YouTube Rippers Oppose $82 Million ‘Piracy’ Damages Recommendation

YouTube rippers FLVTO.biz and 2conv.com are opposing Magistrate Judge Buchanan’s recommendation to award $82 million in piracy damages to the RIAA. The Judge’s findings are in direct contravention of the law, they argue, because the music companies failed to provide evidence of any infringing activity taking place in the United States.

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

dollarsLast October, 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 the order, there is a clear need to deter the behavior of Kurbanov who failed to hand over evidence including server logs. “A less drastic sanction is unlikely to salvage this case,” the Judge wrote.

$82 million Damages Award?

Following this win, the RIAA 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 were taken up in a report and recommendation issued by Magistrate Judge Buchanan last month.

“Defendant’s Websites caused the Plaintiffs to lose profits and streaming revenue because of the enormous internet traffic to and use of the Websites’ stream-ripping functions,” Judge Buchanan wrote.

The recommendation is yet to be accepted by the court but according to Kurbanov’s legal team, this shouldn’t happen. In an opposition brief filed late last week, they point out that the Judge made several errors.

The default judgment confirmed that the operator of the sites is liable. However, the defense believes that this doesn’t automatically mean that the music companies are entitled to damages. They still have to prove that the songs were ripped through the sites in the United States.

No Evidence of Infringements

The music companies provided hundreds of pages of evidence and argued that 1,618 works were infringed. However, there is no evidence of any of these infringements actually taking place, the defense argues.

“The law on this point is exceedingly clear: regardless of the fact that the Court defaulted Mr. Kurbanov, Plaintiffs were required to prove the facts that would entitle them to recover the damages sought,” Kurbanov’s opposition brief reads.

“Plaintiffs 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.”

Judge Buchanan stressed that the music companies were not required to provide this evidence because it can be presumed from the default judgment. However, Kurbanov’s lawyer points to jurisprudence that contests this.

‘Proposed Damages are Too High’

Even if the court agrees that statutory damages are appropriate in this case, the suggested amount of $50,000 per copyright infringement is too high, according to the defense.

The opposition brief points out that Mr. Kurbanov himself is not accused of downloading any songs. He simply built his site around the open-source software youtube-dl that is freely available to anyone on the Internet.

“It is Plaintiffs’ contention that the youtube-dl software (which Mr. Kurbanov did not himself create) circumvents technological measures put in place by Youtube (and not by the Plaintiffs). It is far from clear, however, that youtube-dl ‘circumvents’ anything and, indeed, many experts have concluded that it does not.”

This refers to a letter from the EFF which argued that youtube-dl does not circumvent technological measures. And since Mr. Kurbanov did not himself use the software to download any songs, his infringement should be considered “innocent,” resulting in the lowest amount of statutory damages, $200 per work.

Meanwhile, the additional damages per DMCA violation should be scrapped entirely. These damages apply to the same works and the music companies cannot recover damages twice for the same “injury”, the defense argues.

‘No Worldwide Injunction’

Finally, the court should not accept the permanent injunction suggested by the Judge. That order would apply worldwide, which means that it would apply outside of the court’s jurisdiction.

“In its current form, the proposed injunction exceeds this Court’s jurisdictional powers and so, at a minimum, should only be adopted insofar as it enjoins Mr. Kurbanov and his Websites from providing certain services to visitors from the United States.

“And, indeed, given that Mr. Kurbanov voluntarily blocked access to the Websites from the United States, it is questionable as to whether any such injunction is necessary,” the defense adds.

That last comment could have broader implications. The YouTube rippers did indeed block all traffic from the United States a few months ago. This means that an injunction that’s limited to the U.S. would have no additional effect.

There is another complication. If the music companies are indeed required to deliver additional evidence to show that infringements take place in the U.S., they can no longer do so because U.S. traffic remains blocked.

We expect that the last word hasn’t been said on this matter. Before the court reaches a final decision, the RIAA is likely to have its say as well.

A copy of Mr. Kurbanov’s objections to Magistrate Judge Buchanan’s report and recommendations is available here (pdf)

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

Alienware Concept Nyx brings game streaming to home networks

Have multiple gamers in your household, but don’t really have the budget for multiple high-end gaming rigs? One option is game streaming, which allows you to stream games over the internet to your laptop, phone, tablet, or other devices using services like Google’s Stadia or NVIDIA’s GeForce Now. But the folks at Dell’s Alienware gaming […]

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Have multiple gamers in your household, but don’t really have the budget for multiple high-end gaming rigs? One option is game streaming, which allows you to stream games over the internet to your laptop, phone, tablet, or other devices using services like Google’s Stadia or NVIDIA’s GeForce Now.

But the folks at Dell’s Alienware gaming brand have another idea: instead of streaming games over the internet, why not stream them over a local network? That’s the idea behind Concept Nyx, which is basically a gaming-optimized home server that can stream games to up to four devices on your home network at once.

Dell isn’t saying much about the hardware that makes Nyx work. But the company did show off a demo of Nyx in action to journalists at tech news sites including Ars Technica and The Verge, and it seems to at least work for short gaming sessions.

According to Dell, Nyx works a lot like cloud gaming… but since games are streamed over your local network rather than from remote servers, there’s potential for lower latency and higher bandwidth for a better gaming experience.

Putting all of your games on a central server also makes organizing and accessing your titles across multiple devices as simple as pulling up your music or movie library using Plex or other home media server tools.

But there’s no guarantee that Concept Nyx will ever actually see the light of day. Right now it’s described as an “R&D project,” and it has the word concept right there in its name. In case you needed a reminder that Dell and Alienware concepts don’t always become real products, you need look no further than the game controller the company is using to show off its Nyx prototype hardware – it’s the same controller used for Alienware’s Concept UFO handheld gaming PC that made its debut two years ago… and which never graduated from concept to real-thing-you-can-buy.

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Apple becomes first $3 trillion company after boost from pandemic demand

Market value rose by $1tn in

Apple becomes first $3 trillion company after boost from pandemic demand

Enlarge (credit: Anadolu Agency | Financial Times)

Apple has become the first company to hit a market capitalization of $3 trillion, after its value rose by $1 trillion in less than 16 months as the coronavirus pandemic turbocharged Big Tech.

The iPhone maker became a $1 trillion company in August 2018 and two years later became the first company to be valued at $2 trillion. On Monday, shares in the company rose by 3 percent to $182.86, taking it past the latest milestone, before easing back to trade at $182.

Apple briefly lost its title as the world’s most valuable company to Microsoft at the end of October. However, a strong rally in November restored its crown. It then surged higher into the end of 2021 and has added half a trillion dollars to its market value since November 15.

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Backwards capacitor causes fiery failure for some high-end Asus motherboards

Asus has issued a statement and recall about affected Z690 boards.

Extreme close-up photograph of damaged computer component.

Enlarge / Burned out MOSFETs on an Asus Z690 motherboard. (credit: Reddit user Duhjahno)

Intel's high-end 12th-generation Core processors use a lot of power and generate a lot of heat, but Asus' ROG Maximus Z690 Hero motherboard takes things to the next level. A "potential reversed memory capacitor" in some boards can cause them to catch on fire.

The problem was initially hunted down by the Actually Hardware Overclocking YouTube channel, which diagnosed the issue using images from Reddit users and posters on Asus' support forums whose boards had failed. The reversed capacitor causes increased current leakage, which generates heat that subsequently burns out the neighboring MOSFET transistors. Users with the flipped capacitors noted that they noticed a burning smell or even fire before their systems shut down. Once the MOSFETs have burned out, the motherboard's built-in status display will show error code 53, indicating that the motherboard doesn't detect any installed RAM.

Not all ROG Maximus Z690 Hero boards have the capacitor installed backwards, and the Actually Hardware Overclocking video shows you the exact place to look to see if the capacitor has been installed properly or not. Entering your motherboard's serial number into Asus' support page for the problem will tell you for sure whether your board is affected, and the page will walk you through contacting Asus support to get a replacement.

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Samsung’s 2022 TVs get 144 Hz support and a built-in NFT marketplace

Micro LED TVs saw some improvements this year, too.

Promotional image of high-end TV set.

Enlarge / Here's the first publicly released render of Samsung's new Mini LED TV. (credit: Samsung)

It's that time of year again: The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is upon us, and companies like Samsung are announcing the first details of their 2022 product refreshes. That includes Samsung's flagship TV lineup, which will this year see an iterative step over last year's models.

The company's line of popular, high-end Mini LED 4K and 8K TVs (which it calls its "Neo QLED" line) isn't seeing any radical changes this year. Rather, the line will get small improvements to picture and sound quality.

First off, these TVs now support 4K input at 144 Hz in addition to 120 Hz. Unless you're using your TV as a computer monitor for high-skill, pro or semi-pro esports on a high-end gaming PC, the bump from 120 Hz support to 144 Hz isn't going to mean much. And even then, it's still not significant. Samsung is just looking for a place to one-up competitors on specs any way it can.

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AT&T and Verizon back down in standoff with FAA, agree to 5G delay [Updated]

Battle over aviation industry’s unproven interference claims intensifies.

A person on an airplane using a smartphone to take a photo through the window.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Marco Bottigelli)

Update at 11:20 pm ET: AT&T and Verizon reversed course on Monday night, announcing that they agreed to the request for a two-week delay of their 5G rollouts on C-Band frequencies, according to reports from several news organizations. "At Secretary [of Transportation Pete] Buttigieg's request, we have voluntarily agreed to one additional two-week delay of our deployment of C-Band 5G services," an AT&T spokesperson said, according to CNN. "We also remain committed to the six-month protection zone mitigations we outlined in our letter. We know aviation safety and 5G can co-exist and we are confident further collaboration and technical assessment will allay any issues."

Verizon also confirmed to news organizations that it agreed to the delay, despite both carriers rejecting the request from Buttigieg and the Federal Aviation Administration yesterday. While the two-week delay applies nationwide, it isn't clear whether AT&T and Verizon will agree to the FAA's request for longer delays in areas surrounding airports.

Original story as published on January 3, 2022 at 2:50 pm ET follows:

AT&T and Verizon yesterday rejected a Federal Aviation Administration request to further delay a 5G rollout on C-Band frequencies but said they will adopt one of the world's "most conservative" power limits near airports for six months after the planned January 5 deployment. This is in addition to other voluntary limits the carriers recently announced even though it has been almost two years since the Federal Communications Commission determined that use of the spectrum should not interfere with properly designed airplane altimeters.

"Specifically, for six months, until July 5, 2022, we will adopt the same C-Band radio exclusion zones that are already in use in France, with slight adaptation to reflect the modest technical differences in how C-Band is being deployed in the two countries," the carriers said in yesterday's letter. "That approach—which is one of the most conservative in the world—would include extensive exclusion zones around the runways at certain airports. The effect would be to further reduce C-Band signal levels by at least 10 times on the runway or during the last mile of final approach and the first mile after takeoff."

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Daily Deals (1-03-2022)

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away three recent Tomb Raider titles for a few more days, but those aren’t the only game giveaways at the moment. Amazon Prime members can snag a bunch of free titles this month including Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, Total War: Warhammer, and World War Z: Aftermath. […]

The post Daily Deals (1-03-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away three recent Tomb Raider titles for a few more days, but those aren’t the only game giveaways at the moment.

Amazon Prime members can snag a bunch of free titles this month including Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, Total War: Warhammer, and World War Z: Aftermath. And GOG is giving away Iratus: Lord of the Dead today.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Downloads & Streaming

Laptops & Tablets

Wireless earbuds

PC & mobile accessories

Other

The post Daily Deals (1-03-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Daily Deals (1-03-2022)

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away three recent Tomb Raider titles for a few more days, but those aren’t the only game giveaways at the moment. Amazon Prime members can snag a bunch of free titles this month including Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, Total War: Warhammer, and World War Z: Aftermath. […]

The post Daily Deals (1-03-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away three recent Tomb Raider titles for a few more days, but those aren’t the only game giveaways at the moment.

Amazon Prime members can snag a bunch of free titles this month including Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, Total War: Warhammer, and World War Z: Aftermath. And GOG is giving away Iratus: Lord of the Dead today.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Downloads & Streaming

Laptops & Tablets

Wireless earbuds

PC & mobile accessories

Other

The post Daily Deals (1-03-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Jury in Elizabeth Holmes trial deadlocked on 3 of 11 counts

Jurors have been deliberating for six days.

Former Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes goes through security after arriving for court at the Robert F. Peckham Federal Building on September 17, 2021, in San Jose, California.

Enlarge / Former Theranos founder and CEO Elizabeth Holmes goes through security after arriving for court at the Robert F. Peckham Federal Building on September 17, 2021, in San Jose, California. (credit: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

Jurors in the Elizabeth Holmes criminal trial have been unable to reach a verdict in three of the 11 counts of fraud she has been charged with, according to a note read in court today.

Eight men and four women have been deliberating for more than 40 hours over six days, much of which occurred before an extended holiday weekend. Today is their first day back from break.

It’s unclear what decision the jury reached in the eight counts they have been able to agree on. 

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NASA might just pull off the James Webb Space Telescope deployment

“I don’t expect any drama.”

The James Webb Space Telescope lifts off from French Guiana on an Ariane 5 rocket on December 25.

Enlarge / The James Webb Space Telescope lifts off from French Guiana on an Ariane 5 rocket on December 25. (credit: ESA - S. Corvaja)

Nine days after the launch of the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA says it has made good progress deploying the $10 billion instrument and has now begun the critical process of "tensioning" the sunshield.

On Monday, six motors on board the telescope began the process of fully extending the first of five layers of the sunshield. These tennis-court sized layers, each made of a polyimide film called Kapton, will shade the instrument and allow it to cool down to 50 Kelvin, which is -223 degrees Celsius and just 50 degrees above absolute zero. This cold environment is critical for Webb to observe infrared light and detect heat from very distant objects.

NASA's Webb project manager, Bill Ochs, said the first of these five layers should be completely deployed by the end of Monday. The goal is to extend the other four layers on Tuesday and Wednesday. After this time, the massive sunshield—the most complex aspect of an intricate deployment process—will be complete.

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