900 MHz: Konjunkturpaket hebt LTE-Drosselung an der Schiene auf

Veraltete GSM-R-Ausrüstung in Zügen soll endlich ausgetauscht werden, damit LTE entlang der Strecke nicht mehr eingeschränkt wird. Dafür zahlen die Steuerzahler. (Deutsche Bahn, Long Term Evolution)

Veraltete GSM-R-Ausrüstung in Zügen soll endlich ausgetauscht werden, damit LTE entlang der Strecke nicht mehr eingeschränkt wird. Dafür zahlen die Steuerzahler. (Deutsche Bahn, Long Term Evolution)

Messenger: Signal kann Gesichter in Fotos verpixeln

Zur Unterstützung der Proteste in den USA und weltweit sowie zum Schutz der Privatsphäre lassen sich künftig Gesichter in Signal verpixeln. (Signal, Open Source)

Zur Unterstützung der Proteste in den USA und weltweit sowie zum Schutz der Privatsphäre lassen sich künftig Gesichter in Signal verpixeln. (Signal, Open Source)

Hollywood Studios & Netflix Target ‘Movies Time’ Piracy App

Several Hollywood studios and Netflix have filed a complaint with Github over the pirate streaming app ‘Movies Time’. The companies claim that the Microsoft-owned platform hosts not only the application itself but the website used for its distribution. In response, the operator of Movies Time has already taken evasive action.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

MPA logoEver since the rise of Popcorn Time more than six years ago, developers have been coming up with similar-looking clones to try and grab a slice of the market.

Given the massive reach of Android, which can be found running on phones, tablets and set-top devices, this operating system is the weapon of choice for most coders. As a result there are hundreds of apps available online today that provide ostensibly free access to pirated movies and TV shows.

The Motion Picture Association, which these days includes Netflix, and the global anti-piracy coalition ACE, have been working hard to hold back the tide but like the little boy and the dam, plugging a hole at a time seems a neverending task.

A New Android-based Target for the MPA

The latest target for the MPA is Movies Time, a relative newcomer to the space having appeared online less than a year ago. The developer identifies variously as Prince Sharma and/or Audionetime and markets his app as follows:

“Tired of annoying ads interrupting your entertainment? Not anymore!! We at Movies Time welcomes you to the world of hassle free entertainment.

“Movies time is the most awaited app where you can get access to latest movies, web series and LiveTv on your fingertips ‘free of cost’,” the blurb reads.

“Add movies and web series to your watch-list from our largest library including Bollywood, Hollywood, Tollywood, Punjabi and much more on the go on your smartphone.”

This, of course, is a problem for the MPA and this week it became a problem for Github too.

“We are writing to notify you of, and request your assistance in addressing, the extensive copyright infringement of motion pictures and television shows that is occurring by virtue of the operation of the infringing service titled ‘Movies Time’,” the MPA complaint to Github reads.

“Movies Time is a software application – specifically an APK – that is preconfigured to provide unauthorized access to copyrighted motion pictures and television shows; a user need only download the APK, and on launch it will allow the user to search for, select and stream large numbers of copyrighted motion pictures and television shows, without any further configuration by the user, and all without authorization.”

According to the MPA, Github provides ‘supporting services’ to Movies Time including hosting its repository, hosting its website, and hosting the app (APK). As a result it asked the Microsoft-owned platform to take preventative action.

“Movies Time – your customer – blatantly infringes the MPA Member Studios’ copyrights and countless other copyrights. Indeed, copyright infringement is so prevalent on Movies Tim that infringement plainly is its predominant use and purpose,” the MPA complaint reads.

“By this notification, we are asking for your immediate assistance in stopping your customer’s unauthorized activity. Specifically, we request that you cease providing all supporting services to Movies Time, by (1) removing or disabling access to the infringing Website, and (2) removing the APK from your Repository…”

DMCA Takedown But ‘Movies Time’ Pops Up Elsewhere

The MPA provided Github with a list of infringing works and asked the platform to consider the repeat infringer provision of the DMCA and breaches of its own acceptable use policy. All this appears to have been enough for Github which has now disabled access to the repository and the Movies Time website.

Of course, with these type of applications there is more than one hole to plug. Movies Time has a domain, MoviesTimeApp.xyz, which previously linked to the website hosted on Github. While that was rendered useless yesterday, any visitors to that domain today are now given a ‘drive-by’ download of the Movies Time APK – whether they wanted one or not.

Also, the MoviesTime Telegram channel remains in operation and its growing membership now exceeds 25,600 users, a figure apparently swelled by the Github takedown.

Like many ‘pirate’ APKs, it’s interesting to note that MoviesTime may have a piracy problem of its own. A cursory search reveals several sites offering a modded version of the application which claims to have ads and banner placeholders removed and ads during playback disabled. The mod also states that analytics, unneeded permissions and root check code have been removed.

Why any app would need the final pair in place is open to debate so perhaps needless to say, installing either variant isn’t recommended.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

How Sega hopes to use Japanese arcades as streaming data centers

Idle arcade hardware + cloud gaming infrastructure = a new “fog gaming” business?

How Sega hopes to use Japanese arcades as streaming data centers

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson / Sega)

If you thought the 3-inch-wide Game Gear Micro was going to be the weirdest announcement out of Sega today, think again. Instead, we give that honor to the company's announcement of a strange and somewhat amorphous concept known as "fog gaming," which seems set to utilize idle arcade machines to distribute a new type of cloud-gaming service in Japan.

Details on the initiative are pretty scarce at the moment—the main source of English-language information is a tweet from a Japanese analyst working from a summary by a Japanese blogger (Google translate) of a story appearing in the new print issue of Japan's Weekly Famitsu magazine. Journalist Zenji Nishikawa was teasing the story last week as a "major scoop" on the level of Wired's revelation of the first PlayStation 5 details last year, which seems a bit grandiose for now.

In any case, the "fog gaming" concept seems to be centered around converting Sega's massive infrastructure of Japanese arcades and arcade machines into a kind of widely distributed streaming-gaming data center. Those cabinets—and the decently specc'ed CPUs and GPUs inside them—are only in active use by players for perhaps eight hours a day at a busy location, according to Adam Pratt, an arcade operator who runs industry website Arcade Heroes. The rest of the time, those machines could serve streaming gaming content to homebound players, without the need for an immense, Google Stadia-sized data center investment.

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Jetson Nano: Der Raspberry Pi für KI-Anwendungen

Der Jetson Nano ist ein Rechner für Machine Learning in der Größe eines Raspberry Pi. Wir haben einige KI-Anwendungen mit ihm ausprobiert. Von Dirk Koller (Bastelrechner, KI)

Der Jetson Nano ist ein Rechner für Machine Learning in der Größe eines Raspberry Pi. Wir haben einige KI-Anwendungen mit ihm ausprobiert. Von Dirk Koller (Bastelrechner, KI)