AfD-Rentenkonzept: Der Berg kreißte und gebar eine vergiftete Maus

Nach etlichen Jahren Streit zwischen dem völkischen und dem neoliberalen Flügel der AfD beschloss der Parteitag am letzten Wochenende ein Rentenkonzept. Ergebnis: ideologischer Sieg für Höcke und Co.; rentenpolitischer Punktsieg für Meuthen und Mitstre…

Nach etlichen Jahren Streit zwischen dem völkischen und dem neoliberalen Flügel der AfD beschloss der Parteitag am letzten Wochenende ein Rentenkonzept. Ergebnis: ideologischer Sieg für Höcke und Co.; rentenpolitischer Punktsieg für Meuthen und Mitstreiter

This ugly wrist band brings cameras to the Apple Watch

Folks have been asking whether the Apple Watch is more of a useful gadget or a fashion statement for as long as Apple has been in the watch business. The Wristcam is a new accessory designed that seems to be designed for people who value functionality…

Folks have been asking whether the Apple Watch is more of a useful gadget or a fashion statement for as long as Apple has been in the watch business. The Wristcam is a new accessory designed that seems to be designed for people who value functionality over design. It’s a third-party Apple Watch wrist band that […]

The post This ugly wrist band brings cameras to the Apple Watch appeared first on Liliputing.

Feds logged website visitors in 2019, citing Patriot Act authority

Privacy-minded lawmakers want feds to have to get warrants for web browsing data.

Feds logged website visitors in 2019, citing Patriot Act authority

Enlarge (credit: Peter Dazeley | Getty Images)

The federal government gathered up visitor logs for some websites in 2019, the Office of Director of National Intelligence disclosed in letters made public this week. And the feds cited authority derived from a provision of the Patriot Act to do it.

Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe confirmed these actions in a November 6 letter to Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), part of an exchange (PDF) first obtained and published by the New York Times.

The exchange begins with a May 20 letter from Wyden to the ODNI asking then-director Richard Grenell to explain if and how the federal government uses section 215 of the Patriot Act to obtain IP addresses and other Web browsing information. At the time, the Senate had just passed legislation re-authorizing the law. Wyden was among the privacy advocates in the Senate pushing to amend the law to prevent the FBI from using Section 215 to obtain users' search and browsing histories, but his measure did not succeed.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Lidar startup goes public, makes founder a billionaire

Luminar used a special purpose acquisition company to avoid a traditional IPO.

Luminar CEO Austin Russell

Enlarge / Luminar CEO Austin Russell. (credit: Luminar)

Luminar founder Austin Russell has become one of the youngest self-made billionaires after the lidar maker debuted on public markets on Thursday. Russell, 25, was just 17 when he founded Luminar in 2012. Shares of Luminar rose above $30 a share on Friday, a massive 43 percent gain for the day on top of big gains on Thursday.

Luminar has emerged as one of the leading companies in the fast-growing lidar industry.  Carmakers are expected to begin offering lidar as an advanced option for their vehicles in the next few years to enable better driver-assistance technology. Right now, lidar companies are vying to win contracts to supply these sensors.

Luminar had a major win in May when it signed a deal with Volvo to supply lidar sensors for vehicles starting in 2022. It was one of the first such deals in the industry.

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Rusty but intact: Nazi Enigma cipher machine found in Baltic Sea

Enigma device stymied Allied intelligence until Alan Turing cracked it.

The Enigma cipher machine found in the Baltic Sea is lying on a table in front of the archaeological office of Schleswig-Holstein. After its discovery, the machine was handed over to the office by research diver Huber. Photo: Axel Heimken/dpa (Photo by Axel Heimken/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Enlarge / The Enigma cipher machine found in the Baltic Sea is lying on a table in front of the archaeological office of Schleswig-Holstein. After its discovery, the machine was handed over to the office by research diver Huber. Photo: Axel Heimken/dpa (Photo by Axel Heimken/picture alliance via Getty Images) (credit: Getty Images)

Divers scouring the Baltic Sea for discarded fishing nets have stumbled on the rarest of finds: an Enigma encryption machine used by the Nazis to encode secret messages during World War II.

The electromechanical device was used extensively by the Nazi military to encrypt communications, which typically were transmitted by radio in Morse Code. Three or more rotors on the device used a stream cipher to convert each letter of the alphabet to a different letter.

The Enigma had the appearance of a typewriter. An operator would use the keys to type plaintext, and the converted ciphertext would be reflected in 26 lights above the keys—one light for each converted letter. The converted letters would then be transcribed to derive the ciphertext.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

NASA is about to have double Dragons at its space station

Also, NASA has agreed to fly on a Falcon 9 that has already been used three times.

NASA and SpaceX are making final preparations for a cargo mission that will carry nearly three metric tons of supplies to the International Space Station.

This "CRS-21" mission is the 21st cargo supply mission that SpaceX will launch for NASA overall. But it is the first under a new supply contract that runs through 2024, and this will be the first to use an upgraded "Cargo Dragon 2" vehicle to ferry food, water, science experiments, and other materials to the orbiting laboratory.

The new cargo vehicle is a modified version of the Crew Dragon spacecraft that has flown humans to the space station twice this year, in May and November. The cargo variant lacks seats and cockpit controls, a life support system, and the Super Draco thrusters that are used as an emergency escape system if a problem occurs during launch.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Samsung finally starts its Android 11 rollout, three months after release

Android 11 brings a new media player, new one-time permissions, and more.

Android 11 with Samsung's One UI skin.

Enlarge / Android 11 with Samsung's One UI skin. (credit: Samsung)

Android 11 came out about three months ago, and that means it's finally time for Samsung to get its act together and start shipping the OS out. Samsung announced on its company blog that the Galaxy S20, S20+, and S20 Ultra would all start getting Android 11 right now, provided you're in "Korea, the US, and most markets in Europe."

A three-month delay on the latest Android release is on par with what Samsung did last year for Android 10, which, at the time, was a record pace for the company. Of course, Samsung's lineup is more than just the S20, and the company's official timeline has the Note20, Z Fold 2, and Z Flip waiting until January. Samsung's best-selling devices are all from the midrange "Galaxy A" line, and those are getting updated anywhere from March to June, so anywhere from six to nine months after Android 11's release.

After the absolutely massive Android 10 release and a year plagued with COVID issues, Google didn't pack a huge amount of changes into Android 11. The notification panel has a new persistent media player, a history section, and support for floating bubble notifications. There are new one-time permission approvals for the microphone, camera, and location, new emojis, more work toward modularity, and easier autofill. Of course, on a Samsung phone, this is all getting paved over with a custom UI—Samsung's "One UI"—and that skin is getting updated along with Android. Android Police has a great hands-on of the beta, showing that most of the Android 11 features are intact, along with things like a new volume slider UI and a few other light touches.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Daily Deals (12-04-2020)

This week Warner Brothers announced that all of its new movies slated for release in 2021 would debut on the HBO Max streaming service at the same time as they showed up in theaters… although they’d only be available on HBO Max for a month…

This week Warner Brothers announced that all of its new movies slated for release in 2021 would debut on the HBO Max streaming service at the same time as they showed up in theaters… although they’d only be available on HBO Max for a month before disappearing. Still, it’s one more reason to consider signing […]

The post Daily Deals (12-04-2020) appeared first on Liliputing.

ACE & MPA Target Pirate IPTV Provider & Yet Again, VOD Will Be The Achilles’ Heel

By their very nature, pirate IPTV services are clearly illegal and several have faced action through the courts in the US. To date, Hollywood studios have won every lawsuit in a devastating fashion. Yet, despite these cases being reported in detail, some IPTV services still haven’t worked out how to stay off the radar.

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

ACE logoWhile torrent sites still play an important role in the piracy landscape, Hollywood and major content distributors consider illegal streaming to be a key threat.

Of particular concern are pirate IPTV services that for just a small outlay per month, represent direct and credible competition for legitimate platforms. As a result, many IPTV services and sellers have been targeted around the world under various laws.

ACE/MPA Subpoena Reveals Interest IPTV Service

As we have previously reported, the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment together with the MPA regularly obtain DMCA subpoenas in the US that compel companies such as Cloudflare to give up the personal details of pirate site operators. Thus far, the overwhelming majority have been torrent and web-based streaming sites but this week there was a small but interesting deviation.

Who is Behind SentraTV?

As far as IPTV providers go, SentraTV seems a pretty insignificant player. Its website doesn’t attract large numbers of visitors and searches don’t reveal much interest on the broader Internet. So why, given the large number of big targets available to ACE and the MPA, are they demanding that Cloudflare unmasks its operator?

Due to their policy of not discussing ongoing investigations, we can only speculate on the motivation. However, there are some interesting factors, such as SentraTV providing an address in Delaware for correspondence. Indeed, this same address is used by numerous IPTV sellers, including PingIPTV, UpTickTV and Wave-TV, to name just three.

The websites of these services are obviously similar too, with what appear to be identical packages and pricing. Whether these are all the same service, operated by the same or different people, or have connections to the same suppliers, are things for ACE to find out. All that having been said, if ACE/MPA choose to pursue SentraTV in a US court, they will win the case.

VOD and 24/7 Channels Are The Achilles’ Heel

When ACE/MPA targeted and then shut down the large Vaders IPTV service, the fact that the provider offered thousands of live channels wasn’t the main focus.

Like other similar platforms, Vaders had a large VOD platform offering movies and TV shows, including so-called 24/7 channels dedicated to specific shows. With direct infringement easily provable, that ending up costing its operators $10m. After offering the same type of service, the owners of Crystal Clear Media were later handed a $40m bill.

Despite knowing about these cases (surely?), SentraTV still offers a large VOD service including dozens of 24/7 channels. For ACE/MPA it’s now an easy target ripe for a lawsuit that Hollywood can’t lose or, alternatively, a settlement that will involve handing over large sums of money plus detailed information about its business, including its dealings with customers and suppliers.

Of course, ACE/MPA are only at the subpoena stage but one can’t help think that without the easy target of VOD, the movie and TV companies might have picked a different target.

The DMCA subpoena can be found here and here (pdf)

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