BA.5 is finally fading—sublineages BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 rise from variant stew

BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 now account for 1-in-10 US COVID infections.

Transmission electron micrograph of a variant strain of SARS-CoV-2 virus particles (UK B.1.1.7), isolated from a patient sample and cultivated in cell culture. Image captured at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland.

Enlarge / Transmission electron micrograph of a variant strain of SARS-CoV-2 virus particles (UK B.1.1.7), isolated from a patient sample and cultivated in cell culture. Image captured at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Maryland. (credit: Getty | BSIP)

New omicron coronavirus sublineages are finally threatening BA.5's dominance, as many experts fear the US is on the cusp of a winter wave.

For months, BA.5 has reigned in the US and worldwide. The hypertransmissible omicron subvariant rose up early in the summer to elbow out previous subvariants BA.2 and BA.2.12.1, which had themselves displaced the original omicron strain, BA.1, that swept the world at the start of the year.

But amid BA.5's months-long rule, hundreds of other sublineages have been stewing in the background, gaining new mutations. Of the legions of new viruses, the most concerning stem from BA.5 and BA.2. Many have seemed to independently converge on similar sets of mutations that allow the virus to better skirt strengthening immune responses, generated as more people get infections, vaccinations, and boosters.

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“The hell with it”—Elon Musk to keep funding Ukrainian Starlink service [Updated]

SpaceX and US in talks, but Pentagon says it has “other” satellite options.

A satellite dish sits inside a room.

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Update, October 15, 5:57pm EDT: In a tweet early Saturday afternoon, SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced that satellite-based ISP Starlink will continue providing Internet service to Ukrainian forces battling the Russian invasion as well as the country's government. "The hell with it … even though Starlink is still losing money & other companies are getting billions of taxpayer $, we’ll just keep funding Ukraine govt for free," Musk tweeted.

Original story: SpaceX has asked the Pentagon to fund the Ukraine government and military's use of Starlink broadband, saying the Elon Musk-led company can't afford to donate more user terminals or pay for operations indefinitely, CNN reported.

"We are not in a position to further donate terminals to Ukraine, or fund the existing terminals for an indefinite period of time," SpaceX's director of government sales wrote to the Pentagon in a September letter, according to CNN. The letter "requested that the Pentagon take over funding for Ukraine's government and military use of Starlink, which SpaceX claims would cost more than $120 million for the rest of the year and could cost close to $400 million for the next 12 months."

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Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Gaming Chromebook now available for $399

The Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Gaming Chromebook is a notebook with a 16 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel, 120 Hz display, a keyboard with RGB LED backlit keys and quad speakers. In other words, it has the look of a gaming laptop… but not necessarily the hardware…

The Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Gaming Chromebook is a notebook with a 16 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel, 120 Hz display, a keyboard with RGB LED backlit keys and quad speakers. In other words, it has the look of a gaming laptop… but not necessarily the hardware or the price tag. That’s because it’s designed for cloud […]

The post Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Gaming Chromebook now available for $399 appeared first on Liliputing.

The Pixel 7 tests out 64-bit-only Android, can’t run 32-bit apps

64-bit only Android promises better performance and security, if we can get there.

The Pixel 7 in a lovely "hazel" color.

Enlarge / The Pixel 7 in a lovely "hazel" color. (credit: Google)

Here's a surprise: We knew Android was getting ready to drop 32-bit app support sometime soon, with the upcoming Pixel Tablet receiving code check-ins to prep it for a 64-bit only version of Android. What nobody noticed was that the Pixel 7 is also dropping 64-bit app support, so its release yesterday is taking a big step toward Android's 64-bit-only future. Esper Senior Technical Editor Mishaal Rahman figured out the ins and outs of how this is going to work.

It sounds like the Pixel Tablet will still be the first to run a 64-bit-only version of Android, and the Pixel 7 is only taking a half step toward that milestone. Thirty-two-bit apps are disabled via a software flag, but it's not running a 64-bit-only build of Android yet. Trying to install a 32-bit app will display an error message that says: "App not installed as app isn't compatible with your phone."

It sounds like the OS is not quite ready for 64-bit-only builds, since some system libraries are still 32-bit, but Google is getting there. Plus, starting out with an artificial software flag is a good test case. Google can see exactly how many problems 64-bit only will cause and could easily turn the flag off in a software update if things get too bad.

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Dwarf Fortress, the most inscrutable game of two decades, is getting a tutorial

Start off in a mineral-rich play area with hints, rather than primordial chaos.

Screen showing the

Enlarge / Part of the tutorial that will give new Dwarf Fortress players some pointers, if not full understanding, when the game is available on Steam at some point. (credit: Bay 12 Games / Steam)

Dwarf Fortress, the fantasy mining simulation with the motto "losing is fun," is softening its learning curve just the tiniest bit. In its upcoming (but not yet dated) Steam release, a new tutorial will explain what you can do and how things work—if not, exactly, how to survive.

Co-creator Zach Adams showed off some images from an optional tutorial in an update on the game's Steam Store page. Even with the upgraded pixel art and improved control scheme of the Steam release, the team thought the newcomer experience "still needs something." So they built a tutorial that walks a player through camera controls, mining, stockpiling, woodcutting, and, at a basic level, survival.

What's more, the developers are testing it on Annie, Zach Adams' wife. After a failed attempt with an earlier version, the latest tutorial took Annie far enough to where she could "tunnel under a bog and drown her fortress." Presumably, that is good.

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Brazil court orders Apple to reimburse customers for charger-less iPhones

iPhones sold without chargers is an “abusive practice,” São Paulo judge says.

A black smartphone with two cameras.

Enlarge / Apple has been repeatedly fined in Brazil for selling devices like this iPhone 13 Mini without a charger. (credit: Samuel Axon)

Apple has received its third fine in Brazil for not including chargers with its iPhones. A civil court judge in São Paulo issued the tech giant a 100 million real (about $19 million) fine on Thursday, French news agency Agence France-Presse reported via Barron's.

Civil court Judge Caramuru Afonso Francisco in São Paulo reportedly issued the fine as damages in a lawsuit from the Brazilian Consumers' Association.

The judge is also said to have ordered Apple to start selling chargers with the iPhone 12 and iPhone 13 series in Brazil. Further, the judge ordered Apple to provide chargers to customers in Brazil who bought an iPhone 12 or 13 over the last two years.

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Daily Deals (10-14-2022)

The Epic Games Store is giving away two free PC games this week. Amazon Prime members can stream 6 Amazon Luna games for free this month, or snag up to 7 games PC games to add to their library. Meanwhile Paramount+ is running a promotion that lets you…

The Epic Games Store is giving away two free PC games this week. Amazon Prime members can stream 6 Amazon Luna games for free this month, or snag up to 7 games PC games to add to their library. Meanwhile Paramount+ is running a promotion that lets you save 50% on an annual subscription. That […]

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Nvidia will “unlaunch” the 12GB RTX 4080, says it’s “not named right”

Nvidia had taken heat for announcing two 4080 cards with wildly divergent specs.

Nvidia will “unlaunch” the 12GB RTX 4080, says it’s “not named right”

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Nvidia announced today that it would be "unlaunching" the 12GB version of its upcoming GeForce RTX 4080-series GPU on the basis that "having two GPUs with the 4080 designation is confusing." The card will not be launching in the originally planned November window, but it will return at some point following a rebranding.

"The RTX 4080 12GB is a fantastic graphics card, but it's not named right," reads a brief, anonymous Nvidia blog post. The 16GB version of the 4080 will still launch on November 16.

The 16GB version of the 4080 was in keeping with past xx80-series Nvidia cards—it used the same GPU die as the high-end RTX 4090, but with some of the CUDA cores switched off and the clock speeds reduced. But the difference between the 12GB and 16GB versions of the 4080 was much larger than their names would suggest; the 12GB version came with many fewer CUDA cores and a narrower 192-bit memory bus, and rumors indicated it used a totally different GPU die. Benchmarks from Nvidia suggested the 12GB version could be as much as 30 percent slower than the 16GB version of the 4080.

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Researchers make cyborg cockroaches that carry their own power packs

Solar cell and a battery can keep the cyborg’s electronics running for weeks.

Researchers make cyborg cockroaches that carry their own power packs

Enlarge (credit: Kenjiro Fukuda, RIKEN)

Have you ever thought you’d be seeing a cyborg cockroach that runs on solar power and carries a backpack that looks like an electric circuit? A team of researchers at Japan’s RIKEN research institute has turned a regular Madagascar hissing cockroach into a real cyborg insect by connecting a lithium battery, a solar cell, multiple wires, and a tiny electronic circuit. The cyborg can be controlled using Bluetooth signals, and the researchers suggest that, in the future, such robo-bugs could be employed for search-and-rescue missions.

The researchers refer to their cyborg as an insect-computer hybrid system, and it incorporates a living insect as a platform and a mini-electronic system as its controller. Basically, it’s a biobot that can be controlled like a robot, but it has the power to explore and navigate a complex environment with the proficiency of an insect. The researchers claim that insect cyborgs could even beat traditional soft robots when it comes to usefully navigating the real world.

Going solar

Keeping the body shape of the 6-cm-long cockroach in mind, the researchers designed a polymer backpack that could carry all the electronic equipment without disturbing the insect when it moved. The backpack carried an electronic controller, a lithium battery, and multiple wires. Each wire was connected to the controller on one side and to different legs of the cockroach on the other.

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Piracy Lawsuit Front Company Tries to Shut Down, Accounts Overdue

Copyright Management Services Ltd, a UK-based company that helped front the BitTorrent piracy lawsuit factory known as Guardaley, is attempting to shut itself down, accounts overdue. After fronting controversial ‘copyright troll’ lawsuits all over Europe, CMS leaves behind an almost impenetrable matrix of companies, interlinked directors, and movie company partnerships.

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

copyright trollCopyright Management Services Ltd (CMS) was incorporated in the United Kingdom in October 2014.

Its founding director was Patrick Achache, who later rose to fame as the boss of Germany-based BitTorrent tracking company, MaverickEye.

Both companies operated as parts of Guardaley, the international lawsuit factory that to date has targeted scores of thousands of alleged BitTorrent pirates in the United States, UK, Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Brazil, among others.

In a sample period spanning 2016/2017, Danish law firm Njord Law represented CMS Ltd in legal action targeting telecoms giant Telia. Using data captured by Maverickeye, more than 82,000 Telia subscribers in Sweden, Finland and Denmark faced being unmasked on behalf of the companies behind London Has Fallen and Mechanic: Resurrection, among others.

This small sample is just the tip of an extremely large and well-documented iceberg, which as a business model is continuously active today. For now, however, it’s time to say farewell to CMS as it seeks to shut itself down and disappear into the night.

Copyright Management Services Wants Out

According to UK Companies House data, Patrick Achache stopped being a director and the significant controller of CMS on November 19, 2019. On the same day, Lubesly Tellidua – a beauty queen from the Philippines with links to Achache and Guardaley – became the controlling party

When Tellidua inspected the CMS accounts she would’ve seen a company barely breaking even, a surprise given the scale of the business. Accounts filed for 2020 showed cash at hand of £1.00, significantly down on the £25 in hand listed a year earlier.

In July 2022, Lubesly Tellidua filed an application for CMS to be struck off the register of companies.

cms-strike off

CMS hasn’t yet filed its accounts made up to October 31, 2021, but they’re only three months late, HM Revenue and Customs probably won’t mind, and since all the cash is long gone, nobody in government is likely to get excited about it. A few people might even celebrate the demise of CMS but, given the circumstances, that would be missing the bigger picture.

In Brief: CMS is No Longer Needed

When Patrick Achache was in control of CMS, Maverickeye and Guardaley, he formed a copyright settlement partnership in the UK with Robert Croucher of Hatton & Berkeley. From 2015, as part of their promised ‘anti-piracy invasion‘, they sent letters to alleged movie pirates demanding cash, in the same way as CMS did in Scandinavia, using the same Maverickeye tracking data, under the Guardaley umbrella.

Late 2019, we discovered that Hatton & Berkeley’s Robert Croucher had teamed up with FACT Worldwide Ltd, an anti-piracy company directly connected to the Federation Against Copyright Theft. The partnership was made under an existing entity called H&B Administration LLP and its earliest member, dating all the way back to 2016, was a company called Copyright Management Services Ltd.

By 2021, FACT Administration LLP was in full swing, pressuring internet subscribers for cash settlements yet again. CMS wasn’t needed anymore since the ‘protective wrapper‘, insurance in the event of a lawsuit going wrong, would be provided by the FACT Administration limited liability partnership.

Everyone is Related to Each Other

A few quick observations and connections to sum things up:

Patrick Achache operated Copyright Management Services Ltd, Maverickeye, and Guardaley. Copyright Management Services Ltd was the entity with significant control over H&B Administration LLP. Robert Croucher is the director and person with significant control at Hatton & Berkeley Management Ltd.

In turn, Hatton & Berkeley Management Ltd was the entity with significant control at FACT Administration LLP, despite it being declared dormant as of March 31, 2021, with just £100 to its name. And then there’s Guardaley itself.

In a U.S. court in 2011, Guardaley was reported as having two employees, Patrick Achache and Benjamin Perino. Perino resigned his Guardaley directorship in 2018 and a day later he was replaced by Thomas Nowak, the managing director of piracy data collection outfit Maverickeye.

Guardaley Limited continues to live on in the UK under Nowak but, unlike many of its partners and subsidiaries, including the outgoing and apparently broke CMS, Guardaley doesn’t seem to have problems making money.

The company filed its most recent accounts last month, public information for anyone interested.

guardaley accounts

But the UK operation isn’t the end of the Guardaley empire. A company is registered in Germany under the same name, also run by Tomas Nowak, and elsewhere in Europe too.

On June 1, 2019, Guardaley Technologies Limited was incorporated in Cyprus under the directorship of former Guardaley employee, Benjamin Perino.

Three months earlier American Films LLC, a company described by Bloomberg as having “no significant operations”, said it had taken over Guardaley’s US-based operations.

“GuardaLey Ltd., the leading data investigation company combating online piracy on peer to peer file sharing networks, has selected American Films, Inc. to take over the USA operations through its Joint Venture formed at the beginning of February. American Films, Inc. will own 100% of this joint venture company,” American Films announced.

“The partnership with American Films will combine the resources of GuardaLey and American Films, to monitor peer-to-peer file sharing networks, search for illegally downloaded digital media files and provide the resources to enforce against repeat offenders.”

Plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose….

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