Brazil’s Bolsonaro accused of “crimes against humanity” over COVID response

Brazilian lawmakers walked back initial claims of mass homicide and genocide.

A man in a suit covers his mouth with a fist, not his elbow.

Enlarge / President of Brazil Jair Bolsonaro coughs during a press conference. (credit: Getty | Andressa Anholete)

A Brazilian Senate committee investigating the country's response to the COVID-19 pandemic has recommended that President Jair Bolsonaro face nine criminal charges, including "crimes against humanity," for his role in the public health crisis.

In a lengthy report released Wednesday, the 11-member committee said that Bolsonaro allowed the pandemic coronavirus to spread freely through the country in a failed attempt to achieve herd immunity, leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people. The report also took aim at Bolsonaro's promotion of ineffective treatments, such as hydroxychloroquine. The committee blames the president's policies for the deaths of more than 300,000 Brazilians.

In addition to crimes against humanity, the committee accused Bolsonaro of quackery, malfeasance, inciting crime, improper use of public funds, and forgery. In all, the committee called for indictments of 66 people, including Bolsonaro and three of his sons, as well as two companies.

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Lilbits: Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 Bespoke Edition, Oppo’s in-house chips, and Hyper’s big new batteries

This week Google officially launched the first smartphones powered by its own Google Tensor processors, and Apple unveiled new MacBook Pro laptops powered by the company’s new M1 Pro and M1 Max chips. There seems to be a growing trend of device makers designing their own processors rather than using off-the-shelf chips from Intel, AMD, […]

The post Lilbits: Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 Bespoke Edition, Oppo’s in-house chips, and Hyper’s big new batteries appeared first on Liliputing.

This week Google officially launched the first smartphones powered by its own Google Tensor processors, and Apple unveiled new MacBook Pro laptops powered by the company’s new M1 Pro and M1 Max chips.

There seems to be a growing trend of device makers designing their own processors rather than using off-the-shelf chips from Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, or MediaTek. Now it looks like Oppo may be one of the next companies to try its hand at designing its own chips, according to a new report.

Oppo Find X3 Pro

In other recent tech news from around the web, Samsung is now letting users design their own color scheme for the Galaxy Z Flip3 smartphone with a new “Bespoke Edition” option, YouTube Music’s free tier is about get both more and less useful, and Hyper is taking pre-orders for a new portable battery pack that lets you charge multiple laptops, tablets, or phones at once.

Oppo joins race to develop own smartphone chips [Oppo]

Oppo is reportedly planning to develop its own chips for high-end smartphones, moving away from reliance on Qualcomm and MediaTek and taking a path followed by Samsung, Huawei, Apple, and most recently Google. Phones with the chips could ship in 2023/2024.

HyperJuice 245W USB-C Battery Pack & GaN Charger [Indiegogo]

Hyper’s new “245W” battery is actually a 100Wh battery with four USB ports, allowing you to charge up to four gadgets at a time. Plug in one device and it will crank out up to 100W of charging power. Connect two and you get up to 200W, but only 100W per port, which might not be enough to power some high-performance laptops, for example. 

Need to charge three gadgets simultaneously? You can do two at 100W and one at 45W. And if you use all four ports at once, then you get up to 100W from one port and up to 45W from the rest.

Prices start at $149 during crowdfunding, or $99 for a 245W GaN charger with the same features… except it’s just a charger, not a battery. You’ll need to plug it into a wall. There are also bundle deals if you want one or more of each. 

Free YouTube Music tier going audio-only as video watching becomes Premium perk [9to5Google]

Good news: starting in November you’ll be able to stream YouTube Music in the background for free using the ad-supported version of the service. Bad news: You’ll lose access to music videos at the same time unless you pony up for a Premium plan.

Introducing Galaxy Z Flip3 Bespoke Edition [Samsung]

Samsung Galaxy Z Flip3 Bespoke Edition offers a choice of color combinations, letting you mix and match black or silver frames with blue, yellow, pink, black, or white on the front and back. Available now for $1100.

PinePhone Pro was announced last week. AMA.

Pine64 Community Manager Lukasz Erecinski held an Ask Me Anything session on reddit this week to answer questions about the recently announced PinePhone Pro, a $399 smartphone designed to be a more powerful alternative to the original PinePhone, which sells for $150 to $200.

Like the original PinePhone, the new Pro model is aimed at open source developers and enthusiasts looking to run mainline Linux software on a mobile device and it features replaceable parts, hardware kill switches for privacy, and a removable back cover, among other things. Software for the phone is still very much a work in progress though, which is why it will be sold to developers only at first. 

Keep up on the latest headlines by following Liliputing on Twitter and Facebook and follow @LinuxSmartphone on Twitter and Facebook for the latest news on open source mobile phones.

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Using recycled cathodes makes better lithium batteries, study finds

The materials create a more porous structure for the ions to negotiate.

Stylized illustration of a lithium-ion battery.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

The problem of what to do with old batteries comes up in many discussions about the pros and cons of electric cars. Most people's first preference is to reuse them, repurposing the cells for a second life as stationary storage.

But at some point, even those batteries will reach their end of life, and recycling them makes sense, given concerns over sourcing raw materials for fresh batteries to take their place. It's even possible that using recycled materials might make a better battery, according to a study published in the journal Joule.

Recycling a complicated construction like a battery cell is a difficult task, but it's a potentially lucrative one, which means it's of interest to academia and industry. The study in Joule, led by Professor Yan Wang at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, looks at the performance of lithium-ion cells that have cathodes made from nickel, manganese, and cobalt recovered from other cells.

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YouTube Rippers Oppose RIAA’s Worldwide ‘Blocking’ Injunction & Massive Damages

YouTube rippers FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com are opposing the RIAA’s request for a permanent injunction and $82 million in damages at a Virginia federal court. While the sites’ owner previously backed out of the lawsuit, his lawyers argue that a worldwide shutdown order is too broad and that the requested damages are too high.

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

2convEarier this month the RIAA secured a major victory in its piracy lawsuit against YouTube-rippers FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com and their Russian operator Tofig Kurbanov.

A Virginia federal court issued a default judgment in favor of several prominent music companies after the defendant walked away from the lawsuit.

According to Judge Buchanan there is a clear need to deter the behavior of Kurbanov, who also failed to hand over evidence including server logs. “A less drastic sanction is unlikely to salvage this case,” he noted.

Following this win, the RIAA also asked for an injunction to stop the sites’ worldwide stream-ripping activities. In addition, the music group demanded $82 million in damages. Both of these requests have yet to be signed off by the court.

YouTube Rippers Oppose Demands

While the Russian operator previously indicated that he would no longer take part in the lawsuit, his legal team is not letting the case go completely. This week, they filed a brief in opposition of the RIAA’s demands.

Among other things, Kurbanov’s attorneys point out that the RIAA failed to provide evidence of concrete copyright infringing activity that took place in the United States. Without infringements, there shouldn’t be any damages, they argue.

“Plaintiffs have provided the Court with no competent evidence from which the Court could conclude that any infringement took place at all in connection with the 1,618 works in suit, much less that such infringement took place within the boundaries of the United States.

“Without such evidence, this Court cannot find that Plaintiffs are entitled to any statutory damages, since the evidence of actual infringement does not exist,” the attorneys note.

The defense argues that if the court decides to award statutory damages nonetheless, these should be substantially lower than the millions the music companies demand. Lower damages are appropriate because the case only deals with contributory infringement, while Mr. Kurbanov himself has never set foot on U.S. soil.

YouTube-DL Defense

In addition, the attorneys stress that the stream-rippers’ alleged infringing activity stems from open source software that’s freely available on the Internet. This software, youtube-dl, was previously removed from GitHub by the RIAA but it was reinstated after an intervention from the Electonic Frontier Foundation (EFF).

Kurbanov’s legal team specifically cites the EFF which concluded that, in circumvention terms, youtube-dl works in the same way as a regular web browser.

“As the EFF explains, the youtube-dl software does nothing more than provide YouTube’s servers with the same code that any web browser would provide if an individual went to YouTube looking to play one of the songs that Plaintiffs make freely available to the entire world.”

In addition to the damages, the RIAA also asked for an injunction that would effectively order Kurbanov to block worldwide traffic to his sites. Not just that, the Russian site operator would also lose ownership of his domain names.

Blocking Should be Limited to U.S. Traffic

This global ‘blocking’ demand goes too far, the lawyers point out, as United States courts have no jurisdiction over alleged infringing activity that takes place in other countries.

Mr. Kurbanov has already decided to block U.S visitors from accessing FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com so there is no need for any further measures. If the court decided to issue an injunction after all, it would be appropriate to limit it to the United States.

“Should this Court find injunctive relief appropriate, it should narrowly target such relief, ordering only that Mr. Kurbanov continue to block visitors to the Websites from the United States from accessing any copyrighted materials owned by the Plaintiffs,” Kurbanov’s attorneys write.

“Such an order – while not currently necessary given the complete blocking of the sites in the United States – is sufficient to protect all of Plaintiffs’ legitimate concerns.”

Given the stakes at play, we can expect the RIAA to contest this opposition brief if it gets the chance. After that, it will be up to the court to decide if damages and injunction measures are appropriate and what these should be.

A copy of Mr. Kurbanov’s brief in opposition to RIAA’s request for damages and a permanent injunction is available here (pdf)

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

Trapped in amber: Fossilized dinosaur-era crab bridges evolutionary gap

Discovery pushes back when crabs came to land, freshwater to 100 million years ago.

Trapped in amber: Fossilized dinosaur-era crab bridges evolutionary gap

Enlarge

Once upon a time, during the Cretaceous period, a tiny crab wandered out of the water onto land and somehow got trapped in amber, which preserved it for 100 million years. At least that's what a team of scientists hypothesize might have happened in a new paper announcing their discovery of the oldest known modern-looking crab yet found in the fossil record. The paper was published in the journal Science Advances.

This new type of "true crab" (aka a brachyuran) measures just five millimeters in leg span and has been dubbed Cretapsara athanata. The name is meant to honor the period in which the crab lived and Apsara, a South and Southeast Asian spirit of the clouds and waters. "Athanatos" means "immortal," a sly reference to the fossilized crab being frozen in time.

It's rare to find nonmarine crab fossils from this era trapped in amber; most such amber fossils are those of insects. And the previously discovered crabby fossils are incomplete, usually consisting of pieces of claws. This latest find is so complete that it doesn't seem to be missing even a single hair. The find is of particular interest because it pushes back the time frame for when nonmarine crabs crawled onto land by 25 to 50 million years—consistent with long-standing theories on the genetic history of crabs—and offers new insight into the so-called Cretaceous Crab Revolution, when crabs diversified worldwide.

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Drop Signature Series Islay Night hands-on: A $349, arrow-free keyboard

Holy Panda switches, tall, scooped keycaps result in custom look without the DIY work.

Drop Signature Series Islay Night hands-on: A $349, arrow-free keyboard

Enlarge (credit: Scharon Harding)

You can often tell a custom-made mechanical keyboard when you see it. The keycaps have a selection of colors, shapes, and heights. The owner swears the mechanical switches are something special, and they're all housed in a nice chassis, topped off with the perfect level of stabilizers, lubrication, and sound dampeners that you can't handpick with a prebuilt alternative.

Drop, which sells parts to keyboard enthusiasts, knows that not everyone has the time, patience, or skill to create their perfect board. Its line of prebuilt keyboards—from the $500 Paragon Series to the more attainable Expression Series and, in the middle ground, Signature Series—seek to give customers that hand-assembled custom keyboard experience without requiring any DIY know-how.

The Drop Signature Series Islay Night keyboard is arguably the most unique option among the seven added to the series last week because it's a "60 percent keyboard"—no function row, no numpad, and no arrow keys. That makes it a non-starter for many consumers, and the board's $349 price tag will get it kicked off even more buyers' lists. But if you're willing to splurge on a tiny keyboard, the Islay Night is a premium way to take part in hot mechanical keyboard trends like hybrid switches and diffused RGB without having to do any building. And you get to pay subtle tribute to Scotland as well.

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Attorney conflict could benefit Activision Blizzard in harassment suit

Game-maker says it “could raise serious questions about… underlying investigation.”

Activision's Los Angeles offices.

Enlarge / Activision's Los Angeles offices. (credit: Getty Images)

In a new legal filing, Activision Blizzard is pointing to alleged conflicts of interest within California's Department of Fair Employment and Housing (DFEH) in an effort to delay or stymie the state agency's continuing lawsuit over alleged discrimination and sexual harassment at the company.

Conflict claims

Those who've been following California's slowly unfolding case against Activision since it first became public in July may remember that the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) brought a similar but separate lawsuit against the company last month. Activision Blizzard quickly agreed to a consent decree to settle that federal case, setting up an $18 million restitution fund for affected employees in the process.

Earlier this month, though, California's DFEH filed an objection to that federal settlement, saying in part that it had a "potential prejudicial impact on the state of California's pending enforcement of [the Fair Employment and Housing Act]." The settlement, California argued, might cause "irreparable harm" to the DFEH's case and "may result in the waiver of state claims relevant to DFEH's pending case and the destruction or tampering of evidence necessary to DFEH's case."

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Onyx BOOX Max Lumi2 is a 13.3 inch E Ink tablet with Android 11

The Onyx BOOX Max Lumi2 is a 13.3 inch tablet with the guts of a mid-range smartphone, including a Qualcomm Snapdragon 662 processor, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage. It runs Android 11 software and comes with a pressure-sensitive pen for writing or drawing on the screen. But unlike most phones, the Onyx BOOX […]

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The Onyx BOOX Max Lumi2 is a 13.3 inch tablet with the guts of a mid-range smartphone, including a Qualcomm Snapdragon 662 processor, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage. It runs Android 11 software and comes with a pressure-sensitive pen for writing or drawing on the screen.

But unlike most phones, the Onyx BOOX Max Lumi2 has an E Ink Carta display, making it something of a cross between a tablet and an eReader. It’s also a lot more expensive than a mid-range phone – the Lumi 2 goes up for pre-order October 27th for $880.

That makes the Lumi 2 one of the most expensive E Ink tablets to date… although as the name suggests, this is actually a second-generation device, and last year’s BOOX Max Lumi also sold for $880 at launch (you can currently pick one up for around $820).

This year’s model has the same 2200 x 1650 pixel E Ink Carta display and 4,300 mAh battery as its predecessor, but it has 50% more memory and twice as much storage plus a more powerful processor (last year’s version was powered by a Snapdragon 636 chip).

Onyx says it’s also upgraded its digital pens. The new BOOX Pen Plus has a thicker nib, while the new BOOX Pen2 Pro has an updated design with an integrated eraser function.

The company is also updating some of its smaller models. An upgraded 10.3 inch Onyx BOOX Note Air2 with 4GB of RAM, 64GB of storage, and stronger magnets for holding the pen in place  goes up for pre-order October 27th for $500, while the new Onyx BOOX Note5 with a 10.3 inch display, fingerprint reader, and stereo speakers goes up for pre-order at the same time for $570.

via @OnyxBoox and GoodEReaader

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AORUS Project Cielo is a modular portable gaming PC concept with integrated 5G

Gigabyte has unveiled a concept for a modular gaming PC that’s designed to be customizable, versatile, and compact. While most gaming PCs are modular in the sense that you can pick the CPU, GPU, and other key specs you’d like, the Gigabyte AORUS Project Cielo takes a different approach toward modular design. Project Cielo is […]

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Gigabyte has unveiled a concept for a modular gaming PC that’s designed to be customizable, versatile, and compact.

While most gaming PCs are modular in the sense that you can pick the CPU, GPU, and other key specs you’d like, the Gigabyte AORUS Project Cielo takes a different approach toward modular design.

Project Cielo is basically a computer with three primary parts:

  • Main system
  • Bluetooth speaker
  • Battery pack

The idea is that you can mix and match parts, using only the gear you need. The guts of the computer are stuffed into one module, allowing you to plug in a power supply, keyboard, mouse, and display for gaming at home.

Want to take your gaming computer on the go? Connect the battery module for portable play (with a portable display, presumably). Since there’s a 5G antenna built into the top of the chassis, you should even be able to connect to the internet when you’re out of WiFi range.

Need some sound? You can always plug in a pair of headphones. But there’s also a Bluetooth speaker module that can be added to the stack. Or you can detach that speaker and use it with other devices including smartphones or tablets.

 

For now Project Cielo is just a concept, so it’s unsurprising that Gigabyte isn’t saying anything about actual specs, what kind of battery life to expect, or why this thing is any more likely to succeed than Razer’s Project Christine modular PC concept that never became a real product you could buy.

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Could search engines be fostering some Dunning-Kruger?

Study shows that we think Internet searches are a sign we know more than we do.

Could search engines be fostering some Dunning-Kruger?

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Aurich Lawson)

Many of us make jokes about how we've outsourced part of our brain to electronic devices. But based on a new paper by the University of Texas at Austin's Adrian Ward, this is just a variation on something that has been happening throughout human history. No person could ever learn everything they need to know. But that's OK, according to Ward: "No one person needs to know everything—they simply need to know who knows it."

Over time, we've developed alternatives to finding the person who has the information we need, relying on things like books and other publications. The Internet simply provides electronic equivalents, right?

Not entirely, according to Ward's latest results. Based on data he generated, it seems that search engines now return information so quickly and seamlessly that we tend to think we remembered information that we actually looked up. And that may be giving us unjustified confidence in our ability to pull facts out of our brain.

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