between different types of traffic.

While there has been little research on the topic thus far, a new paper published by Italian researchers shows that several ISPs continue to interfere with BitTorrent transfers.

For the study, Valerio Luconi and his colleagues used a specialized tool called NeutMon to measure traffic flows on several mobile ISP networks. Specifically, they checked whether BitTorrent traffic is treated differently than traffic that appears the same, but isn’t using the BitTorrent protocol.

These traffic measurements were taken throughout the day and in a follow-up measurement, were compared to regular traffic as well. The results show that despite the EU’s net neutrality rules, BitTorrent throttling is still ongoing.

The research started with a broad measurement targeting all of the nine ISPs that were available through the NeutMon tool, some in multiple countries. They then measured the throughput of BitTorrent traffic versus the control group, to see if there are any changes.

The results show that three of the nine ISPs interfered with BitTorrent traffic flowing through the standard port 6881.

This wasn’t the case on all tests, so the researchers selected these providers for a more thorough follow-up run.

This “focused” test looked at the average download speeds for the following traffic types, which were (except HTTP) all similar in respect of types of packets and size.

BT: BitTorrent traffic on port 6881, or a random high number if that fails
CT1: Control traffic on port 6881
CT2: Control traffic on a random port higher than 50000
HT: HTTP request of a large file

After testing the three possibly non-neutral ISPs the researchers found that the earlier interference that was found at the Swedish ISP Telenor could not be replicated. However, on Vodafone (Spain/Italy) and Yoigo (Spain), something was amiss, as the figure below also shows.

The researchers found that Vodafone always blocked BitTorrent traffic on port 6881, except between 1 AM to 5 AM. However, BitTorrent traffic was blocked on higher ports as well. This led to the suspicion that it takes place through deep packet inspection.

“We can in general confirm that classification is done via deep packet inspection, as only BT is always throttled with a very low throughput, both when using port 6881 and when using a random high port,” the researchers write.

The control traffic performs much better, although there is occasional interference there as well. According to the researchers, this might be because this traffic is sporadically misidentified as BitTorrent traffic since it shares the same characteristics. HTTP traffic was, as expected, allowed to flow freely.

On Yoigo there’s also non-neutral activity, according to the findings. Interestingly, much of the control traffic was throttled as well. According to the researchers, this could be due to port blocking.

“From the obtained results we can confirm Yoigo’s non-neutral behavior too, but with quite different modalities,” they write.

“BT, CT1, and CT2 are capped to a very low throughput, whereas HT obtains good performance. These results seem also to confirm that traffic is shaped on a per-port basis.”

BitTorrent was certainly treated differently from the two control conditions though. The researchers report that Yoigo always shut down BitTorrent traffic after a short time, which meant that none of the tests completed. This suggests that the ISP uses multiple blocking measures.

The article concludes that while there’s no blocking on most mobile ISPs, some clearly interfere with traffic in a non-neutral way. They argue that it may be time to introduce real-world monitoring systems, to check whether ISPs play by the rules or not.

That brings us to another issue, which is not mentioned in the article. While the EU has indeed adopted net neutrality rules, it’s up for debate whether BitTorrent blocking is actually prohibited.

ISPs are arguably still allowed to throttle specific categories for “reasonable” network management purposes, as long at it improves the overall “transmission quality.” That would not be a far-fetched argument since torrent traffic can be quite demanding on a network.

The paper titled “Net Neutrality in Mobile Broadband: a European Study Based on a Large Scale Testbed” is accepted for publication in the Internet Technology Letters.


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