Twitter announces deal to sell company to Elon Musk for $44 billion

Musk buyout needs shareholder approval and is expected to close in 2022.

Elon Musk standing and gesturing with his hands while he speaks at a press conference.

Enlarge / Elon Musk at a press conference at SpaceX's Starbase facility in Texas on February 10, 2022. (credit: Getty Images | Jim Watson)

Twitter's board of directors has agreed to sell the company to Elon Musk for $44 billion, the company announced today.

"Free speech is the bedrock of a functioning democracy, and Twitter is the digital town square where matters vital to the future of humanity are debated," Musk said in the purchase announcement.

The deal, which is pending shareholder approval and expected to close later this year, comes just 10 days after the Twitter board approved a poison pill to prevent a hostile takeover in response to Musk's attempt to buy the company. Board members started taking Musk's offer more seriously after he lined up $46.5 billion in financing. The sale agreement was announced hours after reports that a deal between Twitter and Musk was close.

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The first “Meta Store” is opening in California in May

Retail attempt down the road from Meta’s VR labs primarily dedicated to VR headsets.

The first Meta Store won't necessarily be your one-stop shop for all things sold by Meta—as this artistic interpretation points to one thing <em>not</em> sold by the store until further notice.

Enlarge / The first Meta Store won't necessarily be your one-stop shop for all things sold by Meta—as this artistic interpretation points to one thing not sold by the store until further notice. (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

On May 9, Meta will double down on its metaverse sales pitch by... making people drive to California to sample its wares at a single physical location.

The uncreatively named Meta Store will showcase every physical product the company sells under its various branded umbrellas, particularly the Meta Quest 2 VR system (formerly Oculus Quest 2). The company's first retail store will be housed in a 1,550-square-foot space on Meta's Burlingame, California, campus, which houses a number of Meta's VR- and AR-specific development efforts, and it will allow the public to test and purchase any of Meta's physical products.

But it's not a comprehensive Meta sales location, as its shelves will not include access to the reams of user data accumulated by the company's network of criss-crossed sites—though we'll keep our eyes peeled in case the Meta Store decides to unveil a Cambridge Analytica-themed aisle in the future.

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RIAA & Homeland Security’s IPR Center Team Up to Fight Online Piracy

The RIAA and the US Government’s National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to coordinate public and private sector efforts to disrupt online piracy. Criminal prosecutions for music piracy are relatively rare, so the partnership may signal changes ahead.

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

RIAAFollowing a disastrous few years at the turn of the century where the major labels failed to accept the direction their own industry was heading, streaming services such as Spotify are now giving the majority of music consumers what they have demanded all along.

Massive libraries of accessible music at prices suitable for all pocket depths are helping the industry back to its glory days, with last year proving the most successful on record. But despite music being readily available for free, somehow piracy is still an issue for the world’s largest labels, with stream-ripping platforms the current boogeyman.

In recent years, the majors have targeted some of these services in successful civil lawsuits but a new partnership suggests that criminal enforcement may lie ahead for selected targets.

RIAA and Homeland Security’s IPR Center Team Up

A joint announcement from the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) reveals a long-term agreement that formalizes and expands cooperation between the public and private sectors in the fight against all forms of digital piracy.

Through the signed Memorandum of Understanding, the IPR Center and RIAA will implement “an aggressive multi-layered strategy to strengthen the digital ecosystem” including training events and the promise to “dismantle large-scale online criminal enterprises” via referral packages on the “most egregious violators.”

Prospects for Criminal Enforcement

Potential targets for dismantling are not discussed in the announcement. Thus far, stream-ripping platforms have been handled in civil lawsuits and services mentioned in the RIAA’s submission to the USTR ‘Notorious Markets’ list (MP3Juices.cc and Newalbumreleases.net) are presumably based overseas, given the nature of the process.

Clues may be available in the European Commission’s equivalent list, but US-based criminal enforcement for music piracy has been rare, with the last notable case concluding four years ago with a five-year prison sentence for the former operator of ShareBeast and AlbumJams.

Given trends over the years, it seems likely that platforms engaged in pre-release piracy could be at the front of the queue for enforcement, while a criminal conviction relating to a stream-ripping service could prove strategically useful in the US. That being said, the partnership appears to be gearing up for greater international enforcement.

IPR Center Acknowledges Overseas Links

“Investigations into illicit streaming services are extremely complex; these services are typically operated from abroad through multi-faceted schemes that touch numerous countries,” says acting director of the IPR Center, Ricardo Mayoral.

“Because of this complexity, our partnership with RIAA brings us one step closer toward dismantling criminal enterprises that think they are above the law, attempting to use the internet to hide illicit activity.”

According to Brad Buckles, the RIAA’s Chief Content Protection Officer, digital piracy is “too big a problem for any one artist, industry, or agency to handle on their own” so the public/private partnership will address that with enhanced cooperation and coordination.

“As global piracy operations evolve their tactics and innovate new ways to steal and profit from creative works, this MOU will empower creators and the federal government to work together on the cutting edge of this fast-moving fight,” Buckles says.

Reading between the lines, rather than the RIAA having to wade through the complexities and restrictions usually associated with civil lawsuits, it will now have have direct access to powerful toolkits only usually available to government agencies – with the public, at least in part – picking up the bill for enforcement.

IPR Center Now Partners With All Major Rightsholders

RIAA’s announcement that it will partner with IPR Center follows similar moves by major players in the movie, TV show and broadcasting sectors.

In September 2020, the MPA and anti-piracy coalition Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment signed an similar agreement with IPR Center and earlier this year, the groups revealed they would embed their own personnel in the government department.

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

Daily Deals (4-25-2022)

EBay is offering 15% off on thousands of items between now and May 1, 2022 as part of a Mother’s Day sale, which means that whether you’re shopping for mom or for yourself, you can save some money on clothes, bags, home goods, or tech items including laptops, headphones, and speakers. Note that many, if […]

The post Daily Deals (4-25-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

EBay is offering 15% off on thousands of items between now and May 1, 2022 as part of a Mother’s Day sale, which means that whether you’re shopping for mom or for yourself, you can save some money on clothes, bags, home goods, or tech items including laptops, headphones, and speakers.

Note that many, if not all, of the deals are for refurbished products, but eBay includes a 2 year warranty on those items.

Refurb Samsung Galaxy Book Go for $230 from eBay w/coupon: SAVINGSFORMOM

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Windows laptops

Chromebooks

Wireless audio

Downloads & Streaming

Other

The post Daily Deals (4-25-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Pixel Watch prototype is left at a bar, gets photographed

It has “substantial” bezels, pogo pins in the band connector, and an ECG sensor.

The Pixel Watch. This bootloader is the only thing the watch would display.

Enlarge / The Pixel Watch. This bootloader is the only thing the watch would display. (credit: Android Central)

The Pixel Watch had an iPhone 4 moment over the weekend. Just as Apple's 2010 flagship leaked after being left at a bar, Google's upcoming Pixel Watch was apparently lost and found at a restaurant. Android Central got ahold of photos of the leaked device first, and the person who found the watch did a Reddit AMA as the user "Tagtech414" and shared more pictures. Sadly, the device doesn't actually work. No one knows how to charge it, and it might be remotely wiped anyway. Keep in mind that these are pictures of a prototype, not the final model, and this watch was sitting in the lost and found for "several weeks" before the Internet got ahold of it.

We do get a good look at the hardware, though. Google's smartwatch is a plump little glass circle. The top glass cover is the widest part of the watch circle and seems designed to look like the top "half" of the watch. It actually only makes up about one-third of the watch depth, which makes the watch seem thinner than it is.

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Newsmax using climate change outrage to lure paid newsletter subscribers

Newsmax’s “free” anti-climate change book comes with an auto-renewing subscription.

Newsmax using climate change outrage to lure paid newsletter subscribers

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

An unfortunate byproduct of the arguments over climate change has been the publication of some truly awful books. Think tank staff members, disgruntled scientists, and self-appointed experts have produced page after page of arguments we knew were wrong decades ago, framing them as earth-shattering revelations that will cause the entire scientific community to collapse. It wouldn't be news if another one was produced.

But it was intriguing when I saw that a print ad was proudly trumpeting a "new" book that promised to explain "why there is ZERO evidence linking carbon dioxide to climate change." The intrigue arose from the fact that the book's author has been dead for over two years.

A quick search revealed that the supposedly new book was a not-quite-new edition of one originally published in 1997. Figuring out why it was being advertised now took me down a rabbit hole of domain registrations and paid newsletters that all led back to an unexpected source: Newsmax, best known for operating one of the Trumpier broadcasting outfits in the US.

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Diablo Immortal was built for mobile, but now it’s coming to PCs, too

30 million have preregistered for June 2 launch, which now includes a PC open beta.

In case you couldn't tell, this <em>Diablo Immortal</em> footage from Blizzard was captured on a PC.

Enlarge / In case you couldn't tell, this Diablo Immortal footage from Blizzard was captured on a PC. (credit: Blizzard)

It has been nearly three and a half years since Blizzard first announced Diablo Immortal as the first-ever smartphone-only entry in the popular PC and console action RPG series. So it came as a surprise this morning when Blizzard announced that the game's June 2 mobile launch would be accompanied by a free-to-play open beta on Windows PCs.

"Community feedback has been imperative to the development of Immortal and has influenced the game in many ways, as you’ll come to see," Blizzard wrote in an announcement post. "One recurring piece of feedback we especially took to heart was the desire to play Immortal on PC."

The PC open beta will offer "full cross-play and cross-progression support" with the "uncompromised AAA mobile experience" from the get-go, Blizzard promised. But while the "built from the ground up for mobile" version sounds like it has been fully polished and tuned, the PC experience launching in June will be initially set up to "collect player feedback, make changes, and fine-tune this version of Immortal until we feel it delivers a finalized experience for all courageous adventurers."

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Anzeige: Cleveres First-Response-Management

Durch cleveres First-Response-Management lassen sich die Folgen von Cycberattacken deutlich mindern. Wie das praktisch aussehen kann, zeigt ein Workshop der Golem Akademie. (Golem Akademie, Server-Applikationen)

Durch cleveres First-Response-Management lassen sich die Folgen von Cycberattacken deutlich mindern. Wie das praktisch aussehen kann, zeigt ein Workshop der Golem Akademie. (Golem Akademie, Server-Applikationen)