ANC-Kopfhörer: Bose macht die Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 besser

Bose hat ein Firmware-Update und eine neue Version der zugehörigen App für die ANC-Kopfhörer Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 veröffentlicht. Damit lässt sich die lästige Abschaltautomatik deaktivieren und der ANC-Kopfhörer kann parallel mit Boses smart…

Bose hat ein Firmware-Update und eine neue Version der zugehörigen App für die ANC-Kopfhörer Noise Cancelling Headphones 700 veröffentlicht. Damit lässt sich die lästige Abschaltautomatik deaktivieren und der ANC-Kopfhörer kann parallel mit Boses smarten Lautsprechern verwendet werden. (Bose, Audio/Video)

Oneplus: Unbefugte greifen erneut auf Kundendaten zu

Datenschutzvorfall bei Oneplus: Der Smartphone-Hersteller weist darauf hin, dass Kundendaten in falsche Hände gelangt sind. Das ist bereits der zweite Vorfall in zwei Jahren. (Oneplus, Smartphone)

Datenschutzvorfall bei Oneplus: Der Smartphone-Hersteller weist darauf hin, dass Kundendaten in falsche Hände gelangt sind. Das ist bereits der zweite Vorfall in zwei Jahren. (Oneplus, Smartphone)

Aldi Talk Jahrespaket: Smartphone-Tarif zum Jahrespreis von 60 Euro

Der Lebensmittel-Discounter Aldi bietet einen Smartphone-Tarif im Jahrespaket an. Das Besondere daran: Das im Tarif enthaltene ungedrosselte Datenvolumen wird pro Jahr berechnet. Eine Nachbuchung von Datenvolumen ist aber vergleichsweise teuer. (Mobilf…

Der Lebensmittel-Discounter Aldi bietet einen Smartphone-Tarif im Jahrespaket an. Das Besondere daran: Das im Tarif enthaltene ungedrosselte Datenvolumen wird pro Jahr berechnet. Eine Nachbuchung von Datenvolumen ist aber vergleichsweise teuer. (Mobilfunktarif, Handy)

Freenet Funk: Nach dem 30. Pausentag wird eine Grundgebühr verlangt

Freenet ändert die Bedingungen für den App-basieren Funk-Tarif. Noch können Kunden den Tarif beliebig oft pausieren. Demnächst stehen pro Jahr nur noch 30 Pausentage bereit. An allen übrigen Tagen fällt eine Art Grundgebühr an. (Freenet, Mobilfunk) …

Freenet ändert die Bedingungen für den App-basieren Funk-Tarif. Noch können Kunden den Tarif beliebig oft pausieren. Demnächst stehen pro Jahr nur noch 30 Pausentage bereit. An allen übrigen Tagen fällt eine Art Grundgebühr an. (Freenet, Mobilfunk)

Millions in Crypto & Cash Seized in Movie Piracy Investigation

Police in New Zealand have reportedly seized $6.7m in cryptocurrency and $1.1m in cash as part of a money laundering investigation. According to a local report, a man from Hamilton allegedly received the funds from a US-based movie piracy site he helped to create. PayPal noticed unusual activity on an account linked to the suspect and reported the case to the IRS.

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

When New Zealand, alleged movie piracy, cash seizures, and a US-based investigation feature in the same sentence, what follows is usually information pertaining to Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom.

It transpires, however, that there are other pretty big players on the radars of authorities in both countries.

Back in June, software programmer Jaron David McIvor received an unwelcome visit from police in New Zealand who were investigating a movie piracy case in the United States. It took at least two visits but Ivor ultimately ended up handing over $1.1 million in cash and the keys to his cryptocurrency accounts containing almost $6.7 million.

The case, which has just been made public by NZHerald, centers around alleged money laundering. According to Detective Senior Sergeant Keith Kay, the head of the Asset Recovery Unit in Waikato, McIvor helped to create a movie piracy site in the United States from which he received an estimated $2m.

It’s reported that the money was deposited into various bank accounts from wire transfers, Stripe, and PayPal. It was the latter who identified “suspicious activity” on an account linked to McIvor and subsequently reported the matter to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in the United States.

Since the funds were allegedly generated from crimes that took place in the United States, moving the funds into New Zealand was sufficient to trigger a money-laundering investigation and the seizure of the funds earlier this year.

The name of the pirate platform allegedly co-founded by McIvor has not been named. However, police have confirmed that other individuals are under investigation in the United States, Canada, and Vietnam.

The seizures that began in June in New Zealand came just a month after news broke in the United States that authorities had seized around $4 million worth of cash and cryptocurrency there as part of an investigation into alleged movie piracy.

The two cases are not currently being linked by authorities but they share some similarities. Both involve an alleged pirate movie site in the US, both received a PayPal referral for suspicious activity, and both resulted in the seizure of large volumes of cash and cryptocurrency.

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

Actor Karl Pilkington Pirates Own Show

British comedian, actor Karl Pilkington has shared a link to an episode of his own show. The only problem? It was a pirated upload!Karl Pilkington, best known as the titular “character” in ‘An Idiot Abroad’ shared an episode of his latest show ‘Sick of…



British comedian, actor Karl Pilkington has shared a link to an episode of his own show. The only problem? It was a pirated upload!

Karl Pilkington, best known as the titular "character" in 'An Idiot Abroad' shared an episode of his latest show 'Sick of It' when someone complained that the show wasn't available in his country.

Instead of pointing to a place where the show can be purchased or streamed, Pilkington instead simply linked to a Vimeo video that contained the season 1 episode 2 of the show. With the video titled "Sick.Of.It.S01E02.HDTV.x264.PLUTONiUM", it was clear that the upload came from a pirated source.

Not content with doing it once, Pilkington and even a co-writer on the show has been linking to the same upload every time someone asks where the show can be seen.

The upload has been viewed 11,000+ times since it was uploaded a year ago, and this number has no doubt increased a fair bit thanks to the show's star.

Sky, who owns the show, has so far not taken any action against the upload, or against Pilkington for linking to it.

Australians who want to watch the show can do so on the streaming platform Stan.

[via TorrentFreak]

Microsoft Leaves Anti-Piracy Group After it Scolded EFF’s New Board Chair

Microsoft has cut its ties with anti-piracy group CreativeFuture, after the group criticized the copyright track record of the new EFF board chair. This decision didn’t sit well with CreativeFuture, which wrote a scathing letter arguing that Microsoft is turning its back on the copyright industries that helped the company to thrive.

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

In recent years CreativeFuture has been one of the most vocal anti-piracy groups.

The coalition is made up of more than 550 organizations as well as hundreds of thousands of individual creators.

The group lobbies lawmakers and leads the charge when it comes to many anti-piracy discussions. Its message is loud and clear: piracy is terrible and Google is enemy number one.

In recent years CreativeFuture has repeatedly pitted itself against major technology companies which it believes don’t do enough to curb piracy. In this often hostile ecosystem, it found one sole tech giant at its side, Microsoft.

“In an era of creative decimation perpetrated by the world’s biggest technology companies, one of their very biggest made a point of joining us to stand up for copyright,” CreativeFuture noted in a recent mailing.  

While that sounds positive, the reason for the email isn’t good. The anti-piracy coalition explains that Microsoft is the first member to ever leave the group. While the company hasn’t publicly explained its motives, CreativeFuture knows why.

According to the mailing, Microsoft wasn’t happy with an article the group wrote about Pamela Samuelson, the new Board Chair at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).

CreativeFuture and EFF often find themselves at odds and the former has repeatedly criticized the digital rights group. In its most recent article, CreativeFuture highlights what it calls Samuelson’s “miserable copyright record.”

This apparently went a step too far for Microsoft. While the company probably hoped to keep its disagreement out of public view, CreativeFuture decided otherwise, going on the attack.

“Confused and hurt, we did some digging, and discovered that Samuelson and Microsoft have a long history together, going at least as far back as 2005, when Microsoft gifted a whopping $1 million to the Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at UC Berkeley,” CreativeFuture writes.

In addition, the coalition points out that Samuelson published a paper defending Microsoft in a lawsuit against AT&T, while the tech company continued to support the Samuelson Clinic.

CreativeFuture says that it “gets it” and that Samuelson may be a “lovely person with a kind and tender heart.” However, it notes that by backing her, the company is turning its back “on the core copyright industries,” including many software developers.

“As one of the world’s most innovative companies, Microsoft, you should know better than anyone that copyright is the fuel of innovation in this country, the assurance that innovators will be compensated for doing their important work.

“From this perspective, your relationship with Pamela Samuelson is ultimately a kind of self-sabotage, an attack on the very values that have helped your company thrive,” CreativeFuture adds.

CreativeFuture says it’s sad to see Microsoft go. It will continue its anti-piracy quest and hopes that the tech giant will one day rejoin. However, considering its scathing letter, that’s very unlikely.

We don’t know Microsoft’s exact reasons for leaving. Perhaps the arguments against Samuelson weren’t the problem as much as the fact that it was made personal. Personal attacks can be quite effective and fuel most of the online discourse today, but they may not fit Microsoft’s image.

That said, it may also be that Microsoft no longer sees fit to support CreativeFuture, as it has interests and allies on the other side as well. That’s certainly not uncommon and happens on both sides of the copyright/technology divide.

For example, when we researched an unrelated article, we noticed that Netflix has left the Internet Association, which is critical of stringent copyright legislation. While no reason was mentioned, Netflix’s departure took place late last year, just a few weeks before it joined the Motion Picture Association.

Whatever Microsoft’s precise motives are, the company can be assured that CreativeFuture will keep a close eye on its copyright track record going forward.

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

Geforce GTX 1650 Super im Test: Kleine Super-Karte hat große Konkurrenz

Mit der Geforce GTX 1650 Super positioniert Nvidia ein weiteres Modell für unter 200 Euro. Dort trifft die Turing-Grafikkarte allerdings auf AMDs Radeon RX 580, die zwar ziemlich alt und stromhungrig, aber immer noch schnell ist. Zudem erscheint bald d…

Mit der Geforce GTX 1650 Super positioniert Nvidia ein weiteres Modell für unter 200 Euro. Dort trifft die Turing-Grafikkarte allerdings auf AMDs Radeon RX 580, die zwar ziemlich alt und stromhungrig, aber immer noch schnell ist. Zudem erscheint bald die sparsame Radeon RX 5500 als Nachfolger. Ein Test von Marc Sauter (Nvidia Turing, Grafikhardware)

Jodie Whittaker’s Time Lord is back in action-packed Doctor Who S12 trailer

And is that a glimpse of a Cyberman we see?

The Time Lord and her faithful companions face all new adventures in series 12 of the BBC's Doctor Who.

Jodie Whittaker returns as everyone favorite kooky-yet-brilliant Time Lord in the first action-packed trailer for the upcoming 12th series of Doctor Who. And it just so happens the trailer's debut coincides with BBC One's airing of the very first Doctor Who episode, "An Unearthly Child," 56 years ago.

(Some spoilers for series 11 below.)

There were lots of big changes to Doctor Who last season. In addition to Whittaker's first female Time Lord (Time Lady? Eh, we'll stick with the original), longtime showrunner Steven Moffat left the show. He was replaced by Chris Chibnall, who not only wrote for Who and its spinoff Torchwood but was also the creator of the successful Broadchurch series (which featured Whittaker and the 10th Doctor, David Tennant).

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