Night owls beware, Fitbit knows your sleep type and wants to educate you on it

Sleep Profiles are part of Fitbit’s latest paywalled health insights.

Being a dolphin's actually not a great thing.

Enlarge / Being a dolphin's actually not a great thing. (credit: Fitbit)

Today Fitbit announced a set of new sleep-assessment features for premium users. Launching via the Fitbit app on Wednesday, Sleep Profile is the latest subscription-only data Fitbit Premium members can use to better understand their unique sleep type and identify their strengths and weaknesses.

Using a month's worth of sleep data from about 60,000 Fitbit users, the company studied 1,000 unique sleep attributes, eventually cutting and compiling them down to 10 metrics. Five already existed within the Fitbit app, including sleep stages and duration. But the five new categories assess bedtime consistency, the number of days with naps, the time before sound sleep, disrupted sleep, and "stability," which averages the number of brief, typically unnoticeable wakeups through the night. With these assessments, users can see daily, weekly, and monthly trends in each category and see where they are (and should be) within the data range of other users of the same age and gender.

(credit: Fitbit)

Each month, users will also be assigned sleep chronotypes based on their data. Each of the six types is named after an animal with similar sleep patterns: giraffe, bear, dolphin, hedgehog, parrot, and tortoise. According to Fitbit, aside from fun, these sleep pattern identifiers aim to help stick in people's minds and reflect how their patterns change over time. Sleep types based on animals aren't a new concept to sleep science or even wearables; Samsung introduced a similar feature in the Galaxy Watch 4 this year.

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Daily Deals (6-22-2022)

Today you can pick up a $199 Windows laptop with 4G LTE support, find a bunch of good deals on Lenovo convertibles or 2-in-1 tablets running Windows or Chrome OS, and a sale on Herman Miller chairs. Here are some of the day’s best deals. Windows…

Today you can pick up a $199 Windows laptop with 4G LTE support, find a bunch of good deals on Lenovo convertibles or 2-in-1 tablets running Windows or Chrome OS, and a sale on Herman Miller chairs. Here are some of the day’s best deals. Windows Laptops & Tablets Gateway 11.6″ convertible notebook w/Snapdragon 7c/4GB/64GB/4G […]

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Tarantino Asks Court to Dismiss Miramax’s ‘Pulp Fiction’ NFT Lawsuit

Quentin Tarantino has asked a California court to dismiss a copyright lawsuit filed by Miramax against his “Pulp Fiction” NFT project. The director’s legal team submitted a motion for judgment, arguing that the movie company’s claims fall flat. The Pulp Fiction film is a derivative of the screenplay, not the other way around, they stress.

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

tarantino nftThe popularity of non-fungible tokens, NFTs for short, has reached new highs over the past year.

This has also drawn the attention of celebrities, some of whom agreed to tie their names and creations to these digital collectibles.

Last fall, Quentin Tarantino joined in as well. The movie director announced that he would auction ‘Pulp Fiction’ NFTs to the public. These NFTs will unlock handwritten scripts and exclusive custom commentary from Tarantino, assets that could prove valuable to collectors.

Miramax Sues over Pulp Fiction NFTs

Not everyone was happy with this plan though. Movie studio Miramax, which owns most of the rights to the film, sees the plan as a contract breach and copyright infringement. In a lawsuit filed at a California federal court last November, the movie company accused the director of attempting to cash in on something he doesn’t own the full rights to.

“Eager to cash in on the non-fungible token (‘NFT’) boom, as widely reported in the media, Quentin Tarantino recently announced plans to auction off seven ‘exclusive scenes’ from the 1994 motion picture Pulp Fiction in the form of NFTs,” the complaint read.

Despite this legal dispute, the first NFT was put up for auction early this year, selling for over a million dollars. After that, the project was put on hold, perhaps in part to await the outcome of the lawsuit.

Tarantino Wants the Lawsuit Dismissed

According to Tarantino, Miramax’s claims are ungrounded. His legal team previously described the claims as “offensively meritless” and this week they submitted a motion for judgment, seeking dismissal of the complaint in its entirety.

“Miramax’s copyright claim fails because it misapprehends fundamental principles of copyright law and ignores the clear language of the agreements and assignments,” Tarantino’s lawyers write.

The movie company suggests that by assigning the film’s copyright to Miramax, the director also gave up the rights to his screenplay. That’s not the case, the lawyers counter.

The Film is a Derivative

Tarantino sees the film as a derivative of the screenplay he personally wrote and still holds the rights to, not the other way around.

“Miramax’s complaint assumes that an assignment of copyrights in a motion picture encompasses an assignment of exclusive rights in the underlying screenplay for that motion picture. That turns copyright law on its head,” the lawyers write.

Even if Miramax could somehow show that, by giving up the film’s copyrights, Tarantino also transferred the exclusive rights for the underlying screenplay, that wouldn’t be sufficient. The agreements both parties have signed make it clear that the director didn’t give up the screenplay rights.

“At every turn, the parties bent over backwards to make clear that Mr. Tarantino was not assigning any rights in the Screenplay to Miramax,” Tarantino’s lawyers note.

Tarantino’s legal team makes it clear that the NFTs will not include any content from the film. They will be based on the screenplay which is still owned and copyrighted by the director.

“The Film is a derivative work created from the Screenplay, not the other way around. Because Mr. Tarantino never assigned any rights in the Screenplay to Miramax, Miramax’s copyright claim fails,” the lawyers reiterate.

‘Infringements’ Removed?

It is worth noting that when the TarantinoNFTs.com first launched, it included several film-inspired elements.

For example, the early artwork featured iconic depictions of Samuel L. Jackson and John Travolta, which have since been replaced with an image of Tarantino himself. The original artwork was labeled as copyright-infringing by Miramax so this change appears to be a direct response to this claim.

In addition, several tweets from the Tarantino NFT team with alleged copyright-infringing material were deleted as well. These tweets are also listed as infringing examples in the legal paperwork.

It is now up to the court to decide whether there are sufficient grounds to dismiss the complaint or not. Before that happens, Miramax is expected to formally respond to Tarantino’s arguments.

A copy of the motion for judgement on the pleadings is available here (pdf) and the proposed order to dismiss the case can be found here (pdf)

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

Poliovirus may be spreading in London; virus detected in sewage for months

Vaccine-derived poliovirus spreads with poor hygiene, sanitation, and low vaccination.

A health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child out of Kabul Afghanistan on May 17, 2016.

Enlarge / A health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child out of Kabul Afghanistan on May 17, 2016. (credit: Getty | Anadolu Agency)

A vaccine-derived version of poliovirus has repeatedly surfaced in London sewage over the past several months, suggesting there may be a cryptic or hidden spread among some unvaccinated people, UK health officials announced Wednesday.

No polio cases have been reported so far, nor any identified cases of paralysis. But sewage sampling in one London treatment plant has repeatedly detected closely related vaccine-derived polioviruses between February and May. This suggests "it is likely there has been some spread between closely-linked individuals in North and East London and that they are now shedding the type 2 poliovirus strain in their feces," the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said.

Though the current situation raises alarm, the agency notes that it's otherwise common to see a small number of vaccine-like polioviruses pop up in sewage from time to time, usually from people who have recently been vaccinated out of the country. This is because many countries use oral polio vaccines that include weakened (attenuated) polioviruses, which can still replicate in the intestines and thus be present in stool. They can also spread to others via poor hygiene and sanitation (i.e., unwashed hands and food or water contaminated by sewage), which can become concerning amid poor vaccination rates.

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AYA Neo Flip clamshell-style handheld gaming PC is on the way

In the past two years Chinese handheld PC maker AYA has launched a handful of devices including the AYA Neo and AYA Neo Next. This year the company is expanding its lineup in a big way with a bunch of small computers including the upcoming AYA Neo 2, …

In the past two years Chinese handheld PC maker AYA has launched a handful of devices including the AYA Neo and AYA Neo Next. This year the company is expanding its lineup in a big way with a bunch of small computers including the upcoming AYA Neo 2, AYA Neo Air, AYA Neo Air Plus, […]

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Ex-Tesla worker who suffered racist abuse rejects $15M award, seeks new trial

Owen Diaz rejects lowered damages, says it’s not enough to punish and deter Tesla.

Illustration of a stamp that prints the word

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Bet_Noire)

A former Tesla worker who won a racial discrimination case against the company has rejected a $15 million payout and will seek a new damages trial.

A jury had awarded plaintiff Owen Diaz $137 million in October 2021, but in April, a federal judge reduced the payout to $15 million. In that ruling, US District Judge William Orrick rejected Tesla's claim that it is not liable for the "disturbing" racist abuse suffered by Diaz, who is Black, but found that the jury overreached in its damages calculation.

Diaz had the option of accepting or rejecting the lower payout, and he rejected it in a court filing on Tuesday. The case is in US District Court for the Northern District of California.

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Meta and Microsoft team up to create metaverse standards; Apple, Google sit out

The group believes open standards will help realize the so-called metaverse.

Young man or teenager in a white t-shirt wearing virtual reality Headset during the VR experience in Neon fluorescent ultra violet purple and blue colors.

Enlarge (credit: Getty)

Parties interested in turning Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg's favorite buzzword into a reality announced on Wednesday that they have formed The Metaverse Standards Forum. Meta is a founding member, naturally, and big tech names like Adobe, Microsoft, and Nvidia are also founding members. Initial membership notably lacks participation from Apple and Google, however.

The forum, according to today's announcement, is meant to "foster the development of open standards for the metaverse."

"The Forum will explore where the lack of interoperability is holding back metaverse deployment and how the work of Standards Developing Organizations (SDOs) defining and evolving needed standards may be coordinated and accelerated," the group said in its announcement.

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Leak of next-gen Intel NUC combines a 12th-gen CPU with Intel’s discrete Arc GPU

Though the benchmarks we’ve seen for Intel’s GPUs so far could be better.

"Serpent Canyon" could be Intel's next "enthusiast"-class NUC box, and the first with a dedicated Intel GPU.

Enlarge / "Serpent Canyon" could be Intel's next "enthusiast"-class NUC box, and the first with a dedicated Intel GPU. (credit: Baidu)

Intel's "Phantom Canyon" NUC sits in between the company's standard square NUC mini PCs and the expandable NUC Extreme boxes in size, performance, and expandability. It's much smaller than the NUC Extreme boxes and still fits a dedicated GPU and more powerful CPU, but like the smallest NUCs, those components are laptop-class components that can't be upgraded.

The next-generation follow-up to Phantom Canyon is allegedly around the corner, according to very plausible-looking leaked images and specs from a Chinese forum post (via Tom's Hardware). The new NUC, allegedly codenamed "Serpent Canyon," combines a Core i7-12700H CPU (6 P-cores and 8 E-cores) with one of Intel's own Arc A770M GPUs, making it the first of these high-performance NUC boxes without an AMD or Nvidia GPU in it. The Phantom Canyon NUC uses a 4-core Core i7-1165G7 and an Nvidia RTX 2060 GPU, so Serpent Canyon should be quite a bit more powerful overall.

The Serpent Canyon photos make it look chunkier than the Phantom Canyon box, which as Tom's Hardware points out is a likely side effect of the higher-performance CPU and GPU—more power means more cooling and thus a larger case. But the PC should still offer impressive performance for its size, and its array of USB, Ethernet, Thunderbolt, HDMI, and DisplayPort outputs should accommodate most peoples' accessories and multi-monitor setups. Like Intel's other high-performance NUCs, it also has a lit-up skull on the side. This may or may not make it go faster.

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