Verbraucherzentrale: Nutzer bezahlen wegen zu niedriger Datenrate zu viel

Die Verbraucherzentrale hat mit einem Python-Skript ausgerechnet, wie viel Nutzer des Messtools der Bundesnetzagentur zu viel bezahlen. Es lohnt sich für die Netzbetreiber. (VZBV, Verbraucherschutz)

Die Verbraucherzentrale hat mit einem Python-Skript ausgerechnet, wie viel Nutzer des Messtools der Bundesnetzagentur zu viel bezahlen. Es lohnt sich für die Netzbetreiber. (VZBV, Verbraucherschutz)

Criminal Copyright Complaint Filed Against BitTorrent Seedbox Provider

Three seedbox providers have announced that they will block their users from sharing on at least three named trackers. While one appears to have decided to act voluntarily, TorrentFreak is informed that a company operating under two brands is now being investigated for criminal copyright infringement.

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

please seedOver the past year in particular, anti-piracy group Rights Alliance has been applying maximum pressure to various players in the piracy ecosystem.

Through detailed investigations that are ultimately referred to local law enforcement, one of the group’s main aims is to disrupt and ultimately disassemble the private torrent site scene in Denmark. With the shutdown of several major private trackers in recent months, Rights Alliance clearly has the momentum but that isn’t to say that clearing-up operations aren’t needed.

Last week news broke that six people had been arrested following criminal referrals by Rights Alliance relating to the private torrent sites ShareUniversity and DanishBytes. An aspect of that operation will be of interest to private tracker users all over Europe and potentially even the United States.

Seedboxes Providers and Sellers Under Pressure

The revelation came from the Public Prosecutor for Special Economic and International Crime (SØIK) which indicated that one of the arrested men reportedly sold access to seedboxes, a BitTorrent-related term for specially-configured servers that allow people to share content remotely.

These servers were reportedly rented by BitTorrent users for use on one or more of the private trackers to share around 3,800 copyrighted works.

It’s important to note that seedboxes aren’t illegal per se but if they are used to share infringing content then there are implications for users and seedboxes providers alike, when certain conditions are met. The circumstances surrounding last week’s arrests will become clearer in the coming weeks and months but in the meantime, some providers are already taking action.

Announcement from Seedbox.io and Walkerservers

In an announcement posted to its portal on November 6, 2021, seedbox provider Seedbox.io said that due to the recent raids in Denmark, it would no longer allow its customers to seed (share) content on three named private trackers.

“Due to recent events in Denmark on November 3rd we have decided to take our precautions and as a result we have blocked access to the below domains from our servers. The trackers in question are: https://superbits.org, https://danishbytes.org (And all subdomains/alternative domains) [and] https://cynicalgen.org. The sites have been blocked on the network level,” the provider explained.

Walkerservers, which is operated by the same company as Seedbox.io, later confirmed that the same announcement is true for its business too.

Criminal Complaint Was Filed By Rights Alliance

Given that Rights Alliance is behind most if not all pressure in Denmark that can lead to this type of response, TorrentFreak asked the anti-piracy company what it knows about these announcements. As it turns out, it knows quite a lot.

“The Rights Alliance filed a criminal complaint against HNielsen Networks, the Danish company behind Seedbox.io and Walkerservers, in March this year for facilitating copyright infringements by providing seedbox servers pre-installed with software for torrenting and providing customer support for using their services on illegal torrent sites,” explained Ditte Rie Agerskov, Head of Communications at Rights Alliance.

“Seedboxes greatly increase the efficiency of illegal torrent activity. This facilitation is similar in nature to the Filmspeler service that the European Court of Justice has looked at in its case law.”

The Filmspeler case involved Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN and Netherlands-based Filmspeler.nl (Movie Player). The online store sold piracy-configured media players that came with pre-installed add-ons containing hyperlinks to websites from where copyrighted works such as movies, TV shows and live broadcasts were made available without copyright holders’ permission.

Filmspeler lost that fight after the battle went all the way to the European Court of Justice. As a result, the case has been cited in many separate copyright infringement discussions since, sometimes with references to how those devices were marketed and the sellers’ stated aim of allowing customers to access content for free.

Rights Alliance also highlights the existence of criminal precedents in Denmark stating contributory infringement related to “illegal infrastructure.” These include the convictions of men who provided detailed instructions on how to use the piracy app ‘Popcorn Time’.

HNielsen Networks Responds

Speaking with TorrentFreak, Kasper Nielsen of HNielsen Networks acknowledges that an investigation is underway but to comply with legal standards in Denmark, wouldn’t comment on its status. However, he does confirm that he never received any approach from Rights Alliance over alleged wrongdoing. No abuse reports were sent to his hosting providers and, until recently, he had no idea what was going on.

He also insists that Rights Alliance’s claim, that his company provided customers with support to use “illegal torrent sites”, is wrong. Support is only given on how to use the platform his company provides.

“We do not provide that kind of support, in fact we have denied it to clients that have come seeking for it. We provide support for our platform – application-specific issues like programs not responding etc.”

Nielsen also believes that comparing his business with that previously operated by Filmspeler (the case cited by Rights Alliance) is somewhat of a stretch.

“There’s a pretty large difference between the two cases. Filmspeler provided a box that was preconfigured for piracy with addons leading to copyright-protected content but this is not the case on our end. We provide a clean (blank) installation with a set of applications that are in their default settings, there are no links to copyrighted content nor is there any content on the server when you purchase the service,” he says.

“In essence here, I am being investigated as a hosting provider for what my users are using my services for. There’s no encouragement to doing things illegally from our side, that would be up to the end-user and how they want to handle it.”

In respect of responding to reports of abuse, copyright complaints included, HNielsen Networks says that all are responded to and, when required, content is removed from servers. In this case, however, none were sent by the opposing parties.

“Had the Rights Alliance sent in abuse notices for all the cases here then they would have been handled accordingly. There’s a really firm, strict policy inhouse on how these are handled,” Nielsen concludes.

Blocking Decision by Ultra.cc Was “A Smart Move”

Around the same time that WalkerServers and Seedbox.io announced they would block three torrent sites, another provider called Ultra.cc said it would take similar action. In this case, the provider said it would block four unnamed sites to protect its users.

“We would like to inform that we have taken the decision to block 4 websites from our servers. This decision came after the evaluation to protect our clients and their privacy. Our clients is our priority and sometimes we have to take the bold decisions in order to protect them and our business [sic],” the announcement reads.

“Please note that we received no court order or warning this is just a precautionary measure. We at Ultra.cc take privacy, security, and concerns surrounding them very seriously.”

The blocking actions of all three seedbox providers have already been observed by Rights Alliance who say that, while they can’t comment on the ongoing police investigation, they can confirm that users are reporting issues with connecting their seedboxes to several sites. In respect of Ultra.cc, they say that blocking was the correct course of action.

“As our actions during the past year have shown we are targeting all parts of the illegal market from operators to users and illegal infrastructure. So we look at Ultraseedbox’s actions related to the blocking of illegal torrent sites as a smart move that others should follow,” the anti-piracy group concludes.

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

Ars is reviewing Amazon’s The Wheel of Time series

Two book readers will be your guide through the series’ screen adaptation.

Promotional image for upcoming streaming fantasy series.

Enlarge / The hotly anticipated Wheel of Time series debuts on November 19, 2021, on Amazon Prime. (credit: Amazon Prime)

Amazon's adaptation of The Wheel of Time series begins airing on November 19 after years of development and false starts. And as Ars Technica's resident WoT book nerds, Andrew Cunningham (that's me) and Lee Hutchinson will be here to recap the first season for you, episode by episode. We've both read Robert Jordan's (and, later, Brandon Sanderson's) 14-volume fantasy epic from end to end more than once, and it would be a shame to let such a ridiculous time investment go to waste!

The Wheel of Time series in its current iteration has been in the works since at least 2016, when Wheel of Time copyright owner (and Robert Jordan's wife and editor) Harriet McDougal teased a "cutting edge TV series" from a "major studio" in the wake of a terrible low-budget pilot that aired in the wee hours one day in early 2015. Amazon has put some serious marketing muscle behind the series, with a slow-but-steady drip of trailers and promotional images, plus a gigantic interactive page walking you through the series' main characters and some of its complex lore. Amazon has also already renewed the series for a second season.

Sprawling, multi-book series like WoT can be tough to adapt, as we learned from watching the highs and lows of HBO's Game of Thrones over its eight-year run. Plot arcs need to be streamlined, tweaked, or dropped altogether; new characters are invented while existing ones (including fan-favorites!) are skipped over; and the unlimited special effects produced in the human mind need to be replicated by the finite capabilities of computer-generated imagery.

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Google loses appeal, faces €2.4 billion shopping antitrust fine

The case, which started in 2009, could still be subject to one more appeal.

Google loses appeal, faces €2.4 billion shopping antitrust fine

(credit: MTSOfan)

Google and the European Union are still battling it out over various product-bundling schemes across Google's empire. The latest news has to do with Google Shopping's integration with Google Search. In 2017, the EU ruled that Google Shopping's integration with Search was a violation of antitrust laws. Today, Google lost its appeal, and the court held up the €2.4 billion ($2.8 billion) fine. Google can still appeal the ruling one more time, but this time, the company would go before the European Court of Justice (ECJ), the highest court in the EU.

As in many other antitrust lawsuits that Google is facing around the world, EU regulators took issue with Google artificially promoting its own services over the competition on the search results page. Google Maps, Google Shopping, and Google Flights all automatically get premium spots above the organic search results.

Google's verticals provide Google Search results with rich, often helpful content that goes above and beyond the standard "10 blue links" interface, but there's no reason non-Google services can't also provide this data. Google often says that regulation will remove these rich results from search, but it has a whole "structured data format" that allows for rich results from non-Google sites, so the claim doesn't add up. Google regularly shows rich-result content from third-party sites today; it's just not pinned to the top of the page.

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Unity purchases Weta Digital’s visual-effects tool suite for $1.65 billion

Major deal continues the slow merging of movie-creation and game-creation tools.

A preciousssss deal for all involved.

Enlarge / A preciousssss deal for all involved.

Unity, the company best known for its line of popular video game engines, has announced plans to purchase the tech division of the Peter Jackson-led, New Zealand-based visual-effects studio Weta Digital for $1.625 billion in cash and stock.

The acquisition means that Weta's suite of visual-effects tools, popularized in movies like Lord of the RingsAvatar, and Wonder Woman, will eventually be integrated into Unity's cloud-based workflow and made available to millions of users, the company said in a press release announcing the move. Unity will also acquire the 275 engineers that build Weta's technology and "a library of thousands of incredible assets."

The Weta visual-effects team itself will remain as a standalone entity known as WetaFX, which will still be majority-owned by Jackson. Unity expects that entity to "become Unity’s largest customer in the Media and Entertainment space." Weta Workshop, which focuses on practical effects and props, will also remain separate.

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Mudita Pure minimalist E Ink phone is coming soon and its OS was just open sourced

The Mudita Pure is a simple phone with a 2.84 inch E Ink display, a number pad, and an emphasis on the “phone” part of smartphone, although it also supports a handful of apps including a calendar, calculator, notes, alarm clock, music player, and voice recorder. Under development for the past few years, the phone […]

The post Mudita Pure minimalist E Ink phone is coming soon and its OS was just open sourced appeared first on Liliputing.

The Mudita Pure is a simple phone with a 2.84 inch E Ink display, a number pad, and an emphasis on the “phone” part of smartphone, although it also supports a handful of apps including a calendar, calculator, notes, alarm clock, music player, and voice recorder.

Under development for the past few years, the phone is up for pre-order for $369, and it should begin shipping relatively soon – mass production is scheduled to begin on November 15th, with the first phones expected to begin shipping November 30th. Ahead of launch, the Mudita team has also announced that the MuditaOS software powering the phone is now open source.

Mudita Pure

The now fully open-sourced MuditaOS is built on top of FreeRTOS, but it features a custom user interface, apps, and other features designed to support the Mudita Pure phone’s hardware including an E Ink display, USB-C port, and cellular radio.

The Mudita Pure phone features a 2.84 inch, 600 x 480 pixel grayscale E Ink display with 270 pixels per inch, a 600 MHz ARM Cortex-M7 processor, 64MB of SDRAM, 16GB of eMMC storage, a 1,600 mAh user-replaceable lithium ion battery, and dual SIM support with support for 2G, 3G, and 4G LTE connections.

MuditaOS

Unlike most modern phones, the Mudita Pure does not have any WiFi or mobile data support. But it does support Bluetooth 4.2 and you can tether it to a computer with a USB cable, allowing you to use the phone as a cellular modem for a computer when running the Mudita Center software on your PC.

The team has also open sourced that Mudita Center companion app, which, in addition to tethering, allows you to sync contacts and calendar info, and upload audio to a computer, among other things.

Mudita Center

After the phone begins shipping, the developers also plan to open source its Mudita Launcher Android app, which lets you put a minimalistic UI on Android phones, and the Mudita Storage component of the Mudita Space set of privacy-focused apps.

 

The post Mudita Pure minimalist E Ink phone is coming soon and its OS was just open sourced appeared first on Liliputing.

One6G: Was an 5G nicht stimmt

Netzbetreiber und Ausrüster fügen erste Teile für 6G zusammen. Huawei setzt hier auch auf Optical Wireless. (6G, Huawei)

Netzbetreiber und Ausrüster fügen erste Teile für 6G zusammen. Huawei setzt hier auch auf Optical Wireless. (6G, Huawei)

HP takes printer troubleshooting into mixed reality for some reason

HP’s new service handles printer problems—but why the headset?

HP claims using the mixed-reality service will ultimately save time.

Enlarge / HP claims using the mixed-reality service will ultimately save time. (credit: HP)

Whether a printer is out of ink or the paper is jammed, printer troubleshooting can be a pain. Now, with the "metaverse" just a head-mounted display away, printer repair can be easier. At least that's what HP is claiming with xRServices, a printer repair and support feature that uses Microsoft HoloLens 2 mixed-reality headsets.

Businesses that have a HoloLens 2 and buy HP's xRServices will be able to instantly connect to an HP engineer and ask about printer problems during "any point of their print production," HP's Monday announcement said.

The service targets companies that use HP's Industrial line of printers, the massive pieces of equipment you'll find in everything from standard offices to large warehouses. They can do things your printer at home can't, like print 6,000 sheets an hour.

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Toyota’s RAV4 Prime is a perfect plug-in hybrid for the range-anxious

It has around 40 miles of electric-only range and great efficiency in hybrid mode.

The $38,350 Toyota RAV4 Prime is one of the most in-demand plug-in hybrid EVs on sale today.

Enlarge / The $38,350 Toyota RAV4 Prime is one of the most in-demand plug-in hybrid EVs on sale today. (credit: Toyota)

I wouldn't say that Toyota invented the crossover. But in 1994, the company debuted the first RAV4, an SUV with off-road-capable four-wheel drive—yet built on a unibody chassis, just like a Corolla. And its bold styling and decent on-road performance did a lot to popularize this new vehicle segment.

In the years since, the RAV4 has grown. Today's RAV4 is much larger than the original two-door model from the '90s, and it's now far and away Toyota's most popular offering. Here in the US, the RAV4 has outsold the Camry and Corolla—as well as the entire Lexus brand—by tens of thousands of units this year already.

That popularity is why it has taken a surprisingly long time to arrange this review. When Toyota announced it was making a plug-in hybrid version of its bestseller, demand was so great that the company prioritized getting cars into the hands of its customers rather than the media.

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