Französische AKW: Mit "zufälligen Abschaltungen und Unsicherheiten" ist zu rechnen

Zweifel an den Angaben der EDF; nervöse Regierung in Paris macht Druck. Auch in Großbritannien fürchtet man Stromausfälle im Winter, da Frankreich vom Stromexporteur zum Importeur geworden ist.

Zweifel an den Angaben der EDF; nervöse Regierung in Paris macht Druck. Auch in Großbritannien fürchtet man Stromausfälle im Winter, da Frankreich vom Stromexporteur zum Importeur geworden ist.

Altersarmut in Deutschland: Tausende Rentner sind noch mit 85 im Job

Insgesamt sind es über eine Million Senioren, die noch in Lohnarbeit sind. Linke kritisieren: Niedrige Renten treiben Alte zurück in die Arbeitswelt. Wirtschaft fordert höheres Renteneintrittsalter.

Insgesamt sind es über eine Million Senioren, die noch in Lohnarbeit sind. Linke kritisieren: Niedrige Renten treiben Alte zurück in die Arbeitswelt. Wirtschaft fordert höheres Renteneintrittsalter.

Warum 2022 ein gutes Jahr für die Kohle in Deutschland war

Energie und Klima – kompakt: In Sachen Kohleausstieg war 2022 ein verlorenes Jahr. Der Gasmangel beflügelte den fossilen Energieträger. Das neue könnte mit einem schwarz-grünen Angriff auf die Klimaschutzbewegung beginnen.

Energie und Klima – kompakt: In Sachen Kohleausstieg war 2022 ein verlorenes Jahr. Der Gasmangel beflügelte den fossilen Energieträger. Das neue könnte mit einem schwarz-grünen Angriff auf die Klimaschutzbewegung beginnen.

Russian Cinemas Get Help to Bypass Sanctions to Screen “Avatar: The Way of Water”

Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the latest Hollywood blockbusters are no longer available in local cinemas. Not with permission from rightsholders, at least. The Russian cinema business was hit hard by these restrictions but with some tricks and help from “friendly” neighbors, pirated copies of “Avatar: The Way of Water” have found their way onto the big screen.

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

avatar the way of waterWith its invasion of Ukraine, Russia ignited a regional conflict with global repercussions. Thousands of lives have been lost and many more ruined.

In response, many U.S. entertainment industry companies took a stand by ceasing their Russian operations.

Since Russia is a relatively small source of revenue, the damage is mostly contained for the major Hollywood studios. For the Russian cinema industry, the effect of sanctions is devastating. In fact, Russia’s Association of Cinema Owners warned that the entire industry could collapse.

Evading Sanctions

In response to the restrictions, several theaters had to get creative to keep visitors coming through the door. This includes the use of pirated films, with some converted to Digital Cinema Packages (DCP) so they can be displayed on the big screen.

Many of these DCP releases come with Russian dubbing. Interestingly, our previous research suggests that these packages are sometimes shared between cinema locations using unlisted torrents.

For the movie industry, pirate screenings are seen as a bare necessity to keep the lights on. And since there are no legal options available, Alexei Voronkov of the Russian Association of Cinema Owners understands this move.

“I can’t even blame cinemas now dabbling in torrent screenings,” Voronkov previously said, after condemning pirate screenings early on.

Screening Avatar

These piracy issues drifted from the headlines in more recent months, but with the release of this year’s blockbuster “Avatar: The Way of Water”, the topic is hot once again.

Russian cinema owners recently promised that, one way or another, the movie would be screened locally. Even decent-quality CAM rips were being considered in the absence of better-quality options.

A recent “Avatar: The Way of Water” CAM

avatar cam

This promise was indeed kept as several cinemas began showing “Avatar: The Way of Water” to the public a few days ago. Interestingly, the theaters didn’t have to rely on low-quality pirate releases either.

Independent Russian news outlet Meduza reports that several movie theaters managed to get their hands on high-quality DCP copies. These are reportedly sourced from “friendly” countries such as Kazakhstan, and come complete with Russian dubbing.

Unauthorized screenings are taking place in cities including St. Petersburg, Yekaterinburg, and Krasnoyarsk. How these theaters receive their DCP copies is unknown, but unlisted torrent transfers could be involved.

Delays and Tricks

Not all movie theater chains are taking part in these illegal screenings. The Movie Distributor’s Bulletin reports that the major chains have reached a private agreement to keep Avatar 2 out of theaters until January 13. This “gentlemen’s agreement” was reached because there is already a healthy stream of visitors around New Year.

“In this way, cinemas show that they are responsible for the Russian film business. We all ended up in the same boat, and if we don’t help each other in this situation, then further coexistence within the industry will be difficult,” a source explained.

Not all cinemas are bound by the agreement but there are concerns that openly advertising the screenings could have legal ramifications. This has resulted in some interesting workarounds, such as showing Avatar 2 as a free preview to a 17-minute Russian film “I See”.

“Free pre-session service ‘Avatar: The Way of Water’ – duration 3 hours 12 minutes. The break between the pre-screening service and the film is 1 minute. The film ‘I See’ – duration – 17 minutes,” one movie theater states (translated) on its booking page.

avatar

Legalizing Piracy?

Interestingly, movie theaters that use pirated content to stay in business, also have piracy as their main competitor. A few hours ago a relatively high-quality Telesync copy of Avatar 2 made its way onto various pirate sites, which might tempt some Russians to stay at home.

The Association of Cinema Owners is well aware of the difficult situation and has lobbied the Government for relief. This may now be on the horizon in the form of a newly proposed law that would allow Russian theaters to show unlicensed movies, without fear of legal repercussions.

However, with everything that’s going on in and around Russia in recent months, copyright infringement is unlikely to be the country’s main priority.

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

Startup Make Sunsets promises to disrupt… the stratosphere?

Claims to sell geoengineering warming offsets but can’t currently validate anything.

Image of clouds bathed in orange and pink light.

Enlarge / Stratospheric aerosols can make for great sunsets, regardless of how they get there. (credit: Rachel Dulson)

Humanity has managed to stabilize its carbon emissions, but they have yet to start trending downwards. It looks increasingly probable that we're going to emit enough to commit to at least 1.5° C of warming—and we need to act quickly to avert going past 2° C. This failure to get our emissions in order may force us to consider alternatives such as pulling carbon dioxide out of the air or geoengineering to reduce the amount of incoming sunlight.

Of the two, geoengineering comes with the longest list of unknowns, with a recent report from the National Academies of Science saying, "Scientific understanding of many aspects of solar geoengineering technologies remains limited, including how they could affect weather extremes, agriculture, natural ecosystems, or human health."

So, some Silicon Valley types naturally decided to go ahead and launch a startup company that would offer geoengineering for a fee. The company claims to offer warming offsets despite the considerable unknowns regarding geoengineering. And it's even worse than that sounds; based on an article in MIT Technology Review, the company has already started launching balloons to the stratosphere, despite not being capable of determining whether they're actually deploying their payload.

Read 14 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Bigme S6 Color is a color E Ink tablet with a 7.8 inch display and pen support

The Bigme S6 Color is an E Ink tablet with a 2.3 GHz octa-core processor, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage. It runs an operating system based on Android 11, has front and rear cameras, stereo speakers, four microphones, and support for pen and touch i…

The Bigme S6 Color is an E Ink tablet with a 2.3 GHz octa-core processor, 6GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage. It runs an operating system based on Android 11, has front and rear cameras, stereo speakers, four microphones, and support for pen and touch input. But since it has an E Ink display […]

The post Bigme S6 Color is a color E Ink tablet with a 7.8 inch display and pen support appeared first on Liliputing.

iOS 16 exploit lets you set the system font to Comic Sans (and other things)

Irritate Apple’s UI designers with this one weird trick.

An indie app can be used to change your iPhone's default font if you haven't already installed the latest OS update.

Enlarge / An indie app can be used to change your iPhone's default font if you haven't already installed the latest OS update. (credit: Zhuowei Zhang)

If you like your iPhone but hate the San Francisco typeface, developer Zhuowei Zhang has posted a neat tool to Github—an app that can temporarily "overwrite" the iOS system font with another one, giving your phone a new, non-Apple-sanctioned look.

The app doesn't require any kind of jailbreak, but does need "iOS 16.1.2 or below" to work, since it relies on a kernel execution bug (CVE-2022-46689) patched in iOS 16.2. If you've already installed iOS 16.2—which we'd advise you to do, for security reasons—you won't be able to experiment with the hack. Any font changes will be reverted by a device reboot, and apps that don't use the default San Francisco typeface won't change.

The app includes a number of pre-installed fonts, many of which seem designed to irritate the eyes of Apple's UI designers. Comic Sans MS leads the charge in that regard, but Segoe UI (Windows' and Microsoft's default font of choice) and Samsung's "Choco Cooky" (a distant cousin of Comic Sans) are also included. Custom fonts can be installed as long as they're iOS-compatible.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Daily Deals (12-28-2022)

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away a different PC game for free every day, and today’s free title is Mortal Shell. Meanwhile Amazon is giving away a bunch of free games for Prime members, including Dishonored 2 and Quake. And if you…

The Epic Games Store is continuing to give away a different PC game for free every day, and today’s free title is Mortal Shell. Meanwhile Amazon is giving away a bunch of free games for Prime members, including Dishonored 2 and Quake. And if you’d rather sit back and watch some TV and movies, Amazon’s got you covered with […]

The post Daily Deals (12-28-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.