Ticket for space flight with Jeff Bezos is auctioned for $28 million

Unnamed passenger will pay more than $9 million per minute of zero gravity.

New Shepard crew capsule seen landing in west Texas in April 2021.

Enlarge / New Shepard crew capsule seen landing in west Texas in April 2021. (credit: Blue Origin)

A ticket to take a brief trip to space with Amazon founder Jeff Bezos next month has been sold at auction for $28 million.

The bidding process, which began in early May, drew offers from more than 7,000 participants from 159 countries, Blue Origin said. The price had stood at $4.8 million ahead of Saturday’s live auction, which was streamed online.

The identity of the winning bidder has not yet been made public but will be revealed in the coming weeks, Blue Origin said.

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OnePlus Nord N200 5G will be a budget phone with a 90 Hz display (leaks)

Over the years it’s been interesting to see fancy new features debut in high-end smartphone before eventually making their way to mid-range and budget devices. It looks like screens with high refresh rates are the latest example. The upcoming On…

Over the years it’s been interesting to see fancy new features debut in high-end smartphone before eventually making their way to mid-range and budget devices. It looks like screens with high refresh rates are the latest example. The upcoming OnePlus Nord N200 5G is expected to sell for less than $250 and feature a 6.49 inch, […]

The post OnePlus Nord N200 5G will be a budget phone with a 90 Hz display (leaks) appeared first on Liliputing.

Starfield reveal: Coming November 11, 2022, exclusively to PC, Xbox Series X/S

Brief, gorgeous trailer: “You’re part of Constellation now. Part of our family.”

Half an hour before Sunday's Xbox and Bethesda game-reveal event, one major announcement found its way out of the bag: the cinematic reveal for the upcoming space-exploration adventure game Starfield.

"Cinematic" should be in scare quotes, because Bethesda Game Studios has advertised that this trailer, as released by the Washington Post ahead of schedule, runs on its brand-new Creation Engine 2 and is "in-game alpha footage." Content rendered inside a game engine isn't necessarily the same as live gameplay. Plus, this trailer mostly consists of slow pans over a single planet's exterior and the inside of our apparent hero's spaceship, set to blast off.

Still, what we're seeing looks less like an artificially sweetened trailer full of rapid camera pans and detailed zooms on faces (cough, cough, Halo Infinite's earliest trailer) and more like a true look at Bethesda Game Studios' first bonafide adventure since 2015's Fallout 4. Its emphasis on curved surface reflections, vast view distances, geometrically intense rocky plains, and at least one highly detailed human face imply a demanding game—which explains why the trailer ends with confirmation that this is an Xbox Series X/S and PC game, not base Xbox One. (And, tellingly, not any PlayStation consoles—a post-acquisition reality for Bethesda and Xbox that the deal's players have loudly hinted to in recent months.)

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GPD ships some Win 3 handheld gaming PCs with the wrong wireless card (and other mistakes)

The GPD Win 3 is a small, powerful handheld gaming computer designed to let you play AAA PC games on a device about the size of a Nintendo Switch Lite. There’s a lot to like about the little computer, but shortly after GPD began shipping the Win…

The GPD Win 3 is a small, powerful handheld gaming computer designed to let you play AAA PC games on a device about the size of a Nintendo Switch Lite. There’s a lot to like about the little computer, but shortly after GPD began shipping the Win 3 to customers, some folks began noticing problems. […]

The post GPD ships some Win 3 handheld gaming PCs with the wrong wireless card (and other mistakes) appeared first on Liliputing.

‘Web Sheriff’ Targets Ubuntu.com URLs With Overbroad Takedown Notices

Anti-piracy outfit Web Sheriff is somewhat of an icon in the copyright protection industry. The company has protected rightsholders for over two decades and has seen many piracy platforms gone and gone. However, Sheriffs can make mistakes too, and flagging several Ubuntu URLs as copyright-infringing content, seems to fall in that category.

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

web sheriffThe Web Sheriff, founded by copyright lawyer John Giacobbi, has protected the Internet from pirates for more than two decades.

In the early days, Giacobbi became somewhat of a cult figure thanks to his polite style and trademarked letterhead. This set him apart from other anti-piracy crusaders who usually sent DMCA takedown requests with a more aggressive lawyer-like style.

The Sheriff once had a lively discussion with The Pirate Bay folks, who then sent him this invoice fax. Not much later relationships deteriorated even further after the Sheriff announced he would sue the site’s operators in the US, France, and Sweden, but not much came of that.

In recent years the Web Sheriff hasn’t been in the public eye much but his firm continues to patrol the web. Every week, it sends thousands of takedown notices to various online services, targeting allegedly infringing links. These links are at least in part generated by automated tools, which are far from perfect, it seems.

Web Sheriff Can Miss Too

This week we stumbled upon a series of takedown notices Web Sheriff sent to Google. These point out several infringing links to pirated copies of Magnolia Pictures films including “The Final Year”, “Person to Person”, and “2:22“.

While some of the URLs do indeed point to pirated content, many don’t. The Sheriff finds it particularly problematic to spot pirated “2:22” movies. Most of the links in this takedown notice point to unrelated content, including IRC logs on Ubuntu.com.

We assume that these links are gathered by some automated system that searched for 2:22. And indeed, the Ubuntu IRC logs are from 2/22/2017, but that’s the only similarity we could find. That’s also true for many other URLs in the notice.

sheriff takedown

This isn’t an isolated incident either. We found two other notices that were sent to Google which also list harmless Ubuntu.com URLs, presenting these as links to pirated content. Those URLs supposedly infringe the rights of the movie “Results“.

Fedora

Intriguingly, Ubuntu isn’t the only Linux distribution that’s highlighted in the notice, there are several Fedora URLs as well. And there’s a long list of Medium posts about election and test results, which have nothing to do with the “Results” film.

fedora

We could probably find many other overbroad requests but manually checking notices for errors actually takes a lot of time. That is, perhaps, why this problem exists in the first place. That said, for takedown senders, it may be wise to add Ubuntu.com and other URLs to a whitelist.

Once again, these examples show that automated filters are far from perfect. In this case, the Ubuntu mistakes were caught by Google and not removed from the search engine. However, as we have highlighted in the past, in other cases legitimate URLs simply disappear.

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