
Project Hazel: Razers Zephyr-Gesichtsmaske ist vorbestellbar
Project Hazel wird zu Zephyr: Razer hat seine Gesichtsmaske weitestgehend fertiggestellt und sucht nach Betatestern in der Community. (Razer, Coronavirus)

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Project Hazel wird zu Zephyr: Razer hat seine Gesichtsmaske weitestgehend fertiggestellt und sucht nach Betatestern in der Community. (Razer, Coronavirus)
Wäre “Nine Eleven” durch Hirnscanner zu verhindern gewesen? – Buchkritik: John-Dylan Haynes’ und Matthias Eckoldts “Fenster ins Gehirn” (Teil 3)
The humor is dark, the body count is high, and the finale is just plain bonkers
Enlarge / Don't call it a reboot: Margot Robbie stars in James Gunn's The Suicide Squad (credit: Warner Bros.)
Fan enthusiasm has been high leading up to the premiere of The Suicide Squad, James "Don't Call It a Reboot" Gunn's band-of-misfit-supervillains homage to the classic 1967 film The Dirty Dozen (among many other influences). That enthusiasm was not misplaced. This tenth installment in the DCEU is a fast-paced, blood-soaked, wildly irreverent escapade that skillfully balances gore and goofiness, with equal amounts of irreverence and sincerity. Think The Boys pumped up on a steroids.
(Some spoilers below but no major reveals.)
As I've written previously, The Suicide Squad is not a direct sequel to the 2016 film directed by David Ayers. Gunn wanted to take the franchise in a new direction and introduce new characters. But Joel Kinnaman and Viola Davis do reprise their 2016 roles as Col. Rick Flag, the squad's understandably jaded field leader, and Intelligence Officer Amanda Waller, respectively. Steve Agee plays John Economos, prison warden and aide to Waller. As with the 2016 film, the titular squad is composed entirely of criminal supervillains, led by Flag, under the authority of Waller. Waller plants nanite bombs in their necks to keep them reasonably under control, promising to shorten their sentences if their missions are successfully fulfilled.
Wie der Kapitalismus weibliche Präferenzen abwertet. Frauen, Männer, Perspektiven. Das politische Geschlecht (Teil 3 und Schluss)
In Südspanien kolorierten die Ur-Europäer vor 65.000 Jahren Teile von Tropfsteinformationen: Beleg für abstraktes und komplexes Denken des Homo neanderthalensis
Am Montag ist das Schiff nach Fernost ausgelaufen. Dort soll es sich aller Voraussicht nach mit französischen, britischen und US-amerikanischen Verbänden in den Gewässern vor der chinesischen Küste treffen
A 3-planet system may expand out to 5, and one of its members is pretty small.
Enlarge / This artist’s impression shows L 98-59b, one of the planets in the L 98-59 system 35 light-years away. (credit: ESO/M. Kornmesser)
Most of the exoplanets we've discovered have been identified by large surveys like the Kepler mission or the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). While these projects are great at spotting stars that host planets, they mostly just tell us that the planets are there. Understanding an exosolar system and its planets requires multiple follow-up observations—and the telescope time that goes with them. Here, the phenomenal success of the surveys has given us far more to observe than we can get to conveniently.
But the follow-ups can provide critical information, as a study released this week makes clear. In it, the researchers describe observations of a three-planet system discovered by TESS. Using the additional observations, the researchers find that there are likely to be two other planets that TESS couldn't see and that one it spotted is the least massive exoplanet described to date.
The system is called L 98-59, and it has a couple of properties that make it a great candidate for follow-on observations. One plus is that it's fairly close, at least in galactic terms, being only about 35 light-years from Earth. It's also located where it will spend a lot of time within the field of view of the James Webb Space Telescope, should that mission successfully make it to its operational orbit. That means it will be relatively convenient to obtain enough imaging to study the atmospheres of the system's planets.
Den Wandel in der Automobilindustrie zum E-Auto sieht Herbert Diess gelassen. Die Sorge um massive Jobverluste hält der Volkswagen-Chef für überzogen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)
With the new Premier League season due to kick off in less than a week’s time, pubs across the country will be showing matches to their customers. To do that legally they’ll need an appropriate subscription package so to ensure that happens, a compliance company is looking for people to visit pubs during match times and report those breaking the rules.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Top level football is massive business in the UK, generating money from turnstiles, merchandising and lucrative broadcasting rights.
Those who want to watch matches legally can subscribe to packages offered by Sky, BT Sport, and Amazon, which together hold the rights to air games in the UK. Of course, some people prefer to pay little or even nothing by watching pirated streams instead but there is a third option – the local pub.
Depending on venue, landlords can benefit from increased footfall and increased revenue when airing matches but for some, commercial licenses offered by broadcasters can be too expensive to be economically viable.
To counter this, some use cheaper domestic subscriptions instead while others go flat-out with a pirate set-top box. Needless to say, this doesn’t sit well with companies such as Sky.
To counter this threat to its business model, Sky utilizes a team of pub snoopers, or in industry parlance, ‘Pub Testers’. These people are given a list of pubs to visit at certain times with the advance knowledge that the premises don’t already have a proper subscription to show matches. Once there they gather evidence, quietly leave, and report back to Sky.
Late last week, a job listing appeared on the UK Government’s Department for Work and Pensions “find-a-job” website seeking people to carry out this type of work.
“This work is really quick and easy and involves going into a set list of pubs during certain football games and testing what they are showing on their TV’s [sic]. We offer our work in a flexible capacity, so you can choose when you want to work, making it compatible with other commitments such as other work or family,” the listing begins.
“We pay per audit, so the more you work, the more you earn!” it continues.
“You can expect to be paid ~£35+ a game (2 hours max; multiple audits – note, this is not £35 per pub!), but this may be more depending on the number of audits, the urgency of the work and the distance traveled. With no need to spend anything, it’s a perfect way to making quick money in a short period of time.”
The job listing was placed by a company called Serve Legal, which carries out checks on businesses for a variety of reasons. These include ensuring that age-restricted items such as alcohol and cigarettes aren’t sold to minors, customer service checks, mystery shopper services and, of course, sports broadcasting compliance.
While there is no shortage of cases where Sky has taken landlords to court following visits from ‘Pub Testers’, documents reviewed by TorrentFreak suggest that is not what the company wants.
During the last months of 2019, TF was made aware of a legal letter sent to a landlord that referenced Sky UK Limited and Sky Subscriber Services. It noted (correctly) that a certain game had been shown in the pub the day before without a proper subscription, evidence of which had been obtained during a clandestine visit to the premises.
In reality, the letter wasn’t a surprise. Staff noticed a man walk into the bar and watched him look around for a while – particularly at the TV. They asked him if he needed any help but he made some vague excuses and left. Nevertheless, the damage had been done.
“You were doing this without a commercial viewing agreement with our client. Viewing Sky programming with a commercial viewing agreement from our client is the only legal way you could have shown this in your commercial premises,” the letter warned.
The letter noted that continued showing of Sky programming to the public could result in all sorts of terrible outcomes, including criminal action under the Copyright Designs and Patents Act, criminal action under the Fraud Act, plus civil action for copyright infringement. However, our source indicated that what Sky really wanted was for the landlord to become a customer.
Faced with these threats from the Russell Cooke law firm, the landlord (who was using an IPTV device) eventually signed up with Sky but not before at least one follow-up visit from another ‘Pub Tester’ was carried out. In local pubs, outsiders tend to get spotted more easily but on this occasion, there was nothing for him to report.
This business model of using testers and legal threats is referenced on the Serve Legal website. A testimonial from a “leading UK sports broadcaster” (possibly Sky) reveals how these visits can result in additional business.
“We have worked with Serve Legal since 2014 and they have significantly helped us to combat illegal broadcasting in the UK and Ireland,” it reads.
“Their knowledge, expertise and robust auditing in conjunction with the prompt supply of infringement data has generated over 8,000 leads; which has led to valuable leads for our sales force and investigation team to defend our investment in exclusive sports content.”
The Pub Tester job listing can be found here
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Germ theory denialist Facebook group went from 147 members in April 2020 to 18.4K now.
Enlarge / This thriving Facebook group says viruses don't cause disease and the pandemic isn't real. (credit: Facebook)
Listen up, sheeple: COVID-19 doesn't exist. Viruses don't cause disease, and they aren't contagious. Those doctors and health experts who say otherwise don't know what they're talking about; the real experts are on Facebook. And they're saying it loud and clear: The pandemic is caused by your own deplorable life choices, like eating meat or pasta. Any "COVID" symptoms you might experience are actually the result of toxic lifestyle exposures—and you have only yourself to blame.
As utterly idiotic and abhorrent as all of the above is, it's not an exaggeration of the messages being spread by a growing group of Darwin-award finalists on the Internet—that is, germ theory denialists. Yes, you read that correctly: Germ theory denialists—also known as people who don't believe that pathogenic viruses and bacteria can cause disease.
As an extension of their rejection of basic scientific and clinical data collected over centuries, they deny the existence of the devastating pandemic that has sickened upwards of 200 million people worldwide, killing more than 4 million.
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