"Einige dieser Objekte können wir mit unseren Daten nicht erklären"

Erstmals seit 50 Jahren gab es diese Woche vor dem US-Kongress wieder eine Anhörung über unidentifizierte Flugobjekte. Dabei gab es interessante Zahlen und Daten

Erstmals seit 50 Jahren gab es diese Woche vor dem US-Kongress wieder eine Anhörung über unidentifizierte Flugobjekte. Dabei gab es interessante Zahlen und Daten

The weekend’s best deals: Epic PC games sale, 1Password subscriptions, and more

Dealmaster also has discounts on Hulu memberships, AirPods, and LG OLED TVs.

The weekend’s best deals: Epic PC games sale, 1Password subscriptions, and more

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

It's the weekend, which means the time has come for another Dealmaster. Our latest roundup of the best tech deals from around the web is headlined by a truckload of discounts on good PC games. Most of those are due to the return of the Epic Games Store's annual "Mega Sale," which began earlier this week and runs until June 16.

As with previous promotions from Epic's PC game storefront, the new sale is most notable for offering an unlimited-use coupon that applies to any purchase of $14.99 or more. In past sales, this coupon amounted to a flat $10 off, but Epic says it will now give a 25 percent discount. This means you won't save as much as before on less-expensive games—a $15 game that would've dropped to $5 after applying the coupon in previous sales will now cost $11.25—but you'll get slightly more back with games closer to full price. For instance, a newer game like LEGO Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga, which normally goes for $50 on PC, can be had for $37.49 after using the coupon here.

You'll have to sign into an Epic account and manually claim the coupon first, but once you do, it will automatically renew after each use until the sale ends next month. Note that you only need to have at least $14.99's worth of games in your cart for the coupon to apply: Something like Disco Elysiuman Ars favorite that's on sale for $14, wouldn't be eligible for the extra 25 percent off on its own, but if you add another discounted game to your cart to get over the $15 threshold, the coupon will then apply to both titles individually at checkout. As with past Epic sales, the coupon doesn't apply to DLC or in-game purchases, nor will it work with preorders.

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Records Labels and ISP Seek Summary Judgments in Piracy Lawsuit

Internet provider Bright House has asked a court for a summary judgment confirming that it’s not liable for the alleged piracy activities of its subscribers. Several major music companies, meanwhile, request the exact opposite. The motions aim to simplify the case before it goes to trial and are crucial to its eventual outcome.

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

pirate flagUnder US copyright law, Internet providers must terminate the accounts of repeat infringers “in appropriate circumstances.”

This requirement has been in place for more than two decades but only over the past few years have ISPs been held to the standard.

Billion Dollar Lawsuits

Several major music industry companies including Artista Records, Sony Music Entertainment, Universal Music, and Warner Records, have filed lawsuits against some of the largest U.S. Internet providers.

They include Bright House, which is owned by Charter. According to the music companies, the ISP failed to terminate persistent pirates. This claim could lead to hundreds of millions of dollars in damages, as seen in the lawsuit against Cox Communications two years ago.

The repeat infringer case is scheduled to go to trial later this year. Before it starts, however, both sides have submitted requests for summary judgments, in order to settle crucial matters before they are presented to the jury.

‘Copyright Claims Should be Dismissed’

Bright House requests the court to dismiss the only remaining copyright infringement claim. This accuses the ISP of contributory infringement, which means that the company induced, caused or materially contributed to the piracy activities of its subscribers.

The ISP rejects this claim and points out that it had an anti-infringement program modeled after the Copyright Alert System, an “industry-standard” anti-piracy agreement that was supported by the recording industry.

This system was described as a set of “best practices” for ISPs on how to handle copyright infringements. Bright House mimicked this with its own set of escalating “alerts” which, like the original scheme, didn’t lead to permanent disconnections.

Under Bright House’s program, subscribers’ Internet connections were quarantined after repeated alerts, and only reenabled after the subscriber spoke to its abuse team. That doesn’t rhyme with the allegation that it ‘fostered’ infringements, the ISP notes.

“The record contains no evidence that Bright House supplied Internet service to subscribers or otherwise handled infringement notices with the object of fostering copyright infringement,” Bright House informs the court.

“To the contrary, Bright House adopted and employed a robust anti-infringement program to ensure that subscribers were informed of infringement accusations by rightsholders and educated about copyright infringement on the Internet—all in an effort to discourage and prevent future infringement.”

Piracy Notices Never Came Through

If the court chooses not to dismiss the copyright claims, the ISP would like the claims to be drastically limited. The company explains that many of the copyright notices sent by the rightsholders should be excluded because they were sent to the wrong email address.

“51,895 of the 109,458 notices Plaintiffs claim they sent to Bright House were actually sent to Time Warner Cable. Of those notices, a small number — 67 notices — appear to have been forwarded by Time Warner Cable to Bright House.

“Bright House could not have had knowledge of alleged infringements identified in notices it did not receive,” the company adds.

In addition, the ISP also notes that the music companies are not entitled to request damages for a large part of the works included in the lawsuit. Apparently, the companies seek damages for both the sound recording and composition of the same works, which isn’t allowed.

Music Companies Have Demands Too

The music companies, including Universal Music and Warner Records, also request a partial summary judgment. They are taking the opposite stance by asking the court to rule that the ISP is liable for the pirating activities of its subscribers.

While Bright House (BHN) may have had its own anti-piracy scheme, the law requires it to terminate the accounts of repeat infringers in appropriate circumstances. That didn’t happen, the plaintiffs say.

“BHN easily could have avoided all liability for copyright infringement had it simply complied with the DMCA safe harbor that Congress enacted to protect ISPs. It merely needed to adopt and reasonably implement a repeat infringer policy that provided for termination in appropriate circumstances, and communicate that policy to its subscribers.

“For years, BHN chose not to even look at the overwhelming majority of infringement notices it received — willfully blinding itself to the bulk of infringement occurring on its network,” the companies add.

The record labels also ask the court to confirm that they own all the copyrights at stake and that the files that Bright House subscribers shared were indeed pirated copies.

Both of the motions reported here were already submitted under seal. They were made public this week, together with a slew of other documents. It is now up to the Florida federal court to decide on the matter. When that is done, the case will move to trial.

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

HP Dev One laptop with Pop!_OS Linux coming soon for $1099

Most HP computers ship with Windows, but from time to time the company has dabbled in Linux by offering models with Ubuntu or Red Hat Enterprise Linux. HP’s next Linux laptop is a little different. The upcoming HP Dev One is a 14 inch laptop wit…

Most HP computers ship with Windows, but from time to time the company has dabbled in Linux by offering models with Ubuntu or Red Hat Enterprise Linux. HP’s next Linux laptop is a little different. The upcoming HP Dev One is a 14 inch laptop with an AMD Ryzen processor that will ship with Pop!_OS […]

The post HP Dev One laptop with Pop!_OS Linux coming soon for $1099 appeared first on Liliputing.

Erdogans Ringen um die "Werte der Nato"

Zynisch, aber lehrreich für das Bild des Militärpakts im Westen: Der türkische Präsident macht geflohene Kurdinnen und Kurdinnen zur Verhandlungsmasse für die Beitritte Schwedens und Finnlands

Zynisch, aber lehrreich für das Bild des Militärpakts im Westen: Der türkische Präsident macht geflohene Kurdinnen und Kurdinnen zur Verhandlungsmasse für die Beitritte Schwedens und Finnlands

Biden administration lays out plan for four carbon-capture facilities

Big infrastructure package includes funds for the underdeveloped technology.

Image of a facility filled with green-colored tubes.

Enlarge / Bioreactors that host algae would be one option for carbon sequestration—as long as the carbon is stored somehow. (credit: Getty Images)

On Thursday, the US Department of Energy (DOE) announced the latest program to come out of the bipartisan infrastructure funding package that was passed last year. In this case, the money is going to foster the development of a technology that we'll almost certainly need but is currently underdeveloped: capture of carbon dioxide from the air and its stable storage. The infrastructure law set aside $3.5 billion for direct air capture, and the DOE plans to use that to fund four facilities spread across the US.

Direct air capture has suffered from a bit of a catch-22. Most scenarios for limiting end-of-century warming assume we'll emit enough carbon dioxide in the next few decades to overshoot our climate goals and will therefore need to remove some from the atmosphere. That would necessitate the development of direct air capture technologies. But, at present, there's no way to fund the operation of a facility to do the capturing, so the technology remains immature and its economics poorly understood.

The DOE's funding has the potential to change some of that. It has a total of $3.5 billion to spend in the years 2022 through 2026. It plans to use that to fund four carbon-capture and storage centers spread across the US, each with the capability of permanently storing a million metric tons of carbon dioxide a year.

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