
ID.Buzz: VWs elektrischer Hippiebus soll ab 40.000 Euro kosten
Volkswagen will den ID.Buzz ab Februar 2022 bauen und zunächst als Hecktriebler verkaufen. Das lange Modell und Allrad kommen erst später. (Volkswagen ID., Elektroauto)

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Volkswagen will den ID.Buzz ab Februar 2022 bauen und zunächst als Hecktriebler verkaufen. Das lange Modell und Allrad kommen erst später. (Volkswagen ID., Elektroauto)
Quasi ein halbiertes Topmodell: Mit der Radeon RX 6600 XT alias Navi 23 peilt AMD das 300-Euro-Segment an, bessere Verfügbarkeit inklusive. (AMD Navi, AMD)
Der Wochenrückblick von Telepolis. Und was nun ansteht
Deutschland im Winter-Lockdown. Eine Zwischenbilanz (Teil 4 und Schluss)
Nintendo continues its efforts to remove piracy-related links from search results. The gaming company is using anti-circumvention complaints to have Google remove links to RCM loaders on AliExpress, arguing that these help to bypass Nintendo’s technical protection measures.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
As one of the most iconic gaming manufacturers in the world, Nintendo has been fighting piracy for many years.
The company has an in-house anti-piracy division that signals the latest threats to steer enforcement actions in the right direction.
This has resulted in high-profile lawsuits against ROM sites and stores that offer Switch hacks and chips. Earlier this year, the company ‘won’ a $2 million judgment against the Uberchips store, for example.
Nintendo’s real nemesis is Team-Xecuter, which makes the software and hardware that enables Switch piracy. While the group hasn’t been sued by Nintendo, several alleged members are currently being prosecuted by the US Department of Justice.
This case is ongoing but it seems to have had quite an impact already. The official Team-Xecuter domain has been offline for weeks and several stores that offered its products have vanished as well.
Nintendo must be pleased with this, but the company remains vigilant. Those who know where to look can still find Team-Xecutor firmware. With a device called an RCM Loader, Team-Xecutor’s SX OS can easily be loaded onto Switch consoles.
This possibility hasn’t escaped the Japanese gaming giant. The company previously sued a seller of these RCM loaders at a federal court in Seattle. Its efforts don’t stop there either. This week, Nintendo tried to remove several store links from Google that offer similar devices.
The most recent notice identifies several links from the online stores Carousell and AliExpress. While these links mainly point to RCM loaders, which have more purposes, Nintendo alleges that they promote, sell, or redirect visitors to resellers or Team-Xecuter products.
“The URLs listed below promote, offer for sale directly or direct visitors to resellers of, circumvention software and devices called the SX OS, SX Pro, SX Core and SX Lite, among others,” the notice reads.
“The SX OS, SX Pro, SX Core and SX Lite are designed to bypass technological protection measures in the Nintendo Switch video game system and allows users to play unauthorized copies of Nintendo’s video game files that are offered unlawfully via the Internet.”
The offending AliExpress links point to categories which may change over time. When we checked there were no direct links to SX OS, SX Pro, SX Core and SX Lite. However, one product did show the Team-Xecuter logo.
The Carousel links have a more obvious ‘connection’ to Team-Xecuter, as these point to shop listings of modded devices that directly mention SX OS and SX Pro, among other things.
The “anti-circumvention” takedown notice further stresses that the products or components offered via these links bypass Nintendo’s technical protection measures. This allows users to play pirated games that are made available via the Internet.
Nintendo sent the request to Google on Wednesday and, at the time of writing, the AliExpress links remain indexed by the search engine. Google sometimes needs more time to do a manual review, so this could change in the future.
As for the Caroussel links, one was removed from search results, while the others don’t appear to have been indexed to begin with.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Emma Southon discusses her new book, A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum
Enlarge / University of Birmingham historian Dr. Emma Southon explores murder in ancient Rome in her new book, A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. (credit: Abrams Press)
There once was a wealthy Roman man named Vedius Pollio, infamous for maintaining a reservoir of man-eating eels, into which he would throw any slaves who displeased him, resulting in their gruesome deaths. When Emperor Augustus dined with him on one memorable occasion, a servant broke a crystal goblet, and an enraged Vidius order the servant thrown to the eels. Augustus was shocked, and ordered all the crystal at the table to be broken. Vidius was forced to pardon the servant, since he could hardly punish him for breaking one goblet when Augustus had broken so many more.
That servant seems to have been spared, but many others had their "bowels torn asunder" by the eels. And that's just one of the many horrific ways the ancient Romans devised to kill those who displeased or or offended them, from crucifixions and feeding people to wild beasts, to setting slaves on fire, and assassinating Julius Caesar on the Ides of March. Historian Emma Southon covers them all in her wittily irreverent new book, A Fatal Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum: Murder in Ancient Rome, showing us how the people of ancient Rome viewed life, death, and what it means to be human.
Inspiration struck in April 2018, when the notorious Golden State Killer, Joseph James DeAngelo, was arrested—a big day for true crime aficionados like Southon. While chatting with a fellow true crime buff and history teacher, Southon learned that her friend often used true crime as a teaching tool for specific cultural biases—for instance, using the example of Jeffrey Dahmer as a context for discussing homophobia in the 1990s. Intrigued, Southon searched for a true crime book about killings in ancient Rome, only to realize that nobody had written such a book. So she set out to rectify that grievous oversight, and the result is a delightful blend of true crime and ancient history.
Deutschland im Winter-Lockdown. Eine Zwischenbilanz (Teil 3)
An diesem Wochenende findet das kurdische Neujahrsfest Newroz statt. Die türkische Regierung versucht die Feiern zu unterbinden oder umzudeuten
Use of Boston Robotics’ Digidog intensifies concerns about police militarization.
Enlarge (credit: Michael Cohen | Getty Images)
New York City councilmember Ben Kallos says he "watched in horror" last month when city police responded to a hostage situation in the Bronx using Boston Dynamics' Digidog, a remotely operated robotic dog equipped with surveillance cameras. Pictures of the Digidog went viral on Twitter, in part due to their uncanny resemblance with world-ending machines in the Netflix sci-fi series Black Mirror.
Now Kallos is proposing what may be the nation's first law banning police from owning or operating robots armed with weapons.
"I don't think anyone was anticipating that they'd actually be used by the NYPD right now," Kallos says. "I have no problem with using a robot to defuse a bomb, but it has to be the right use of a tool and the right type of circumstance."
Die Inschrift prangt am Reichstagsgebäude. Seine Entstehung weist auf ein Ereignis vor genau 150 Jahren zurück. Versuch einer historischen Einordnung
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