Google’s split-screen Android Auto revamp is rolling out now

The new panel design fits big screens, wide screens, and small screens.

After a big delay, Google's big revamp of Android Auto is finally here. This new version of Android Auto puts a big focus on a new split-screen interface, which is a lot more flexible than the old, rigid Android Auto display. This update was first shown off at Google I/O and promised in the summer of 2022, but somehow that got pushed back to CES 2023. Car apps have a lot of safety regulations to go through.

Android Auto is an app that lives on your phone and sends a custom interface (wirelessly or wired) to a compatible car's dashboard. Unlike regular Android, which can scale to any size or shape display, Android Auto was originally designed rigidly around a horizontal 16:9 display. It's been updated over the years to be slightly more flexible, but it has always wanted to live in this horizontal, widescreen configuration. Not all car screens are widescreen, though, and for cars like the Volvo XC90, which has a big 4:3 iPad-style screen in the center console, Android Auto was just in a tiny window in the middle of the display. Some manufacturers gave it a letter or pillar box. Apple's CarPlay received a similar flexibility update in iOS 13.

Unlike the old version, the split-screen interface should be able to adapt to any rectangular screen.  There are three components: a navigation bar, the main app interface, and a smaller sidebar section that can show one or two additional widgets. These can all be configured in a way that makes sense for the screen's shape. The navigation bar can be on the right side or the bottom. The main app interface can be next to the sidebar section or stacked on top. The sidebar can be a tall vertical strip or a skinny horizontal strip. Some configuration is going to work!

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FDA approves new Alzheimer’s treatment despite risks, unclear benefits

The drug’s price has already been set at $26,500 per year.

MRI of a human brain.

Enlarge / MRI of a human brain. (credit: Getty | BSIP)

The Food and Drug Administration on Friday granted a fast-tracked approval for a new Alzheimer's disease treatment, which may slightly slow the progression of cognitive decline in the disease's early stages, but also raises risks of brain bleeds and swelling.

The treatment—lecanemab, brand name Leqemb, made by pharmaceutical companies Eisai and Biogen—is an intravenous monoclonal antibody that targets amyloid-beta proteins, which accumulate in plaques in the brains of people with Alzheimer's. Researchers have not yet conclusively determined if amyloid plaques are a root cause of the disease, nor whether clearing them can significantly slow or halt cognitive decline.

The FDA's approval of lecanemab is via an accelerated pathway, which uses "a surrogate endpoint that is reasonably likely to predict a clinical benefit to patients." In this case, the surrogate endpoint was lecanemab's ability to reduce amyloid beta plaques in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.

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FDA approves new Alzheimer’s treatment despite risks, unclear benefits

The drug’s price has already been set at $26,500 per year.

MRI of a human brain.

Enlarge / MRI of a human brain. (credit: Getty | BSIP)

The Food and Drug Administration on Friday granted a fast-tracked approval for a new Alzheimer's disease treatment, which may slightly slow the progression of cognitive decline in the disease's early stages, but also raises risks of brain bleeds and swelling.

The treatment—lecanemab, brand name Leqemb, made by pharmaceutical companies Eisai and Biogen—is an intravenous monoclonal antibody that targets amyloid-beta proteins, which accumulate in plaques in the brains of people with Alzheimer's. Researchers have not yet conclusively determined if amyloid plaques are a root cause of the disease, nor whether clearing them can significantly slow or halt cognitive decline.

The FDA's approval of lecanemab is via an accelerated pathway, which uses "a surrogate endpoint that is reasonably likely to predict a clinical benefit to patients." In this case, the surrogate endpoint was lecanemab's ability to reduce amyloid beta plaques in the brains of Alzheimer's patients.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

YouTube Wins Partial Summary Judgment in Maria Schneider Copyright Lawsuit

YouTube’s motion for summary judgment in a class action lawsuit filed by musician Maria Schneider has been granted in part and denied in part. A California district court dismissed all claims related to 27 works, direct infringement claims against 15 works, and 121 other alleged infringements. Other infringement claims stand, and the case will continue.

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

YouTubeA 2020 class action lawsuit filed by musician Maria Schneider accused YouTube of mass copyright infringement, failing to suspend ‘repeat infringers, and restricting access to anti-piracy tools, among other allegations.

Despite YouTube’s findings that at least one member of the putative class acted fraudulently (Pirate Monitor) to fabricate ‘evidence’ of YouTube’s alleged shortcomings in support of the lawsuit, litigation continued. More than two years later, with both sides committing significant resources to a highly complex case, both Schneider and YouTube filed motions for summary judgment.

YouTube’s Motion For Summary Judgment

Schneider’s first amended complaint alleged that YouTube and its users infringed her copyrighted musical compositions and sound recordings, and that YouTube facilitated infringement by removing copyright management information (CMI) from her copyright works, in violation of the DMCA.

YouTube’s motion for summary judgment states that Schneider licensed her content to YouTube, presented no evidence of DMCA violations, and in some cases had filed untimely claims. An order handed down by Judge James Donato on Thursday addresses each aspect in detail.

Copyright Law: Infringement Standards

For a platform like YouTube to be held liable for direct infringement, it needs to be actively involved in that infringement, not just a “passive handler” of content supplied by others.

A claim of contributory (secondary) infringement requires the plaintiff to show that direct infringement has been carried out by third parties.

A claim of vicarious infringement requires the plaintiff to prove that the defendant had the practical ability to prevent infringement, had a direct financial interest in that infringement, yet failed to mitigate it.

YouTube Wins Partial Summary Judgment

Schneider’s amended complaint alleged direct and indirect infringement for 76 copyrighted musical compositions and two sound recordings. Judge Donato says that discovery failed to produce any evidence of infringement for 27 of Schneider’s copyrighted works, and that the musician acknowledges that to be true.

“Consequently, summary judgment is granted in favor of YouTube for those 27 works,” the order reads.

YouTube’s Licensing Defense

YouTube’s main defense to Schneider’s copyright claims in other works is that it holds a “blanket catalog license” granted by Modern Works Music Publishing (MWP).

According to YouTube, that license covers all of Schneider’s musical compositions, so Schneider’s infringement claims cannot succeed. The big questions now center on the nature of that license and whether YouTube can rely on it to fend off liability.

In 2008, Schneider appointed her management company ArtistShare Music Publishing (AMP) as the “sole and exclusive Administrator” of her musical compositions under a Music Publishing Administration Agreement (AA). AWP subsequently assigned “all its duties” in the agreement to MWP, which was already a 50% co-owner of AMP.

In April 2014, MWP and YouTube signed a Publishing Licensing Agreement (PLA) that granted YouTube a license to compositions “owned or controlled” by MWP. As acknowledged by the Judge, the license appears broad enough to “sound the death knell” for all infringement claims filed by Schneider.

“Consequently, the salient question is whether YouTube has demonstrated as a matter of law and undisputed fact that the PLA grants it a license to all of Schneider’s works-in-suit. It has not,” Judge Donato writes.

“The PLA grants YouTube a license only to compositions ‘owned or controlled’ by MWP. Viewing the record in the light most favorable to Schneider, the question of whether MWP owned or controlled Schneider’s compositions is replete with factual disputes that preclude summary judgment.”

Describing YouTube’s arguments to the contrary as “unavailing,” Judge Donato says that the existence of “quintessential factual disputes” precludes summary judgment for YouTube on the basis of the PLA.

YouTube’s ‘Terms of Service’ Defense

YouTube’s motion for summary judgment claims that when Schneider and her agents uploaded copyrighted content to YouTube, that content became licensed under YouTube’s Terms of Service (TOS). In this respect, YouTube says it is entitled to summary judgment on 114 of Schneider’s 381 infringment claims.

The YouTube TOS grants YouTube “a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, sublicensable and transferable license to use, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of, display, and perform” any content uploaded by users. The TOS also grants a non-exclusive license to YouTube users which enables them to “use, reproduce, distribute, and perform” that content “as permitted through the functionality of the Service and under these Terms of Service.”

The record shows that Schneider created a YouTube account in 2012, through which she and authorized third parties uploaded content to YouTube, including some of the works listed in the lawsuit.

Since the ‘TOS’ license is so broad, Judge Donato says that YouTube cannot be held liable for direct infringement of works covered by it. However, the license does not insulate YouTube from indirect infringement liability, including when users violate YouTube’s TOS by uploading infringing content.

As a result, YouTube wins summary judgment for direct infringement claims on 15 named works but related indirect infringement claims stand.

Time-Barred Claims

YouTube’s TOS contains a contractual one-year limitation period and a three-year limitations period under the Copyright Act. The record shows that Schneider had actual knowledge of 121 allegedly infringing videos more than a year before she filed this lawsuit against YouTube, and had actual knowledge of 73 allegedly infringing videos more than three years before.

Schneider claims that she had to accept YouTube’s TOS because without a YouTube account, she couldn’t submit any takedown notices. The record shows that YouTube accepts takedown notices via email and fax, among other methods.

Based on this and other refuted claims, Judge Donato concludes that YouTube has established that 121 infringements for which Schneider admits to having actual knowledge are barred by the one-year limitations clause in the YouTube TOS.

DMCA / CMI Removal

Section 1202(b) of the DMCA states that without approval from the copyright owner, no person is allowed to remove or alter Copyright Management Information (CMI), distribute or import for distribution CMI knowing that it has been removed or altered, or distribute, import for distribution, or publicly perform works, copies of works, or phonorecords, knowing that CMI has been removed or altered.

The statute also has a ‘scienter’ requirement, i.e intent or knowledge of wrongdoing. In this case, knowledge that removing/altering CMI will “induce, enable, facilitate, or conceal an infringement.”

YouTube says that Schneider has produced no evidence to support her claim that YouTube removed or altered CMI in her works, or acted with intent/knowledge, as required under the DMCA. The Court’s view is much more broad.

“This argument sinks on a reef of disputed facts. To start, it is not necessary for Schneider to establish that YouTube itself removed or altered her CMI to state a claim under section 1202(b).

“Schneider could still prevail under section 1202(b)(3) upon a showing that YouTube distributed her works with the knowledge that CMI had been removed, even if [YouTube] did not remove it,” Judge Donato’s order reads.

Overall, due to the existence of numerous disputed facts, summary judgment for YouTube is denied on the issue of CMI. The parties are now required to file a numbered list of Schneider’s remaining works-in-suit and corresponding infringement claims by January 12.

Judge Donato’s order can be found here (pdf)

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

ChatGPT is enabling script kiddies to write functional malware

For a beta, ChatGPT isn’t all that bad at writing fairly decent malware.

OpenAI logo displayed on a phone screen and ChatGPT website displayed on a laptop screen.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Since its beta launch in November, AI chatbot ChatGPT has been used for a wide range of tasks, including writing poetry, technical papers, novels, and essays, planning parties, and learning about new topics. Now we can add malware development and the pursuit of other types of cybercrime to the list.

Researchers at security firm Check Point Research reported Friday that within a few weeks of ChatGPT going live, participants in cybercrime forums—some with little or no coding experience—were using it to write software and emails that could be used for espionage, ransomware, malicious spam, and other malicious tasks.

“It’s still too early to decide whether or not ChatGPT capabilities will become the new favorite tool for participants in the Dark Web,” company researchers wrote. “However, the cybercriminal community has already shown significant interest and are jumping into this latest trend to generate malicious code.”

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ChatGPT is enabling script kiddies to write functional malware

For a beta, ChatGPT isn’t all that bad at writing fairly decent malware.

OpenAI logo displayed on a phone screen and ChatGPT website displayed on a laptop screen.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Since its beta launch in November, AI chatbot ChatGPT has been used for a wide range of tasks, including writing poetry, technical papers, novels, and essays, planning parties, and learning about new topics. Now we can add malware development and the pursuit of other types of cybercrime to the list.

Researchers at security firm Check Point Research reported Friday that within a few weeks of ChatGPT going live, participants in cybercrime forums—some with little or no coding experience—were using it to write software and emails that could be used for espionage, ransomware, malicious spam, and other malicious tasks.

“It’s still too early to decide whether or not ChatGPT capabilities will become the new favorite tool for participants in the Dark Web,” company researchers wrote. “However, the cybercriminal community has already shown significant interest and are jumping into this latest trend to generate malicious code.”

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Lenovo Slim 7 laptop coming in April for $730 and up with Alder Lake and Raptor Lake options

The latest version of the Lenovo Slim 7 laptop is a 2.9 pound notebook with up to a 14 inch, 2880 x 1800 pixel, 120 Hz IPS LCD display (or a FHD OLED screen), an Intel Core i7-1360P processor, 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. But it’s also a lapt…

The latest version of the Lenovo Slim 7 laptop is a 2.9 pound notebook with up to a 14 inch, 2880 x 1800 pixel, 120 Hz IPS LCD display (or a FHD OLED screen), an Intel Core i7-1360P processor, 16GB of RAM and 1TB of storage. But it’s also a laptop with a reasonably affordable […]

The post Lenovo Slim 7 laptop coming in April for $730 and up with Alder Lake and Raptor Lake options appeared first on Liliputing.

Germany reminds Musk that removing disinformation from Twitter is a must

Germany will continue “critically” monitoring Twitter for disinformation.

Germany reminds Musk that removing disinformation from Twitter is a must

Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket)

Twitter CEO Elon Musk continues to deal with intense scrutiny of how his social media platform will fight disinformation with its reduced staff. Early in 2023, Musk met with Germany's digital minister, Volker Wissing, in California to discuss whether Twitter would “voluntarily comply” with an agreement Twitter previously made with the European Commission to combat disinformation.

A ministry spokesperson described the meeting as “a very open and long talk” that ended with Musk assuring Wissing that Twitter wouldn’t back down from the disinformation fight. Politico reported in December that part of Twitter’s agreement with the commission involves preventing users from profiting from misinformation, labeling political ads, and making data available to researchers.

Ars could not immediately reach Twitter for comment. A ministry spokesperson told Ars that "in his talks with Elon Musk, Federal Minister Wissing made it clear, among other things, that Germany expects the existing voluntary commitments against disinformation and the rules of the Digital Services Act to be observed in the future."

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Germany reminds Musk that removing disinformation from Twitter is a must

Germany will continue “critically” monitoring Twitter for disinformation.

Germany reminds Musk that removing disinformation from Twitter is a must

Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket)

Twitter CEO Elon Musk continues to deal with intense scrutiny of how his social media platform will fight disinformation with its reduced staff. Early in 2023, Musk met with Germany's digital minister, Volker Wissing, in California to discuss whether Twitter would “voluntarily comply” with an agreement Twitter previously made with the European Commission to combat disinformation.

A ministry spokesperson described the meeting as “a very open and long talk” that ended with Musk assuring Wissing that Twitter wouldn’t back down from the disinformation fight. Politico reported in December that part of Twitter’s agreement with the commission involves preventing users from profiting from misinformation, labeling political ads, and making data available to researchers.

Ars could not immediately reach Twitter for comment. A ministry spokesperson told Ars that "in his talks with Elon Musk, Federal Minister Wissing made it clear, among other things, that Germany expects the existing voluntary commitments against disinformation and the rules of the Digital Services Act to be observed in the future."

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Asus Zenbook 14 Flip OLED is a convertible Raptor Lake-P notebook with a 2.8K OLED 90 Hz display

The Asus Zenbook 14 Flip OLED (UP3404) is a convertible notebook with a 360-degree hinge that lets you use the touchscreen display in laptop, tablet, tent, or stand mode. With support for a pressure-sensitive digital pen, you can also write or draw on…

The Asus Zenbook 14 Flip OLED (UP3404) is a convertible notebook with a 360-degree hinge that lets you use the touchscreen display in laptop, tablet, tent, or stand mode. With support for a pressure-sensitive digital pen, you can also write or draw on the screen. And with a 2880 x 1800 pixel, 90 Hz OLED […]

The post Asus Zenbook 14 Flip OLED is a convertible Raptor Lake-P notebook with a 2.8K OLED 90 Hz display appeared first on Liliputing.