The feds just blessed a custom self-driving vehicle for the first time

Federal car safety agency waives rules requiring side mirrors and a windshield.

Promotional image of a self-driving, no-passenger vehicle on a sedate urban street.

Enlarge / The new Nuro R2. (credit: Nuro)

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration on Thursday officially signed off on a new self-driving vehicle from the the delivery startup Nuro. It's an historic move; Nuro says it's the first time NHTSA has exempted a self-driving vehicle from regulatory requirements that apply to conventional vehicles.

Nuro's new delivery vehicle, the R2, looks a lot like its predecessor, the R1. Nuro has partnerships with Walmart, Domino's, and Kroger, and it has been using R1 robots to deliver groceries, pizza, and other products in the Phoenix and Houston areas since late 2018. But the R2 comes with some key improvements. The cargo area is significantly larger without increasing the overall size of the vehicle. And the R2—unlike the R1—has the ability to heat and cool the compartments to keep products at the perfect temperature.

The R2 is also notable for the features it doesn't have.

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U.S. Counters Appeal of Criminally Convicted ‘Copyright Troll’ Lawyer

The US Government has asked the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit to affirm the conviction of Paul Hansmeier, one of the lead attorneys behind the controversial Prenda law firm. The lawyer appealed his conviction and 14-year prison sentence but according to the federal prosecutors handling the case, it’s clear that he lied to the courts to extract settlements from alleged pirates.

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

Last summer, a U.S. District Court in Minnesota sentenced Paul Hansmeier to 14 years in prison, to be followed by two years of supervised release.

Hansmeier was a key player in the Prenda Law firm, which pursued cases against people who were suspected of downloading pirated porn videos via BitTorrent.

Hansmeier and fellow attorney John Steele went a step further though. Among other things they lied to the courts, committed identity theft, and concocted a scheme to upload their own torrents to The Pirate Bay, creating a honeypot for the people they later sued over pirated downloads.

Both attorneys pleaded guilty but Hansmeier reserved the right to appeal, which he did at the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit.

In his brief, submitted last fall, Hansmeier admits that he abused legal discovery processes. However, he maintains that many of the accused subscribers were pirates. As such, the settlements with these people were legitimate and not fraudulent.

There’s no dispute that there was foul play involved, but these matters should be addressed by civil and regulatory systems of justice and not by criminal law, Hansmeier’s lawyer argued.

This week, U.S. Attorney Erica MacDonald and Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Kirkpatrick responded to these arguments. According to the US, Hansmeier built a career suing thousands of people across the country, accusing them of pirating content he and his co-conspirators uploaded as bait.

That some victims may have indeed shared infringing material is beside the point. According to the federal prosecutors, Hansmeier’s appeal is premised on a misunderstanding of the indictment’s claims.

“Contrary to his claims, the indictment does not charge that the only lies in this case were made to courts. Far from it. Instead, Hansmeier’s lawsuits were fraudulent from the start,” the prosecution writes.

“His scheme entailed lying to courts and using the courts to execute his scheme to defraud victims and making explicit misrepresentations and material omissions to those victims in order to exact quick settlement payments.”

Thus, even though some victims may have broken the law, they were caught by someone who broke the law to catch them, and committed crimes in the process. Or as the prosecution puts it;

“Even if theoretically those victims could be sued for copyright infringement, Hansmeier still misrepresented the nature of his lawsuits in order to exact payments. It was part of his scheme to use litigation to create the illusion of a legitimate civil action environment when, in reality, the entirety of the litigation was a scam and was intended to facilitate his shakedown.”

In addition to the attempt to undo the conviction by framing his offenses as a civil matter, Hansmeier also disputed the court’s order to award roughly $1.5 million in restitution to the victims. This is in part based on the same logic. Since some victims did break the law, Hansmeier argues that the settlements were legitimate.

The prosecution doesn’t agree with this either. While some may have broken the law, they are victims because Hansmeier’s lied and defrauded the court in order to get these settlements.

On top of that, the former Prenda attorney signed a plea agreement where he specifically admitted to receiving more than $3 million in fraudulent proceeds from the lawsuits he was involved in.

“Thus, he agreed that the people who paid him as a result of his copyright infringement lawsuits were fraud victims by acknowledging that the amounts they paid him were ‘fraudulent proceeds.’ He cannot now say that they were not,” the federal prosecutors write.

Based on the above and various other arguments, the US Government asks the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit to affirm the district court’s judgment.

A copy of the full response from U.S. Attorney Erica MacDonald and Assistant U.S. Attorney Lisa Kirkpatrick is available 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.

Rocket Report: Starship may launch this spring, rideshare wars heat up

“It’s put pressure on us to take a look across the spectrum.”

A Falcon 9 rocket launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base.

Enlarge / A Falcon 9 rocket launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base. (credit: SpaceX)

Welcome to Edition 2.31 of the Rocket Report! It's exciting to think that two smallsat launch companies could put rockets into space within the coming weeks—both Astra and Virgin Orbit—and we've got updates on both below. Also making the news this week is a SpaceX application to the Federal Communications Commission for a Starship flight.

As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.

Astra says failure is an option. After operating in stealth mode for a little more than three years, the Alameda, California-based rocket company has revealed its intentions. Among the crowd of would-be small-satellite launch vehicles, Astra stands out for several reasons: it is moving fast, aims to be insanely cheap, and is rigorously following an iterative design process. Perhaps most importantly, the company is willing to fail.

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HAMR don’t hurt ’em—laser-assisted hard drives are coming in 2020

Laser-assisted HAMR drives were vapor in 2012—in 2020, they’re a reality.

Hard drive manufacturer Seagate promises that HAMR—Heat Assisted Magnetic Recording—hard drives in 18TB and 20TB models will be available in retail channels in 2020. The new drives use a medium which is less magnetically malleable at standard operating temperature than CMR (Conventional Magnetic Recording) media and, therefore, needs to be briefly and locally heated with a laser as data is written onto the media.

Seagate's been working on HAMR for a long time; the company's first big press release about the technology came in 2002. The promise has always been the same—higher areal densities, meaning more bits stored per square inch, with higher stability of data once written. The projected densities themselves have increased over the years, though—when Ars Technica first reported on Seagate and HAMR in 2012, the company was promising 6TB HAMR drives were just around the corner.

Although the 2012 "just around the corner" HAMR drives seem to have been mostly vapor, the technology is a reality now. Seagate has been trialing 16TB HAMR drives with select customers for more than a year and claims that the trials have proved that its HAMR drives are "plug and play replacements" for traditional CMR drives, requiring no special care and having no particular poor use cases compared to the drives we're all used to.

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Blizzard: Diablo Immortal geht Mitte 2020 in den Alphatest

Bei der Community ist die Ankündigung von Diablo Immortal nicht gut angekommen, nun nähert sich eine spielbare Version – allerdings nur in einigen Regionen: Bei der Bekanntgabe von Geschäftszahlen hat Activion Blizzard über die Alpha des mobilen Höllen…

Bei der Community ist die Ankündigung von Diablo Immortal nicht gut angekommen, nun nähert sich eine spielbare Version - allerdings nur in einigen Regionen: Bei der Bekanntgabe von Geschäftszahlen hat Activion Blizzard über die Alpha des mobilen Höllenfürsten gesprochen. (Diablo, Activision)

CDPwn: Fehler in Cisco-Protokoll ermöglicht Codeausführung

Mehrere Sicherheitslücken in Cisco-Geräten ermöglichen es Angreifern, im Netzwerk Schadcode auszuführen. Die Lücke betrifft wohl Millionen von Geräten und könnte in Verbindung mit weiteren Lücken gravierende Folgen haben. (Cisco, Netzwerk)

Mehrere Sicherheitslücken in Cisco-Geräten ermöglichen es Angreifern, im Netzwerk Schadcode auszuführen. Die Lücke betrifft wohl Millionen von Geräten und könnte in Verbindung mit weiteren Lücken gravierende Folgen haben. (Cisco, Netzwerk)

ESnet: Schnelles Netz für die Wissenschaft

Der Traffic im Internet ist vielfältig und reichlich. Das führt dazu, dass Daten oft nicht so schnell zum Ziel gelangen, wie es spezielle Anwendungen verlangen, vor allem in der Forschung. Darum gibt es eigens Netze für die Wissenschaft, etwa das ESnet…

Der Traffic im Internet ist vielfältig und reichlich. Das führt dazu, dass Daten oft nicht so schnell zum Ziel gelangen, wie es spezielle Anwendungen verlangen, vor allem in der Forschung. Darum gibt es eigens Netze für die Wissenschaft, etwa das ESnet, das wohl leistungsfähigste Netzwerk der Welt. Von Jan Rähm (Wissenschaft, Technologie)

Intercontinental Exchange: Ebay verliert seinen Käufer

Der Börsenbetreiber Intercontinental Exchange hat den Versuch aufgegeben, Ebay zu kaufen. “Wir haben über das Wochenende nicht den Verstand verloren”, hat sich Unternehmenschef Jeffrey Sprecher zuvor verteidigt. (eBay, Wirtschaft)

Der Börsenbetreiber Intercontinental Exchange hat den Versuch aufgegeben, Ebay zu kaufen. "Wir haben über das Wochenende nicht den Verstand verloren", hat sich Unternehmenschef Jeffrey Sprecher zuvor verteidigt. (eBay, Wirtschaft)

Comet Lake U: Vaio-Notebooks haben jetzt sechs CPU-Kerne

Künftig können Vaio-Käufer sich über neue Modelle mit Intel-Comet-Lake-U-Prozessor freuen. Ansonsten bleiben die Gehäuse des Vaio SX14 und SX12 gleich: viele Anschlüsse, wenig Gewicht, aber ein kleiner Akku und ein fragiles Chassis. (Vaio, Intel)

Künftig können Vaio-Käufer sich über neue Modelle mit Intel-Comet-Lake-U-Prozessor freuen. Ansonsten bleiben die Gehäuse des Vaio SX14 und SX12 gleich: viele Anschlüsse, wenig Gewicht, aber ein kleiner Akku und ein fragiles Chassis. (Vaio, Intel)