Comcast delays data caps in Northeast US for at least another year

Most Comcast customers are still capped, but Northeast states get another reprieve.

A Comcast gateway modem-and-router device labeled with the Xfinity brand name.

Enlarge / Comcast's xFi Advanced Gateway. (credit: Getty Images | Jeff Fusco )

Comcast says it won't deploy data caps in the Northeast US in 2022, giving another year's reprieve to 12 states and a few other areas where Comcast customers don't face overage fees. "We don't have plans to implement our data usage plan in our Northeast markets in 2022 at this time," Comcast said, according to a Light Reading article.

Comcast confirmed that quote to Ars today but declined to provide any further statement when asked about plans for 2023 and beyond. Comcast's statement came after Massachusetts state Rep. Andy Vargas, a Democrat, told WHAV that "the latest we have is that they have no intention of reintroducing the data caps at all, which is a huge win."

Vargas and 70 other Massachusetts lawmakers slammed Comcast a year ago when it announced a plan to start enforcing the data cap in the Northeast starting in January 2021.

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Players invest $54M in Molyneux’s NFT game Legacy in hopes of earning even more

But are these games a brave new world or a FOMO-driven gold rush bubble?

<em>Legacy</em> investors earn the ability to make more money in-game by crafting and selling unique items.

Enlarge / Legacy investors earn the ability to make more money in-game by crafting and selling unique items. (credit: 22cans)

On Saturday, Peter Molyneux's 22cans studio and blockchain gaming company Gala Games announced the first limited land sale in Legacy, an NFT-powered game being sold as "a creative entrepreneur’s dream come true." Less than a week later, early player-investors have already poured over $54 million into the virtual-land non-fungible tokens that make up the game, which isn't expected to launch until sometime next year.

How it works

Described as "the first ever Blockchain Business Sim," Legacy lets players design in-game products and buildings that are then manufactured by virtual workers in in-game factories. Players can trade those items with other players in an "open market" and compete in in-game competitions for "leaderboard positions and big prizes" (denominated in the game's own LegacyCoin cryptocurrency).

To participate in that in-game economy, though, you'll have to be a Legacy landowner. Currently, that means purchasing one of 4,661 available plots of land in a virtual recreation of London using the Gala Games marketplace (it's unclear how many more plots of Legacy land will eventually be made, if any).

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Daily Deals (12-16-2021)

Since launching a few years ago, the Epic Games Store has been giving away at least one PC game a week with new titles appearing on Thursdays. Today’s free game is Shenmue III. But tomorrow there will be a different free game. And another one the day after that, because Epic has kicked off a […]

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Since launching a few years ago, the Epic Games Store has been giving away at least one PC game a week with new titles appearing on Thursdays. Today’s free game is Shenmue III.

But tomorrow there will be a different free game. And another one the day after that, because Epic has kicked off a holiday giveaway spree. Should you also be in the mood to spend at least $5 on a PC game, there’s also an “Epic Coupon” that will let you save $10 on the purchase of any product in the Epic Games Store priced $15 or higher as long as you use the coupon by January 6, 2022.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

PC games

Downloads & Streaming

Devices

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YouTube Urges Court to Dismiss Chaotic Class Action Copyright Lawsuit

In the summer of 2020, musician Maria Schneider filed a class action lawsuit against YouTube demanding access to takedown tools and claiming that the service fails to terminate repeat copyright infringers. Almost 18 months later, YouTube wants the lawsuit dismissed, alleging that the plaintiffs are “hiding the ball” and “flouting the law”.

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

Sad YouTubeSince June 2020, we have been reporting on a class action lawsuit filed by Grammy award-winning musician Maria Schneider against YouTube.

Schneider’s grievances are many. They 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.

Given the nature of the complaint and especially since it targets one of the most powerful entities on the Internet, this was never going to be straightforward. As it transpires, progress has been nothing short of torturous.

Beginning with what YouTube described as fraudulent behavior by one of the plaintiffs through to demands to identify every single user on the platform that had received a takedown notice since 2015, the case has certainly lived up to the billing.

Throw into the mix a first amended complaint that added two new parties – Uniglobe Entertainment, LLC and AST Publishing – yet still failed to properly identify a single alleged copyright infringement relating to any of the parties – YouTube’s patience found itself stretched to the limit. Now, the Google-owned platform has had enough.

YouTube Wants The Entire Lawsuit Dismissed

“In this case filed nearly 18 months ago, Plaintiffs seek to assert copyright infringement claims on behalf of a sprawling putative class of copyright owners. One of the two original plaintiffs, Pirate Monitor, has since dismissed its claims with prejudice after YouTube uncovered proof of its wide-ranging fraud and after it acknowledged it did not own at least one of the copyrighted works it asserted,” YouTube informed the court this week.

“The other original plaintiff, Maria Schneider, faces insurmountable obstacles to her infringement claims, including because her publishing agent granted YouTube a blanket license to her musical works.”

Referencing the first amended complaint that added Uniglobe and AST, YouTube accuses them – along with Schneider – of “hiding the ball” on their claims.

Plaintiffs Ignored Court Order

One of the basics of copyright infringement lawsuits is to identify all of the copyrighted works affected but for reasons best known to the plaintiffs, this still hasn’t happened after 18 months, despite an order from the court.

“Ignoring this Court’s Order to identify all the copyrighted works at issue in the FAC [First Amended Complaint], Plaintiffs purport to reserve the right to pursue claims for new, unidentified works whenever they please. That not only flouts the Order, but also the law, which requires that all works at issue be identified in the operative pleading,” YouTube writes.

Another basic requirement of a copyright infringement lawsuit is to identify alleged infringements. That hasn’t happened either.

“The FAC does not identify a single video on YouTube that allegedly infringed Plaintiffs’ copyrights, much less identify at least one allegedly infringing video for each work at issue in the case,” the video platform adds.

“[T]o state a claim for infringement, a plaintiff cannot rely on generalized allegations of infringement, but must instead plead specifics. But there is not a single alleged infringement specified for any work identified in the FAC. Plaintiffs’ claims remain a moving target, significantly prejudicing YouTube’s ability to respond.”

This may represent a catch-22 for Schneider. The core of her complaint is that to easily identify infringements on YouTube, she needs access to Content ID, something that YouTube is not prepared to grant access to. By identifying the infringements in question without such access, it could raise questions about her demands.

Serious Copyright Registration Problems

Turning to the issue of copyright registrations, which are required to bring a claim in respect of allegedly infringed works, that is a problem too.

According to YouTube, the Copyright Office does not identify the plaintiffs as owners of the several works they cite in their complaint. Furthermore, official records show that Schneider and Uniglobe failed to obtain pre-suit copyright registration for many of the works in question.

“As a matter of law, the infringement claims as to those works cannot proceed. Uniglobe and AST also assert infringement claims based on unregistered foreign works and seek statutory damages and attorneys’ fees. But these remedies are legally unavailable for unregistered works,” YouTube adds.

YouTube Will Move to Dismiss The Case

Alleging that the plaintiffs are “still hiding the substance of their case” from the defendants some 18 months into the lawsuit, the companies say enough is enough.

“Plaintiffs’ refusal to provide basic information regarding their copyright infringement claims warrants dismissal of those claims,” they write.

YouTube and Google inform the court that they will move for an order to dismiss the claims of Schneider, Uniglobe and AST early March 2022.

The notice of motion and motion to dismiss can be found here (pdf)

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

RK3588 is Rockchip’s highest-performance processor to date, likely coming in 2022

Chinese chip maker Rockchip started talking about the RK3588 octa-core processor more than two years ago, but due to a series of delays it has yet to actually ship. That could change soon. The company shared detailed specs and benchmark results for its highest-performance processor to date during the 2021 Rockchip Developer Conference. And at […]

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Chinese chip maker Rockchip started talking about the RK3588 octa-core processor more than two years ago, but due to a series of delays it has yet to actually ship.

That could change soon. The company shared detailed specs and benchmark results for its highest-performance processor to date during the 2021 Rockchip Developer Conference. And at least two companies are planning to launch single-board computers with RK3588 processors in 2022.

The RK3588 processor’s feature set includes:

  • 4 x ARM Cortex-A76 CPU cores at up to 2.6 GHz
  • 4 x ARM Cortex-A55 CPU cores at up to 1.8 GHz
  • ARM Mali-G610 MP4 graphics
  • NPU (neural processing unit) with up to 6 TOPS of AI performance
  • Support for up to 8K/60Hz video decoding
  • Support for PCIe 3.0, USB 3.1 Gen 1, and dual Gigabit Ethernet

While those specs won’t be enough to make this processor competitive with the latest ARM-based flagship chips from Qualcomm or MediaTek, the new chip should offer a major performance boost over older Rockchip processors like the popular RK3399, a hexa-core chip found in a number of older Chromebooks, single-board, computers, and and even some laptops like the PineBook Pro low-cost Linux laptop.

In benchmarks provided to CNX-Software, the RK3588 offers a 2.7X single-core performance boost in Geekbench 4, and a 3.4X improvement in multi-core performance. It also offers up to 6X the graphics performance.

According to Pine64’s Lukasz Erecinski, the new chip brings “entry-level desktop-class ARM CPU performance and plenty of IO options,” and it’s likely that Pine64 and other companies will use the RK3588 processor in upcoming single-board computers and other products.

You can find more details about the RK3588 processor at CNX-Software, including the full 35-page datasheet and a roundup of key details.

 

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Focusing sound vibrations precisely can knock over one Lego minifig among many

The key is a signal processing technique that is akin to ventriloquism.

Brian Anderson's experiments with Lego minifigs led to the development of an interactive museum exhibit in Switzerland.

Enlarge / Brian Anderson's experiments with Lego minifigs led to the development of an interactive museum exhibit in Switzerland. (credit: Brian Anderson)

Legos are a beloved staple of educational science activities and have even proved useful in particle physics experiments at CERN to explore the properties of hadrons. For Brian Anderson, a physicist at Brigham Young University, Legos are an essential component of his acoustics research. At a meeting of the Acoustical Society of America in Seattle earlier this month, Anderson described how he figured out how to focus sound-wave energy precisely enough to knock over a single Lego minifig without disturbing other minifigs clustered around it.

The key is a signal-processing technique called "time reversal," originally used by submarines in the 1960s to help focus signal transmission in the ocean. The name is a bit misleading, since it's sound waves that are being reversed, not time. The technique involves playing a sound (impulse) from a sound source—Anderson uses speakers for playing music through a computer or laptop—and using a sensor (like a microphone or a laser) at a targeted location on a metal plate to record the response to the impulse there.

That recording essentially maps the acoustic wave as it bounces around. One can then use software to reverse that signal and play it back so the waves retrace their steps and constructively interfere with each other, enabling Anderson to precisely focus that acoustic energy on the targeted location. The spatial extent of the focusing depends on the frequencies being used. Higher frequencies typically have smaller wavelengths, enabling Anderson to focus the acoustic energy to a more narrow point in space.

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Beelink GTI 11 mini PC with Intel Tiger Lake now available for $610 and up

The Beelink GTI 11 is a small desktop computer with an Intel Tiger Lake processor, Intel Iris Xe graphics, two 2.5 Gbps Ethernet jacks, and support for up to three displays. First unveiled in June, the computer was supposed to go up for pre-order through a crowdfunding campaign that never actually launched. But now the Beelink […]

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The Beelink GTI 11 is a small desktop computer with an Intel Tiger Lake processor, Intel Iris Xe graphics, two 2.5 Gbps Ethernet jacks, and support for up to three displays.

First unveiled in June, the computer was supposed to go up for pre-order through a crowdfunding campaign that never actually launched. But now the Beelink GTI 11 is available for purchase for about $610 and up.

Banggood is selling two models:

Both models are 6.6″ x 4.7″ x 1.5″ computers with support for up to 64GB of DDR4-3200 memory, an M.2 2280 connector for NVMe storage, another for SATA SSDs, and a drive bay  for a 2.5 inch hard drive or SSD (up to 7mm in height).

In addition to dual RJ45 Ethernet ports, the little computer supports WiFi 6 and Bluetooth 5.0 wireless connectivity and it has a selection of ports including:

  • 4 x USB 3.0 Type-A
  • 2 x USB 2.0 Type-A
  • 1 x USB Type-C
  • 1 x HDMI
  • 1 x DisplayPort
  • 1 x 3.5mm audio

There’s also a fingerprint reader on top of the case for biometric security.

Beelink says the GTI 11 had dual fans inside the case, which should help keep the system from overheating, but don’t expect silent operation.

The computer also comes with a VESA mount bracket that you can use to attach the PC to the back of a display or mount it to a wall.

via MiniMachines

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Smartphones with MediaTek Dimensity 9000 chips coming in Q1, 2022

The MediaTek Dimensity 9000 is a 4nm octa-core processor based on ARMv9 architecture. First unveiled about a month ago, it’s a chip that marks MediaTek’s return to the flagship smartphone processor space – for the past few years the company has been focusing more on the mid-range market. Now MediaTek has announced that the first phones […]

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The MediaTek Dimensity 9000 is a 4nm octa-core processor based on ARMv9 architecture. First unveiled about a month ago, it’s a chip that marks MediaTek’s return to the flagship smartphone processor space – for the past few years the company has been focusing more on the mid-range market.

Now MediaTek has announced that the first phones powered by Dimensity 9000 processors will ship in the first quarter of 2022.

Unsurprisingly, it looks like most of those phones will come from Chinese phone makers like Oppo, Vivo, Xiaomi, and Honor, but given the large market share held by those companies, that’s still a pretty big win for MediaTek.

Dimensity 9000 features include:

  • 1 x ARM Cortex-X2 CPU core @ 3.05 GHz
  • 3 x ARM Cortex-A710 CPU cores @ 2.85 GHz
  • 4 x ARM Cortex-A510 CPU cores
  • LPDDR5X memory @ 7500 Mbps
  • 8MB L3 cache
  • 6MB system cache
  • ARM Mali-G710 MC10 graphics
  • MediaTek HyperEngine 5.0 game technology
  • MediaTek APU 590 AI processor
  • MediaTek Imagiq 790 18-bit HDR-ISP with support for up to 320MP camera
  • MediaTek MirVision 790 chipset with support for up to 144 Hz WQHD+ displays or 180 Hz FHD+ displays
  • 5G sub-6GHz modem with up to 7 Gbps download speeds
  • WiFi 6E support
  • Bluetooth 5.3 support

But Dimensity’s new processor isn’t the only new flagship-class chip around. It will go head to head with Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip, which is also a 4nm, ARMv9 octa-core processor expected to arrive in flagship phones in early 2022. And if early benchmarks are anything to go by, one area where Qualcomm is likely to have a lead is in graphics performance.

 

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Union Busting bei Gorillas geht weiter

Der Lieferdienst Gorillas stemmt sich noch immer gegen die Wahl eines Betriebsrats und greift dafür tief in die Trickkiste

Der Lieferdienst Gorillas stemmt sich noch immer gegen die Wahl eines Betriebsrats und greift dafür tief in die Trickkiste