Discord update adds activities, app directory, and cheaper Nitro subscription

For some communities, Discord has become an alternative to social media.

Discord announced a plethora of updates to its online communication software and service today, including new ways to interact with third-party apps on the platform and a cheaper Nitro subscription tier.

The VoIP and text chat service is adding a new "App Directory" where server moderators can browse apps and integrate them into their servers, all within the Discord app. Third-party apps were supported already, but you had to go find them on the web and install them. This new approach is more akin to an on-platform app store.

Longtime Discord users may typically refer to apps as bots; these are special features you can activate with a "/" command, such as polls, moderation, meme generation, and more. Basically, Discord made it easier to find and install these bots. The App Directory was announced today and launches on October 18.

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Discord update adds activities, app directory, and cheaper Nitro subscription

For some communities, Discord has become an alternative to social media.

Discord announced a plethora of updates to its online communication software and service today, including new ways to interact with third-party apps on the platform and a cheaper Nitro subscription tier.

The VoIP and text chat service is adding a new "App Directory" where server moderators can browse apps and integrate them into their servers, all within the Discord app. Third-party apps were supported already, but you had to go find them on the web and install them. This new approach is more akin to an on-platform app store.

Longtime Discord users may typically refer to apps as bots; these are special features you can activate with a "/" command, such as polls, moderation, meme generation, and more. Basically, Discord made it easier to find and install these bots. The App Directory was announced today and launches on October 18.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

RIAA Flags ‘Artificial Intelligence’ Music Mixer as Emerging Copyright Threat

The RIAA has submitted its most recent overview of notorious markets to the U.S. Trade Representative. As usual, the music industry group lists various torrent sites, cyberlockers and stream-ripping services as familiar suspects. In addition, several ‘AI-based’ music mixers and extractors are added as an emerging threat.

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

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is a buzzword that’s frequently used by startups and established businesses in the tech industry.

In some cases, it refers to little more than advanced algorithms, but complex self-learning computer systems with human-like traits are actively being developed as well.

From a copyright perspective, AI can bring up some interesting questions. For example, can content created by an AI be copyrighted like any other work? Or perhaps AI can infringe copyrights held by others?

AI Piracy

While legal experts scratch their heads over similar questions, the RIAA has already made up its mind about a selection of services claiming to offer AI music extractors and mixers.

Responding to a request from the Office of the US Trade Representative (USTR), the music group highlighted several of these sites in its annual overview of ‘notorious’ piracy markets.

“There are online services that, purportedly using artificial intelligence (AI), extract, or rather, copy, the vocals, instrumentals, or some portion of the instrumentals from a sound recording, and/or generate, master or remix a recording to be very similar to or almost as good as reference tracks by selected, well known sound recording artists,” RIAA writes.

Songmastr

Songmastr is one of the platforms that’s mentioned. The service promises to “master” any song based on the style of well-known music artists such as Beyonce, Taylor Swift, Coltrane, Bob Dylan, James Brown and many others.

The site’s underlying technology is powered by the open-source Matchering 2.0 code, which is freely available on GitHub. And indeed, its purported AI capabilities are prominently in the site’s tagline.

“This service uses artificial intelligence and is based on the open source library Matchering. The algorithm masters your track with the same RMS, FR, peak amplitude and stereo width as the reference song you choose,” Songmastr explains.

songmastr

Where Artificial Intelligence comes into play isn’t quite clear to us. The same can be said for the Acapella-Extractor and Remove-Vocals websites, which the RIAA lists in the same category. The names of these services are pretty much self-explanatory; they can separate the vocals from the rest of a track.

The RIAA logically doesn’t want third parties to strip music or vocals from copyrighted tracks, particularly when these derivative works are further shared with others.

Unauthorized Copies and Derivatives

While Songmastr’s service is a bit more advanced, the RIAA sees it as clearly infringing. After all, the original copyrighted tracks are used by the site to create derivative works, without the necessary permission.

“To the extent these services, or their partners, are training their AI models using our members’ music, that use is unauthorized and infringes our members’ rights by making unauthorized copies of our members works.

“In any event, the files these services disseminate are either unauthorized copies or unauthorized derivative works of our members’ music,” the RIAA’s submission adds.

Thus far, Songmastr doesn’t appear to be a major threat in terms of traffic. With less than 200 visits per day over the past 12 months, it hasn’t really caught on. Acapella-Extractor and Remove-Vocals are more popular, with a few hundred thousand monthly visits.

The RIAA is clearly worried about these services. Interestingly, however, the operator of Songmastr and Acapella-Extractor informs us that the music group hasn’t reached out with any complaints. But perhaps they’re still in the pipeline.

Aside from the emerging AI threats, the RIAA lists various torrent sites, download sites, streamrippers, and bulletproof ISPs in its overview. The popular video app likee.video is also included, as it reportedly failed to obtain proper licenses for the tracks it uses.

The RIAA’s full list of “notorious” pirate sites can be found below, and the full report is available here (pdf).

Stream-Ripping Sites

– ytmp3.cc
– mp3juices.cc
– flvto.biz and 2conv.com
– y2mate.com (and related sites yt1s.com, yt5s.com, y2meta.com, , and 9convert.com)
– savefrom.net (and related site savef.net)
– ssyoutube.com

Music Download Sites

– newalbumreleases.net
– intmusic.net
– ak47full.com
– songswave.com

BitTorrent Indexing Sites

– thepiratebay.org
– 1337x.to and mirrored at 1337x.is, 1337x.se, 1337x.st, x1337x.ws, x1337x.eu, and x1337x.se)
– rarbg.to

Cyberlockers

– zippyshare.com
– dbree.org
– rapidgator.net
– turbobit.net
– onlyfiles.io

Unauthorized Short Form Video Services

– likee.video

AI Based Extractors/Mixers

– acapella-extractor.com
– remove-vocals.com
– songmastr.com

Additional Issues

– Bulletproof ISPS: PRQ, FlokiNET, Frantech Solutions/BuyVM, DDoS Guard.
– Nigerian-Operated Infringing Sites: thenetnaija.net, trendybeatz.com, justnaija.com, 24naijamuzic.com and bazenation.com.

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

Build a shelf-size vintage computer museum made of paper

Artist’s collection allows mini Apple II, C64, TRS-80—and more—for the cost of paper and ink.

An example of eight papercraft vintage computer models designed and assembled by Rocky Bergen.

Enlarge / An example of eight papercraft vintage computer models designed and assembled by Rocky Bergen. (credit: Rocky Bergen)

Yesterday, a Winnipeg, Canada-based artist named Rocky Bergen released a free collection of miniature papercraft vintage computer models that hobbyists can assemble for fun. They are available on The Internet Archive in a pack of 24 PDF files that you can print out on letter-size paper and fold into three dimensions.

Among Bergen's Barbie-size papercraft models, you'll find representations of classic computers originally released during the 1970s and '80s, such as the Apple II, IBM PC 5150, Commodore 64, Apple Macintosh, and even the rare Apple Lisa 1. You'll also find papercraft models of a few classic game consoles like the Sega Master System and the Nintendo GameCube.

Bergen began creating the papercraft models in the summer of 2016, starting with an Amstrad CPC 464 he designed for a CPC fanzine. "I grew up with a Commodore 64 and have always been a fan of old computers and their industrial design," Bergen told Ars Technica. "I would love to have a huge collection of them, but it's not always practical for people to have a massive amount of hardware with them at all times."

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Build a shelf-size vintage computer museum made of paper

Artist’s collection allows mini Apple II, C64, TRS-80—and more—for the cost of paper and ink.

An example of eight papercraft vintage computer models designed and assembled by Rocky Bergen.

Enlarge / An example of eight papercraft vintage computer models designed and assembled by Rocky Bergen. (credit: Rocky Bergen)

Yesterday, a Winnipeg, Canada-based artist named Rocky Bergen released a free collection of miniature papercraft vintage computer models that hobbyists can assemble for fun. They are available on The Internet Archive in a pack of 24 PDF files that you can print out on letter-size paper and fold into three dimensions.

Among Bergen's Barbie-size papercraft models, you'll find representations of classic computers originally released during the 1970s and '80s, such as the Apple II, IBM PC 5150, Commodore 64, Apple Macintosh, and even the rare Apple Lisa 1. You'll also find papercraft models of a few classic game consoles like the Sega Master System and the Nintendo GameCube.

Bergen began creating the papercraft models in the summer of 2016, starting with an Amstrad CPC 464 he designed for a CPC fanzine. "I grew up with a Commodore 64 and have always been a fan of old computers and their industrial design," Bergen told Ars Technica. "I would love to have a huge collection of them, but it's not always practical for people to have a massive amount of hardware with them at all times."

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Hacker gets discontinued P.T. running on unmodified PS5

New method relies on a transfer from a separate jailbroken system.

Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

Enlarge / Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

For years now, Hideo Kojima's cult classic P.T. (or "Playable Trailer" for a canceled Silent Hills project) has only been playable on the million or so increasingly hard-to-find PS4 consoles that downloaded the free demo (and didn't delete it) before it was completely removed from the PlayStation Network. Now, one hacker has gotten the game to run on an unmodified PlayStation 5 by using a second, jailbroken PS5 as a go-between.

Streamer Lance McDonald demonstrated his P.T.-on-PS5 method in a stream early Monday, detailing several prerequisites and steps that will make it difficult for many interested players to copy. Chief among them is McDonald's access to a second PS5 system that he said he hadn't plugged in for over a year, when he used it to try the Elden Ring Network Test. That means the console was still running an old version of the PS5 firmware and was thus susceptible to the recently revealed PS5 jailbreaking method that Sony patched after firmware version 4.3.

Using that jailbroken system, McDonald says he could log in to the system from a PC using an FTP client and "edit the list of games you're allowed to run on your PS5." That's important, because even users who have previously managed to transfer a legitimate PS4 copy of P.T. to their PS5 have been faced with a message saying: "You can't use this PS4 game or app on the PS5."

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Hacker gets discontinued P.T. running on unmodified PS5

New method relies on a transfer from a separate jailbroken system.

Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

Enlarge / Loading this onto a PS5 requires jumping through quite a few hoops.

For years now, Hideo Kojima's cult classic P.T. (or "Playable Trailer" for a canceled Silent Hills project) has only been playable on the million or so increasingly hard-to-find PS4 consoles that downloaded the free demo (and didn't delete it) before it was completely removed from the PlayStation Network. Now, one hacker has gotten the game to run on an unmodified PlayStation 5 by using a second, jailbroken PS5 as a go-between.

Streamer Lance McDonald demonstrated his P.T.-on-PS5 method in a stream early Monday, detailing several prerequisites and steps that will make it difficult for many interested players to copy. Chief among them is McDonald's access to a second PS5 system that he said he hadn't plugged in for over a year, when he used it to try the Elden Ring Network Test. That means the console was still running an old version of the PS5 firmware and was thus susceptible to the recently revealed PS5 jailbreaking method that Sony patched after firmware version 4.3.

Using that jailbroken system, McDonald says he could log in to the system from a PC using an FTP client and "edit the list of games you're allowed to run on your PS5." That's important, because even users who have previously managed to transfer a legitimate PS4 copy of P.T. to their PS5 have been faced with a message saying: "You can't use this PS4 game or app on the PS5."

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Rechenzentrum und Stromausfall: “Solange Diesel da ist, können wir arbeiten”

Rechenzentrumsbetreiber T-Systems will auch bei einem Stromausfall im kommenden Winter weitermachen können. Die Server sind so gesichert, dass man sie nicht sehen darf. (T-Systems, Server)

Rechenzentrumsbetreiber T-Systems will auch bei einem Stromausfall im kommenden Winter weitermachen können. Die Server sind so gesichert, dass man sie nicht sehen darf. (T-Systems, Server)

All DisplayPort 2.0 products are now DisplayPort 2.1, VESA says

VESA released DisplayPort 2.1 today, but you may already own certified products.

Cable Displayport on isolated white background

Enlarge / VESA released the DisplayPort 2.1 specification today. (credit: Getty)

VESA released the DisplayPort 2.1 specification today. Typically when an industry group announces a new standard, it takes months or even years for products supporting the spec to be available to consumers. But DisplayPort 2.1 products are already available today; in fact, you may already own some. With a flick of its magic specs wand, VESA also declared today that any product that was already DisplayPort 2.0-certified before today's announcement is now DisplayPort 2.1-certified, too.

"VESA has been working closely with member companies to ensure that products supporting DisplayPort 2.0 would actually meet the newer, more demanding DisplayPort 2.1 spec," the announcement from VESA, which also makes DisplayHDR, AdaptiveSync/MediaSync, Clear MR, and monitor-mounting specs, said.

"Due to this effort, all previously certified DisplayPort 2.0 products including UHBR (Ultra-high Bit Rate) capable products—whether GPUs, docking station chips, monitor scalar chips, PHY repeater chips, such as re-timers, or DP40 / DP80 cables. (including both passive and active and using full-size DisplayPort, Mini DisplayPort, or USB Type-C connectors)—have already been certified to the stricter DisplayPort 2.1 spec."

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