Gesichtserkennung: Wenn eine Nasen-OP zu einer neuen Identität führt

Nach einer Schönheitsoperation wurde eine Chinesin vom Gesichtserkennungssystem nicht mehr erkannt – und konnte nicht in Hotels einchecken oder Online-Zahlungen vornehmen. Sie musste ihre Identität in der staatlichen Gesichtsdatenbank aktualisieren. (G…

Nach einer Schönheitsoperation wurde eine Chinesin vom Gesichtserkennungssystem nicht mehr erkannt - und konnte nicht in Hotels einchecken oder Online-Zahlungen vornehmen. Sie musste ihre Identität in der staatlichen Gesichtsdatenbank aktualisieren. (Gesichtserkennung)

Quic: Cloudflare startet HTTP/3 mit Chrome und Firefox

Der Netzwerkdienstleister Cloudflare stellt allen seinen Kunden die Nutzung von HTTP/3 über Quic zur Verfügung. In der Ankündigung hebt der Anbieter explizit den Support in Chrome und Firefox hervor und die gute Zusammenarbeit in der IETF. (Cloudflare,…

Der Netzwerkdienstleister Cloudflare stellt allen seinen Kunden die Nutzung von HTTP/3 über Quic zur Verfügung. In der Ankündigung hebt der Anbieter explizit den Support in Chrome und Firefox hervor und die gute Zusammenarbeit in der IETF. (Cloudflare, Firefox)

Ausweisapp2: Personalausweis einfach mit dem iPhone auslesbar

Bisher konnten Personalausweise mit eID-Funktion nur über externe Hardware mit einem iPhone ausgelesen werden. Dank iOS 13.1 und der Öffnung des eingebauten NFC-Chips geht das jetzt auch einfach so – aber nicht mit allen Modellen. (E-Personalausweis, A…

Bisher konnten Personalausweise mit eID-Funktion nur über externe Hardware mit einem iPhone ausgelesen werden. Dank iOS 13.1 und der Öffnung des eingebauten NFC-Chips geht das jetzt auch einfach so - aber nicht mit allen Modellen. (E-Personalausweis, Apple)

Piracy will Surge if More Legal Streaming Services Launch, Research Shows

A new survey conducted by Broadband Genie shows that piracy will surge if content is spread out across more streaming subscription services. In part due to increasing costs, the number of UK streaming subscribers who “pirate” on the side is set to double.

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

When Disney announced that it would launch its own streaming service, two years ago, some noted that this would keep piracy relevant.

People had just become used to having access to a broad movie and TV library in one or two places, and any increased fragmentation appeared to be a step backward.

Fast forward to 2019 and Disney is about to launch its new service. At the same time, more and more streaming subscription platforms are coming up with exclusive releases. If you want to see those, you have to sign up.

While that may not be a problem for some, there is an audience of millions who don’t want to or simply can’t pay for a handful of streaming subscriptions. This means that they have to pick the ones they want the most.

That’s the hard reality for modern consumers, at least, for those who don’t want to break the law.

As it turns out, many people are willing to cross the line, and the increased fragmentation of video streaming service is indeed driving people back to pirate sites. This problem may actually be worse than some think, based on new research that was just published by Broadband Genie.

The broadband comparison/advice site conducted a survey among UK streaming users and found that 18% confessed to using pirate sites on the side. However, this number could more than double to 37% if the legal streaming subscription market continues to fragment.

Credit: Broadband Genie

The cost of these services is the driving factor behind the findings. Two thirds (67%) of the surveyed UK streamers feel that they are already paying too much. The average expenditure is roughly £15 a month, where a maximum of £10 is seen as ideal.

Interestingly, those people who consider becoming pirates are not doing so without taking precautions. More than half (60%) of the prospective pirates say they will invest in a VPN to prevent copyright holders from tracing their steps.

Alex Tofts, Broadband Expert at Broadband Genie, notes that we’re still a long way from having all video entertainment in one place. People have options to save costs, through family discounts, for example. But instead, many people prefer to pay for a VPN so they can go the pirate route.

“It’s disheartening that consumers are prepared to turn to streams and file sharing to access the content they want. The price consumers are willing to pay is the equivalent of subscribing to one service,” Tofts says.

Rightsholders, meanwhile, keep repeating that availability is no longer a problem. They are right. In most countries, people can watch pretty much everything they want, but it comes at a price which, according to the survey, they are not willing to pay.

If fragmentation increases most people will still pay for legal services, but an increasing number will additionally use pirate services to watch content that’s otherwise only available at platforms they don’t have access to.

Availability is no longer the key issue. Instead, the focus has shifted to convenience and affordability. The prospect of signing up and using four or even five different streaming service is not affordable for many people, nor is it convenient.

The solution would be to provide universal access to a multitude of services through a single interface at a decent price. That’s what people also get at pirate sites. But this is easier said than done, as it won’t bring in enough revenue, at least not at the subscription rates we have now.

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

Medienkompetenz: Was, Ihr Kind kann nicht programmieren?

Lesen, schreiben, rechnen und coden: Müssen Kinder programmieren lernen? Vielleicht nicht. Aber sie sollen verstehen, wie Computer funktionieren. Wie das am besten geht. (Schulen, Arduino)

Lesen, schreiben, rechnen und coden: Müssen Kinder programmieren lernen? Vielleicht nicht. Aber sie sollen verstehen, wie Computer funktionieren. Wie das am besten geht. (Schulen, Arduino)

Weiterbildung: Golem-pur-Nutzer erhalten Rabatt für unsere Workshops

Verhandeln, Schwierigkeiten im Team überwinden, sich selbst organisieren, juristisches Wissen erwerben und vieles mehr: Abonnenten bekommen zehn Prozent Rabatt auf alle Workshops der Golem Akademie. (GolemAkademie, Urheberrecht)

Verhandeln, Schwierigkeiten im Team überwinden, sich selbst organisieren, juristisches Wissen erwerben und vieles mehr: Abonnenten bekommen zehn Prozent Rabatt auf alle Workshops der Golem Akademie. (GolemAkademie, Urheberrecht)

Samsungs Galaxy Fold: Verkaufsstart verschoben und Fehler am Display aufgetreten

Samsungs zweiter Anlauf, das Galaxy Fold auf den Markt zu bringen, ist erneut von Pannen begleitet. Die Markteinführung ist ohne Ankündigung verschoben worden, und bei einem Journalisten in den USA ist ein neuer Fehler aufgetreten. (Samsung, Smartphone…

Samsungs zweiter Anlauf, das Galaxy Fold auf den Markt zu bringen, ist erneut von Pannen begleitet. Die Markteinführung ist ohne Ankündigung verschoben worden, und bei einem Journalisten in den USA ist ein neuer Fehler aufgetreten. (Samsung, Smartphone)

Inside Bill’s Brain rezensiert: Nicht nur in Bill Gates’ Kopf herrscht Chaos

Einer der erfolgreichsten Menschen der Welt ist eben auch nur ein Mensch: Die Netflix-Doku Inside Bill’s Brain – Decoding Bill Gates zeichnet das teils emotionale Porträt eines introvertierten und schlauen Nerds, schweift aber leider zu oft in die geme…

Einer der erfolgreichsten Menschen der Welt ist eben auch nur ein Mensch: Die Netflix-Doku Inside Bill's Brain - Decoding Bill Gates zeichnet das teils emotionale Porträt eines introvertierten und schlauen Nerds, schweift aber leider zu oft in die gemeinnützige Arbeit des Microsoft-Gründers ab. (Bill Gates, Microsoft)

DoorDash hack spills loads of data for 4.9 million people

Intruders got access in May. DoorDash only found out earlier this month.

DoorDash hack spills loads of data for 4.9 million people

Enlarge (credit: DoorDash)

A hack on food-delivery service DoorDash leaked the personal data of 4.9 million customers, delivery workers, and merchants, the company revealed on Thursday.

The breach took place on May 4, but DoorDash officials didn't learn of it until earlier this month when they noticed unusual activity involving an unnamed third-party service provider. That's what DoorDash says in recent post, which began: "We take the security of our community very seriously." Data obtained by the attacker could include names, email addresses, delivery addresses, order histories, phone numbers, and cryptographically hashed and salted passwords.

Also exposed were the last four digits of customers' payment cards and the last four digits of delivery workers' and merchants' bank accounts. Drivers license numbers for about 100,000 delivery workers were also accessed.

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Purism’s Librem 5 phone starts shipping—a fully open GNU/Linux phone

The crowdsourced $700 Linux phone is actually becoming a real product.

Purism, the maker of a line of built-for-Linux laptops, is now shipping a built-for-Linux smartphone. The company announced this week that the Libram 5 smartphone is now shipping to early backers of the crowdsourced, $699 smartphone project.

The Librem 5 is unlike anything else on the market. Not only is it one of the only smartphones on Earth that doesn't ship with Android, a fork of Android, or iOS—Purism's commitment to 100% open software, with no binary blobs, puts severe restrictions on what hardware it can use. Android's core might be open source, but it was always built for wide adoption above all else, with provisions for manufacturers to include as much proprietary code as they want. Purism's demand that everything be open means most of the major component manufacturers were out of the question.

Perhaps because of the limited hardware options, the internal construction of the Librem 5 is absolutely wild. While smartphones today are mostly a single mainboard with every component integrated into it, the Librem 5 actually has a pair of M.2 slots that house full-size, off-the-shelf LTE and Wi-Fi cards for connectivity, just like what you would find in an old laptop. The M.2 sockets look massive on top of the tiny phone motherboard, but you could probably replace or upgrade the cards if you wanted.

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