DMCA-Circumventing Cheat Maker Uses DMCA to Take Down Cracked Copy

Copyright law exists so that creators of all kinds can enjoy the fruits of their labor. But what if a piece of software, that appears to breach the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA to enable cheating in Genshin Impact, gets cracked by a third party and distributed online for free? Apparently, the logical first step by the creators is to claim breaches of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions.

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

genshin impactOver the past couple of years a number of high-profile lawsuits have been filed against individuals and groups who create cheating software for videogames.

Companies including Bungie, Riot Games, and Take-Two have all taken cheat makers to court for undermining their gaming environments and business models, claiming that these tools violate the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA.

Gator Cheats, for example, agreed to pay Riot and Bungie $2m to settle their case but despite the risks, many cheat makers and sellers have continued their work regardless, resulting in yet more lawsuits, most of which are filed in the US.

But what if you’re a maker of cheating software and upset that someone is pirating your work? Turns out the DMCA can be quite effective in combating that threat too.

Cheat Maker Releases Genshin XYZ

UnKnoWnCheaTs.me is a discussion forum dedicated to hacking and cheating in multiplayer games. It claims to be the oldest such forum on the internet and stresses that it does not promote the illegal use of software.

Mid-December a new release appeared on the forum titled ‘Genshin XYZ’, a piece of software that works with open-world action role-playing game Genshin Impact. Despite a reported development and marketing budget in excess of $100m, Genshin Impact is free to play but is monetized via gacha game mechanics.

The wide feature range of Genshin XYZ appears designed to undermine that monetization since the tool allows players to cheat their way to progress instead. This is the type of behavior that has attracted copyright infringement lawsuits in the past but in this case, the makers of Genshin XYZ are using copyright law to prevent piracy of their product.

Cheat Maker Targets Software ‘Cracker’

When the Genshin XYZ team made their latest release in December they announced that, unlike their previous releases, this cheating tool would come with a “special loader” that would help players to use the product. However, it appears that someone removed this element and released a ‘cracked’ version of the cheat tool on Github along with their own loader.

genshincheat

This clearly didn’t go down well with the Genshin XYZ team who responded with a DMCA takedown notice claiming that the cracker was infringing on their intellectual property rights.

DMCA’s Anti-Circumvention Provisions

“GenshinXYZ / GenshinPublic is our software being illegal cracked and distributed by the user in mention [sic],” a DMCA takedown notice filed at Github reads.

“The original software is a DLL which we publish inside a DLL loader programmed by us in C# with VMProtection. It should prevent third parties from redistributing and selling the DLL as their own.”

Somewhat interestingly, the notice claims that the cracked version of the cheat tool breaches the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA.

“They have cracked the C# loader to get the DLL. Then they built the DLL into their own loader, which they now distribute as ‘GenshinPublic’. The repository is an illegal crack and upload of our software and should be removed,” the notice adds.

Github’s Analysis Results in Takedown

That the creators of a cheat that almost certainly violates the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA attempted to have a copy taken down based on the same law is both novel and pretty ironic, to say the least. However, Github wasn’t convinced that the crack ‘pirate’ committed any offenses in that respect.

“While GitHub did not find sufficient information to determine a valid anti-circumvention claim, we determined that this takedown notice contains other valid copyright claim(s),” its note reads.

As a result, Github honored the takedown request on broader copyright infringement grounds and disabled the repository, which probably satisfied the cheat makers.

Nevertheless, it’s interesting to observe that people who seem happy to violate the DMCA on the one hand are also prepared to seek redress using the same law on the other.

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

Asus ROG Flow X13 compact gaming laptop gets a Ryzen 6000 refresh

A year after introducing the Asus ROG Flow X13 thin and light gaming laptop with support for up to a 35-watt AMD Ryzen 9 processor, Asus is launching an updated model that swaps the previous-gen Ryzen 5000 series processor for a new Ryzen 6000 series chip with Zen 3 CPU cores. The company is also upgrading […]

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A year after introducing the Asus ROG Flow X13 thin and light gaming laptop with support for up to a 35-watt AMD Ryzen 9 processor, Asus is launching an updated model that swaps the previous-gen Ryzen 5000 series processor for a new Ryzen 6000 series chip with Zen 3 CPU cores.

The company is also upgrading the built-in graphics from NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 to RTX 3050 Ti, bringing support for ray-tracing without the need for an external graphics card… although the new laptop does still have an XG port that allows you to connect an Asus XG Mobile graphics dock when you do need the extra graphics horsepower.

The new Asus ROG Flow X13 (2022) laptop supports up to:

  • 13.4 inch, 3840 x 2400 pixel touchscreen display
  • AMD Ryzen 9 6900HS processor
  • NVIDIA RTX 3050 Ti graphics
  • 32GB of LPDDR5 memory
  • 1TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD

The notebook also has a 360-degree hinge that allows you to use the computer in notebook, tablet, tent, or stand modes.

Asus will also offer some models with RTX 3050 graphics or no discrete GPU at all, although that doesn’t mean you won’t be able to use the laptop for gaming without an external graphics dock. AMD says its Radeon 680M integrated graphics offers up to twice the performance of the previous-gen, which could be all you need for at least some gaming or video/graphics tasks.

The laptop has HDMI 2.0b, 3.5mm audio, USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C and USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports plus a ROG XG Mobile interface for the optional docking station.

Other features include a 720p webcam, an array of 3 microphones, stereo speakers, a 62 Wh battery, a 100W USB-C power adapter that can give you a 50% charge in 30 minutes, and support for WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2. There’s also a fingerprint sensor built into the power button for biometric security, and the laptop has a backlit keyboard with 1.7mm key travel.

The notebook measures about 11.8″ x 8.7″ x 0.6″ and weighs less than 2.9 pounds.

Asus hasn’t yet announced pricing or availability details for the ROG Flow X13 (2022).

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Scientists train goldfish to drive a fish-operated vehicle on land

The fish learned to operate a fish tank on wheels.

A photoshopped image shows a goldfish dreaming of a sports car.

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

My favorite story I wrote in 2019 was about a research study that taught rats to drive, an activity that the rats appeared to enjoy. Today, we have another tale of lab animals getting behind the wheel, but this time the motorists in question weren't mammals—they were goldfish that learned how to drive a fish-operated vehicle (FOV) in a terrestrial environment.

What's the point of this experiment? In the driving-rat study from 2019, the researchers were trying to look at environmental stress, and driving is an activity that turned out to reduce stress levels in the rats. This study, conducted by Shachar Givon and colleagues at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Israel and published in Behavioral Brain Research, aimed to discover something a little different.

Specifically, the idea was to see if the fishes' navigation skills are universal and work in extremely unfamiliar environments, a concept known as domain transfer methodology. And you have to admit that driving a tank inside an enclosure in a research lab is a pretty unfamiliar environment for a goldfish.

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Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 gaming laptop update brings Ryzen 9 6900HS, Radeon RX 6800S and a webcam

Over the past few years the Asus ROG Zephryus G14 has earned a reputation as a high-performance gaming laptop with a compact but stylish body thanks to a grid of LED lights on the lid that allows you to customize the look of the laptop on some models. This year’s model takes things to another […]

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Over the past few years the Asus ROG Zephryus G14 has earned a reputation as a high-performance gaming laptop with a compact but stylish body thanks to a grid of LED lights on the lid that allows you to customize the look of the laptop on some models.

This year’s model takes things to another level with a hardware refresh that includes upgrades to the CPU, graphics, and memory. But there are a few other changes as well. The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 2022 brings even more LED lights to the lid… and for the first time the laptop now has a webcam.

In previous years Asus had sacrificed the webcam under the assumption that most gamers wouldn’t miss it in a thin and light laptop. But video conferencing has become a much more ubiquitous activity since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, so it makes sense to include one in most laptops these days, even models aimed at gamers.

So the latest Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 has a 720p webcam above the display. It’s also an IR camera with support for Windows Hello face recognition, which means you can login to the laptop by looking at it.

The laptop also features an array of 3 microphones, quad speakers, and support for Dolby Atmos sound.

The Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 2022 features a 14 inch, IPS LCD display with a 3ms response time, support for Adaptive-Sync and a choice of 1920 x 1200 pixel 144 Hz or 2560 x 1600 120 Hz display panels.

Under the hood, the laptop is powered by up to an AMD Ryzen 9 6900HS mobile processor with 8 cores, 16 threads, and support for speeds up to 4.9 GHz and up to AMD Radeon RX 6800S graphics with 8GB of GDDR6 memory and up to 105 watts of power.

Asus says the notebook supports up to 32GB of DDR5-4800 memory and features an M.2 slot for PCIe Gen 4 storage.

Ports include:

  • 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (only one supports power input, both support display output)
  • 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A
  • 1 x HDMI 2.0b
  • 1 x 3.5mm combo audio
  • 1 x microSD card reader

Other features include a backlit keyboard with RGB lighting, a 76 Wh battery, support for WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2, and a 240W power supply.

The notebook measures about 12.3″ x 8.9″ x x 0.7″ and has a starting weight of about 3.64 pounds (or 3.79 pounds for configurations with the AniMe Matrix LED lighting on the display).

Speaking of the AniMe Matrix system, Asus has upgraded the number of machined holes to 14,969 and the number of mini LED lights to 1449, allowing users to create more complex graphics.

Asus hasn’t announced pricing or availability details for the new ROG Zephyrus G14 yet.

Asus is also refreshing the larger ROG Zephyrus G15 with the 2022 model supporting up to a Ryzen 9 6900HS processor and up to NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3080 Ti graphics. The 4.2 pound laptop measures less than 0.8 inches thick, features a 90 Wh battery, and has a 15.6 inch, 2560 x 1440 pixel display.

Asus ROG Zephyrus G15 (2022)

 

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Judge blocks Navy vaccine rule: “No COVID-19 exception to the First Amendment”

Navy Seals argued mandate violates First Amendment and religious freedom law.

Nurse wearing a mask and Navy uniform prepares a vaccine.

Enlarge / A Navy nurse prepares a syringe. (credit: Getty Images | petesphotography)

US Navy Seals who objected to COVID vaccination on religious grounds yesterday won a preliminary injunction that prohibits the Navy from enforcing its vaccine mandate.

"Thirty-five Navy Special Warfare service members allege that the military's mandatory vaccination policy violates their religious freedoms under the First Amendment and Religious Freedom Restoration Act," Judge Reed O'Connor wrote in the ruling out of US District Court for the Northern District of Texas. "The Navy provides a religious accommodation process, but by all accounts, it is theater. The Navy has not granted a religious exemption to any vaccine in recent memory. It merely rubber stamps each denial."

O'Connor, who was nominated by President Bush in 2007, found that the Navy service members are likely to win the case on the merits. He granted the injunction prohibiting the Navy from enforcing its mandate against the plaintiffs and "from taking any adverse action against Plaintiffs on the basis of Plaintiffs' requests for religious accommodation."

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Asus’ mechanical keyboard uses 312 mini LEDs to display animations

The board also continues the trend of unnecessarily high 8,000 Hz polling rates.

<3

Enlarge /

Asus announced an animated mechanical keyboard, the Asus ROG Strix Flare II Animate, at CES this week. It has many of the trendiest specs found in modern premium gaming keyboards, including an ultra-high polling rate. But it's the programmable LEDs that really make it stand out—and no, I'm not talking about RGB keys.

The ROG Strix Flare II Animate is a full-sized keyboard with media keys. Most keyboards' media keys are placed on the right side, above the numpad. The Asus keyboard's programmable metal volume roller and hot keys are on the left side. The space above the numpad is instead reserved for the keyboard's so-called "AniMe Matrix LED display."

The AniMe Matrix is composed of 312 mini LEDs that you can program via software to display your own images or animations. You can also set the mini LEDs to react to sounds coming from your game or provide indicators for battery life, keyboard brightness, or the keyboard's current RGB lighting mode.

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AMD announces one last Ryzen 5000 CPU while teasing all-new Ryzen 7000 series

Ryzen 5800X3D will probably be the last stop for the venerable AM4 CPU socket.

AMD's Lisa Su holds up an early sample of a Zen 4 CPU.

Enlarge / AMD's Lisa Su holds up an early sample of a Zen 4 CPU. (credit: AMD)

AMD didn't offer much news on its desktop processors at its CES press conference this morning, but it did offer a brief preview of its next-generation Ryzen 7000 processors and its Zen 4 architecture. These chips will be released in the second half of 2022 and will require an all-new motherboard with a new AM5 processor socket.

We know few details about the Ryzen 7000 CPUs, except that they'll be built on a 5nm TSMC manufacturing process and that the sample AMD demonstrated onstage was running at 5 GHz (the current 5950X tops out at 4.9 GHz). We also didn't hear anything about the AM5 socket that we didn't already know—just that it will be a Land Grid Array (LGA) socket that puts the pins on the motherboard rather than on the bottom of the processor, the same as Intel's desktop chips. We also know that CPU coolers made for AM4 motherboards should continue to work on AM5 boards.

AMD has been using the physical AM4 socket since 2016, but it still has a little life left in it—the new Ryzen 7 5800X3D CPU is an 8-core, 16-thread chip that uses the AM4 socket and improves speeds by stacking L3 cache on top of the processor die, something that AMD calls "3D V-Cache technology." This both increases the cache's bandwidth and the amount of cache; the standard 5800X includes just 32 MB of cache, compared to the 5800X3D's 96 MB.

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Asus ROG Flow Z13 is a gaming tablet with RTX 3050 Ti graphics and Intel Alder Lake-H

A few years ago Asus stuffed the guts of a high-performance gaming laptop into a 17.3 inch tablet called the Asus ROG Mothership. But with a weight of 10.3 pounds, it wasn’t exactly portable. Gaming-class chips have gotten a lot more energy efficient since then, allowing Asus to shrink things considerably for the new Asus ROG […]

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A few years ago Asus stuffed the guts of a high-performance gaming laptop into a 17.3 inch tablet called the Asus ROG Mothership. But with a weight of 10.3 pounds, it wasn’t exactly portable.

Gaming-class chips have gotten a lot more energy efficient since then, allowing Asus to shrink things considerably for the new Asus ROG Flow Z13, a gaming tablet with a 13 inch display, a 12th-gen Intel Core-H processor, and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 Ti graphics.

Asus says its new tablet will be available with either a full HD display with a 120 Hz refresh rate or a 4K 60 Hz display. Both are 16:10 aspect ratio displays with support for 500 nits of peak brightness, Adaptive-Sync technology, and Dolby Vision.

The Asus ROG Flow Z13 will be available with up to an Intel Core i9-12900H processor, which is 45-watt processor with 14 CPU cores, 20 threads, and Intel Iris Xe integrated graphics.

The tablet also features LPDDR5-5200 memory, a PCIe SSD, a custom vapor chamber for cooling, and support for USB-C fast charging. And it can work like a 2-in-1 laptop thanks to a keyboard cover and a built-in kickstand with support for up to a 180-degree angle adjustments.

While the tablet has integrated graphics built-in for gaming on the go, the RTX 3050 Ti GPU isn’t exactly best-in-class hardware. So the tablet also features an Asus XG connector that you can use to connect a proprietary Asus XG Mobile external graphics dock with support for up to an NVIDIA RTX 3080 or AMD Radeon RX 6850M XT graphics card.

The dock also has HDMI, DisplayPort, Ethernet, and USB ports, allowing it to function as a desktop docking station for the ROG Flow Z13 tablet.

Asus says the ROG Zephyrus Flow Z13 will sell for $1899, but keep in mind that this price is for the tablet alone and doesn’t include the XG Mobile graphics dock.

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The James Webb Telescope is now super cool (thanks to its new sunshield)

“It was a wonderful moment. A lot of joy. A lot of relief.”

On Jan. 4, 2022, engineers successfully completed the deployment of the James Webb Space Telescope’s sunshield, seen here during its final deployment test on Earth in December 2020 at Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, California.

Enlarge / On Jan. 4, 2022, engineers successfully completed the deployment of the James Webb Space Telescope’s sunshield, seen here during its final deployment test on Earth in December 2020 at Northrop Grumman in Redondo Beach, California. (credit: NASA)

NASA has not finished deploying the James Webb Space Telescope yet, but the scientists and engineers working on the $10 billion instrument are feeling a lot better today.

As of late Tuesday morning, NASA and the telescope's primary contractor, Northrop Grumman, successfully stretched all five layers of the telescope's sunshield. This step completed the critical process of deploying the telescope's massive and essential sunshield, which keeps the telescope cold so that it can make delicate observations of faint objects.

"The mood is hard to describe," said Hilary Stock, a structural engineer at Northrop Grumman who worked on the sunshield "tensioning" Monday and Tuesday, during a teleconference with reporters. "It was a wonderful moment. A lot of joy. A lot of relief."

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New solar roof emulates asphalt shingles, right down to the nails

Streamlined installation should cut costs over competing solar roofs.

Installers nail GAF Energy's new solar shingles to a demonstration house.

Enlarge / Installers nail GAF Energy's new solar shingles to a demonstration house. (credit: GAF Energy)

A new solar technology introduced yesterday at CES could bring power-producing roofs mainstream by relying on an old building material—nails.

For years, homeowners who wanted solar power have stripped their old roofs of shingles, added new ones, and then slapped large solar panels on top using sturdy frames. It’s a model that works well, but it also creates a two-step process that engineers have been striving to simplify.

Plenty of companies have offered their own take on solar roofs, but so far, they’ve remained niche products. GAF Energy is hoping to change that with the Timberline Solar Energy Shingle that looks strikingly like typical asphalt shingles. But their key feature isn’t so much that they emulate the look of asphalt shingles, but that they’re installed in nearly the same way. Roofers can slap the flexible sheets down and nail the top strip to the roof, just like they do for traditional roofs.

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