Dante Reloaded

Zum 700. Todestag von Dante Alighieri, oder: Warum Dante im 21. Jahrhundert noch wirkt

Zum 700. Todestag von Dante Alighieri, oder: Warum Dante im 21. Jahrhundert noch wirkt

Yout Files Refocused Lawsuit Against RIAA to Have YouTube-Ripping Service Declared Legal

YouTube-ripping service Yout.com sued the RIAA in 2020, hoping to have its platform declared legal. As time went on the case became more complex. As a result, it was dismissed last month to allow Yout time to revise its arguments. Yout has now done just that via a focused amended complaint, providing precise detail on why the court should rule in its favor.

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

RIAAIn 2020, the RIAA attempted to have YouTube-ripping tool youtube-dl removed from Github and in the wake of that, YouTube-ripping service Yout filed a preemptive lawsuit against the RIAA.

Yout said that the RIAA’s earlier efforts to have its homepage delisted by Google, on the basis that Yout circumvented YouTube’s ‘rolling cipher’ technology, were wrongful and damaging to its business.

Yout asked the court to declare its service legal on the basis that, contrary to the RIAA’s allegations, its software platform is not designed to “descramble, decrypt, avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair” YouTube’s so-called ‘rolling cipher technology’.

Over time the case became increasingly complex, with the RIAA seeking to have the lawsuit dismissed, Yout fighting back, and the RIAA countering.

As a result, last month the presiding judge took the decision to dismiss the case without prejudice after both Yout and the RIAA brought up additional facts about how YouTube works. This gave Yout the opportunity to go back to the drawing board to file its second amended complaint. it has now done just that.

Second Amended Complaint

Yout’s new filing still seeks declaratory relief relating to 17 U.S.C. § 1201 – the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA. It also claims that the RIAA made misrepresentations that Yout is infringing under U.S.C. § 512(f) resulting in business disparagement and defamation.

In many other respects the claims against the RIAA remain unchanged but, what stands out in particular, is the characterization of the Yout service, the explanation of how it operates, and the nature of YouTube’s ‘rolling cipher’.

“This lawsuit involves Internet content that can be accessed using a web browser (‘Web Content’) using a unique hyperlink, uniform resource locator (commonly referred to as ‘url’), or ‘web address’ that directs computing devices to such content, respectively, on the Internet,” the second amended complaint (SAC) reads.

“Some Web Content exists behind a pay-wall such that a person can only access the content after paying for the specific content or a broader subscription (eg iTunes). This lawsuit does not involve Web Content behind a pay-wall. Rather, this lawsuit involves content publicly accessible to anyone with a web browser and Internet connection.”

The SAC attempts to draw a line in the sand between services that are designed to grant access to content protected and/or encrypted to prevent unauthorized access and those that simply enable access to content that is already available to anyone.

“[T]his lawsuit does not involve any Web Content that has been hidden from view by use of a cipher or other means of concealing content or meaning. Again, quite simply, this lawsuit involves Web Content publicly accessible by anyone with an Internet connection and a web browser,” it notes.

In keeping with the original complaint, Yout characterizes itself as a time-shifting service, in that it allows users to access content from YouTube, make a copy of that content on their local machines, and then access that content at a time and place of their choosing, without needing an Internet connection. Content owned by Yout’s law firm is used as an example.

Yout example 1

Yout then moves on to the heart of the complaint – the RIAA’s allegations that Yout decrypts, descrambles or otherwise circumvents protections put in place by YouTube.

“YouTube Does Not Implement DRM Mechanisms”

According to the SAC, YouTube does not implement Digital Rights Management (DRM) mechanisms used on protected media such as DVDs, for example. Instead, YouTube content plays on any HTTP user agent with a JavaScript interpreter, not simply on players that are specifically authorized to access the platform.

Yout says that when YouTube plays content, it merely checks that the accessing browser has a JavaScript interpreter, such as those deployed by Yout, youtube-dl, and other tools that have no relationship with YouTube or the record labels.

“By way of comparison, a DVD player has a secret key embedded in it that must be obtained from the rightsholders pursuant to a license, but a browser does not. YouTube doesn’t license browsers to play YouTube. Therefore, even if the YouTube player source code is ‘a process or a treatment,’ it doesn’t require ‘the authority of the copyright owner’ as required by the statute because it’s already been provided to everyone in the world,” the SAC notes.

From here, Yout explains in detail how anyone with a web browser such as Chrome can download audio files from YouTube. In summary, Yout says that all it does is automate these steps, making life easier for the regular user who may want to download and store content for time-shifted consumption.

YouTube’s ‘Rolling Cipher’

Referencing the DMCA anti-circumvention notices sent by the RIAA in order to have Yout delisted from Google search, the ripping service says that if protection measures are put in place, it cannot help users download that content.

“Contrary to [RIAA’s] allegations, Yout’s software platform is not designed to descramble, decrypt, avoid, bypass, remove, deactivate, or impair any technical protection measure or any technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected by the Copyright Act. In fact, any digital mechanism in place designed as anti-circumvention technology stops Yout users from recording and saving that protected work, thereby demonstrating Yout’s compliance with any anti-circumvention protections in place,” Yout notes.

“Yout does not violate Section 1201 of the DMCA because it does not circumvent any technological measure on YouTube videos. Similarly, the ‘rolling cipher’ mechanism that the RIAA argues is employed by YouTube does not prevent copying of videos or other digital media. The term ‘rolling cipher’ is a misnomer and a term likely coined and relied upon by Defendants to argue that services like Yout are somehow breaching a protection that doesn’t exist.”

Yout also suggests that in respect of YouTube, ‘rolling cipher’ is a term being promoted by the RIAA but in practice, it’s not a DRM or technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected by the Copyright Act.

Alleged Damage to Yout’s Reputation

Yout says that prior to the RIAA’s campaign to have YouTube-ripping platforms delisted from Google using the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA, public perception was that these services were legal. Thanks to the RIAA, however, third parties now believe that Yout is an illegal platform.

The ripping service raises the analogy of a VHS tape that can be used to record MTV or an educational broadcast from PBS, noting that the technology used by Yout does not in itself constitute a violation of the DMCA.

In summary, Yout wants its platform declared legal by the court, specifically under the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA. Yout also wants the court to hold the RIAA liable for knowingly misrepresenting infringement in its DMCA notices to Google and seeks compensation for the RIAA’s allegedly false statements relating to the Yout platform and the nature of its business.

Yout’s second amended complaint can be found here (pdf)

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

SpaceX’s Starlink will come out of beta next month, Elon Musk says

With 600,000 orders, SpaceX boosting dish production to (hopefully) meet demand.

Screenshot from the SpaceX Starlink pre-order website.

Enlarge / Screenshot from the Starlink order page, with the street address blotted out. (credit: SpaceX Starlink)

SpaceX's Starlink satellite-broadband service will emerge from beta in October, CEO Elon Musk said last night. Musk provided the answer of "next month" in response to a Twitter user who asked when Starlink will come out of beta.

SpaceX began sending email invitations to Starlink's public beta in October 2020. The service is far from perfect, as trees can disrupt the line-of-sight connections to satellites and the satellite dishes go into "thermal shutdown" in hot areas. But for people in areas where wired ISPs have never deployed cable or fiber, Starlink is still a promising alternative, and service should improve as SpaceX launches more satellites and refines its software.

SpaceX has said it is serving over 100,000 Starlink users in a dozen countries from more than 1,700 satellites. The company has been taking preorders for post-beta service and said in May that "over half a million people have placed an order or put down a deposit for Starlink."

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Astronomers solve centuries-old mystery of supernova observed in 1181

“Parker’s Star” is surrounded by the Pa30 nebula discovered in 2013.

Hubble Space Telescope mosaic image of the Crab Nebula, a six-light-year-wide expanding remnant of a star's supernova explosion in 1054 CE

Enlarge / Hubble Space Telescope mosaic image of the Crab Nebula, a six-light-year-wide expanding remnant of a star's supernova explosion in 1054 CE (credit: NASA/ESA/J. Hester & A. Loll (Arizona State University)

In August 1181, astronomers in China and Japan witnessed a bright "guest star" in the night sky that we now know to have been a supernova—one of just a handful of recorded supernovae in our Milky Way that were visible to the naked eye. It shone brightly for a full six months before it disappeared. Astronomers haven't been able to identify the remnant of the source for SN 1181 for centuries, and that detail is crucial to determine which class the supernova belongs to. Now, an international team of astronomers think they have pinpointed that source as one of the hottest stars in the galaxy within the Pa30 nebula, according to a new paper published in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

As we've written previously, there are two types of known supernova, depending on the mass of the original star. An iron-core collapse supernova occurs with massive stars (greater than ten solar masses), which collapse so violently that it causes a huge, catastrophic explosion. The temperatures and pressures become so high that the carbon in the star's core begins to fuse. This halts the core's collapse, at least temporarily, and this process continues, over and over, with progressively heavier atomic nuclei. When the fuel finally runs out entirely, the (by then) iron core collapses into a black hole or a neutron star.

Then there is a thermonuclear supernova. Smaller stars (up to about eight solar masses) gradually cool to become dense cores of ash known as white dwarfs. If a white dwarf that has run out of nuclear fuel is part of a binary system, it can siphon off matter from its partner, adding to its mass until its core reaches high enough temperatures for carbon fusion to occur. 

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Microsoft Surface Go 3 specs confirmed by Thai retailer

Microsoft is holding an event on September 22 when the company is expected to introduce next-gen hardware including new Surface Book, Surface Pro, and Surface Go devices. We’ve already got a good idea of what to expect from the budget-friendly Surface Go 3 tablets, thanks to several recent leaks. But now a Thai retailer called […]

The post Microsoft Surface Go 3 specs confirmed by Thai retailer appeared first on Liliputing.

Microsoft is holding an event on September 22 when the company is expected to introduce next-gen hardware including new Surface Book, Surface Pro, and Surface Go devices.

We’ve already got a good idea of what to expect from the budget-friendly Surface Go 3 tablets, thanks to several recent leaks. But now a Thai retailer called Shopee has posted product pages for the Surface Go 3, complete with pictures and detailed specs for the upcoming tablets.

According to Shopee, the new tablet will look nearly identical to the Surface Go 2. It’s the same size and shape, and has the same display, speakers, cameras, and wireless capabilities. But the listings do confirm that Microsoft is giving its entry-level tablets a processor upgrade… albeit a modest one.

The Surface Go 3 is expected to be available with a choice of Intel Pentium 6500Y or Core i3-10100Y processors, which is a step up from the Pentium 4425Y and Core m3-8100Y processors used for the Surface Go 2 in terms of base and boost speeds for the CPU and graphics.

TDP Cores / Threads Base / Boost Freq GPU Base / Boost Freq 
Core i3-10100Y (Surface Go 3) 5W 2 / 4 1.3 GHz / 3.9 GHz 300 MHz / 1 GHz
Core m3-8100Y (Surface Go 2) 5W 2 / 4 1.1 GHz / 3.4 GHz 300 MHz / 900 MHz
Pentium 6500Y (Surface Go 3) 5W 2 / 4 1.6 GHz / 3.4 GHz 300 MHz / 900 MHz
Pentium 4425Y (Surface Go 2) 6W 2 / 4 1.7 GHz / N/A 300 MHz / 850 MHz

These are still 14nm chips that are part of Intel’s low-power “Amber Lake Y” lineup, so don’t expect the same level of performance you’d get from an 11th-gen “Tiger Lake” processor, but the both the entry-level and top tier Surface Go 3 should be a little faster than their predecessors.

Here’s a run-down on the specs for the new tablet. Note that Microsoft may also plan to launch a WiFi + cellular model, but that’s not currently shown at the Shopee website.

Surface Go 3 specs
Display 10.5 inch PixelSense Display
1920 x 1280
220 pixels per inch
3:2 aspect ratio
1500:1 contrast ratio
10-point multi-touch
CPU Intel Pentium Gold 6500Y
Intel Core i3-10100Y
GPU Intel UHD Graphics 615
RAM 4GB / 8GB
Storage 64GB eMMC
or
128GB SSD
Rear camera 8MP with autofocus
Front camera 5MP
Ports USB-C
3.5mm audio
microSD card
Wireless WiFi 6
Bluetooth 5.0
Sensors Ambient light sensor
Accelerometer
Gyroscope
Magnetometer
Audio Dual microphone
2 watt stereo speakers with Dolby Audio
Dimensions & weight 245 x 175 x 8.3 mm
640 grams

Given the modest spec bump, I suspect Microsoft will keep the same $399 starting price it has for the Surface Go 2 when the new models launch in the United States. But prices on the Shopee website range from the equivalent of about $450 for a model with a Pentium 6500Y processor, 4GB of RAM, and 64GB of storage, to $675 for a Core i3-10100Y/8GB/128GB model.

via WinFuture 

The post Microsoft Surface Go 3 specs confirmed by Thai retailer appeared first on Liliputing.

The iPhone 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, and 13 Pro Max are available to order today

Ship dates for some configurations are already slipping to late October, though.

As previously announced, Apple's new lineup of flagship iPhones is available to pre-order today through the company's online store.

The new phones include the iPhone 13, iPhone 13 mini, iPhone 13 Pro, and iPhone 13 Pro Max. Prices range from $699 all the way up to $1,599, with storage configurations ranging from 128GB to 1TB across the line.

The originally stated ship date for these phones was September 24, but unsurprisingly, the dates have slipped back, depending on which phone you're trying to buy.

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The FAA releases initial report on Boca Chica launches, and it’s not terrible

“Support is greatly appreciated!”

Photograph from beneath a giant rocket component.

Enlarge / SpaceX's Booster 4 is lifted onto its orbital launch mount in South Texas. (credit: Elon Musk/Twitter)

The Federal Aviation Administration released a draft environmental review of SpaceX's plans for orbital launches from South Texas on Friday, kicking off a 30-day public comment period.

The long-awaited procedural step is the first of several regulatory hurdles that SpaceX must clear before obtaining final permission to launch its Super Heavy booster and Starship upper stage from a site near Boca Chica, Texas. Such a launch likely remains months away, but it now appears that the feds will ultimately greenlight South Texas for orbital launches. That seemed far from assured before today.

The document, formally called a Draft Programmatic Environmental Assessment, evaluates the potential environmental impacts of SpaceX’s Starship program, including launch and reentry. It also reviews debris recovery, the integration tower and other launch-related construction, and local road closures between Brownsville and Boca Chica beach.

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Volkswagen’s electric ID.4 was already good—does AWD change that?

We test out the new AWD version of the electric VW and visit its new factory.

CHATTANOOGA, TENN.—Volkswagen in 2021 seems like a rather different company than Volkswagen circa 2015. The company has transformed itself in the wake of dieselgate, and it's found forgiveness in the arms of American consumers as evidenced by skyrocketing SUV sales. VW has also thrown itself wholeheartedly into electrification, applying the approach of a highly modular platform that can be used to build a range of battery electric vehicles including hatchbacks considered too small for the US and that electric bus everyone loves so much.

In North America, the ID.4 is the tip of the electric spear, an electric crossover that's pitched perfectly at our automotive mode du jour. We've already driven the ID.4 a couple of times: briefly as a pre-production prototype, then for a couple of days on home turf. It wasn't particularly flashy, and there were a couple of things that needed tweaking. Yet, overall, we were impressed. (And we weren't alone.)

At launch, the ID.4 was only available in a single configuration: an 82 kWh (gross, 77 kWh useable) lithium-ion battery powering a 201 hp (150 kW), 229 lb-ft (310 Nm) permanent magnet synchronous electric motor at the rear axle. But American car buyers like power, and they love all-wheel drive (for potentially misguided reasons about traction and grip, but that's neither here nor there).

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