Microsoft 365 Basic gives you 100GB of OneDrive space (but no Office) for $2

Basic subscription tier will also remove ads from web and mobile Outlook apps.

Microsoft 365 Basic gives you 100GB of OneDrive space (but no Office) for $2

Enlarge (credit: Microsoft)

Microsoft is adding a new low-end subscription tier to its Microsoft 365 service designed to cater to existing OneDrive subscribers and people who want more features for their Outlook inboxes but don't need the full desktop versions of Word, Excel, or PowerPoint.

The Verge reports that Microsoft 365 Basic will cost $1.99 a month or $19.99 a year, and it includes 100GB of OneDrive cloud storage, removes ads from the Outlook web and mobile clients, and offers "advanced security" for Outlook users in the form of malware-scanning for links and attachments and additional encryption options.

The main shortcoming of the Basic plan relative to the other Microsoft 365 subscription tiers is that you won't get access to the full desktop versions of the apps formerly known as Microsoft Office: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, OneNote, and Outlook. You'll still be able to use the more feature-limited online versions, but those are also available to anyone with a free Microsoft account. To get those apps, you'll still need to upgrade to the Microsoft 365 Personal ($6.99 a month, $69.99 a year) or Microsoft 365 Family ($9.99 a month, $99.99 a year) tiers, each of which also comes with additional OneDrive storage and other perks.

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Chuck E. Cheese still uses floppy disks in 2023, but not for long

Employee TikTok reveals a floor show upgrade from floppy and DVD—possibly for the last time.

Stewart Coonrod holds up an official 2023 Chuck E. Cheese floppy disk in a TikTok video. It contains dance moves for in-store animatronics.

Enlarge / Stewart Coonrod holds up an official 2023 Chuck E. Cheese floppy disk in a TikTok video. It contains dance moves for in-store animatronics. (credit: Stewart Coonrod)

On Sunday, a Chuck E. Cheese employee named Stewart Coonrod posted a TikTok video that documents the process of installing a new song-and-dance show on an old Chuck E. Cheese animatronics system—a process that involves a 3.5-inch floppy disk and two DVDs. Coonrod says it is the last update before his store undergoes a remodel that will remove the animatronics altogether.

Coonrod's Chuck E. Cheese location in Darien, Illinois, was originally a Show-Biz Pizza restaurant but changed over to Chuck E. Cheese branding in 1991. It includes a single Chuck E. Cheese animatronics character (called "Cyberamics" in the parlance of the company) surrounded by four video screens in a setup called "Studio C," first introduced in 1998.

Currently, those 25-year-old setups are being phased out nationwide in favor of a remodel that replaces the animatronics character with a dance floor. It's the end of the line for Cyberamics, but a few stores still use them, and the parent company ships out updates on floppy and DVD to match the legacy system.

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TCL backtracks on making its first OLED TVs

QD-OLED announcement during CES was apparently a mistake.

TCL QM8 98-inch Mini LED TV

Enlarge / TCL will instead focus on bigger QLED and Mini LED Tvs, like the 98-inch QM8. (credit: TCL)

TCL isn't letting go of the QLED dream. This dream doesn't just see TCL selling LCD-LED TVs with quantum dots but also features QLED as the sole four-letter acronym in its lineup. Numerous vendors announced new OLED TVs during CES 2023 last week, with some leveraging purportedly next-gen tech. However, TCL has affirmed plans to be one of the last TV makers still holding out on OLED... despite what you may have heard.

During CES, TCL actually did announce that it was making its first OLED TV. It even went as far as to commit to Samsung Display's QD-OLED panels, which would make it the third company to sell QD-OLED TVs, after Samsung and Sony. The announcement claimed that Mini LED and QD-OLED would "both hold premium positions in TCL's 2023 TV line-up." However, the TV maker known for budget and mid-range products told FlatPanelsHD today that this is false.

"A line in the TCL CES 2023 press release confirming plans to launch the brand's first QD-OLED television this year was incorrectly included," TCL told the publication.

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Acer Aspire 3 laptop with Intel Core i3-N305 now available for $480 and up

Intel’s Alder Lake-N line of processors are low-cost, low-power chips designed for entry-level laptops, tablets, and mini PCs. But Intel says the Intel Core i3-N305 processor, which is the highest-performance Alder Lake-N chip to date, offers th…

Intel’s Alder Lake-N line of processors are low-cost, low-power chips designed for entry-level laptops, tablets, and mini PCs. But Intel says the Intel Core i3-N305 processor, which is the highest-performance Alder Lake-N chip to date, offers the kind of performance you’d expect from a Core i3 processor… thus the name. Now one of the first […]

The post Acer Aspire 3 laptop with Intel Core i3-N305 now available for $480 and up appeared first on Liliputing.

Twitter didn’t block child sex abuse hashtags until journalists pointed them out

Hashtags promoting sale of CSAM were searchable on Twitter until NBC News report.

Twitter logo displayed on a cracked phone screen is seen through broken glass

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | NurPhoto )

Elon Musk said in November that Twitter's top priority is eliminating content that sexually exploits children. But Twitter apparently didn't take action against a series of hashtags and keywords used to promote the sale of child sex abuse material (CSAM) until after NBC News identified the problem in a report published Friday.

Twitter blocked searches for the hashtags and keywords on Saturday, NBC News wrote yesterday.

"NBC News found that a series of hashtags on the platform related to the file-sharing service Mega served as rallying points for users seeking to trade or sell CSAM. NBC News observed the hashtags over a period of several weeks, and counted dozens of users who collectively published hundreds of tweets daily," the report said. "The accounts used thinly veiled keywords and terms related to CSAM to promote the content they said was stored on Mega, which they said was available for purchase or trade."

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RPG fans irate as D&D tries to shut its “open” game license

Leaked document seeks to revoke two decades of royalty-free rules sharing.

Excuse me, but do you have the proper rights to that spell?

Enlarge / Excuse me, but do you have the proper rights to that spell? (credit: Aurich Lawson | Wizards of the Coast)

For decades now, Wizards of the Coast (WotC) has made the core framework of its popular Dungeons & Dragons RPG (D&D) widely available to other game makers as part of an expansive, royalty-free Open Gaming License (OGL). But a planned update to the license imposes more restrictive terms and royalties of up to 25 percent for some revenue from large companies, according to an early leaked copy.

The reported changes have some in the tabletop gaming community up in arms, with one organized group already calling the unreleased license update "a betrayal" and "objectionable, if not downright illegal."

How did we get here?

WotC's original Open Gaming License (version 1.0a) dates back to the early 2000s and establishes a relatively forgiving set of guidelines for creators hoping to build new creative content on top of the core D&D rules. The short document is mainly designed to help clarify which parts of WotC's D&D publications are "Open Game Content" (e.g., rules and mechanics that would be difficult for WotC to copyright in the first place) and which parts constitute "Product Identity" (e.g., trademarked terms and copyright-protected characters and worlds created by the company).

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A widespread logic controller flaw raises the specter of Stuxnet

Over 120 PLC models contain a serious vulnerability—and no fix is on the way.

Siemens sign

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In 2009, the computer worm Stuxnet crippled hundreds of centrifuges inside Iran’s Natanz uranium enrichment plant by targeting the software running on the facility’s industrial computers, known as programmable logic controllers. The exploited PLCs were made by the automation giant Siemens and were all models from the company’s ubiquitous, long-running SIMATIC S7 product series. Now, more than a decade later, Siemens disclosed today that a vulnerability in its S7-1500 series could be exploited by an attacker to silently install malicious firmware on the devices and take full control of them.

The vulnerability was discovered by researchers at the embedded device security firm Red Balloon Security after they spent more than a year developing a methodology to evaluate the S7-1500’s firmware, which Siemens has encrypted for added protection since 2013. Firmware is the low-level code that coordinates hardware and software on a computer. The vulnerability stems from a basic error in how the cryptography is implemented, but Siemens can’t fix it through a software patch because the scheme is physically burned onto a dedicated ATECC CryptoAuthentication chip. As a result, Siemens says it has no fix planned for any of the 122 S7-1500 PLC models that the company lists as being vulnerable.

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Sony Patents Anti-Piracy Blacklist for Smart TVs and Media Players

Sony is patenting a technology that can detect and blacklist pirate apps on media players and smart TVs. Through the use of monitoring software, third-party applications sideloaded onto these and other devices can be blocked, effectively protecting rightsholders against online piracy.

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

Over the past several decades, Sony has established itself as a leading player in the technology, music, film, and gaming industries.

The Japanese company hasn’t shied away from taking on the competition, but one adversary has proven particularly difficult to overcome; piracy.

Sony recognized this threat early on. At the Americas Conference on Information Systems in 2000, Sony Pictures Entertainment’s U.S. senior vice president Steve Heckler declared an all-out attack on piracy.

Whatever It Takes…

Responding to the Napster threat, which had just reached its peak, Heckler promised to take aggressive steps to tackle the online scourge.

“We will develop technology that transcends the individual user. We will firewall Napster at source — we will block it at your cable company, we will block it at your phone company, we will block it at your ISP. We will firewall it at your PC,” Heckler said.

This wasn’t an exaggeration. In the years that followed, Sony rolled out some rather aggressive technology, most notably the software exposed in the DRM rootkit scandal. After affecting millions of people, a mass recall of infected CDs and several class action lawsuits ensued.

Fast forward more than two decades and Sony is still fighting online piracy. The company hopes that cloud technology will eventually defeat piracy in the gaming sector, but on the video entertainment side, blocking may still be required.

As Heckler envisioned at the start of the century, Sony has since obtained various blocking orders around the world, requiring ISPs to block subscriber access to pirate sites. More recently, this effort was expanded to DNS resolvers with Sony’s lawsuit against Quad9.

Anti-Piracy Blacklist Patent

Interestingly, a new patent application suggests that Sony’s blocking vision is not limited to Internet providers. Once again, the company also wants to gain blocking powers on people’s media devices, including smart TVs.

The proposed patent, titled “Anti-Piracy Control Based on Blacklisting Function,” describes a technology to ban third-party applications that allow users to access pirated content. These illicit apps will be detected on consumer hardware through the use of monitoring software, which in turn will form part of an operating system.

“The monitor application has system privileges to examine the code and execution of the third-party application installed on the electronic device,” Sony writes.

sony blacklist patent

Banning Pirate Apps

Sony details several scenarios where the patent can be useful, including one where streaming devices allow users to install unvetted apps. Another envisions intervention when people try to sideload apps that are banned by official stores such as Google Play.

“Some of these third-party applications may include pirate applications that may acquire content from rogue websites to stream pirated content onto the streaming device,” the patent description reads.

“In such scenarios, the pirate applications may provide premium content to the streaming device without authorization, and may subvert the services of legitimate content providers,” Sony adds.

The full patent application goes into detail on various techniques the monitoring software could use to detect and block apps. Monitoring external network sources accessed by apps, for example, or directly inspecting an app’s code.

Whether Sony is actually working on a project to be rolled out in the real world is unknown. However, the patent clearly shows that online piracy has yet to be ‘rooted’ out so it remains a serious concern for the company.

A copy of the patent application titled “Anti-Piracy Control Based on Blacklisting Function” is available here (pdf)

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

Daily Deals (1-11-2023)

Remember when OLED displays were only available in high-priced laptops and tablets? These days you can find them in devices with list prices of $600 or less… and street prices as low as half that much. Newegg is selling a 13 inch Asus laptop wit…

Remember when OLED displays were only available in high-priced laptops and tablets? These days you can find them in devices with list prices of $600 or less… and street prices as low as half that much. Newegg is selling a 13 inch Asus laptop with an OLED screen for $600. It has a slightly older […]

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Nothing Phone’s US “beta test” targets people with more money than sense

For $300, you won’t get US cellular bands, a warranty, or a production OS.

The Nothing Phone (1) bets the farm that you'll instantly fall in love with this back design. If you don't, there's not much else to see.

Enlarge / The Nothing Phone (1) bets the farm that you'll instantly fall in love with this back design. If you don't, there's not much else to see. (credit: Nothing)

Does anyone remember the "Nothing Phone?"

The awkwardly named "Nothing" is a new smartphone company from OnePlus cofounder Carl Pei, and its first phone, the Nothing Phone 1, launched about half a year ago in Europe, India, and China for 469 euro (about $500). Nothing will now let you buy that phone in the US for $300. The company is calling this a "beta test," but it doesn't sound like you're testing anything other than market interest. The "beta test" label means that buying the phone comes with caveats that make it a pretty terrible deal.

First, a quick recap: The Nothing Phone 1 is a $300 mid-ranger with a Snapdragon 778G+, a 6.55-inch, 2400×1080 120Hz OLED display, a 4500 mAh battery, and a bunch of other specs that fall firmly into the "meh" category. The device has no clear sales pitch for why it's a good smartphone, with only a few light strips on the back panel to separate it from the crowd. The company hopes the wacky back panel will blow you away.

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