Pandemic of unvaccinated rages in Louisiana, Florida amid breakthrough concerns

Vaccines and masks are both needed to lower transmission, US officials stress.

An ungainly inflatable tent has been set up next to an emergency room's automobile drop-off.

Enlarge / MELBOURNE, Fla. - 2021/07/29: A treatment tent is seen outside the emergency department at Holmes Regional Medical Center in Melbourne. The tent was set up to serve as an overflow area as the number of COVID-19 infections surges throughout Brevard County, Florida, due to the Delta variant and large numbers of unvaccinated residents. (credit: Getty | SOPA Images)

The delta-fueled surge in COVID-19 cases among unvaccinated Americans continues to overwhelm states and health care systems across the country, with Florida and Louisiana experiencing some of the worst tolls.

Nearly one in five new cases reported in the US each day is in the state of Florida—the third-most populous state in the country and one with below-average vaccination rates. On Friday, the Sunshine State reported 21,683 new cases to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is the state's highest daily total of new cases in the course of the entire pandemic (aside from a reporting anomaly on January 2). And the state is now nearing its all-time record for current hospitalizations. As of Monday, at least 10,682 people in Florida are hospitalized with COVID-19. The counties with some of the highest rates of infection have some of the lowest rates of vaccination, including Baker county with just 21 percent of residents fully vaccinated.

Louisiana, meanwhile, is claiming the title for the state with the highest rates of infection in the country. The Pelican State, which is a little over a quarter of the size of Florida, has a case rate of 89 new daily cases per 100,000 statewide. That's above Florida's current average rate of 74 new cases a day per 100,000. Louisiana is reporting an average of around 4,000 cases per day currently. Every county in the state is considered to have a high rate of transmission by the CDC's definition. Louisiana overall has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the country overall, with just 37 percent of the state fully vaccinated. Some of the counties with the highest case rates have vaccination rates as low as 26 percent.

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The Lord of the Rings TV series has finished filming, and it has a release date

Plus, Amazon shared one of the first visuals from the series.

The first live action promotional image for Amazon's new <em>The Lord of the Rings</em>-related series.

Enlarge / The first live action promotional image for Amazon's new The Lord of the Rings-related series. (credit: Amazon Studios)

Today, Amazon Studios announced that its new TV series based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings has finished filming its first season. The season is expected to premiere on September 2, 2022, "with new episodes available weekly," Amazon says.

Additionally, Amazon tweeted out one of the first visuals from the series, seen above. It depicts a person standing in a field looking out at a spectacular fantasy landscape.

Thirteen months might seem like a long gap between the conclusion of filming and the airing of the series, but a series like this is likely to have many visual effects that could contribute to a prolonged post-production period.

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Die Braunkohle-Sicherheitsbereitschaft wird etwas teurer

Über sieben Jahre hinweg werden acht ausgediente Braunkohle-Kraftwerksblöcke schrittweise stillgelegt. Die Kraftwerksbetreiber erhalten dafür Vergütungen, die wohl etwas höher ausfallen als bisher bekannt. Bezahlt wird dieses Geld von den Stromkunden

Über sieben Jahre hinweg werden acht ausgediente Braunkohle-Kraftwerksblöcke schrittweise stillgelegt. Die Kraftwerksbetreiber erhalten dafür Vergütungen, die wohl etwas höher ausfallen als bisher bekannt. Bezahlt wird dieses Geld von den Stromkunden

Post Mortem is the Norwegian vampire procedural dramedy we need right now

No one dies in the town of Skarnes. Could a hungry vampire save the local funeral home?

Scandinavian crime dramas have become so prevalent—thanks in part to Netflix including so much foreign content on their platform—that they've inspired the occasional sketch comedy parody. And now we're getting Norway's take on the supernatural police procedural, with vampires: Post Mortem: No One Dies in Skarnes. Netflix just released some first-look images on the heels of dropping the official trailer last week, and Post Mortem looks like the darker cousin of iZombie and The Santa Clarita Diet with a dash of Six Feet Under.

Directed by Harald Zwart (The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, The Karate Kid) with Petter Holmsen (who also serves as head writer), the six-episode series is "an intriguing mix of thriller, drama, and supernatural elements," according to Tesha Crawford, director of Nordic original series at Netflix. Per the official premise:

Live Hallangen is declared dead. Hours later she suddenly wakes up on the forensic table. A dark, insatiable hunger has awoken in her. Meanwhile, her brother Odd tries to keep the family driven funeral home afloat, but the stagnant death rate in the small Norwegian town of Skarnes makes it impossible. Live has to learn to control her new dangerous nature and decide if she is willing to sacrifice people’s lives for her own survival, which ironically goes hand in hand with the survival of the family business.

Kathrine Thorborg Johansen stars as Live, Elias Holmsen Sorensen plays Odd, Kim Fairchild plays Judith, Andre Sorum is Reinert, Sarah Khorami is Rose, and Terje Stromdahl is Arvid. In a statement, Zwart praised his cast members, saying that they all "embody the blend of Scandinavian mystique and dark humor."

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Lilbits: Google Pixel 6 with Tensor processor, Steam Deck, and upgrading the GPD Win Max

The Google Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro are coming this fall and they’ll feature a brand new design with a large camera bar across the back of the phones and upgraded camera hardware including new sensors and lenses. But the biggest chance, Google sa…

The Google Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro are coming this fall and they’ll feature a brand new design with a large camera bar across the back of the phones and upgraded camera hardware including new sensors and lenses. But the biggest chance, Google says, is under the hood. Google’s Pixel 6 series phones will […]

The post Lilbits: Google Pixel 6 with Tensor processor, Steam Deck, and upgrading the GPD Win Max appeared first on Liliputing.

YouTube Class Action: Maria Schneider Argues With Google Over Class Expansion

Maria Schneider’s class action lawsuit against YouTube is being fought tooth and nail by both sides, centering around YouTube’s alleged restriction of access to takedown tools and a failure to terminate repeat copyright infringers. After shadowy company ‘Pirate Monitor’ exited the action, Schneider now wants to add new plaintiffs but YouTube and Google are having none of it.

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

Sad YouTubeMore than a year after Grammy award-winning musician Maria Schneider filed a class action lawsuit against YouTube, claiming massive infringement on the platform and serious deficiencies in copyright enforcement measures, the parties are still bumping heads in court.

Schneider’s grievances are wide-ranging and include allegations that YouTube restricts access to its takedown tools, profits from piracy, and fails to disconnect repeat infringers due to them receiving ‘protection’ under YouTube’s Content ID system.

As previously reported, shadowy business entity ‘Pirate Monitor’ claimed to be a victim of YouTube’s policies but following a YouTube investigation, was found to have secretly uploaded its own content before sending bogus takedown notices. It later exited the lawsuit but YouTube wasn’t letting that go.

Despite this apparent canary in the coalmine, the action has continued, with Schneider asking the court to compel YouTube to hand over information on every user that had received a takedown notice filed against their account since 2015, to determine whether YouTube’s repeat infringer policies come up to scratch.

Back in March, Schneider indicated that she wanted to add dozens more copyright works to the three originally listed in the case but denied that she needed to identify each infringement of the works on YouTube. Without access to Content ID – an argument that circles back to the core of her complaint – that would be laborious, she argued.

Motion For Leave to File Amended Complaint

Early July, Schneider filed a motion with the court for leave to file her first amended complaint. Schneider indicated she wanted to add two companies – Uniglobe Entertainment, LLC and AST Publishing. YouTube and Google were not impressed.

“The proposed amendments, most notably to add two new parties as putative class representatives, come only after discovery confirmed glaring deficiencies in Schneider’s claims, and after Pirate Monitor dismissed its claims with prejudice under a cloud of fraudulent behavior,” the companies told the court.

“The request for leave continues Schneider’s shifting sands approach to the litigation. Her original complaint identified only three copyrighted works over which she was suing, and did not identify a single alleged infringement of those works on YouTube. Schneider now proposes amending to add seventy-five new copyrighted works to the case, still without identifying corresponding alleged infringements.”

YouTube/Google said the proposed “dramatic expansion” of Schneider’s claims sit alongside her refusal to accept a deadline for “closing the universe” of works in suit. The proposed new plaintiffs only make matters worse, since they too have not provided a list of copyrighted works or alleged infringements.

Overall, YouTube believes it has spent more than enough time (“many hundreds of hours”) on discovery when dealing with the claims of Schneider and Pirate Monitor, who – according to YouTube – “turned out to be a fraudster”. Going over everything again would create a huge burden when considering the new claims of US-based Uniglobe (which reportedly has rights over three motion pictures) and AST, a Russian publishing house, which asserts rights over at least nine print and audiobooks.

In summary, YouTube told the court that a year into the case, Schneider’s proposed amendments are not only too late but also raise new works and new legal issues, which would unfairly prejudice YouTube. For these reasons and more, YouTube asked the court to deny Schnieder’s motion for leave to amend.

Schneider’s Reply – Court Should Allow Amended Complaint

In her response filed late last week, Schneider argues that she is completely within her rights to amend her complaint and places the blame for delays firmly on YouTube and Google.

Schneider says that “delay alone” is not sufficient to deny leave to amend and repeats that she is under no obligation to identify the 78 works now being proposed. In addition, YouTube/Google’s claims that the addition of AST and Uniglobe was unduly delayed “fares no better”, since negotiations had been underway with these companies since late 2020.

Initial investigations apparently took several months and additional time was spent in a “weeks-long meet-and-confer” with YouTube/Google to determine whether they would consent to the filing of the amendments.

Schneider then provides a laundry list of events that she claims resulted in YouTube itself introducing delays, including YouTube asking for time to consider the amended complaint before consent was provided, asking for more time to review it, and then not objecting to the holding of meet-and-confer discussions concerning the amendments.

New Plaintiffs Aren’t Meant to Make Up For Case ‘Weaknesses’

Interestingly, Schneider also asks the court not to credit YouTube/Google’s argument that the inclusion of AST and Uniglobe is a measure to make up for supposed weaknesses in her case. That appears to relate to a licensing agreement with Schneider’s publisher that meant that some of her works were included in the Content ID program that Schenider insists she has been denied access to.

“Defendants appear to refer to a licensing agreement with Schneider’s publisher. But that agreement licenses only the works that Schneider’s publisher controlled and had the right to license,” Schneider’s counsel writes.

“But Schneider’s agreement with her publisher did not grant the publisher control over her works and did not provide her publisher the right to license those works without her written consent, which was never given, which means YouTube’s licensing agreement does not extend to Schneider’s works. Moreover, even if some of her works were
inappropriately part of Content ID for some period of time, not all works were.

“Regardless, even if Schneider’s claim was somehow deficient, that is not a valid reason to deny leave to amend, particularly at this stage of the proceeding,” the filing continues.

“Defendants claim that amendment would ‘moot’ the work it has already undertaken..[..]..but because Schneider is not withdrawing her claim, whatever work Defendants have already undertaken remains relevant.”

The court is yet to rule on the motion to file Schneider’s amended complaint but whatever the outcome, this case is clearly being fought and challenged at every turn. That tends to suggest that the year spent on it thus far could be just the beginning in what is already a controversial and extremely expensive piece of litigation.

The supporting documents can be found here 1,2,3 (pdf)

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

Zoom to pay $85M for lying about encryption and sending data to Facebook and Google

Zoom users to get $15 or $25 each in proposed settlement of class-action lawsuit.

A computer screen with a Zoom call showing the faces of a dozen participants.

Enlarge / Technical preview of Zoom's end-to-end encryption, made available months after Zoom was caught lying to users about how it encrypts video calls. (credit: Zoom )

Zoom has agreed to pay $85 million to settle claims that it lied about offering end-to-end encryption and gave user data to Facebook and Google without the consent of users. The settlement between Zoom and the filers of a class-action lawsuit also covers security problems that led to rampant "Zoombombings."

The proposed settlement would generally give Zoom users $15 or $25 each and was filed Saturday at US District Court for the Northern District of California. It came nine months after Zoom agreed to security improvements and a "prohibition on privacy and security misrepresentations" in a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission, but the FTC settlement didn't include compensation for users.

As we wrote in November, the FTC said that Zoom claimed it offers end-to-end encryption in its June 2016 and July 2017 HIPAA compliance guides, in a January 2019 white paper, in an April 2017 blog post, and in direct responses to inquiries from customers and potential customers. In reality, "Zoom did not provide end-to-end encryption for any Zoom Meeting that was conducted outside of Zoom's 'Connecter' product (which are hosted on a customer's own servers), because Zoom's servers—including some located in China—maintain the cryptographic keys that would allow Zoom to access the content of its customers' Zoom Meetings," the FTC said. In real end-to-end encryption, only the users themselves have access to the keys needed to decrypt content.

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SpaceX installed 29 Raptor engines on a Super Heavy rocket last night

Progress on the regulatory side of things remains murky, though.

Image of 29 Raptor rocket engines installed on a Super Heavy booster.

Image of 29 Raptor rocket engines installed on a Super Heavy booster. (credit: Elon Musk/Twitter)

Sometimes it is difficult to write objectively about the rate at which SpaceX makes progress. The advancements we're seeing at the company's Starbase site in South Texas are unprecedented.

Like, seriously unprecedented.

On Sunday, SpaceX finished stacking what it is calling "Booster 4," the first of its Super Heavy rocket boosters expected to take flight. This is a massive, single-core rocket that is approximately 70 meters tall, with a diameter of 9 meters. It has a thrust approximately double that of the Saturn V rocket that launched NASA astronauts to the Moon.

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Here are the first official Pixel 6 pictures and info

Google’s “Whitechapel” SoC is officially “Google Tensor,” plus we’ve got pictures!

Google has posted an official "sneak peek" of its upcoming Pixel 6 flagship. Contained in a tweet storm and a teaser website, we're finally getting official pictures and confirmation for many of the rumors that have been out there.

First up, one of the most exciting aspects of the Pixel 6 is the inclusion of the Google "Whitechapel" SoC. This is Google's first in-house SoC that will serve as the main chip powering the phone. It represents Google dumping Qualcomm as the SoC manufacturer and taking a more Apple-like vertical approach to its phone hardware. The chip is officially called "Google Tensor," and it's described by the company as "the brand new chip designed by Google, custom-made for Pixel."

"The highlight of Tensor is that it can process Google’s most powerful AI and ML models directly on #Pixel6. You’ll see a transformed experience for the camera, speech recognition, and many other Pixel 6 features," Google said in its posts today. "Speech recognition is another foundational technology where you will see a huge improvement in #Pixel6. Google Tensor allows us to make big leaps in: Voice commands, Translation, Captioning, & Dictation."

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Dice: Mietserver für Battlefield 2042 möglicherweise später

Zum Start von Battlefield 2042 wird es keine RSP-Mietserver geben. Dennoch sollen Spieler eigene private Partien eröffnen können. (EpicGames, Battlefield2042, Cheat, Antic, Electronic Arts)

Zum Start von Battlefield 2042 wird es keine RSP-Mietserver geben. Dennoch sollen Spieler eigene private Partien eröffnen können. (EpicGames, Battlefield2042, Cheat, Antic, Electronic Arts)