Vivaldi browsers adds a Break Mode to pause internet activity

The Vivaldi web browser is aimed at power users who want to customize their browsing experience and and use advanced tools for tab management, multitasking, and more. But the latest version of Vivaldi? It’s designed to let you do less. Vivaldi 3…

The Vivaldi web browser is aimed at power users who want to customize their browsing experience and and use advanced tools for tab management, multitasking, and more. But the latest version of Vivaldi? It’s designed to let you do less. Vivaldi 3.3 introduces a new Break Mode feature that lets you pause all of your […]

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Energiewende: Stahlherstellung mit Wasserstoff geht in den Testbetrieb

Die Produktion von Stahl macht acht Prozent der weltweiten CO2-Emissionen aus. Wasserstoff kann das deutlich senken. Golem.de erklärt, wie das geht. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Wasserstoff, Internet)

Die Produktion von Stahl macht acht Prozent der weltweiten CO2-Emissionen aus. Wasserstoff kann das deutlich senken. Golem.de erklärt, wie das geht. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Wasserstoff, Internet)

Hintergründe zu Nowitschok und Giftanschlägen auf russische Oppositionellen

Der deutsche Außenminister Maas warf Russland das Zünden von Nebelkerzen vor, musste aber einräumen, dass noch keine Informationen aufgrund des Rechtshilfeersuchens weitergegeben wurden – was auch umgekehrt der Fall sein soll

Der deutsche Außenminister Maas warf Russland das Zünden von Nebelkerzen vor, musste aber einräumen, dass noch keine Informationen aufgrund des Rechtshilfeersuchens weitergegeben wurden - was auch umgekehrt der Fall sein soll

Besser selbst die Verfassung schützen

Die deutschen Geheimdienste BND, MAD und Verfassungsschutz haben eines gemeinsam. Immer dann, wenn sie mal wieder knietief im meist selbst produzierten braunen Morast waten oder ihnen Gesetzesbrüche nachgewiesen wurden, kommt ihnen die Politik zur Hilf…

Die deutschen Geheimdienste BND, MAD und Verfassungsschutz haben eines gemeinsam. Immer dann, wenn sie mal wieder knietief im meist selbst produzierten braunen Morast waten oder ihnen Gesetzesbrüche nachgewiesen wurden, kommt ihnen die Politik zur Hilfe - Teil 1

The Scene: A Stress Headache That Most Pirates Can Do Without

Many up-and-coming pirates dream of one day being elite enough to become a member of The Scene, hoping to bathe in the collective mystery, kudos and notoriety it exudes. But for most, however, the headaches and stress would probably outweigh the benefits of this exclusive ‘club’.

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

RipOver the past two weeks ‘The Scene’, the individuals, groups, and entities that are often described as sitting at the top of the so-called ‘Piracy Pyramid’, has been thrust into the mainstream media.

A US Government-led operation, carried out on several continents against the ‘Sparks Conspiracy‘, listed three individuals from the UK, US and Norway as the main targets of a massive investigation. What took place on the ground, however, ended up being something much, much bigger.

While SPARKS and related groups GECKOS, DRONES, ROVERS and SPLINTERS were placed front and center, operations like this don’t and can’t operate in a vacuum. These groups were part of an organic network built up over years and, as such, their activities and members touched huge numbers of disparate yet interconnected individuals involved in the piracy world overall, not just ‘The Scene’ itself.

One of the interesting things about The Scene is that over almost two decades, it has gained almost mythical status as an almost impossible-to-penetrate ‘place’ where only the most elite of pirates hang out. As a result, many people aspire to become a ‘member’ one day, hoping to bathe in the collective mystery, kudos and notoriety.

What the unfolding events of the past two weeks have shown, however, is that The Scene is already much closer to regular pirates than most people might think, touching and even intermingling at some level with private and public torrent sites, streaming platforms, and similar services.

For two weeks insiders have been happy to talk, presenting facts, ideas, theories and suggestions on what happened behind the headlines and who might have been involved or even responsible. Unfortunately, it’s not always information that makes for comfortable reading.

More than once since the massive raids, names of particular Scene members and groups sucked into the investigation have been repeatedly mentioned by various sources. Who these people are in ‘real-life’ is a mystery but, over the years, pictures of what they might be like, largely based on their activities, are subconsciously formed by observers.

Then, due to the ensuing chaos, it suddenly becomes apparent that not only is Group A the same as Group B and Group C, but also Person X, who people thought they knew under a very specific identity, is also Person Y and Person Z, all of whom have different and sometimes even conflicting online traits and personas.

One of the problems (and there are many) is that Groups A to C and Persons X to Z all have their ‘own’ connections, trusted and valued by some but untrusted and even despised by others. In reality, it now transpires, they could all be inextricably linked via shared contacts, with many of those involved oblivious to what they’ve become part of.

Add into the mix that Persons D and E, who may or may not have been previously arrested according to rumor, are very connected with many of the contacts of the individuals and groups listed above and way beyond. At this point, it’s very easy to visualize an extremely large network of people that might be just one step away from being arrested themselves having been completely compromised.

If that’s not enough stress, someone then blurts out that a person who may have been previously and for years viewed as the mild-mannered janitor from the 70s cartoon Hong Kong Phooey, is now rumored to be the martial arts hound himself, undermining all previous perceptions and throwing all of the mental connections formed around them into chaos.

Of course, many experienced members will be shouting that they knew all of this already but from the communications received from those further down the chain, echoes of “No, I didn’t know that,” and “Really? Shit…” shows that many people simply aren’t in the loop. And if everyone had been completely in the loop, lots of people wouldn’t have arrested recently.

The admittedly-labored point is this: if people really must obtain all the latest movies and TV shows for free, doing it quietly via torrent sites etc seems much, much less stressful than getting tightly involved in The Scene or anyone close to it. Indeed, The Scene seems more of a complex lifestyle choice than a hobby for many participants, but one that could implode at any second.

Action, adventure, and mystery probably sound like an exciting prospect to some but after reading dozens of emails and tip-offs plus pages of Scene chats containing accusations and potential bombshells (not to mention concern and speculation about who is who and what they might have said to whom), the term “mental exhaustion” springs to mind.

You can laugh while fetching my cocoa and pipe if you like but at this time of life, when relaxing and quiet time is at a premium, too much involvement in The Scene sounds like an utterly exhausting not to mention precarious way to spend one’s time.

There again, some people like freefall skydiving and exploring pitch-black caves filled with muddy brown water. So, Godspeed to the intrepid and brave, just mind who packed your parachute and topped-up your oxygen bottle. Tonight, I’m watching Netflix instead. I’m fairly sure it won’t end too badly.

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

Intel Jasper Lake processor lineup leaked (next-gen Atom)

Intel plans to update its line of low-cost, low-power chips for entry-level laptop and mini-desktop computers early next year. While official details haven’t been released yet, FanlessTech has obtained specs for Intel’s upcoming Jasper Lak…

Intel plans to update its line of low-cost, low-power chips for entry-level laptop and mini-desktop computers early next year. While official details haven’t been released yet, FanlessTech has obtained specs for Intel’s upcoming Jasper Lake processor lineup. The new chips are follow-ups to the Gemini Lake Refresh processors released in late 2019, and they feature Intel’s […]

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Masterpiece: Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island

The game that changed the idea of what a Mario game could be.

Masterpiece: Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island

Update, Sept. 6, 2020: It's Labor Day Weekend in the US, and even though most of us now also call home "the office," Ars staff is taking a long weekend to rest and relax. For many, that includes gaming on titles new and old. We planned on resurfacing a few pieces from the archives to keep the lights on over a holiday, so it seemed only right to select one honoring an all-time classic that turns 25 this year. Our Masterpiece essay on Yoshi's Island originally ran in September 2012 and it appears unchanged below.

Back in 1995, I thought I knew what a Mario game was. Running left to right (or maybe down to up). Jumping on things. Eating mushrooms to get big. Flying, sometimes. You know the drill. Then Yoshi's Island came along and showed that Mario games could be about a lot more than that.

Yeah, you were still running through levels and jumping on things, but the myriad ways Yoshi's Island expanded on the Mario formula made it feel like an entirely new game. Yoshi went from an occasional helper in Super Mario World to a permanently controllable character in Yoshi's Island, tasked with protecting a near-helpless Baby Mario riding on his back. Yoshi's oversized tongue let players slurp up enemies and transform them into projectile eggs that could be fired in any direction. What used to be a run-and-jump series was now run-and-jump-and-slurp-and-shoot game, and the Yoshi's Island designers built levels that catered to these new abilities wonderfully.

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How Ars Technica’s tech-savvy staffers conduct happy hours in locked-down 2020

High-tech, low-tech, and low-brow: Check out our advice and add your suggestions.

Artist's approximation of Security Editor Dan Goodin's Zoom calls with other infosec pros.

Enlarge / Artist's approximation of Security Editor Dan Goodin's Zoom calls with other infosec pros. (credit: Getty Images / Aurich Lawson)

As the United States settles into Labor Day weekend, we hope you're finding ways to celebrate—or, more crucially, to carve out something that resembles a "vacation" when travel and holiday options have become more limited. With that in mind, I polled my Ars colleagues with a vacation-minded question: How do you put the "happy" into "happy hour" in a socially distanced universe?

Unsurprisingly, many of the answers hinge on technology, though not all of them. If you've been struggling to socialize or break out of a 2020 rut, we hope our suggestions inspire you, though we'd also love to see your own suggestions in the comments section below.

Life updates between bets

In the before time, I was part of a semi-weekly poker night with friends from graduate school. Once the pandemic hit, we moved poker night online. We used Zoom for video chat, but we actually had a tough time finding good online poker software.

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