World of Warcraft: Shadowlands impressions: Leveling alts is about to get a lot more fun

New zones look great, but it’s new ways to play old ones that have me excited.

World of Warcraft: Shadowlands marks the eighth major expansion pack for the storied MMO. Judging from a half-hour playing it at BlizzCon this year, it seems like a natural evolution of modern WoW that will run alongside the very-different WoW Classic experience for the foreseeable future. That said, the biggest change wasn't part of my hands-on demo—but don't worry, that won't stop me from geeking out about it in extreme detail.

Let's be clear where I'm coming from, here: I've been playing World of Warcraft almost continuously for 15 years. (I lapsed for a big chunk of the Wrath of the Lich King era for IRL reasons.) While I understand the appeal of WoW Classic, I am very much a proponent of modern WoW; the game has evolved over time to be more accessible for me to play just a couple of hours a week, as real life now dictates. But I tend to play solo or just with one or two friends on a sporadic basis, which means I'm looking for something very different than the hardcore raiding or PvP crowd.

Within that framing, I feel WoW has gotten more and more fun over the years. There have been some missteps, sure (I'm looking at you, Warlords of Draenor) but I felt that the semi-recent Legion was the best expansion Blizzard has ever done. My hopes are high for Shadowlands.

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Can science break its plastic addiction?

Gloves, sample tubes, and vials—labs produce millions of tonnes of waste each year.

There is no shortage of plastic in your average science lab.

Enlarge / There is no shortage of plastic in your average science lab. (credit: © Daniel Stier at Twenty Twenty and Miren Marañón at East Photographic for Mosaic)

Lucy Gilliam has an infectious passion for environmental action. Today, she works in Brussels on environmental transport policy. But in the early 2000s, she was a molecular microbiologist in Hertfordshire. Like many in her field, Gilliam got through a lot of disposable plastics. It had become a normal part of 21st-century science, as everyday as coffee and overtime.

Gilliam was, in her words, a “super high user” of the sort of plastic, ultra-sterilized filter pipettes that could only be used once. Just as so many of us do in our domestic lives, she found she was working with what anti-pollution campaigners call a “produce, use, discard” model. The pipettes would pile up, and all that plastic waste just seemed wrong to her.

Science’s environmental impact had begun to worry her. It wasn’t just a matter of plastics. She also wanted to know why there weren’t solar panels on the roof of the new lab building, for example, and why flying to conferences was seen more as a perk than a problem. “I used to bitch about it over coffee all the time,” Gilliam tells me. “How can it be that we’re researching climate science, and people are flying all over the place? We should be a beacon.”

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Soziales Netzwerk: Instagram testet Verzicht auf Anzeige von Likes in den USA

Es wird offenbar ernst: Auch in den USA will Instagram testweise die Anzahl der Likes ausblenden. Das Unternehmen will damit unter anderem den sozialen Druck auf seine Mitglieder senken. (Instagram, Soziales Netz)

Es wird offenbar ernst: Auch in den USA will Instagram testweise die Anzahl der Likes ausblenden. Das Unternehmen will damit unter anderem den sozialen Druck auf seine Mitglieder senken. (Instagram, Soziales Netz)

How Airbnb’s fight to overturn a New Jersey law imploded

More than $4 million spent opposing new rules that crack down on short-term rentals.

A crescent moon rises in the pre-dawn sky over the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on October 25, 2019 as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey.

Enlarge / A crescent moon rises in the pre-dawn sky over the skyline of lower Manhattan and One World Trade Center in New York City on October 25, 2019 as seen from Jersey City, New Jersey. (credit: Gary Hershorn | Getty Images)

Residents of Jersey City, New Jersey, voted overwhelmingly in favor of strict short-term rental regulations on Tuesday, putting an end to the high-profile feud between Airbnb and local officials that had engulfed the city in recent months. The move comes as a major blow to Airbnb, which spent more than $4.2 million blanketing Jersey City in television ads, handouts, and pro-Airbnb canvassers in a campaign to quash the restrictions, which will affect a popular destination for guests looking to visit Manhattan (which is just across the Hudson River and several minutes away on public transit) without running afoul of New York's tight rules on short-term rentals.

The new rules crack down on Jersey City’s booming short-term rental industry—which has grown by an order of magnitude since city officials effectively legalized the practice in 2015—by requiring that owners obtain permits and limiting who can rent out their spaces and for how long. Despite an aggressive opposition campaign, voters approved the regulations in a landslide, with current estimates suggesting nearly 70 percent voted in favor of the measure.

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Spieleabo: Apple Arcade bietet nun 100 Spiele

Ein Fußballspiel namens Sociable Soccer, der Murmelplattformer Marble It Up: Mayhem sowie vier weitere Neuzugänge haben das Aboangebot von Apple Arcade auf nun 100 Spiele erweitert. (Apple Arcade, Apple)

Ein Fußballspiel namens Sociable Soccer, der Murmelplattformer Marble It Up: Mayhem sowie vier weitere Neuzugänge haben das Aboangebot von Apple Arcade auf nun 100 Spiele erweitert. (Apple Arcade, Apple)

PC-Version: Death Stranding erscheint gleichzeitig bei Epic und Steam

Im Frühsommer 2020 soll das bislang nur für die PS4 erhältliche Death Stranding auch für Windows-PC auf den Markt kommen. Nun steht fest: Es erscheint am selben Tag auf Steam und im Epic Games Store – aber wohl nicht auf anderen Downloadplattformen. (D…

Im Frühsommer 2020 soll das bislang nur für die PS4 erhältliche Death Stranding auch für Windows-PC auf den Markt kommen. Nun steht fest: Es erscheint am selben Tag auf Steam und im Epic Games Store - aber wohl nicht auf anderen Downloadplattformen. (Death Stranding, Steam)

ACE Hits Two More Pirate Streaming Sites, Seizes More Openload Domains

Global anti-piracy coalition Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment is continuing its drive to purge pirate sites from the Internet. In addition to the dramatic taking down of Openload last week and a related domain seizure run, another two streaming services have succumbed to the Alliance’s wishes by closing down their operations and handing their domains to the MPA.

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

After a standing start just over two years ago, the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment quickly became the most feared anti-piracy group on the planet.

Compromised of around three dozen entertainment companies, including the major Hollywood studios, Netflix and Amazon, the group now targets piracy on a global scale, sharing resources and costs to tackle infringement wherever it might be.

Last week the group took down Openload and Streamango, a dramatic and significant action by any standard. However, as documented here on several occasions (1,2,3), the anti-piracy group also shuts down smaller players with little to no fanfare. Today we can report that another two sites have joined the club.

The first, IPTVBox.plus, appears to have been a seller/reseller of IPTV services targeted at the Brazilian market. Its packages started off pretty cheaply, less than US$4.50 for around 1000 standard definition channels.

The ‘master’ package, however, offered an impressive 13,000 mixed SD, HD and ‘FullHD’ channels for around US$9.70 per month, almost double the price but still cheap by most standards.

IPTVBox.plus…..gone

Thanks to the intervention of ACE, however, the site’s domain is now in the hands of the MPA. A notice on the site informs visitors that the platform bit the dust for infringing copyright. The familiar timer then runs down to zero and diverts disappointed users to the ACE homepage for a lesson in copyright.

Finally, a dedicated streaming portal has also handed over its domain to ACE. PlanetaTVonlineHD.com first appeared online in 2015, streaming popular TV shows such as Game of Thrones, The Walking Dead, and Prison Break to a fairly sizeable audience.

But now, without any official announcement from ACE, the show is clearly over for the TV show streaming platform.

Like so many other similar sites and services, its domain now redirects to the ACE anti-piracy portal. What happened between the parties may never be known but it seems fairly obvious that the group’s influence convinced the site’s operator that continuing just wasn’t worth the trouble.

Finally, over the past week ACE has been taking control of more Openload, Streamango, and StreamCherry domains. We previously reported that Openload.co, oload.cc, oload.club, oload.download, openload.pw and oloadcdn.net had been seized, but more can be added to the list. They are:

StreamCherry.com, Oload.stream, fruithosted.net, oload.win, oload.life, oload.services, oload.xyz, oload.space, oload.biz, oload.vip, oload.tv, oload.monster, oload.best, oload.press, oload.live, oload.site, oload.network, oload.website, oload.online, olpair.com, and openload.status.

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Messenger: Jugendmedienschutz soll Cybermobbing in den Blick nehmen

Nachrichtendienste wie Whatsapp sollen mehr tun, um Kinder und Jugendliche vor Cybermobbing und Hate Speech zu schützen. Dafür will Bundesfamilienministerin Franziska Giffey auch mit dem neuen Jugendmedienschutzrecht sorgen. (Jugendschutz, Instant Mess…

Nachrichtendienste wie Whatsapp sollen mehr tun, um Kinder und Jugendliche vor Cybermobbing und Hate Speech zu schützen. Dafür will Bundesfamilienministerin Franziska Giffey auch mit dem neuen Jugendmedienschutzrecht sorgen. (Jugendschutz, Instant Messenger)

RunCode challenge returns with coding, pwning puzzles—and prizes

In its third year, hacking/coding challenge tests a range of skills.

Capture the flag with your code in the RunCode challenge this weekend.

Enlarge / Capture the flag with your code in the RunCode challenge this weekend. (credit: Getty Images)

It's Veterans Day weekend again, which means it's time for the return of RunCode, an annual capture-the-flag style programming and information security competition run by a non-profit group formed by a collection of volunteers (many of them with day jobs in the military) three years ago.

Originally a straight coding competition that supported multiple languages, RunCode evolved last year toward more of a security focus—though its challenges still involve writing code to overcome the puzzles. Points are accumulated with the completion of each challenge, based on its level of difficulty. Currently, the contest features 17 "easy", 9 "intermediate", and 3 "hard" challenges. The tasks include challenges in networking, math, encryption, forensics, "pwning", reverse-engineering, web hacking, among others.

The prizes include a one-year subscription to the penetration testing training site Hack the Box, a WiFi Pineapple Nano from Hak5, a 4-gigabyte Raspberry Pi 4, a RTL software-defined radio kit, and a WarCollar Industries DopeScope 2.0 Wi-Fi hunting tool (very useful for finding Wi-Fi hotspots and catching the "fox" during wireless challenges at hacker cons). Depending on participation, more prizes may be added, according to event organizers.

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Cox and Music Companies Battle Over Piracy Evidence Ahead of Trial

Last year, several major music companies sued Internet provider Cox Communications for failing to take proper action against pirating subscribers. The case will soon head to trial where Cox plans to present evidence showing that its anti-piracy measures were effective. However, the music labels want to exclude the evidence, describing it as a confusing mess of misleading calculations.

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

Regular Internet providers are being put under increasing pressure for not doing enough to curb copyright infringement.

Music rights company BMG got the ball rolling a few years ago when it won its piracy liability lawsuit against Cox Communications.

The ISP was ordered to pay $25 million in damages and another $8 million in legal fees. Hoping to escape this judgment, the company filed an appeal, but the case was eventually settled with Cox agreeing to pay an undisclosed but substantial settlement amount.

The landmark case signaled the start of many similar lawsuits against a variety of ISPs, several of which are still ongoing. In fact, just days after the settlement was announced, Cox was sued again, this time by a group of RIAA-affiliated music companies.

In simple terms, the crux of the case is whether Cox did enough stop pirating subscribers. While the ISP did have the policy to disconnect repeat infringers, the music companies argue that this wasn’t sufficient.

Over the past several months, both parties have conducted discovery and they are currently gearing up for a jury trial which is scheduled for December.

Most recently, both parties have presented their motions in limine, requesting the court to exclude certain testimony from being presented to the jury. This is typically material they see as irrelevant, misleading, or confusing.

One of the music companies’ motions focuses on a document (DX 74) Cox wants to present which indicates that the ISP’s own graduated response system worked pretty well.

Apparently, internal Cox research showed that 96% of subscribers stop receiving notices after the 5th warning. This was concluded in 2010 and resulted in the ISP’s belief that its “graduated response” system was effective.

The number was also brought up to the plaintiffs, as it was mentioned during the Copyright Alert System negotiations. Cox says that it chose not to join this voluntary piracy notice agreement because it already had a functional anti-piracy system in place.

The music companies don’t want this evidence to be shown to the jury. In a reply to Cox’s objections, they argue that the facts and figures in the document are a confusing mess of misleading calculations that lack data to support them.

The reply, which also rebuts other issues, is aggressively worded and redacts the 96% figure at the center of the dispute.

“The mere utterance of the so-called ‘study’ and its misleading and unsupported conclusion will lend it an air of credibility in the jury’s mind. The proverbial bell cannot be un-rung. The only adequate solution is exclusion,” the music companies write.

Cox has also submitted a variety of motions in limine. Among other things, the ISP doesn’t want the plaintiffs to present the millions of infringement notices tracking company MarkMonitor sent to Cox on behalf of other rightsholders.

The music companies disagree, however, arguing that the jury is allowed to know that potential copyright infringements are not limited to their own complaints. The other notices are also relevant to determine crucial issues such as liability, willfulness, and statutory damages, they add.

According to Cox, however, these third-party infringements notices are irrelevant to the present case and don’t prove anything.

“Plaintiffs’ attempt to litigate this case with evidence from an unrelated case concerning acts of infringement that are not at issue is inappropriate, improper, and prejudicial. Plaintiffs’ evidence of third-party infringement allegations should be excluded from trial.”

The docket is littered with back and forths on issues one party wants to exclude while being considered vital evidence by the other. This process is generally the last major clash before the trial starts.

The court has yet to rule on the various motions. When that is done the case will move forward. If all goes according to the current schedule, the verdict will be announced in a few weeks.

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