
Energiewende: Ammoniak aus der Wüste
Mit grünem Wasserstoff hergestelltes Ammoniak hat viel Potenzial, die Produktion wird aber möglicherweise nicht in Mitteleuropa stattfinden. Von Hanno Böck (Woher kommt der Wasserstoff?, Internet)

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Mit grünem Wasserstoff hergestelltes Ammoniak hat viel Potenzial, die Produktion wird aber möglicherweise nicht in Mitteleuropa stattfinden. Von Hanno Böck (Woher kommt der Wasserstoff?, Internet)
Mit ihrer gigantischen Einkaufsmacht bringen große Handelsketten die kleinen Lieferanten in ihre Abhängigkeit. Lidl und Kaufland, Aldi, REWE und Edeka besitzen einen Marktanteil von mehr als 85 Prozent
Wie objektiv berichten die Medien über die Corona-Pandemie? Im sechsten Teil unserer Serie geht es an Einzelbeispielen um diese Frage
A stellar cast can’t save the narrative from slowly unraveling into a pointless finale
Enlarge / James Marsden, Alexander Skarsgård, Whoopi Goldberg, and Amber Heard are among the ensemble cast of a new miniseries adaptation of Stephen King's sprawling 1978 novel, The Stand. (credit: CBS All Access)
A deadly virus wipes out most of the human population, and the survivors find themselves caught in an apocalyptic battle between good and evil in The Stand, the latest miniseries adaptation of Stephen King's sprawling 1978 novel. But despite a strong start, terrific performances from the all-star ensemble cast, and impressive production values, as a story, The Stand starts unraveling midway through, culminating in a meandering, seemingly pointless finale.
(Spoilers for the book below; a few major spoilers for the new miniseries below the gallery. We'll give you a heads-up when we get there.)
As we reported previously, The Stand is widely considered to be among King's best work, with a sprawling cast of characters and multiple storylines. It's also his longest, with the 1990 Complete and Uncut Edition surpassing even It in page count. King has said he wanted to write an epic dark fantasy akin to The Lord of the Rings, only with a contemporary American setting. "Instead of a hobbit, my hero was a Texan named Stu Redman, and instead of a Dark Lord, my villain was a ruthless drifter and supernatural madman named Randall Flagg," King wrote in his 1981 nonfiction book, Danse Macabre. "The land of Mordor ('where the shadows lie,' according to Tolkien) was played by Las Vegas."
The WHO and investigators offer conflicting accounts of the closely watched probe.
Enlarge / Liang Wannian (2nd L) and Peter Ben Embarek (3rd R) both members of the WHO-China joint study team, shake hands after the WHO-China joint study press conference in Wuhan, central China's Hubei Province, Feb. 9, 2021. (credit: Getty | Xinhua News Agency )
The Chinese government failed to share key data on early COVID-19 cases with a team of international scientists investigating how the pandemic began.
The researchers had requested raw data on 174 of the very first COVID-19 cases identified in Wuhan, China during December 2019, as well as other cases. But the team—assembled by the World Health Organization—was only given a summary of those early cases, according to multiple media reports.
Having such detailed patient data from the start of an outbreak is “standard practice for an outbreak investigation,” Dominic Dwyer, an Australian infectious diseases expert and WHO team member, told Reuters in an interview Saturday. Dwyer emphasized that data on those 174 cases is particularly key because only half of them were connected to the Huanan seafood market, which was initially thought to be the source of the outbreak.
Cox Communications has decided to appeal the $1 billion jury verdict in its piracy liability lawsuit against several major record labels. The Internet provider characterized the amount as “shockingly excessive” and successfully requested to delay the potential payment while appeals are pending.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Two years ago Internet provider Cox Communications lost its legal battle against a group of major record labels.
Following a two-week trial, a Virginia jury held Cox liable for pirating subscribers which it failed to disconnect, ordering the company to pay $1 billion in damages.
Heavily disappointed by the decision, Cox asked the court to set the jury verdict aside and decide the issue directly. In addition, the ISP asked to lower the “shockingly excessive” damages or allow a new trial. All these efforts failed.
The court was initially open to lowering the amount because there were several overlapping copyrights at play. However, it later backtracked and confirmed the jury’s $1 billion judgment.
That was another setback for Cox but the legal battle is far from over. This week, Cox submitted its notice of appeal at the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, covering a series of previous rulings.
Cox’s appeal is not limited to the final $1 billion damages award and covers all underlying orders.
This means that the company also objects to last month’s order about the number of works for which it is required to pay, as well as the denied request for a new trial from last summer.
Meanwhile, the Internet provider requested to delay the damages payment while the appeal is ongoing. In exchange, it offered a $1,002,001,000 bond, which includes two years of interest, to be issued by three insurance companies.
This request was granted by the Virginia federal court last week. District Court Judge Liam O’Grady ordered that Cox is not required to pay until all rulings are final. This includes a potential appeal at the Supreme Court, if it gets that far.
With more than a billion dollars at stake, we can assume that Cox will exhaust all legal means to lower the damages or make them disappear. As such, we expect that this legal battle will continue for a few more years.
The record labels, for their part, will do everything they can to uphold the judgment. Not just for the financial windfall, but also because they have similar cases pending against other ISPs such as Charter and Grande, which center around the same “repeat infringer” issue.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Dealmaster has discounts on AirPods Pro, Lenovo and HP laptops, and more.
Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)
While Presidents' Day sales aren't exactly known as a bastion of tech deals, today's Dealmaster has found a few good discounts for those looking for new gadgets, games, and electronics gear.
Highlights from our roundup below include several deals on recommended Apple products, with the AirPods Pro marked down to $180—which is $60 off Apple's MSRP and tied for the second-lowest price we've tracked—the 64GB iPad Air down to a new low of $540, and the MagSafe Charger for iPhone 12 down to a new low of $34.
Elsewhere, we have a handful of deals on noteworthy laptops, including the 256GB version of Microsoft's Surface Laptop Go available for a new low of $700 and a few good value configurations of HP and Lenovo notebooks. We also have a truckload of discounts on video games for both consoles and PC, a near-low on LG's well-regarded CX OLED TV, and several discounts on wireless headphones and budget-friendly Amazon Fire HD tablets, among other offers. You can check out our full slate of curated discounts below.
Mitten in der dritten Welle muss gewählt werden, obwohl sich die große Mehrheit der Parteien auf eine Verschiebung geeinigt hatte
The deal could become a template across Europe and perhaps around the world.
Enlarge / Google's main headquarters. (credit: Cyrus Farivar)
Google will pay $76 million over three years to 121 French news organizations to comply with a new French law requiring Google to pay when it uses "snippets" from news articles, Reuters reports. The payments range from $1.3 million paid to Le Monde to $13,741 for a local weekly newspaper called La Voix de la Haute Marne.
Reuters notes that "leading national dailies Le Monde, Le Figaro and Liberation and their respective groups negotiated about €3 million ($3.6 million) each per year on top of this, notably by agreeing in November to sell subscriptions through Google."
These payments are the result of a shotgun marriage brokered by the French government. Until recently, Google insisted that it wouldn't pay a penny to link to news articles in France or elsewhere. When Spain passed legislation to force Google to pay to link to Spanish News organizations in 2014, Google responded by shutting down Google News in Spain.
Three teenage strippers go on a blood-soaked and drug-fueled cross-country tear.
"Thank heaven for little girls," Special Agent Cannon sarcastically declares off-screen as we get our first look at the Bad Girls. [credit: Films Colacitta ]
You've probably never heard of the underground film industry in Columbia, South Carolina—which is understandable, since it has only produced three films in the last 10 years or so. Two of those films are by producer/director/person-with-a-dream Christopher Bickel, who finished his sophomore full-length movie effort Bad Girls just this month.
Bad Girls is an over-the-top grindhouse jam, packed full of sex, drugs, loud music, and ultraviolent action. The movie was shot on a budget of $16,000—approximately one-tenth the amount that Troma (probably the best-known ridiculously low-budget production company) spent making its first film in 1979.
The microscopic budget makes it almost impossible for Bad Girls to avoid the Dancing Bear trope—but despite the movie's lack of funds and semi-amateur cast and crew, Bad Girls delivers a thoroughly watchable experience to its target audience.
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