Microsoft’s failures to renew: Teams, Hotmail, and Hotmail.co.uk

SSL certificates aren’t optional anymore—no cert, no authentication, no service.

This is the face of SSL certificate renewal failure.

Enlarge / This is the face of SSL certificate renewal failure. (credit: Microsoft)

Yesterday, Microsoft Teams—a combination instant messaging, chat, and collaboration package competing with Slack and the new version of Google Hangouts—was inaccessible for several hours, from approximately 8:30am to 11:30am ET.

By 10:30am, Microsoft acknowledged on Twitter that the outage was the result of an expired SSL certificate. Approximately an hour later, they had secured a replacement certificate and began deploying it in production, with service widely restored by Monday afternoon.

This isn't Microsoft's first major public embarrassment due to a service renewal failure. The company was responsible for one of the most famous "oops, we accidentally the whole domain" incidents in 1999, when it allowed the domain registry for passport.com to expire. The domain was responsible for authentication for a variety of Microsoft services, including Hotmail.com and Microsoft Messenger.

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Unihertz Atom XL rugged 4 inch smartphone will cost $280 and up (or $169 and up during crowdfunding)

Smartphone screen sizes have crept ever-upward in recent years, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that the upcoming Unihertz Atom XL has a much larger screen than the original Atom. But it’s still pretty tiny by modern smartphone standards. The…

Smartphone screen sizes have crept ever-upward in recent years, so it shouldn’t be a surprise that the upcoming Unihertz Atom XL has a much larger screen than the original Atom. But it’s still pretty tiny by modern smartphone standards. The Unihertz Atom launched in 2018 with a 2.45 inch smartphone. The Atom XL has a […]

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NVIDIA GeForce game streaming service exits beta with freemium pricing

Late last year Google launched its Stadia game streaming service, Microsoft kicked off a preview of its Project xCloud. But NVIDIA’s been beta testing a game streaming service since 2013. Now it’s finally out of beta and available for users…

Late last year Google launched its Stadia game streaming service, Microsoft kicked off a preview of its Project xCloud. But NVIDIA’s been beta testing a game streaming service since 2013. Now it’s finally out of beta and available for users in North America and Europe. NVIDIA’s GeForce Now game streaming service is a little different from […]

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NVIDIA GeForce game streaming service exits beta with freemium pricing

Late last year Google launched its Stadia game streaming service, Microsoft kicked off a preview of its Project xCloud. But NVIDIA’s been beta testing a game streaming service since 2013. Now it’s finally out of beta and available for users…

Late last year Google launched its Stadia game streaming service, Microsoft kicked off a preview of its Project xCloud. But NVIDIA’s been beta testing a game streaming service since 2013. Now it’s finally out of beta and available for users in North America and Europe. NVIDIA’s GeForce Now game streaming service is a little different from […]

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OpenRAN: Trump hofft auf 5G von Microsoft und Dell

Erst war es Apple, nun will Trump, dass Microsoft, Dell und AT&T 5G-Software entwickeln, die auf Standard-Hardware läuft. Alles soll möglichst von US-amerikanischen Firmen kommen. (5G, Apple)

Erst war es Apple, nun will Trump, dass Microsoft, Dell und AT&T 5G-Software entwickeln, die auf Standard-Hardware läuft. Alles soll möglichst von US-amerikanischen Firmen kommen. (5G, Apple)

Robust, scalable not words that apply to Iowa Dem Caucus app

Untested platform from campaign tech startup buckles under strain of caucus tallies.

Volunteers tally votes during the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucus at the Southridge Mall in Des Moines, Iowa, US, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2020. The app used to submit the results turned out not to be seamless, scalable or robust.

Enlarge / Volunteers tally votes during the first-in-the-nation Iowa caucus at the Southridge Mall in Des Moines, Iowa, US, on Monday, Feb. 3, 2020. The app used to submit the results turned out not to be seamless, scalable or robust. (credit: Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Iowa's Democratic Party turned to an untested software platform tied to a mobile application to streamline reporting from its presidential caucuses last night. What could possibly go wrong?

In a collapse that echoed the failure of a canvassing application used by Sen. Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential bid, the caucus reporting app repeatedly hung as precinct leaders attempted to submit returns. A backup hotline was jammed for hours. And as of the morning after the caucuses, the full results are still not tallied.

The application was built on technology provided by Shadow Inc.—a technology company that received seed funding from the nonprofit ACRONYM. Shadow's CEO, Gerard Niemiria, previously ran the software tool development team for Hillary Clinton's campaign organization. He left an executive position at ACRONYM to launch the company last year.

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Daily Deals (2-04-2020)

Amazon is running a sale on Samsung Chromebook 4 models today, which means you can pick one up for anywhere between $180 and $280 depending on the screen size, storage, and memory. Meanwhile, Best Buy is selling Lenovo’s 11.6 inch Chromebook 100e…

Amazon is running a sale on Samsung Chromebook 4 models today, which means you can pick one up for anywhere between $180 and $280 depending on the screen size, storage, and memory. Meanwhile, Best Buy is selling Lenovo’s 11.6 inch Chromebook 100e with a quad-core MediaTek processor, 4GB of RAM, and 32GB of storage for just […]

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Chromebooks with discrete graphics could be on the way

While many Chromebooks are still basically small, cheap laptops with a browser-based operating system, we’ve seen a growing number of mid-range and premium models in recent years with the kind of processors, displays, RAM, and other specs you&#82…

While many Chromebooks are still basically small, cheap laptops with a browser-based operating system, we’ve seen a growing number of mid-range and premium models in recent years with the kind of processors, displays, RAM, and other specs you’d expect from a decent Windows notebook. One thing we haven’t seen yet? A Chromebook with discrete graphics. […]

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Jury Finds Pirate TV Box Sellers Guilty Under the Serious Crime Act

Two men who sold piracy-enabled TV boxes and encouraged buyers to access content without an appropriate subscription have been found guilty after a four-day trial in the UK. The individuals, who will be sentenced later this month, face potentially lengthy sentences under the Serious Crime Act 2007 and Fraud Act 2006.

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

Those looking for a way to obtain otherwise premium subscription TV packages at a cheap price will find that piracy-configured TV devices are easily available online. Equally, those who prefer to see the goods before buying them can often find them for sale at markets up and down the UK.

Markets that develop a reputation for pirated and counterfeit goods can attract the attention of the authorities, including local councils. That was the case in July 2017 when Hertfordshire Trading Standards officers carried out a covert operation at Bovingdon Market.

According to Hertfordshire Council, the officers carried out a filmed, undercover purchase from traders operating from a stand under the BlackBox.tv banner. The piracy-configured device was sold on the premise that it gave access to movies and sports without the buyer having to pay a subscription.

The case took two-and-a-half years to go to trial but following a four-day hearing, two men – Thomas Tewelde and Mohamed Abdou, both from London – have now been found guilty of offenses under the Serious Crime Act 2007 and Fraud Act 2006.

During the trial, jurors were shown the covert video recorded by Trading Standards and unanimously found that the men had intentionally encouraged buyers of the devices to obtain paid TV services dishonestly. Or, in Serious Crime Act terms, they “encouraged or assisted the commission of an offense.”

Furthermore, after tests carried out by Trading Standards reportedly revealed electrical safety issues with the supplied devices, the pair were found guilty of supplying devices that failed to comply with Electrical Equipment Safety Regulations.

“We’re keen to support the growth of the creative industries which is significant in Hertfordshire. The sale of these boxes, allowing free access to copyrighted material, puts this industry and Hertfordshire jobs at risk,” commented Terry Hone, Cabinet Member for Community Safety.

“People who are buying these boxes may not be aware that they too could be committing a serious act of fraud as well as the associated risk of buying a box, which may not have been subject to safety checks, as in this case. If the deal appears too good to be true it likely is.”

In a tweet welcoming the convictions, Andrew Butler, Head of Regulatory Services at Hertfordshire County Council, revealed that the Federation Against Copyright Theft had been involved in the prosecution of the men. FACT Chief Executive Kieron Sharp issued a warning to others considering the same line of business.

“The message is very clear,” Sharp said. “If you sell a device that provides access to content that is not licensed or owned by you, you will face a criminal conviction and we thank Hertfordshire Trading Standards for their work on this case.”

The two men will be sentenced on February 28, 2019, at St. Albans Crown Court.

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

RIP Stadia? Nvidia’s newly launched cloud-gaming service is (mostly) a stunner

GeForce Now works with hundreds of games you may already own, includes free tier.

RIP Stadia? Nvidia’s newly launched cloud-gaming service is (mostly) a stunner

Enlarge

Imagine it: a video game streaming service that lets you log on to the cloud, access games you already own on multiple storefronts (including free-to-play fare), and play them on any Windows, Mac, or Android device. You'd need nothing more than a broadband connection. You'd get snappy, low-latency performance, including tolerable stats on your router's 5Ghz wireless band. And you could access all of this for free.

All of this was what we had hoped to get out of Google Stadia, which arrived in November with promises of a tantalizing "Netflix for games" model. But that streaming service's launch was immediately hobbled with device restrictions, pricing confusion, and a terribly limited (and closed) games library. Instead, the above description comes courtesy of an utter surprise, launching today in both free and paid tiers: Nvidia's GeForce Now.

After a months-long closed beta, GeForce Now opens to the public sometime today (perhaps the moment this article goes live). Download its app on a supported device, then hook up your preferred control method (gamepad, mouse+keyboard) and connect to one of Nvidia's servers. You'll boot into a virtualized Windows PC on the cloud, which then loads one of "hundreds" of supported games as sold by Steam, Epic Games Store, Battle.net, uPlay, the Bethesda Launcher, and Origin. From there, the server's gameplay feed and your button presses go back and forth so that your low-powered device can stream high-end 3D video games.

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