Star-Wars-Rip-offs: Besser schlecht als gar nicht kopiert
Nach dem Erfolg von Star Wars 1977 wollten viele Filmemacher profitieren – und schreckten nicht vor dreisten Imitationen zurück. Von Peter Osteried (Star Wars, George Lucas)
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Nach dem Erfolg von Star Wars 1977 wollten viele Filmemacher profitieren – und schreckten nicht vor dreisten Imitationen zurück. Von Peter Osteried (Star Wars, George Lucas)
50-year-old Frenchman Max Louarn began his hacking career in the 80s and during the following decades built up quite a reputation. He earned millions of dollars and traveled the world, but also spent time in prison. Despite being wanted by the FBI for his alleged involvement with Nintendo hacking group Team Xecuter, Louarn doesn’t view himself as a criminal, but as a rebel instead.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
In the fall of 2020, the U.S. Government indicted three members of the infamous group Team Xecuter, the masterminds behind various Nintendo hacks.
The authorities arrested Canadian Gary Bowser in the Dominican Republic and Frenchman Max Louarn was detained in Tanzania.
Bowser was later deported to the U.S. where he was sentenced to 40 months in prison earlier this year. His sentence was lower than the five-year prison term the U.S. Government had requested.
At the sentencing, Judge Lasnik said that it was important ‘to send a message’ but a reduction was indeed warranted; Bowser played the smallest role of the three defendants and faced medical and other issues.
At the same time, Judge Lasnik also made clear that Max Louarn, who was portrayed as the boss of Team Xecuter, shouldn’t expect the same treatment if he eventually appears before the court.
“If Mr. Louarn comes in front of me for sentencing, he may very well be doing double-digit years in prison for his role and his involvement,” Judge Lasnik said.
There is no sign that Louarn will be brought to justice in the US anytime soon. The 50-year-old Frenchman is currently living in an apartment in Avignon with his girlfriend, a former Russian model, and recently sat down for an in-depth interview with Le Monde.
Louarn doesn’t hide the fact that he’s a hacker. His career started in the 80s soon after his parents bought him a Commodore 64, a reward for his excellent school performance. This was the start of a lifelong hacking passion, which perfectly aligned with his math skills.
At the age of 14, Louarn started to connect with like-minded people from all over the world, sharing messages on Bulletin Board Systems (BBS). Hacking in those days was mostly done for fun but as time went on, money started to play an increasingly important role.
“I wasn’t going to end up as an engineer earning 5,000 euros a month when I realized, at 18, that hacking was not just fun, but that there was a way to make a lot of money,” Louarn says.
While the Frenchman knew that companies were being damaged by his actions, that didn’t hold him back. The companies he hacked had plenty of money, he reasons.
“Stealing from companies that make billions, what do I care?”
In the piracy scene, Louarn soon became a legend. At the start of the 1990s “MAXiMiLiEN” became the driving force behind the warez-demogroup PARADOX (PDX), which supplied a constant stream of pirated games, cracks, keygens, and other software.
This wasn’t without risk. In 1993 he was arrested in a Nintendo piracy case, forcing him to flee to Spain where he enjoyed a lavish lifestyle in a Mallorcan villa.
The extravagant escapade didn’t last very long. In 1994, a friend invited Louarn to the United States to party. It turned out to be a trap. Instead of partying, he was welcomed by 15 armed agents for reselling thousands of stolen phone cards.
Facing a potential 40-year prison term, Louarn decided to plead guilty. This eventually resulted in a sentence of five years and eight months for the then 23-year-old, who was sent to the Federal Correctional Institution in Petersburg, Virginia.
Louarn was released in 1999 and returned to France but he hadn’t lost his passion for hacking nor his love for computers.
Along the way, he met a variety of people including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, who shared his fascination with hacking. Louarn also invested in Kim Dotcom’s file-storage platform Megaupload, which was later taken down by the feds.
In 2005, Louarn’s name showed up again in federal court records, with Sony accusing him of operating Divineo, a company through which he sold modified Playstation devices and modchips. Sony went on to win the case, securing a judgment of more than $5 million in statutory damages.
Meanwhile, Nintendo was also taking an interest in Louarn’s ‘hacking’ activities. The Japanese gaming giant filed several lawsuits and pulled out all the stops to prevent people from jailbreaking consoles, with mixed results. That turned Louarn into Nintendo’s archnemesis.
“They hate me. I bet that in Tokyo, they posted my picture in an office,” he says. The Frenchman doesn’t see himself as a criminal, though, but as a rebel instead. One who helps the public take control of the devices they bought.
“We’ve always been pro-liberty, that’s our mindset: to do what we want with the machines and for everyone to have access to them,” Louarn tells Le Monde.
Nintendo clearly sees things differently and with the US Department of Justice on its side, in 2020 the company went after Louarn again. This time, he stands accused of being the leader of Team Xecuter.
This claim was backed up by a plea agreement signed a few months ago by fellow defendant Gary Bowser. Louarn denies involvement with the group and believes that Bowser said these things to get a reduced sentence.
“He pleaded guilty to things he didn’t do in order to escape a life sentence,” Louarn says. “That’s American justice! The press showed that Gary Browser was living poorly in a tin shack in the Dominican Republic, while Team Xecuter, they are all millionaires.”
The Frenchman doesn’t plan on proving his innocence in a US court though. After being arrested at the Zuri Hotel Tanzania in late 2020, he was released from prison after a few weeks, with a Dar es Salaam court concluding that his arrest was “illegal”.
With help from a friend, who sent a private plane from South Africa to pick him up, Louarn initially traveled to Reunion Island and then back to France, before the FBI could apprehend him again.
Although Louarn is now living relatively freely in France, his foreign bank and cryptocurrency accounts remain frozen. Leaving the country isn’t really an option either, as he is still a wanted man in the United States.
There are legal issues in France as well. There’s a case pending about his refusal to hand over the unlocking codes of his electronic devices to the American officers when he was arrested. His lawyer hopes to have this case closed.
Louarn, meanwhile, will seize any opportunity to brand the FBI and the US justice system as biased. They’re “in the pay of large corporations, ready to destroy competitors by dressing up simple commercial disputes with criminal law,” he notes.
There’s no denying that “MAXiMiLiEN” has led a turbulent life, one that could be easily turned into a Hollywood script. He’s made internet history books on several occasions and remains rebellious to this day.
But times have changed this hacker too, as a quote tucked away in the Le Monde piece shows. Reflecting on the five years he spent in prison in the 1990s, he now realizes that another long sentence would have an entirely different impact today.
“Now [serving time in prison] would be hard because I take care of my father. I have a 16-year-old daughter, and soon a second child,” he says.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Apple zeigt neue Hard- und Software und es gibt Kabelsalat: die Woche im Video. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Apple)
Westliche Politiker werfen Russland vor, die Hungerkrise als Druckmittel einzusetzen, um die Sanktionen aufzuheben. Mit etwas Glück könnte es beim Streit um die Getreide-Exporte bald eine Einigung geben
Erhebung der Robert Bosch Stiftung weist auf alarmierende Zustände in deutschen Klassenzimmern hin. Corona hat die Lage verschärft, aber nicht verursacht
CDC worked to raise awareness, dispel concerns of airborne transmission.
The US has now identified 45 monkeypox cases scattered across 15 states and the District of Columbia, while the multinational outbreak has reached more than 1,300 confirmed cases from at least 31 countries. No deaths have been reported.
In a press briefing Friday, US health officials provided updates on efforts to halt the spread of the virus and dispel unfounded concerns that the virus is spreading through the air.
To date, no cases of airborne transmission have been reported in the outbreak, which has almost entirely been found spreading through sexual networks of men who have sex with men. Monkeypox may spread through large, short-range respiratory droplets, and health care providers are encouraged to mask and take other precautions during specific procedures, such as intubation. But the general potential for spread via smaller, long-range aerosols is more speculative and theoretical.
Game developer Bungie and Elite Boss Tech, a creator of cheating software for the popular Destiny 2 game, have reached an agreement to end a copyright infringement lawsuit. The stipulated consent judgment, in which Elite Boss Tech admits thousands of violations of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions, includes a permanent injunction and statutory damages of $13.5 million.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Late August 2022, game developer Bungie filed a lawsuit against the creators of software that enabled cheating in Destiny 2.
The complaint named Canadian business entities Elite Boss Tech and 11020781 Canada Inc., owner Robert James Duthie Nelson, plus a number of ‘Doe’ defendants said to be involved in the creation, sale, and distribution of the software.
Bungie’s claims were underpinned by alleged breaches of copyright law, including the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions. Additional allegations included racketeering, fraud, money laundering, and violations of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.
In a February 2022 status report, Bungie stressed that Destiny 2’s commercial viability depends on the integrity of its gameplay and the positive experiences of its players. The defendants threaten the gaming experience, Bungie added, noting that anti-cheating mitigation technology had cost it “exorbitant amounts of money.”
The defendants argued that during the development of the cheating software, no copies of Destiny 2 were made or distributed, and no derivative works were created. They also claimed that certain terms in Bungie’s Limited Software License Agreement (LSLA) are unenforceable and that any copyright infringement claims were baseless.
The parties were as far apart as ever and the lawsuit seemed to be heading towards trial. This week, however, news of consensus appeared in the form of a stipulated motion asking the court to enter a consent judgment to end Bungie’s legal action.
The agreement sees Robert James Duthie Nelson, Elite Boss Tech, Inc., and 11020781 Canada, accept that the cheating software “displays a graphical overlay” that integrates into and annotates Bungie’s copyrighted Destiny 2 work and injects code into Destiny 2’s copyrighted code, in both cases creating an unlicensed derivative work.
The defendants agree that their infringement was willful and admit that their cheat software circumvents technological measures employed by Bungie to control access to its software, thereby violating the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions (17 U.S.C. § 1201(a) and (b)).
The cheating software was reportedly downloaded 6,765 times, with each download constituting an independent provision of a circumvention device, also in violation of 17 U.S.C. § 1201(a) and (b).
Multiplying the number of downloads (6,765) by the statutory damages available under § 1201 (not less than $200 or more than $2,500), the defendants agree that judgment should be entered in the amount of $13,530,000, representing statutory damages of $2,000 per violation. All other alleged claims in the complaint are withdrawn.
The consent judgment also comes with a proposed permanent injunction that prohibits the defendants (and any person or company acting in concert with them) from creating, distributing or otherwise making available, any software that infringes Bungie’s rights or those of its parents, subsidiaries, or affiliates. The defendants are also restrained from any reverse engineering activities or similar manipulation of any game connected to the plaintiff.
Any third parties connected to the defendants, including domain registrars and registries, are prohibited from supporting their activities if they include trafficking in circumvention devices or otherwise infringe Bungie’s intellectual property rights. The defendants are also prohibited from using any online resource to provide any content relating to their own or anyone else’s cheating software.
“This permanent injunction is binding against Defendants worldwide, without regard to the territorial scope of the specific intellectual property rights asserted in the Complaint and may be enforced in any court of competent jurisdiction wherever Defendants or their assets may be found,” the motion reads.
“Any violations of this order by Defendants will subject them to the full scope of this Court’s contempt authority, including punitive, coercive, and monetary sanctions.”
The consent judgment is yet to be signed off by the court but that is likely just a formality.
Supporting documents can be found here and here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
The most significant historic maritime discovery since raising the Mary Rose in 1982.
At 5:30 am on May 6, 1682, a ship called the Gloucester ran aground on a sandbank off the coast of Norfolk and sank within the hour. Among the passengers was James Stuart, Duke of York and future King James II of England, who escaped in a small boat just before the ship sank. Had he perished, British history might have played out quite differently. Yesterday we learned that the wreck of the Gloucester was discovered by a pair of brothers in 2007, although it took several more years to verify that the wreck was indeed the Gloucester. Its discovery has been a closely guarded secret until now.
"Because of the circumstances of its sinking, this can be claimed as the single most significant historic maritime discovery since the raising of the Mary Rose [Henry VIII's favorite warship] in 1982," said maritime history expert Claire Jowitt of the University of East Anglia (UEA). "The discovery promises to fundamentally change understanding of 17th-century social, maritime, and political history." Jowitt is the author of a new paper published in the journal English Historical Review, outlining the significance of the find.
This was a particularly fraught historical period, rife with political intrigue and religious tensions. In January 1649, King Charles I was executed and Oliver Cromwell came into power as Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Ireland, and Scotland. The executed king's sons, Charles (the heir) and James, fled to France where they lived in exile.
Best Buy and Newegg are both running 3-day flash sales with discounts on PCs, tablets, accessories, and a whole bunch of other electronic devices. Among other things, you can pick up a halfway decent Chromebook for as little as $89, or a Windows lapto…
Best Buy and Newegg are both running 3-day flash sales with discounts on PCs, tablets, accessories, and a whole bunch of other electronic devices. Among other things, you can pick up a halfway decent Chromebook for as little as $89, or a Windows laptop with similar specs for $21 more. Or if you’re looking for […]
The post Daily Deals (6-10-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.
Zen 4 laptop CPUs will include next-gen GPUs based on the RDNA3 architecture.
CPUs based on AMD's new Zen 4 architecture won't arrive until this fall, but the company is already dropping hints about what comes next. As reported by AnandTech, AMD is planning a new Zen 5 architecture, which is scheduled to come to desktop and laptop PCs in 2024. The company is also planning to bring the Zen 4 architecture to laptops in 2023, while the desktop CPUs remain on track to launch in 2022.
AMD also provided more information about Zen 4's performance. The company said at Computex that the Ryzen 7000-series chips would sport roughly 15 percent faster single-threaded performance than Ryzen 5000. The company said Friday that Zen 4 was between 8 and 10 percent faster than Zen 3 at the same clock speeds, accounting for most of the speed improvement, while the remaining 5 to 7 percent will come from higher clock speeds for Ryzen 7000 CPUs. Zen 4 can also deliver roughly 25 percent higher performance-per-watt than Zen 3.
The company will bring back its 3D V-Cache technology for some Zen 4 CPUs as well. This allows AMD to stack additional L3 cache on top of the CPU die, providing a big boost to the amount of cache without increasing the footprint of the CPU die or the CPU package. As we saw in our review of the Ryzen 7 5800X3D, the technology helps with game performance in particular, though the chip also ran a bit hotter than Zen 3 CPUs without 3D V-Cache, and its somewhat lower clock speeds made it perform a bit worse in non-gaming workloads.
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