Put a Tiger in your Lake: Intel’s next-gen mobile CPUs pack a punch

Intel demos Tiger Lake CPUs, Project Athena designs, and foldable displays.

Tiger Lake mobile CPU on a small board

Enlarge / The slightly darker black blob in the center of this board is a Tiger Lake mobile CPU. (credit: Jim Salter)

Yesterday at CES 2020, Intel previewed its next-generation line of mobile CPUs, code-named Tiger Lake, in several new form factors while running brand-new (and impressive) software designed with the platform in mind.

Tiger Lake plays into Intel's ongoing Project Athena program, which aims to bring a performance and usability standard with concrete, testable metrics to mobile computing—that includes at least nine hours of battery life with the screen at 250 nits of brightness, out-of-the-box display and system settings, and multiple tabs and applications running. Project Athena has now been expanded to cover some new Chromebook models, as well as traditional Windows PCs.

Several new foldable designs were announced during the presentation, ranging from a relatively conventional Dell hinged two-in-one to much more outré designs such as Lenovo's X1 Fold—presented onstage by Lenovo President Christian Teismann—and an Intel concept design prototype called Horseshoe Bend. Both the X1 Fold and Horseshoe Bend will look immediately familiar to anyone who has been following Ron Amadeo's coverage of the Samsung and Motorola foldable smartphones; in each design, the screen itself folds down the middle.

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MediaTek Dimensity 800 5G processors coming to mid-range smartphones this year

Qualcomm isn’t the only chip maker looking to bring 5G connectivity to mid-range smartphones this year. MediaTek’s new Dimensity 800 5G chipset is an octa-core processor designed for “mid-tier and mass market” phones. MediaTek f…

Qualcomm isn’t the only chip maker looking to bring 5G connectivity to mid-range smartphones this year. MediaTek’s new Dimensity 800 5G chipset is an octa-core processor designed for “mid-tier and mass market” phones. MediaTek first teased the new chip a few weeks ago, but now the company is providing more details about what to expect. […]

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Daily Deals (1-07-2020)

A growing number of laptops come with USB-C chargers. But if you’re looking for something a little more portable than the charging brick that probably came with your laptop, a new crop of compact wall chargers with GaN tech have been hitting the …

A growing number of laptops come with USB-C chargers. But if you’re looking for something a little more portable than the charging brick that probably came with your laptop, a new crop of compact wall chargers with GaN tech have been hitting the streets in recent months. About the size of a smartphone charger, many […]

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Cloudflare Sued For Failing to Terminate 99 ‘Repeat Copyright Infringing’ Sites

Two companies that design and manufacture wedding dresses are suing Cloudflare for copyright infringement after it failed to terminate service to 99 ‘repeat infringer’ websites. Allure Bridals and Justin Alexander claim that they sent 7,000 DMCA complaints to the CDN company but aside from passing the notices on, Cloudflare failed to take more meaningful action.

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

When copyright holders feel they have exhausted all options to have websites stop their allegedly-infringing activities, there is a growing trend to move further up the chain.

Sites now regularly have copyright complaints filed against their hosting companies and domain registries, for example, demanding that they take action to prevent contentious behavior. Since millions of websites now use Cloudflare’s services, that makes the CDN provider a prime candidate for pressure. A new case filed yesterday in a Tennessee district court provides yet another example.

American Clothing Express Inc., which does business as Allure Bridals and Justin Alexander, designs and manufactures wedding dresses. As part of the companies’ sales and marketing efforts, they claim to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars per year on photoshoots featuring models wearing their creations.

According to the companies, however, the resulting photographic images are also being deployed by unauthorized overseas websites (sample below) in an effort to drive customers to unaffiliated bridal stores in local markets selling “cheap imitation” dresses.

The plaintiffs state that they lack a meaningful remedy against such sites, noting that the majority are hosted on servers in China, other locations in South East Asia, or on offshore servers that advertise their non-compliance with United States’ copyright laws.

“Complaints sent by Plaintiffs, or their agents, to the Infringing Website Defendants, or to the entities hosting them in these far-away jurisdictions, largely fall on deaf ears. Domestic judgments obtained against the Infringing Website Defendants are often unenforceable against them in their home jurisdictions,” the complaint reads.

The filing lists 99 websites (represented by Does 1-200) falling into these categories that all have something in common – they are or have been customers of US-based Cloudflare. As a result, the plaintiffs have resorted to filing infringement notices with the CDN company, hoping it will take action to restrict the availability of the infringing images.

Indeed, over the past three years the companies claim that they sent several thousand infringement notifications to Cloudflare which included the URLs of pages on the allegedly infringing sites where unlicensed images were being used. The complaint acknowledges that Cloudflare forwarded the complaints to its customers and their hosts but due to the nature of the clients, the hosting providers mostly ignored the takedown demands.

The complaint targets the operators of the 99 sample sites with claims of direct copyright infringement but additionally, due to Cloudflare’s involvement, the CDN company itself is accused of contributory copyright infringement.

“CloudFlare had actual knowledge of the specific infringing activity at issue here because anti-counterfeiting vendors retained by Plaintiffs delivered more than seven thousand notifications to CloudFlare of the ongoing infringement being prosecuted herein over the course of three years,” the complaint reads.

In common with a similar on-going case in California involving another bridal company, the plaintiffs in this matter also state that Cloudflare should have taken more permanent action when they realized that complaints were being made against the same customers time and again, as illustrated by the sample in the image below.

“CloudFlare could have stopped this infringement being perpetrated through its CDN by simply terminating the accounts of repeat infringers,” the complaint continues.

“CloudFlare has never terminated a repeat infringer in response to notifications sent by Plaintiffs or other bridal manufacturers. Consequently, an exceedingly disproportionate amount of websites infringing Plaintiffs’ copyrights are optimized by CloudFlare, as opposed to other providers of CDNs, due to CloudFlare’s well-known policy of refusing to terminate repeat infringers.”

While the plaintiffs don’t mention Cloudflare’s competitors by name, the complaint alleges that in response to similar copyright infringement notices, other CDN providers told their clients that if the images weren’t removed, their entire website accounts would be terminated.

The term ‘repeat infringer’ is becoming increasingly common in United States copyright infringement cases.

In December 2019, Cox Communications was hit with a $1 billion copyright infringement verdict after a Virginia federal jury determined that the ISP didn’t do enough to stop repeat infringers. Cox was found to be contributorily and vicariously liable for the alleged pirating activities of its subscribers on more than 10,000 copyrighted works.

For comparison, Allure Bridals and Justin Alexander state that Cloudflare is liable for contributory copyright infringement relating to more than 5,000 infringing images published on 99 different websites. Overall, Cloudflare serves many thousands of pirate sites, making the outcome of this and similar cases of particular interest.

In respect of the “willful and intentional” direct infringement claims against the 99 websites themselves, Allure Bridals and Justin Alexander request actual or statutory damages, injunctive relief to prevent the ongoing infringements, and the destruction of all copies of copyright works made in violation of the bridal companies’ rights.

The contributory copyright infringement claim against Cloudflare asserts that the CDN company assisted the direct infringers by storing copies of the infringing images on servers in the United States, improving the performance of the infringing websites, while concealing their true locations.

As a result, Cloudflare’s behavior is also described as “willful and intentional”, with the plaintiffs demanding a similar injunction in addition to actual or statutory damages.

The complaint can be obtained 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.

NASA may ask lunar lander aspirants to put more skin in the game

“The $600 million wasn’t everything we requested.”

NASA chief Jim Bridenstine says lunar lander partners may need to step up financial contributions to their designs.

Enlarge / NASA chief Jim Bridenstine says lunar lander partners may need to step up financial contributions to their designs. (credit: NASA)

NASA wants to return to the Moon, but it would like to do so in a way different from the Apollo Program—more sustainably, so that there are not just a handful of missions before humans retreat back into low-Earth orbit.

As part of this, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has said he prefers the space agency to be one of several customers for private companies interested in building transportation systems to the lunar surface and back. Initially, of course, NASA would be the sole customer, but over time, the agency would like to foster the commercial development of the Moon.

Because aerospace companies may one day find additional customers for their services, NASA has asked companies to invest in the rockets, landers, and spacecraft they are building as part of the agency's Artemis Moon program. In short, NASA wants its contractors to put some skin in the game.

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Dealmaster: Get a recommended RAVPower wireless charger and adapter for $17

Plus deals on the Beats Powerbeats Pro, gaming mice, PlayStation Plus, and more.

Dealmaster: Get a recommended RAVPower wireless charger and adapter for $17

Enlarge

Today's Dealmaster includes a few good deals on wireless chargers, headlined by a $10 discount on RAVPower's RP-PC058 charging pad with an on-page coupon at Amazon. While we haven't reviewed this model specifically, it's essentially an updated version of the top pick in our wireless charger buying guide: it has a similarly stable and efficient design, it supports both 10W charging for Samsung Galaxy phones and 7.5W charging for iPhones, and, importantly, it comes with an AC adapter in the box. The main advertised difference is that this model includes formal support for Apple's AirPods wireless charging case. At $17, this is tied for the cheapest it has been on Amazon.

If you'd prefer a wireless charging stand rather than a flat pad, consider Anker's PowerWave Stand, which we do recommend in our guide and is $5 off on Amazon with the code "AKA25241" at checkout. This one only supports 5W charging for iPhones and doesn't come with an AC adapter but might be more convenient for quick glances at a desk. Today's discount brings it down to $12.

If you prefer to charge your phone the old-fashioned (and technically faster) way, though, we also have deals on PlayStation Plus subscriptions, gaming headsets and mice, internal SSDs, and more. Have a look at the full list below.

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Wacom One is a $400 drawing tablet that works with Windows, Mac, and Android

The Wacom One is a 13 inch graphics tablet that lets digital artists work with a pressure-sensitive pen. It’s not a standalone tablet, but rather an input device designed to work with Windows or Mac computers… and it’s also the first …

The Wacom One is a 13 inch graphics tablet that lets digital artists work with a pressure-sensitive pen. It’s not a standalone tablet, but rather an input device designed to work with Windows or Mac computers… and it’s also the first Wacom tablet that’s also compatible with Android phones, tablets, and other devices. With a […]

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US finally prohibits ISPs from charging for routers they don’t provide

Yes, we needed a law to ban rental fees for devices that customers own in full.

A wireless router with an Ethernet cable hooked into it.

Enlarge / A Wi-Fi router. (credit: Getty Images | deepblue4you)

A new US law prohibits broadband and TV providers from charging "rental" fees for equipment that customers have provided themselves.

Even by the low customer-service standards of the cable and telecom industries, requiring customers to pay a monthly fee for equipment they own is pretty rude. But that's exactly what Frontier Communications does to its customers, as we wrote in July 2019. Frontier customers who use routers they own themselves must still pay Frontier $10 a month in a "Wi-Fi Router" fee, even if the router they use is fully compatible with the service and requires no additional work on Frontier's part.

As Frontier's website says, its customers are forced to pay "a monthly lease fee for your Frontier router or modem—whether you use it or not." That statement makes it sound like Frontier automatically provides the device to all customers—but the customer in Texas we wrote about never received a router from Frontier and was still required to pay the fee.

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Facebook is banning (most) deepfakes

The policy doesn’t cover videos doctored using more conventional techniques.

Mark Zuckerberg.

Enlarge / Mark Zuckerberg. (credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Facebook is opening a new front in its endless war on problematic content with an announcement that it is banning most deepfake videos from its platforms. Under the new policy, a video will be taken down if it is "the product of artificial intelligence or machine learning that merges, replaces or superimposes content onto a video" and if it is likely to "mislead someone into thinking that a subject of the video said words that they did not actually say."

Parody and satire is still permitted, Facebook says.

Facebook has been the target of pointed protest and criticism in recent months. Last June, Internet pranksters uploaded a deepfake of Mark Zuckerberg supposedly gloating about being "one man, with total control of billions of people's stolen data." He added that "I owe it all to SPECTRE"—a fictional evil organization from the James Bond franchise.

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Moar screens! Expanscape unveils 7-screen laptop and dual-screen handheld prototypes

Dual-screen laptops are starting to become a thing… but UK-based Expanscape wants to go further than that. Much further. The company is revealing prototypes of two multi-screen devices at the Consumer Electronics Show: Aurora 7 is a laptop with 7…

Dual-screen laptops are starting to become a thing… but UK-based Expanscape wants to go further than that. Much further. The company is revealing prototypes of two multi-screen devices at the Consumer Electronics Show: Aurora 7 is a laptop with 7 screens that lets you carry a monster workstation PC with you on the go. TeenySERV […]

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