The next best thing to OLED is getting cheaper

Cooler Master GP27-FQS gaming monitor will lower the cost of entry.

Promotional image of cutting edge monitor.

Enlarge (credit: Cooler Master)

OLED is so popular among shoppers seeking high-end image quality that its acronym is expanding (see: QD-OLED). But in PC monitors, OLED means limited size options and lofty prices. Mini LED is a strong alternative but has long carried high price tags as well, partially due to the devices being so frequently marketed to creative professionals. But with this week's mini LED PC monitor announcement, the technology is getting cheaper than ever.

Mini LED monitors can fit more LEDs into their backlight because each individual light-emitting diode in a Mini LED monitor is about half the size of the diodes in regular LED monitors. In a full-array local dimming (FALD) monitor, which has independently controlled lighting zones, this should lead to greater contrast, since the display has greater control over brightness in differing areas of an image. Contrast, however, won't be as extreme as what you can expect from OLED.

The Cooler Master GP27-FQS monitor will come out some time between late Q2 and early Q3 with an MSRP of $699. However, a Cooler Master representative told Ars Technica that there will "most likely" be sale prices "closer to $550."

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CDC wants to “give people a break” from masks, says new guidance coming

“I know that everyone is anxious to move beyond this pandemic,” CDC head said.

Paper print-out taped to glass door.

Enlarge / Signage on a window of a coffee shop informs customer of their masking policy in San Francisco, California, US, on Tuesday, Feb. 15, 2022. The state's indoor mask requirement, which requires everyone to wear face coverings indoors regardless of vaccination status, expired on Wednesday. (credit: Getty | Bloomberg)

With national cases of COVID-19 dropping precipitously, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will soon release new guidance on how states and local governments can ease out of health restrictions, including indoor mask wearing. According to news reports citing unnamed officials, new guidance could come as early as next week.

The CDC's guidance will arrive well after several states and local governments charged ahead with plans to pull back pandemic restrictions, particularly indoor masking. The moves have left some questioning whether the CDC is, once again, struggling to keep up with the pandemic's shifting conditions.

In a press briefing last week, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky stood by the current guidance, noting that "our hospitalizations are still high, our death rates are still high." While the agency was "encouraged" by current downward trends, "we are not there yet," Dr. Walensky said of easing guidance.

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Populismus in Richterrobe

Oberster Sozialrichter will Ungeimpfte zur Kasse bitten. Das wäre aber nicht durchsetzbar. Und es würde mit einem zentralen Prinzip des Solidarsystems brechen – mit Folgen über die Coronapandemie hinaus

Oberster Sozialrichter will Ungeimpfte zur Kasse bitten. Das wäre aber nicht durchsetzbar. Und es würde mit einem zentralen Prinzip des Solidarsystems brechen – mit Folgen über die Coronapandemie hinaus

Lilbits: Google’s Privacy Sandbox for Android, Valve brings more Windows games to Android, and a triple-screen PC powered by Raspberry Pi computers

Google is announcing a vague plan to provide Android users with more privacy from ad tracking technology… but unlike Apple, which has basically made tracking an opt-in experience on iOS, Google is trying to find a way to offer more privacy without completely gutting the advertising model that accounts for most of the company’s profits. We’ll […]

The post Lilbits: Google’s Privacy Sandbox for Android, Valve brings more Windows games to Android, and a triple-screen PC powered by Raspberry Pi computers appeared first on Liliputing.

Google is announcing a vague plan to provide Android users with more privacy from ad tracking technology… but unlike Apple, which has basically made tracking an opt-in experience on iOS, Google is trying to find a way to offer more privacy without completely gutting the advertising model that accounts for most of the company’s profits. We’ll see how that goes.

In other recent tech news from around the web, with the Steam Deck handheld gaming PC set to begin shipping in less than two weeks, Valve continues to improve its Proton software that allows many Windows PC games to run on Linux. Nintendo, meanwhile, is showing one of the down sides of internet-connected game consoles: the company is shutting down its eShop for the Wii U and 3DS next year, and those are the only ways to purchase some classic games for those consoles, which will make the company’s older consoles a little less useful in the future. And an intriguing homemade computer showed up in an unusual place recently: the /r/woodworking subreddit.

Here’s a roundup of recent tech news from around the web:

This Triple-Screen Raspberry Pi Kid’s PC Packs a Lot of Tech Into a Custom Walnut Case [Hackster.io]

This custom computer is actually made from three Raspberry Pi systems, each powering its own display and positioned in a custom walnut enclosure along with a keyboard, number pad, and speakers. Redditor /u/mw33212 says they designed the system as a first computer for their son. You can find more pictures plus additional details about the project in a reddit post

BLEU JOUR’s ROOT [FanlessTech]

The Bleu Jour Root is a compact, fanless PC powered by an AMD Ryen Embedded processor with prices starting at 650 Euros and support for up to Ryzen Embedded V2718, 32GB RAM, and a 2TB SSD.

Valve’s Proton 7.0 brings more Windows games to Linux [Proton / GitHub]

Valve releases proton 7.0 with support for playing 20+ additional Windows games on Linux, support for Epic’s EasyAntiCheat DRM, local decoding of H264 videos, and many bug fixes and other improvements.

Nintendo Closing 3DS & Wii U Shops In 2023, Has ‘No Plans To Offer Classic Content In Other Ways’ [Kotaku]

Nintendo is shutting down its eShop for the Wii U and Nintendo 3DS on May 23, 2022. That means you won’t be able to buy content or download free content like game demos, but you’ll still be able to redownload games and get software updates… for a while. More details are available in Nintendo’s announcement

Introducing the Privacy Sandbox on Android [Google]

While Apple has basically made tracking users for advertising purposes an opt-in feature on iPhones, Google says its Privacy Sandbox initiative for Android will explore ways to increase user privacy while continuing to support advertising technologies.

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.

The post Lilbits: Google’s Privacy Sandbox for Android, Valve brings more Windows games to Android, and a triple-screen PC powered by Raspberry Pi computers appeared first on Liliputing.

Android’s toothless “Privacy Sandbox” fails to answer iOS tracking limits

Android “Privacy Sandbox” is optional for advertisers, and that misses the point.

A large Google logo is displayed amidst foliage.

Enlarge (credit: Sean Gallup | Getty Images)

Google is announcing the "Android Privacy Sandbox" today, a move the company says will be "a multi-year initiative" to introduce "more private advertising solutions" into Android. After Apple made tracking opt-in in iOS 14, Android wants to be seen as matching its main rival. Today's announcement is in addition to existing ad systems, not a replacement for them, so this will probably be even less effective than the "Privacy Sandbox" for Chrome.

Apple's tracking changes blew up the advertising industry and are already costing ad-based companies like Facebook $10 billion in revenue for the year. Google, the world's largest ad company, doesn't seem to want to do that on Android.

Here's how Google addresses iOS 14 in its blog post:

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Clearview AI aims to put almost every human in facial recognition database

Investor pitch said 100 billion photos would make almost everyone “identifiable.”

Illustration of a man's face being scanned with advanced technology.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | imaginima)

The controversial facial recognition company Clearview AI reportedly told investors that it aims to collect 100 billion photos—supposedly enough to ensure that almost every human will be in its database.

"Clearview AI is telling investors it is on track to have 100 billion facial photos in its database within a year, enough to ensure 'almost everyone in the world will be identifiable,' according to a financial presentation from December obtained by The Washington Post," the Post reported today. There are an estimated 7.9 billion people on the planet.

The December presentation was part of an effort to obtain new funding from investors, so 100 billion facial images is more of a goal than a firm plan. However, the presentation said that Clearview has already racked up 10 billion images and is adding 1.5 billion images a month, the Post wrote. Clearview told investors it needs another $50 million to hit its goal of 100 billion photos, the Post reported:

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Latest success from Google’s AI group: Controlling a fusion reactor

The AI was trained on a simulator to shape the plasma held within a tokamak.

A dark space with a toroidal material that glows purple.

Enlarge / Plasma inside the tokamak at the EPFL. (credit: EPFL)

As the world waits for construction of the largest fusion reactor yet, called ITER, smaller reactors with similar designs are still running. These reactors, called tokamaks, help us test both hardware and software. The hardware testing helps us refine things like the materials used for container walls or the shape and location of control magnets.

But arguably, the software is the most important. To enable fusion, the control software of a tokamak has to monitor the state of the plasma it contains and respond to any changes by making real-time adjustments to the system's magnets. Failure to do so can result in anything from a drop in energy (which leads to the failure of any fusion) to seeing the plasma spill out of containment (and scorch the walls of the container).

Getting that control software right requires a detailed understanding of both the control magnets and the plasma the magnets manipulate. Or it would be more accurate to say, getting that control software right has required. Because today, Google's DeepMind AI team is announcing that its software has been successfully trained to control a tokamak.

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US says Russian state hackers lurked in defense contractor networks for months

Multiple hacks over 2 years revealed sensitive info about weapons and comms platforms.

Cartoon padlock and broken glass superimposed on a Russian flag.

Enlarge / What's happened to Russia's flag? (credit: Sean Gladwell / Getty Images)

Hackers backed by the Russian government have breached the networks of multiple US defense contractors in a sustained campaign that has revealed sensitive information about US weapons-development communications infrastructure, the federal government said on Wednesday.

The campaign began no later than January 2020 and has continued through this month, according to a joint advisory by the FBI, National Security Agency, and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. The hackers have been targeting and successfully hacking cleared defense contractors, or CDCs, which support contracts for the US Department of Defense and intelligence community.

“Persistent access,” “significant insight”

“During this two-year period, these actors have maintained persistent access to multiple CDC networks, in some cases for at least six months,” officials wrote in the advisory. “In instances when the actors have successfully obtained access, the FBI, NSA, and CISA have noted regular and recurring exfiltration of emails and data. For example, during a compromise in 2021, threat actors exfiltrated hundreds of documents related to the company’s products, relationships with other countries, and internal personnel and legal matters.”

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Disaster as “NFT Music Stream” Enrages Artists By Pulling Music From YouTube

NFT Music Stream bills itself as a decentralized music distribution system designed to empower artists through the wonders of NFTs. After artists in their droves complained that their songs were being distributed against their wishes, the platform admitted that the tracks were being pulled from YouTube. Even worse, one of those musicians is artists’ champion David Lowery, a fighter they really don’t want to take on.

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

nft-musicThe non-fungible token (NFT) craze that’s been sweeping the internet for months now is a truly sight to behold. Huge sums of cryptocurrency are traded for these often Ethereum blockchain ‘items’ alongside dreams that one day they will be worth substantially more.

As a result, the hype around NFTs (particularly where they relate to some kind of art) has reached astonishing levels, with new projects appearing all the time promising to revolutionize this and democratize that. Since the music industry is often criticized for not doing enough to support artists, some platforms have decided they can do better.

Thus far, it hasn’t gone well. Early February the RIAA stepped in to issue a cease-and-desist against HitPiece.com, describing it as a scam site designed to mislead and defraud fans with its offer to sell them NFTs genuinely associated with artists. According to their RIAA, that certainly wasn’t the case.

NFT Music Stream

With HitPiece now in some kind of hibernation, another NFT-focused platform has been thrust into the spotlight afting launching this month. NFT Music Stream promises a “new chain of sound” alongside pledges to bring artists, fans, distributors and labels together “in one single beautiful, efficient and transparent” NFT music platform.

“NFT MUSIC STREAM is a fun, exciting private NFT Music platform where content creators can charge for audio & music content and get paid in crypto. It gives investors the freedom to distribute, monetize, and stream audio via our NFT MUSIC Streaming Platform,” the service says.

nftmusicstream

“We have established a decentralized music distribution and royalty management system to better reward artists and their fans. NFT Music Stream connects fans directly with artists in a beautiful music player interface.”

Streaming Service Upsets Artists

That music player was available on Streamer.fm but despite its claims to help “cut out the middle man” to give artists a greater share of the spoils, many quickly realized that something was amiss. According to the masses of complaints from artists on Twitter, few – if any – had agreed to have their music placed on the platform.

Composer Kerry Muzzey, for example, took to Twitter to complain that the new streaming service had no rights to monetize his copyrighted works. However, after an unspecified number of DMs to the @nftmusicstream account, they blocked him along with many other artists making similar complaints.

kerry-blocked

Muzzey responded with a strongly-worded cease-and-desist notice and he wasn’t the only one.

Of course, big questions remained. Why did NFT Music Stream believe it had the rights to distribute artists’ content without their explicit permission? Equally, where was it getting its music and artwork from to populate its music player? And, indeed, was that licensed in some way, and if so, by whom?

NFT Music Stream Subscribed to YouTube Music

Given that NFT Music Stream’s White Paper is just six pages long and provides almost no useful information about anything, it was up to the more technical among artists to have a quick look under the hood. That didn’t go well either.

Posting on Twitter, @shyphomusic expressed their concerns that the “next evolution in the industry” was actually a “glorified frontend for YouTube.” Another claimed that the site’s code used a domain owned by Spotify for API use.

With the YouTube claim raising a number of eyebrows, artists pressed NFT Music Stream on the details. Surprisingly the company quickly admitted that rather than the “decentralized music distribution” system mentioned in its advertising, its player is indeed a front-end for YouTube, accessed via a “bulk subscription“, meaning that when a track is played, “royalties are paid to the artist via their agreement with YouTube.”

When the question of artist consent was raised, the company said that since artists had given YouTube permission to show their content, NFT Music Stream had permission too.

“The artist did consent to make their music available to YouTube who charge us to use it and pass the royalties back to the artist. We do not make NFT’s from it. We do not profit from it. A music NFT can ONLY be made from music directly uploaded and minted by the artist themself,” the company responded.

“If you don’t want your music being provided as part of a subscription service you can cancel your agreement with them. That said, email our support team with proof of ownership / representation to remove it,” the service bluntly added.

nftmusicstream-youtube

NFT Music Stream Player Taken Down

Given that NFT Music Stream is now on record saying that it doesn’t make any NFTs from the artists’ content pulled from YouTube, the big question is why it was put on the service in the first place. NFT Music Stream said that many users are “missing the point of the project” which is an interesting take given that the artists it’s claiming to support clearly haven’t been sufficiently briefed.

“Firstly, we have not profited in anyway from Musicians and Artists, in fact we have lost money as we pay YouTube Music (not to be confused with YouTube directly) the rights to host the music who then pays the royalties accordingly. Our goal is for the future where artists get to keep 98% of streaming profits through NFT distribution,” they added.

With artists in general clearly outraged with the launch and baffled by the business plan, NFT Music Stream also managed to annoy musician and musicians’ rights champion David Lowery. Not just because he was annoyed on artists’ behalf, but because his music was also made available on the platform without his express permission.

david-lowery-nft

“Don’t blow me off,” Lowery warned the platform. “In case you aren’t familiar with my work,” he added, linking directly to an article detailing his class action lawsuit against Spotify which cost the streaming service tens of millions of dollars.

Only making matters worse, the artwork in the screenshots posted by Lowery point to what appear to be unauthorized uploads of his music on YouTube. This suggests that no matter what mental gymnastics are applied to NFT Music Stream’s music player service or business model, Lowery is unlikely to see a penny from either of them.

A worse start to a pro-artist service is hard to imagine but all the signs suggest it won’t be the last.

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