Anhörung im US-Kongress: Whistleblowerin vergleicht Facebook mit Tabakkonzernen

Die frühere Facebook-Mitarbeiterin Francis Haugen kritisiert das soziale Netzwerk scharf. Das Unternehmen sei ohne neue Gesetze nicht kontrollierbar. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Die frühere Facebook-Mitarbeiterin Francis Haugen kritisiert das soziale Netzwerk scharf. Das Unternehmen sei ohne neue Gesetze nicht kontrollierbar. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Razer Book laptop now ships with Windows 11, starts at $1000

The Razer Book 13 is a thin and light notebook with a 13.4 inch display, an Intel Tiger Lake processor, and a body that measures just 0.6 inches thick and which has a starting weight of 2.9 pounds. When the notebook first launched a little under a year ago, it shipped with Windows 10 and […]

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The Razer Book 13 is a thin and light notebook with a 13.4 inch display, an Intel Tiger Lake processor, and a body that measures just 0.6 inches thick and which has a starting weight of 2.9 pounds.

When the notebook first launched a little under a year ago, it shipped with Windows 10 and had a starting price of $1200. But now Razer has announced that a “new” Razer Book is shipping with Windows 11 and a lower starting price of $1000.

The notebook has a 13.4 inch display with slim bezels and a 16:10 aspect ratio, and there are three prices/configurations available:

  • Core i5-1135G7/8GB/256GB with 1920 x 1200 pixel non-touch display for $1000
  • Core i7-1165G7/16GB/512GB with 1920 x 1200 pixel touchscreen display for $1500
  • Core i7-1165G7/16GB/1TB with 4K pixel touchscreen display for $1800

Razer is probably better known for making gaming hardware than mainstream laptops, but the Razer Book shares some DNA with the company’s Razer Blade Stealth line of thin and light gaming laptops, while dropping features that non-gamers might not want or need like discrete graphics and the company’s signature black-and-green design for the chassis.

You still get per-key RGB lighting effects for the backlit keyboard though, as well as top-firing speakers, two Thunderbolt 4 port that can be used with an optional external graphics dock, and a Windows Hello-compatible IR camera for face recognition.

The laptop also has a full-sized HDMI 2.0 port, a microSD card reader, a 3.5mm headphone jack, a USB Type-A port, and support for WiFi 6.

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Physics Nobel goes to complexity, both general and climatic

An award for understanding complex systems, including the climate.

The output of a modern climate model allows us to detect trends despite the chaotic nature of the underlying system.

Enlarge / The output of a modern climate model allows us to detect trends despite the chaotic nature of the underlying system. (credit: NOAA)

Complex behavior is all around us. Think of something like the economy. It has lots of components, each with its own set of rules and all of them interacting in complicated ways. Trying to follow what's going on from the ground up is nearly impossible. Yet, some reasonably consistent behaviors emerge from that complexity, allowing us to understand some general rules for it.

This mix of complexity and emergent behavior shows up in lots of other systems involving aggregate human behavior, as well as in areas of physics, chemistry, and biology. This year's Nobel in Physics is split evenly between two aspects of studying these systems. Half of the award goes to Giorgio Parisi, who helped find methods for understanding complex systems that can be applied more generally. And the other half is split between two climate modelers, Syukuro Manabe and Klaus Hasselmann, who helped developed systems that we now use to understand how the climate's behavior emerges from the complicated interaction of its components and influences—including the growing influence of greenhouse gases.

Complex systems and emergent behavior

Giorgio Parisi's work has its roots in the earliest days of statistical mechanics, most notably the work of James Clerk Maxwell (of Maxwell's Demon fame) and Ludwig Boltzmann, who famously applied a statistical approach to the second law of thermodynamics (entropy). Finally, physicists had a mathematical tool capable of describing how properties on the macroscale—such as the temperature and pressure of a gas—emerge from the random, disordered movements of particles on the microscale. Parisi's work uncovered the hidden rules that govern these kinds of complex disordered systems and their emergent properties.

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Court Orders Universe IPTV to Pay DISH $7m in Copyright Infringement Damages

In August 2020, DISH Network filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in the United States against ‘pirate’ IPTV provider Universal IPTV. DISH tracked down three defendants to addresses in the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Germany but despite extensive efforts, could not engage the parties in legal battle. That has now resulted in a judgment in favor of DISH to the tune of $7 million.

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

DISH logoWhile the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment has built a reputation for shutting down pirate IPTV services by various means, US broadcaster DISH is more prolific when it comes to actual lawsuits.

Over the years DISH has filed large numbers of civil lawsuits, some based on copyright law and others the Federal Communications Act. Some of these complaints are met by defendants who wish to engage in court but there are others that are completely one-sided affairs, with DISH doing all the legal legwork and getting very little in response.

The case in question is an excellent example of the latter.

DISH Files Copyright Infringement Lawsuit Against IPTV Provider

Initially filed in August 2020, the complaint targeted five ‘doe’ defendants, together doing business as Universe IPTV and Universe TV. The complaint alleged that the service’s business was carried out via several domains, including but not limited to World-Universeiptv.com and Uni-Update.com.

According to DISH, the pirate provider had not obtained a license to transmit any of DISH’s 400 channels in the United States, neither did it have permission to distribute copyrighted works for shows for which the company owns the copyrights. The Universe service transmitted and distributed DISH content regardless, utilizing a network of resellers to sell illicit subscriptions via Instagram and Facebook, in breach of DISH’s rights.

DISH went to some lengths to try and close Universe down including sending cease-and-desist letters directly to the platform and more than a dozen to CDN networks associated with the service. This proved fruitless, however, since Universe simply shifted to new locations and different providers.

DISH Identifies Universe IPTV Operators

In December 2020, DISH’s first amended complaint named three people as the alleged operators of Universe IPTV – Mohamed Omar, Hossam Abd Elghany, and Moustafa Maatouk. Together they were accused of direct and contributory copyright infringement. DISH also claimed to have identified their locations – United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Germany respectively.

The big question was whether DISH would be able to do anything to make the men participate in the lawsuit. The answer to that question was ultimately negative. Despite using established legal processes in all three countries, by April 2021 DISH was unable to confirm to the court that the defendants had been directly served.

So, in August 2021, DISH filed motions for default judgment against all three after serving the defendants via third parties including VeriSign, Donuts, and other service providers previously utilized by the platform. The court considered this to be acceptable to advance DISH’s claim for a default judgment.

Court Orders Universe IPTV Operators to Pay DISH $7m+

In a judgment handed down late last week, United States District Judge Sim Lake found that Universe IPTV had transmitted DISH’s protected channels (and the copyrighted works that aired on those channels) to users of the Universe service in the United States. By doing so, the defendants directly infringed DISH’s exclusive rights to distribute and publicly perform those works and, as a result, they are liable for direct copyright infringement.

In addition, the defendants also induced and materially contributed to the infringement of DISH’s rights by providing Universe IPTV’s users with access to DISH content, despite having the ability to prevent such access.

“Defendants are contributorily liable for copyright infringement because they served as the intermediary between third parties who directly infringe DISH’s exclusive distribution and public performance rights and users of the Universe Service, who became a necessary component of the infringement – the audience,” the judgment reads.

As a result, the Judge found the Universe defendants liable for inducing and materially contributing to copyright infringement, noting that the breaches were both malicious and willful.

Taking the 47 copyrighted works mentioned in the complaint, the Judge awarded DISH $150,000 in damages for each of them, to a total of $7,050,000, with the defendants held jointly and severally liable. Whether DISH will ever see a penny of this amount is in question but the Judge also handed down a broad injunction in an effort to hinder the defendants’ business moving forward.

Broad Injunction Against Universe IPTV

In addition to some broad measures designed to prevent Universe from doing business as before, including transmitting the DISH channels in the United States and/or marketing/selling subscriptions there, the injunction prevents non-party service providers from engaging in infringing activities with the Universe defendants in the future.

Website and domain hosting companies, proxy services, CDN providers, advertisers, social media services and email providers cannot provide services to support any infringing service offered by the defendants. In addition, Belize-based ISP Squitter Networks must disable a range of IP addresses used by Universe and any future ISPs served with the order must do the same, if their network is being used by Universe to breach DISH’s rights.

Finally, domain companies including VeriSign and Donuts are required to disable a large number of domains related to the Universe service and transfer them to DISH so that the broadcaster can fully control and use them.

The $7m default judgment can be found here (pdf)

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

Nintendo wraps Smash Bros. roster with Kingdom Hearts’ Sora

Almost 3 years of DLC additions end with a little Disney-Final Fantasy magic.

Nintendo revealed on Tuesday that Kingdom Hearts' Sora will be the final addition to Super Smash Bros. Ultimate's substantial roster of fighters—and the fan-favorite Square Enix-Disney action RPG series will be coming will be the Switch via cloud gaming.

Announced in a final showcase hosted by director Masahiro Sakurai, Ultimate's Challenger Pack 11 DLC will feature Kingdom Hearts' hero, the twelfth new DLC fighter since Super Mario's Piranha Plant was added in January 2019. Sora employs his elemental magic attacks and his signature weapon, the Keyblade. The update will be available for download later this month.

Disney world(s)

If you're unfamiliar with Kingdom Hearts, picture a Ready Player One-style crossover between Final Fantasy and Disney characters—who come from their own individual "worlds" themed around their respective movies or cartoons, like Toy StoryNightmare Before Christmas, and Pirates of the Caribbean—which Sora and his friends visit. (2002's original Kingdom Hearts launched a year before the company then known as Squaresoft merged with Enix, so the latter's Dragon Quest series has never been added to the universe.)

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Daily Deals (10-05-2021)

EBay is running a 15% off sale on hundreds of refurbished products, most of which come with a 2-year warranty. Amazon continues to offer discounts on Fire, Echo, and Kindle hardware. And today you can pick up a 13 inch Lenovo Chromebook Flex 5 13″ FHD convertible with a 10th-gen Intel Core i3 processor for […]

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EBay is running a 15% off sale on hundreds of refurbished products, most of which come with a 2-year warranty. Amazon continues to offer discounts on Fire, Echo, and Kindle hardware. And today you can pick up a 13 inch Lenovo Chromebook Flex 5 13″ FHD convertible with a 10th-gen Intel Core i3 processor for $300.

Sony WF-SP800N Sport true wireless noise-cancelling earbuds for $34 (via eBay w/coupon: LIKENEWFALL15)

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Sales

Laptops & Tablets

Earbuds

Headphones

Downloads & Streaming

Other

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Facebook misled investors about shrinking user base, ex-employee alleges

Complaint to SEC: Facebook mishandling of duplicate accounts was “extensive fraud.”

A person using a smartphone in front of a TV screen displaying the Facebook logo.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Chesnot)

Facebook has been misleading investors about its "shrinking" teen and young-adult user bases and about the actual number of Facebook users, former employee Frances Haugen alleged in a whistleblower complaint filed with the US Securities and Exchange Commission. "For years, Facebook has misled investors and advertisers about [its] shrinking user base in important demographics, declining content production, and the true number of recipients of 'Reach & Frequency' advertising," the complaint said.

Noting that "Facebook's stock valuation is based almost entirely on predictions of future advertising revenue," the complaint cites "evidence showing that Facebook has, for years past and ongoing, violated US securities laws by making material misrepresentations and omissions in statements to investors and prospective investors, including... through filings with the SEC, testimony to Congress, online statements, and media stories."

"Facebook has misrepresented core metrics to investors and advertisers including the amount of content produced on its platforms and growth in individual users (especially in high-value demographics)," the complaint said. Facebook's advertising algorithms did not properly account for what the complaint calls Single Users with Multiple Accounts (SUMA), and the company thus "systematically overcharg[ed] advertisers" by misrepresenting the number of individual users, Haugen alleged.

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1.8% of staff fired from NY’s largest health care provider for vaccine refusal

Unvaccinated workers say they’d rather quit than get shots—but few actually do.

A city-operated mobile pharmacy advertises the COVID-19 vaccine in a Brooklyn neighborhood on July 30, 2021, in New York City.

Enlarge / A city-operated mobile pharmacy advertises the COVID-19 vaccine in a Brooklyn neighborhood on July 30, 2021, in New York City. (credit: Getty | Spencer Platt)

Northwell Health, the largest health care provider in New York, announced Monday that it fired just a sliver of its staff for failing to comply with the state's COVID-19 vaccination mandate—and there will be no interruptions to patient care at the system's 23 hospitals and over 830 outpatient facilities.

In all, Northwell terminated only 1,400 of its more than 76,000-member workforce—that's roughly 1.8 percent.

"Northwell Health is proud to announce that our workforce—the largest in New York State—is 100 percent vaccinated," the company said in a statement. "This allows us to continue to provide exceptional care at all of our facilities without interruption and remain open and fully operational."

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The 12 best deals from Amazon’s early Black Friday event

Deals may help you beat anticipated shipping delays.

The 12 best deals from Amazon’s early Black Friday event

Enlarge

Amazon has created another mini tentpole event to get ahead of the holiday rush. This time, the company may be more justified than usual, as retailers and shippers across the country are warning of COVID-related shipping delays for the holiday season.

This isn't a massive event like Amazon Prime Day, but there are still a few good deals. Some offers will change daily, but savings are live now for core items like Amazon devices, data storage accessories, and Apple and Beats headphones.

You can also snag $100 off one of our favorite home office items, Flexispot's V9 Desk Bike, or go the more traditional route with a solid standing desk for just $220. Last on our list is the TRX Go Suspension Trainer, a versatile piece of exercise equipment for any home gym. It's a great piece, whether you're a beginner starting with mostly bodyweight exercises or an advanced trainer wanting to level-up your workouts with more dynamic activity.

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YouTube Music continues glacial development pace, adds background playback

Five years after launch, YouTube Music is still working on basic music app features.

Welcome to YouTube Music. Please swipe your credit card here.

Enlarge / Welcome to YouTube Music. Please swipe your credit card here. (credit: Jericho / Ron Amadeo)

October marks the first anniversary of the death of Google Play Music, leaving only the sad shadow of a replacement music service, YouTube Music, in Google's ecosystem. YouTube Music is showing just how far behind the streaming music wars it is with the announcement of a new feature: background music playback. Previously, playing a streaming song on the ad-supported YouTube Music app would only work if you had the app open—navigating to something else on your phone would stop the music. Now, five years after the service's launch and one year after the shutdown of Google Play Music, you can use YouTube Music like—well—a music app without paying for YouTube Premium.

One last detail: this extremely basic feature is only rolling out to Canada next month. For now, everyone else still can't use YouTube Music like a regular streaming music app without paying for the service. Google says that free background playback will be available to "listeners around the world" at some point, but it hasn't said when.

SoundCloud and Spotify offer free background streaming—as did Google Play Music before it was shut down—but YouTube Music hasn't been able to replicate that feature for the past five years. Subscribers to the $9.99 YouTube Music Premium have been able to play music in the background, and the feature is available for music you've uploaded yourself. But if you were listening to the ad-supported streaming catalog, the music just stopped in the background.

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