OSHA will try a different route to a vaccine mandate for businesses

The Supreme Court blocked its first choice, but there are other routes available.

Image of a gloved hand holding a cotton ball to a person's arm.

Enlarge (credit: OSHA)

On Tuesday, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) announced it was withdrawing its planned vaccine mandate for businesses with 100 or more employees. The decision comes in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling that blocked OSHA from implementing the mandate while lawsuits opposing it made their way through lower courts.

But the agency also indicated it as still working on getting the mandate implemented via a completely different, albeit slower, mechanism.

OSHA's initial attempt to implement a vaccine mandate was done under a clause of US law that allows the agency to issue temporary emergency standards in response to "new hazards." Reasoning that SARS-CoV-2 represents a new hazard, the emergency standard would require vaccination or testing, and apply to companies with 100 or more employees, provided those employees were not consistently working outdoors.

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Three new Star Wars video games are in development at EA, Respawn

EA’s exclusivity deal with Lucasfilm is ending, but EA is still making new games.

Screenshot from videogame Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order

Enlarge / Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order. Yes, the colon comes after the "Jedi." (credit: EA)

EA and Lucasfilm Games have jointly announced that three new Star Wars games are in development at Respawn, the studio that developed Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order.

Among those three planned games is a sequel to Fallen Order, which was a story-driven, Souls-like melee combat action and exploration game. The other two games include a first-person shooter and a strategy game, but EA's press release did not provide details about those titles beyond their respective genres.

The first-person shooter will be led by a former producer for the Star Wars: Battlefront franchise of online shooters set in the Star Wars universe. The strategy game will be produced by Respawn, but its lead developer will be Bit Reactor. Bit Reactor is a new studio formed in part by developers who previously worked on the recent entries in the XCOM franchise.

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WHO warns of potential for more variants as omicron subvariant found in US

“Learning to live with COVID cannot mean that we give this virus a free ride.”

A man with a loosened necktie stands in front of a logo for the World Health Organization.

Enlarge / World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus (credit: Getty | Fabrice Cof)

The head of the World Health Organization on Monday dampened optimism that the pandemic will subside in omicron's wake, noting that global conditions are still ideal for the emergence of new variants.

"There are different scenarios for how the pandemic could play out and how the acute phase could end," Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a WHO executive board meeting Monday. "But it is dangerous to assume that omicron will be the last variant or that we are in the endgame. On the contrary, globally, the conditions are ideal for more variants to emerge."

Many US experts and officials have expressed cautious hope that the towering omicron wave could signal the final throes of the pandemic. In this beatific vision, the country will see a lull in transmission after COVID-19 cases peak and decline. With at least 15.8 million people infected just since the start of this year, the ultratransmissible variant is significantly boosting collective immunity across the US, which already has 63 percent of the population fully vaccinated.

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Lilbits: NVIDIA’s ARM acquisition may not happen, plus Samsung Galaxy S22, Motorola Frontier 22, and Google Pixel Notepad leaks

It’s been more than a year since NVIDIA announced plans to buy chip designer Arm from Softbank. Since then the deal has been heavily scrutinized by antitrust regulators from across the globe and it’s looking increasingly likely that the company will be forced to abandon the acquisition. Now Bloomberg’s sources report that NVIDIA is prepared […]

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It’s been more than a year since NVIDIA announced plans to buy chip designer Arm from Softbank. Since then the deal has been heavily scrutinized by antitrust regulators from across the globe and it’s looking increasingly likely that the company will be forced to abandon the acquisition. Now Bloomberg’s sources report that NVIDIA is prepared for that possibility… and so is Arm.

In other tech news from around the web, we have a series of leaked pictures showing Samsung’s next flagship smartphones, details about Motorola’s upcoming phone with a 200MP camera, and a potential price tag for Google’s upcoming Pixel foldable phone (it’s $1400). Plus, after BlackBerry shut down its services for legacy phones running BlackBerry OS, many users found that they could continue to use their devices… but it’s not exactly smooth sailing. Folks who tried resetting the operating system or adding new email accounts have run into trouble.

Here’s a roundup of recent tech news.

Nvidia Quietly Prepares to Abandon $40 Billion Arm Bid [Bloomberg]

NVIDIA’s planned $40 billion acquisition of Arm has faced skepticism from regulators around the globe. Now it looks like NVIDIA expects the deal to fall through, while Arm’s parent company Softbank is allegedly planning an IPO instead.

Samsung Galaxy S22 series rendered images [@evleaks]

Samsung Galaxy S22, S22+ and S22 Ultra images leaked by @evleaks ahead of Samsung’s next Unpacked event, which is expected to take place in February.

Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra (via @evleaks)

Motorola “Frontier 22” smartphone with 200MP camera leaked [WinFuture]

Motorola “Frontier 22” smartphone leak points to a July 22 launch for a flagship with a Qualcomm SM8475 chip (Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 Plus?), up to 12GB RAM, 256GB storage, 144 Hz display, and 200MP primary camera.

Motorola “Frontier 22” via WinFuture

Sources: This is Google’s target price for its ‘Pixel Notepad’ foldable [9to5Google]

Google’s upcoming “Pixel Notepad” could sell for around $1400, making it one of the most affordable foldable phone/tablet hybrids yet… although still more expensive than most traditional flagship phones.

RedMagic 7 will come with four firsts that you haven’t seen in any gaming phone yet [GizmoChina]

Red Magic’s next gaming phone is expected to have 165W fast charging support, top tier benchmark performance (and cooling performance), and a display with 100% P3 color gamut.

BlackBerry users are waking up to find that their phones still work… kind of [Liliputing]

Update: Some BlackBerry owners are continuing to use their phones after BlackBerry shut down its services for legacy phones running BB OS earlier this month. But some features have stopped working, making it tricky to reset a phone or add email accounts.

Left: BlackBerry Bold / Right: BlackBerry Passport

Google kills off FLoC, replaces it with Topics [TechCrunch]

Google’s much-maligned plan for a post-cookie world, called FLoC (Federated Learning of Cohorts) is dead. Instead the company has unveiled Topics, which will categorize sites you visit in the Chrome browser and pick adds based on your top… topics. It still means you browser will be a part of the targeted advertising process (if you use Chrome, that is), but Google says websites and users will be able to opt out of using the Topics API altogether. 

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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Starlink preps rugged user terminal that may avoid “thermal shutdown” problem

Fixed earth station would bring Starlink to buildings in harsher environments.

A Starlink satellite dish mounted on a roof.

Enlarge / The current Starlink user terminal. Images of the planned ruggedized terminal aren't available yet. (credit: Starlink)

SpaceX's Starlink division is planning a new ruggedized satellite dish that can operate in hotter and colder temperatures. This is the second ruggedized Starlink dish the company has revealed—the first is designed for vehicles, ships, and aircraft, while the newer one is a fixed earth station that would provide broadband to buildings.

SpaceX asked the Federal Communications Commission for permission to deploy the "high-performance fixed earth stations" (or "HP terminals") in an application filed Friday. PCMag wrote an article about the application yesterday.

"Compared to other user terminals SpaceX Services has been authorized to deploy, the HP model has been ruggedized to handle harsher environments so that, for example, it will be able to continue to operate at greater extremes of heat and cold, will have improved snow/ice melt capabilities, and will withstand a greater number of thermal cycles," SpaceX told the FCC. SpaceX said its application should be approved because the terminals will extend the Starlink network to "a range of much more challenging environments."

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Tor Project Mounts Legal Challenge to Oppose Russian Blocking

After moves to block access to the Tor network, last month Russian authorities ordered the blocking of TorProject.org, the main domain of the privacy-focused anti-censorship tool Tor. With assistance from digital rights activists at Roskomsvoboda, Tor has now mounted a legal challenge to have the blocking reversed.

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

TorIn an effort to control what its citizens can access on the internet, over the past several years Russian authorities have stepped up their blocking and censorship efforts.

Some initiatives, such as the blocking of websites and URLs to reduce copyright infringement, are commonplace outside Russia but local authorities have also begun defining additional content categories, including some political dissent, as illegal. As a result, not only is this content blocked by ISPs but those who provide means to unblock it can also find themselves on the wrong side of the law.

This has sucked some VPN providers into the debate and after they failed to comply, Russia blocked them too, with the inevitable fallout and collateral damage.

Tor Becomes the Next ‘Logical’ Target

In the weeks leading up to the new year, reports indicated that Russia was taking action against Tor nodes, most likely by deploying the same Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) system it previously used to throttle Twitter and to silence the Smart Voting website developed by jailed opposition politician Aleksei Navalny.

The efforts didn’t appear to affect the whole of Russia but many ISPs were affected. Soon after, Russian politicians began openly criticizing Tor as a tool for criminals, with one going as far as labeling it “an “absolute evil”. Soon after, problems hit the Tor Project’s main domain.

Following a warning from local telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor supported by a decision from the Saratov District Court dating back to 2017, Russian authorities ordered local ISPs to block TorProject.org.

Fighting Back

Since then, Tor supporters have been working to mitigate the blocking measures, which include attacks on Tor bridges or relays that are not listed in the public Tor directory.

This cat and mouse game could go indefinitely so in the meantime, the Tor Project has decided to take legal action in Russia to contest the blockade.

In partnership with digital rights activists at Roskomsvoboda, an organization that champions privacy, anonymity, freedom of information and prohibition of censorship, on January 11, 2022, The Tor Project, Inc. filed an appeal at the Saratov District Court against Russia’s blocking measures.

Without naming any specific content at all, Russia says it took action to prevent access to Tor’s “anonymizing browser” in order to restrict access to sites that host content included in the “Federal List of Extremist Materials”.

Roskomsvoboda believes that the Court acted illegally and the order should be overturned.

“Order Violates Constitutional Rights”

According to the digital freedoms group, the decision of the Court should be canceled on the basis that it violates the constitutional right to freely provide, receive and disseminate information and protect privacy. The blocking decision was also handed down without the participation of Tor representatives, which violated their procedural rights and the fairness of the process.

“The decision of the court is contrary to the law and already established practice. According to the position of the Supreme Court, any decision made without the participation of the owner of the site is unjust and violates the rights of this owner,” says Roskomsvoboda legal representative Sarkis Darbinyan.

“In addition, we have the decision of the ECtHR [European Court of Human Rights] in the Engels v. Russia case, which states that blocking a technical network tool is no different from trying to restrict access to printers and photocopiers, since they can also be used to reproduce extremist materials.”

Tor Project Executive Director Isabela Bageros is hopeful that the process in Russia, which began with the filing of an appeal on January 11, 2022, will lead to a positive outcome both for Tor and Russian netizens.

“With the help of Roskomsvoboda lawyers Sarkis Darbinyan and Ekaterina Abashina, we will appeal the court decision and hope to correct this situation and help create a precedent for the protection of digital rights in Russia,” Bageros says.

Separately, Russian telecoms watchdog Roscomnadzor, which oversees blocking in Russia, sent a complaint to YouTube this week demanding the restoration of two channels operated by a music group and a local radio station that were suspended by YouTube due to copyright infringement complaints.

“Roscomnadzor believes that such actions on the part of the YouTube video hosting administration violate the key principles of the free distribution of information, unimpeded access to it, and are an act of censorship, which is prohibited under the Russian Constitution,” the watchdog said.

The joint Tor/Roskomsvoboda campaign website can be found here

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

Musterfeststellungsklage: Parship kann eine Kündigungswelle erwarten

Die Verbraucherzentrale ruft zur Kündigung bei Parship und zur Teilnahme an einer Musterfeststellungsklage auf. Doch laut Betreiber PE Digital ist das aussichtslos. (VZBV, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)

Die Verbraucherzentrale ruft zur Kündigung bei Parship und zur Teilnahme an einer Musterfeststellungsklage auf. Doch laut Betreiber PE Digital ist das aussichtslos. (VZBV, Rechtsstreitigkeiten)

Daily Deals (1-25-2022)

Samsung is expected to launch its Galaxy Tab S8 line of tablets in February, bringing a spec bump to its flagship tablet lineup with a faster processor and support for up to 16GB of RAM and dual front-facing cameras on the largest model (which will now have a 14.6 inch display). But last year’s Galaxy […]

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Samsung is expected to launch its Galaxy Tab S8 line of tablets in February, bringing a spec bump to its flagship tablet lineup with a faster processor and support for up to 16GB of RAM and dual front-facing cameras on the largest model (which will now have a 14.6 inch display).

But last year’s Galaxy Tab S7 series tablets are still some of the best Android tablets around. And there are several ways to save money on one at the moment. Samsung is running sales on the whole series, and you can save even more if you order a refurbished or open box model from eBay or Woot.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 series tablets

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S7 series tablets

Storage

Wireless audio

Other

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Google drops FLoC after widespread opposition, pivots to “Topics API” plan

Google still wants to build tracking tech for advertisers directly into the browser.

Vivaldi's graphic on FLoC.

Enlarge / Vivaldi's graphic on FLoC. (credit: Vivaldi)

After widespread opposition from the rest of the Internet, Google is killing its "FLoC" plans.

The company wants to get rid of the third-party web cookies used for advertising tracking, so it proposed FLoC ("Federated Learning of Cohorts"), which would have let its browser track you for the benefit of advertising companies. With FLoC dead, Google is floating another proposal to track users for advertisers. This time, the system is called the "Topics API." There are currently no implementation details, but Google has posted info about the Topics API in a blog post, in developer docs, on a GitHub page, and on a "Privacy Sandbox" site.

Google's Topic API plans are just now being shared with the world, and the company says the next step is to build a trial implementation and gather feedback from the Internet. Hopefully, the EFF, Mozilla, the EU, and other privacy advocates that spoke out about FLoC will chime in on Google's new plan. The Topics API gives users more control over the tracking process, but if your core complaint was that browser makers should not build user tracking technology directly into the browser for the benefit of advertising companies, you'll still find fault with Google's plan. Google is the world's biggest advertising company, and it's using its ownership of the world's biggest browser to insert its business model into Chrome.

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New Logitech mechanical keyboards are conservative in looks and price

“Gaming keyboard” looks fit for work, too.

Logitech G413 SE mechanical keyboard

Enlarge / Logitech G413 SE mechanical keyboard.

Logitech introduced two mechanical keyboards to its lineup on Monday. Shipping in February, the boards are part of the company's PC gaming brand, but with their $70 starting price and classic, toned-down look, they're also interesting candidates for someone seeking a productivity keyboard with mechanical switches.

The Logitech G G413 SE and G413 TKL SE are $80 and $70, respectively, offering a reasonable entry point for people who might think mechanical keyboards are too expensive. Logitech, specifically its G gaming brand, isn't afraid to overload its keyboards with RGB lighting, but the backlight on these boards comes in white only. The standard G413 is available with an all-white or all-red backlight.

A subdued appearance continues with a top case made of aluminum-magnesium alloy with a brushed black finish that matches the black PBT keycaps. The plastic should be an upgrade from the non-SE G413's ABS plastic keyboards, as PBT is generally more resistant to degradation over time.

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