PlayStation 5 runs cool and quiet, according to initial hands-on reports

Plus new details on DualSense controller lighting, added buttons, and more.

Like most of the world, we here at Ars are still waiting for our first hands-on experience with the PlayStation 5 ahead of its planned release next month. But over the weekend, a handful of Japanese journalists and YouTubers got to try out Sony's new system and have revealed a few new tidbits about the hardware and its design.

The most welcome news—at least for those accustomed to the "jet engine" fan noise sometimes encountered on the PS3 and PS4—is that the PS5 seems to remain relatively quiet even while in continuous use. Dengeki Online (Google Translate) noted that "it was really quiet" after playing for hours in a hot room, with no apparent heat felt on the surface of the system itself.

AV Watch (Google Translate) similarly noted that "the operating sound of the main unit [is] now smaller than [that] of PS4," as was the sound of pressing buttons on the DualSense controller. And 4Gamer (Google Translate) confirmed that "the exhaust was gentle, and I could hardly hear what seemed to be the rotating noise of the fan."

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US Criminal Prosecution Casts Doubt Over Team-Xecuter’s Future

Late last week the US Department of Justice indicted three members of the hacking group Team-Xecuter. Thus far, the group’s official site remains up and running and after a brief outage, the licensing service is working again as well. Still, the future is uncertain. Today we take a more detailed look at the US Government’s indictment, which reveals some of Team-Xecuter’s internal communications.

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

team xecuterHacking group Team-Xecuter has long been a thorn in the side of major gaming companies.

The group offers hardware and software solutions that allow people to install and play unofficial games – including pirated copies – on various consoles, including the popular Nintendo Switch.

Team-Xecuter often defended its work by pointing out that their products are not necessarily pirate tools. They are supporters of the ‘right to repair’ movement and back people who want to play homebrew games on their devices for personal use.

The affected game companies disagree, with Nintendo in front. The Japanese game company has been chasing down Team-Xecuter for years and a few months ago the company took several online stores to court for selling Team-Xecuter products. Last week, these enforcement efforts reached a new level when the US Government launched a criminal prosecution of three of the group’s members.

Team-Xecuter’s Future

Despite the criminal prosecution, Team-Xecuter’s website remains online. Other services, which are allegedly operated by members of the same conspiracy, are up and running as well, including Axiogame.com and Maxconsole.com.

This doesn’t mean that there are no issues at all. In recent days several people reported problems while activating their Team-Xecuter licenses. However, this problem appeared to be just temporary.

xecuter license

Following the news about the criminal prosecution, some third-party vendors removed associated products from their stores. That said, these remain available elsewhere and installation support is still available as well.

To find out more about their future plans, we reached out to Team-Xecuter over email. This message wasn’t delivered due to a technical problem, suggesting that not everything is running completely smoothly at the moment.

What we do know is that there are more people involved in the group than just the three who were indicted. The others may be able to continue business as usual, or not. Since we can only speculate at the moment, we decided to focus on the US Government’s allegations.

The Defendants

Over the past several days, we’ve combed through the legal paperwork of which we will provide an overview below. It has to be stressed that, at this point, all claims against the defendants have yet to be proven.

Max Louarn (48, France) aka MAXiMiLiEN, aka Julien Ambroise

The first defendant is Max Louarn, a 48-year-old French national who was arrested in Canada where he is being held in custody. Louarn is seen as the leader of Team-Xecuter. He made important business decisions, arranged investors and financing, and oversaw product development and the wholesale distribution chains.

Louarn is a familiar name in the game hacking scene and describes himself as an “officially retired hacking pioneer.” His work reportedly dates back well into the last century when he was linked to the warez group PARADOX. In 1993 he was arrested in a Nintendo piracy case, after which he fled to Spain.

That was not his only run-in with the law. Two years later he was arrested in Washington for his involvement in a credit card fraud and was accused of reselling 3,000 stolen credit cards. This eventually led to a sentence of five years and eight months for the then 23-year-old.

In 2005, Louarn’s name showed up again in federal court records, with Sony accusing him of operating Divineo, a company through which he sold modified Playstation devices and modchips. Sony eventually secured a judgment of more than $5 million in statutory damages against Lourn and Diveneo.

Yuanning Chen (35, China) aka Yuan Ning Chen, aka Velison Chen, aka 100+1, aka Jingui Chen

35-year-old Yuanning Chen from China is the only defendant who’s still at large. According to the indictment, Chen was involved in the management of a manufacturing and distribution company where Team-Xecuter’s hardware was made.

The company, “China Distribution,” was labeled as the official wholesale distributor of several circumvention devices. In addition, Chen was also operating the Axiogame.com store, which remains online today.

Gary Bowser (51, Canada) aka GaryOPA

The third defendant, Gary Bowser, was arrested in the Dominican Republic last month and he has since been deported to the US. Bowser is allegedly responsible for the development of circumvention devices. He was also in regular contact with resellers.

Bowser is best known through his nickname GaryOPA, the supposed operator and a frequent writer on the website “MaxConsole,” which regularly reviewed Team-Xecuter hardware and other hacking tools.

Team-Xecuter’s “Fragmented Approach”

The indictment sees the Team-Xecuter conspiracy as a broad enterprise that included many sites, products, and organizations that are not publicly associated with the group. This is less efficient to manage but was used to isolate all parts from enforcement threats.

“The enterprise used this fragmented approach to protect the overall enterprise in the event that one device or brand were to be targeted by gaming companies, financial institutions, and law enforcement,” the indictment reads.

This fragmented setup involved, among other things, various third-party developers and hackers, operating the distribution chain through a Chinese company, facilitating sales through Axiogames.com, and promoting the products through Maxconsole.com.

garyopa

To hide the identities of the people involved Team-Xecuter relied on reverse proxies and bulletproof hosting providers. In addition, communication channels were mostly encrypted, using PGP and apps such as Signal and Telegram for sensitive messages.

The indictment stresses that the success of the business relied on the availability of pirated games. To make sure that this was in order, they allegedly “created” and “supported” ROM sites, which were then highlighted on MaxConsole.

“Accordingly, the enterprise undertook efforts to create and support online ROM libraries that could be used by the enterprise’s customers. The enterprise directed users to ROM libraries through the enterprise’s website, maxconsole.com,” the indictment reads.

Tapped Communications

Several claims in the indictment are backed up by internal communications from and between the defendants. How the US Government obtained this isn’t clear, but it seems to confirm the various connections. For example, Louarn sent the following note to an alleged co-conspirator.

“You are always panicky about things and not taking time to analyze and see the big picture to make real money. First, obviously we know how to host. Just for sites you know we own, we have Maxconsole, Team-xecuter etc. which are 1000 times more traffic than your site ever had.

“Second, of course[,] Axiogame will be back up, it is already back but we have some issues which I am trying to understand. Axlogame has over 200 orders per day…”

Another email, sent by Louarn to Chen, goes into detail about payments requested by chip developers, asking Chen if it’s possible to put up some pre-orders or pay them in another way.

Bowser, for his part, sent an email to a business partner detailing how he was responding to enforcement efforts by Nintendo.

“They have been trying hard to crack down on everything, removing ‘roms’ from various sites which devices like Classic2Magic need, but we have [a] plan in the works to have secure links to these retro rompacks on [a] protected server, so it will not be a problem.”

Investigators Purchased Devices

The investigation into Team-Xecuter started years ago. The indictment mentions several occasions where investigators from the Western District of Washington bought devices that were trafficked by members of the conspiracy.

This includes the Team-Xecuter branded SX Lite, SX Core and SX Pro, all jailbreaking solutions for the Nintendo Switch. Investigators bought an SX Pro kit from an ‘authorized’ seller in July 2018, and several others later on, which they installed on separate Switch consoles.

Other devices, allegedly trafficked by the conspiracy, include the “Gateway 3DS” and the “Stargate” for the Nintendo 3DS, the “TrueBlue Mini” for the Playstation Classic, and the Classic2Magic, for Nintendo’s SNES. Copies of these devices were all bought by investigators.

According to the allegations, the defendants were aware of the illegality of the devices. In order to frustrate enforcement efforts, they would use false merchandise descriptions, tariff classifications, and value descriptions.

For example, defendant Louarn advised his co-conspirator Chen to declare a shipment of circumvention devices as memory card adaptors, with a value of $0.20 each.

The Charges

While not all individual claims would be seen as criminal necessarily, the indictment argues that taken together, it clearly is a criminal conspiracy.

In total, the three defendants each face 11 felony counts, including conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to circumvent technological measures and to traffic in circumvention devices, trafficking in circumvention devices, and conspiracy to commit money laundering.

If proven, these can lead to lengthy prison sentences. For now, however, all defendants are presumed innocent, until the opposite is proven in court.

A copy of the indictment, as released by the US Department of Justice, is available here (pdf)

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

You can flash firmware on this PineTime smartwatch in Singapore over the internet

The PineTime is an inexpensive smartwatch designed to run open source software. Introduced last year, the PineTime isn’t ready for the general public yet, but developers can purchase a dev kit for $25. Don’t want to spend the money, but wa…

The PineTime is an inexpensive smartwatch designed to run open source software. Introduced last year, the PineTime isn’t ready for the general public yet, but developers can purchase a dev kit for $25. Don’t want to spend the money, but want to tinker? One user in Singapore has set up a system that lets you […]

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A decadeslong struggle to find a virus wins the Nobel

It took 25 years to go from knowing the virus existed to confirming its identity.

Image of a statue of a person, with a poster in the background.

Enlarge / This photograph of a bust of Alfred Nobel was taken just prior to the announcement of the winners of the 2020 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden, on October 5, 2020. (credit: JONATHAN NACKSTRAND / Getty Images)

The first known human cases of COVID-19 occurred in December 2019. About a month went by before the virus was identified and its complete genome sequence identified. This year's Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine honors a 25-year-long struggle to identify the virus we now know as hepatitis C.

The A B Cs

The hepatitis viruses are a bit confusing. There are now five of them known, and while they're united by their ability to attack the liver, they're very different in most other ways. The most significant of the viruses are hepatitis A, hepatitis B, and hepatitis C, and they're caused by three largely unrelated viruses—some even differ in their genetic material, using DNA versus RNA—with very different properties.

One of the first differences recognized by the medical research community was how the viruses spread. Hepatitis A infections can start due to contaminated water or food; in contrast, B and C are typically spread through contaminated blood or needles, making them a threat to the blood supply. The hepatitis A virus was the first identified, leaving researchers focused on the bloodborne B and C. B was the next identified, which is when this year's Nobel Laureates enter the picture.

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Daily Deals (10-05-2020)

Amazon is running a 1-day sale on select Anker audio and charging products. eBay is offering a 15-percent discount on thousand of products. And Lenovo’s Semi-Annual sale continues. Here are some of the day’s best deals. Sales Save 15-perce…

Amazon is running a 1-day sale on select Anker audio and charging products. eBay is offering a 15-percent discount on thousand of products. And Lenovo’s Semi-Annual sale continues. Here are some of the day’s best deals. Sales Save 15-percent (up to $100 total) on select purchases – eBay (coupon: PFALL15) Save up to 44-percent on […]

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AT&T kills DSL, leaves tens of millions of homes without fiber Internet

AT&T stops connecting new DSL users; only 28% of AT&T territory has full fiber.

A snail resting on a computer mouse, to illustrate slow Internet service.

Enlarge (credit: Getty IMages | Synergee)

AT&T has deployed fiber-to-the-home Internet to less than 30 percent of the households in its 21-state territory, according to a new report that says AT&T has targeted wealthy, non-rural areas in its fiber upgrades.

The report, co-written by an AT&T workers union and an advocacy group, is timely, being issued just a few days after AT&T confirmed it will stop connecting new customers to its aging DSL network. That does not mean customers in DSL areas will get fiber, because AT&T last year said it was mostly done expanding its fiber service. AT&T said at the time that it would only expand fiber incrementally, in areas where it makes financial sense for AT&T to do so. We'll provide more detail on the DSL cutoff later in this article—in short, the fiber/copper hybrid known as AT&T Internet is still offered to new customers, but the slower product that AT&T sells under the DSL name is being discontinued except for existing customers.

Citing data that ISPs are required to submit to the Federal Communications Commission, the report issued today said that AT&T had built fiber-to-the-home to 28 percent of the households in its footprint as of June 30, 2019. The report was written by the Communications Workers of America (CWA), a union that represents AT&T employees; and the National Digital Inclusion Alliance (NDIA), an advocacy group that has been tracking AT&T's broadband deployments for years. The groups say that AT&T has left rural areas and people with low incomes with old, inadequate broadband services.

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45 minutes on the road in a prototype Volkswagen ID.4 electric car

It turns on a dime, but there’s a lot of roll in the corners.

In late September, Volkswagen unveiled a new crossover called the ID.4. It's one of a number of new battery electric vehicles that the automaker has in the works, and the first destined for this side of the Atlantic. Although the order books are now open, the ID.4 is still finishing its final stage of development, and customer cars won't start arriving on boats until next year. But in advance of that, last week VW let Ars have a quick go in an early pre-production prototype.

It was a much more low-key experience than my last time driving one of VW's electric prototypes. Then, it was the ID Buggy and an original Manx buggy on a sunny day at Pebble Beach. The bright green prototype had an electronic speed limiter but would breach 25mph while coasting down a slight grade, and we even had a photographer in a chase vehicle to record the event.

This time, I met up with VW at an Electrify America charging station a couple of miles from Dulles International Airport in Virginia. Instead of bright sunshine, there were gray skies and the occasional half-hearted drop of rain. There was no vintage car for comparison, and no chase vehicle. In fact, there was no photo shoot at all—VW asked us to keep it to interior pics only. But there was also no chaperone, just a request to be back within 45 minutes.

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The history of Galloping Ghost, the USA’s largest classic arcade

Told by co-founder Doc Mack with (archival) footage of crowds playing games.

If you're anything like us, you're itching for a return to physical gaming experiences like expos and arcades. The next best thing this week is a new 30-minute mini-documentary (embedded below) about the history of Galloping Ghost, a Chicago mega-arcade whose massive collection, full of rarities, was given the Ars Technica spotlight years ago.

The story is told primarily by arcade co-founder Doc Mack, who sits in his arcade's main office and recalls how the idea for an arcade began in part when he was a lowly clerk at a Babbage's in the '90s. Mortal Kombat co-creator Ed Boon came into his shop to buy video games, and Mack worked up the nerve to ask how he got into the game industry. A terse interaction followed, and Mack read between the lines: "Wow, Ed Boon didn't want to hear anything I had to say." Mack took the meeting as motivation to realize he'd have to change gears entirely to pursue his games-industry dream and start his own business.

The documentary skips over Mack's exact path from Babbage's to his own arcade, merely hinting at "business ideas" he had along the way, before jumping ahead to a friend prompting him to co-found and open an arcade in 2010. While trying to score classic arcade machines in the run-up, he was stunned to discover that out of 80 venues he visited, none had a working cabinet for Mortal Kombat 2 (one of his admitted favorites) for sale. "That motivated me," he says.

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Disney, Marvel, and Pixar movies now available in 4K HDR on Apple TV and iTunes

The change comes months after Disney+ offered 4K HDR versions of the same films.

Apple TV pages for films like <em>Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker</em> now claim 4K, Dolby Vision, and Dolby Atmos support.

Enlarge / Apple TV pages for films like Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker now claim 4K, Dolby Vision, and Dolby Atmos support. (credit: Samuel Axon)

When Apple launched the Apple TV 4K streaming box and first announced support for 4K and HDR in the iTunes movie store back in 2017, it had managed to sign up most major studios. But there was one holdout in terms of offering its catalog in UltraHD: Disney.

For three years, users in Apple's ecosystem had to settle for 1080p HD to watch, say, the Marvel movies or Pixar animated films. Today, it looks like that's changing in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. A plethora of Disney-made films inclusive of numerous Marvel, Star Wars, Pixar, and Walt Disney Studios animated films are available in Apple's storefront in both 4K and Dolby Vision HDR. They also support Dolby Atmos audio.

Examples include Star Wars: Rise of Skywalker and Thor Ragnarok.

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