Paul Atreides rides a sandworm in first trailer for Dune: Part 2

“In the shadows of Arrakis lie many secrets but the darkest of them all may remain.”

Timothee Chalamet and Zendaya are back for Dune: Part 2.

We've been waiting to catch a glimpse of Dune: Part 2, the second part of Denis Villeneuve's visually stunning, ambitious adaption of Frank Herbert's seminal sci-fi novel. Warner Bros. dropped the first official trailer today, featuring Timothee Chalamet's Paul Atreides riding a sandworm to win the respect of the Fremen, as well as the introduction of the nefarious new villain from House Harkonnen.

(Some spoilers for Dune: Part 1 below.)

As we've reported previously (also here and here), Herbert's novel Dune is set in the distant future and follows the fortunes of various noble houses in what amounts to a feudal interstellar society. Much of the action takes place on the planet Arrakis, where the economy is driven largely by a rare, life-extending drug called melange ("the spice"). Melange also conveys a kind of prescience and makes faster-than-light travel practical. There's betrayal, a prophecy concerning a messianic figure, giant sandworms, and battle upon battle, as protagonist Paul Atreides (a duke's son) contends with rival House Harkonnen and strives to defeat the forces of Shaddam IV, Emperor of the Known Universe.

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Nintendo Switch accessories deals to get you ready for Tears of the Kingdom

Save on fun accessories before you glide into Hyrule once more.

It has felt like a long time since The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild launched back in 2017, but the game offered so much that some of us are still playing it today.

Still, Nintendo has been showing peeks at the sequel—Tears of the Kingdom—over the past few weeks, and it looks plausible that we'll get another six years' worth of fun out of it. Between the rework of the landscape of Hyrule, the array of new floating islands, and the major, gameplay-altering new powers Link will get, it's looking less like a retread every day.

That has a lot of us very excited about the new game. If you're right there with us, this is a good place to start to prepare for the launch. You can buy the game, of course (no discounts just yet), but there are a bunch of limited-time deals on accessories for your Switch that you might get some use out of when you're exploring the skies.

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“We must regulate AI,” FTC Chair Khan says

Khan: FTC is “well equipped” to handle AI collusion, fraud, and privacy concerns.

Lina M. Khan testifies during a Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee nomination hearing on April 21, 2021 in Washington, DC.

Enlarge / FTC Chair Lina M. Khan testifies during a Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee nomination hearing on April 21, 2021, in Washington, DC. (credit: Graeme Jennings/Getty Images)

On Wednesday, Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Chair Lina Khan pledged to use existing laws to regulate AI in a New York Times op-ed, "We Must Regulate A.I. Here's How." In the piece, she warns of AI risks such as market dominance by large tech firms, collusion, and the potential for increased fraud and privacy violations.

In the op-ed, Khan cites the rise of the "Web 2.0" era in the mid-2000s as a cautionary tale for AI's expansion, saying that the growth of tech companies led to invasive surveillance and loss of privacy. Khan feels that public officials must now ensure history doesn't repeat itself with AI, but without unduly restricting innovation.

"As these technologies evolve," she wrote, "we are committed to doing our part to uphold America’s longstanding tradition of maintaining the open, fair and competitive markets that have underpinned both breakthrough innovations and our nation’s economic success—without tolerating business models or practices involving the mass exploitation of their users."

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Starlink nixes plan to impose 1TB data cap and per-gigabyte overage fees

Home users won’t have to pay extra for each gigabyte thanks to policy reversal.

A Starlink broadband satellite dish placed outside on the ground.

Enlarge / Starlink satellite dish. (credit: Getty Images | olegda88)

Starlink has abandoned plans to charge data overage fees to standard residential users who exceed 1TB of monthly usage.

When SpaceX's Starlink division first announced the data cap in November 2022, it said that residential customers would get 1TB of "priority access data" each month. After using 1TB, customers could keep accessing the Internet at slower (but unspecified) speeds or pay $0.25 per gigabyte for "additional priority access."

This was originally supposed to take effect in December, but Starlink delayed the change to February and then to April. But now, Starlink's list of support FAQs no longer mentions the residential data cap and the current version of the fair use policy says that standard service plan users have unlimited data. The previous version of the Starlink fair use policy described the 1TB residential cap and optional $0.25-per-gigabyte overage fees.

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Disease detectives gathered at CDC event—a COVID outbreak erupted

Some attendees reportedly did not mask, distance, or take other precautions.

Huge facade for CDC headquarters against a beautiful sky.

Enlarge (credit: Bloomberg | Getty Images)

Disease detectives with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are on the case of a new COVID-19 outbreak—the one at their very own conference, which has sickened around 35 attendees as of Tuesday.

Last week, the CDC hosted the 2023 Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) Conference in Atlanta, the first time the conference has been held in person since 2019. The annual event, which dates back seven decades, was fully virtual last year and was canceled entirely in 2020 and 2021 while EIS officers were immersed in the pandemic response.

"The COVID-19 pandemic has been hard on everyone and especially for our public health workforce. … We are thankful you are back with us at the EIS conference," EIS leaders wrote in the preface of this year's conference agenda, celebrating the return of the in-person gathering.

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Chonky Pocket is (almost) a pocket-sized Raspberry Pi computer with a chording keyboard

Most modern computers small enough to fit in a pocket either have a BlackBerry-style keyboard or a touchscreen display and no physical keyboard. But the Chonky Pocket stands out from the crowd. Developer Daniel Norris says it’s an “almost …

Most modern computers small enough to fit in a pocket either have a BlackBerry-style keyboard or a touchscreen display and no physical keyboard. But the Chonky Pocket stands out from the crowd. Developer Daniel Norris says it’s an “almost pocket-sized portable computer” built around a Raspberry Pi, with all-day battery life, full-sized ports, and a […]

The post Chonky Pocket is (almost) a pocket-sized Raspberry Pi computer with a chording keyboard appeared first on Liliputing.

AI vs. Hollywood: Writers battle “plagiarism machines” in union talks

WGA writers don’t want to train AI or clean up AI-generated “sloppy first drafts.”

An AI-generated image of

Enlarge / An AI-generated image of "an office copy machine in front of a hollywood-style explosion." (credit: Midjourney)

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) is seeking to restrict the use of generative AI in writing film and TV scripts as part of an ongoing strike, reports Reuters. The concerns come at a time when anxiety over the economic impact of tech like ChatGPT looms large in the minds of many.

The WGA strike is the first in 15 years, and it's taking place over issues beyond just AI. But in particular, Reuters reports that WGA writers have two main concerns about automation in writing, quoting screenwriter John August, who is part of the WGA negotiating committee: They don't want their material to be used as training data for AI systems, and they don't want to be tasked with fixing AI-generated "sloppy first drafts."

That's because writers who are hired to polish first drafts get paid at a lower rate, and WGA writers are fighting to make sure that a ChatGPT-generated first draft would not be counted as "literary material" or "source material," which are terms defined in their contract.

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AI vs. Hollywood: Writers battle “plagiarism machines” in union talks

WGA writers don’t want to train AI or clean up AI-generated “sloppy first drafts.”

An AI-generated image of

Enlarge / An AI-generated image of "an office copy machine in front of a hollywood-style explosion." (credit: Midjourney)

The Writers Guild of America (WGA) is seeking to restrict the use of generative AI in writing film and TV scripts as part of an ongoing strike, reports Reuters. The concerns come at a time when anxiety over the economic impact of tech like ChatGPT looms large in the minds of many.

The WGA strike is the first in 15 years, and it's taking place over issues beyond just AI. But in particular, Reuters reports that WGA writers have two main concerns about automation in writing, quoting screenwriter John August, who is part of the WGA negotiating committee: They don't want their material to be used as training data for AI systems, and they don't want to be tasked with fixing AI-generated "sloppy first drafts."

That's because writers who are hired to polish first drafts get paid at a lower rate, and WGA writers are fighting to make sure that a ChatGPT-generated first draft would not be counted as "literary material" or "source material," which are terms defined in their contract.

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Daily Deals (5-3-2023)

Amazon’s Kindle Scribe E Ink tablet with a 10.2 inch display and pen support is on sale for nearly $60 off… but the deal is only available for Prime members. Meanwhile Best Buy is running a 1-day sale on select laptops, tablets, and PC acc…

Amazon’s Kindle Scribe E Ink tablet with a 10.2 inch display and pen support is on sale for nearly $60 off… but the deal is only available for Prime members. Meanwhile Best Buy is running a 1-day sale on select laptops, tablets, and PC accessories. And RAVPower is offering a 30W USB wall charger for […]

The post Daily Deals (5-3-2023) appeared first on Liliputing.

New UK Cybersecurity Campaign Leads Kids Directly to Pirate Apps & Malware

The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) launched a new awareness campaign today hoping to educate kids on the risks of using the internet. The government’s decision to call the campaign “CyberFlix” is utterly bewildering. Not only does the campaign now share the same name as one of the most recognized movie piracy apps, but the first few pages of Google results only return piracy-related results, at least some of which lead to malware.

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

ncscTo reduce the chances of being tracked, profiled, spammed with malicious ads, infected with malware or subjected to ransomware, no device in this building accesses the internet without stringent filtering.

With network tools and browser plugins doing some of the heavy lifting, WireGuard VPN connections help to keep the dangers at bay. In today’s online environment, every little helps and on this network, a little amounts to millions of URLs blocked every year.

A new government initiative launched today on the website of the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) sounded interesting; at least until the website started delivering broken and insecure HTTP pages in an apparent protest against an encrypted connection.

ncscs-uk

Having to reduce network security to read what the NCSC had to say about staying safe online wasn’t a great start. Worringly, things only went downhill from there.

Campaign to Raise Kids’ Awareness of Online Harms

The new awareness campaign targets pre-teens and young teenagers and is designed to raise awareness of some of the risks they’re likely to encounter when using the web.

A key feature is described as an “interactive video learning resource” which amounts to short video clips of a longer story, punctuated by multiple choice questions relating to decisions for staying safe online. For the strictly over 18s, think Black Mirror’s ‘Bandersnatch‘ but on a much tighter budget.

“Young people are growing up in an increasingly digital world, exposing them to both the opportunities and risks of the internet,” the NCSC campaign website notes.

“CyberFlix highlights some of the most common cyber scams and malicious activity that a pre-teen and teenage internet user might come across and empowers them to make choices to keep themselves more secure online.”

Hard to Believe Nobody Googled “CyberFlix”

For people who never go online, the word ‘CyberFlix’ probably means very little. For a few million others who love movies and TV shows but would rather not pay for them, CyberFlix means watching movies and TV shows but not having to pay for them.

The CyberFlix app for Android devices is a reported clone of Terrarium TV, which shut down in 2018 under legal pressure widely attributed to Hollywood. Given its similarities, CyberFlix became a favorite among pirates and as this complaint shows, also a prime target for enforcement groups including the Alliance for Creativity and Entertainment.

The problem for the online harms campaign is that when people seek it out by its chosen name, search engines turn up pages and pages of results that link to various CyberFlix-branded apps, most of which are completely dedicated to piracy.

cyberflix-google

If the CyberFlix campaign generates enough interest in its own right, it might be able to improve its position in search results. As things stand the bizarre choice of name means that wherever it ends up, the campaign is likely to be surrounded by piracy apps when people attempt to find it using a search engine.

Given the nature of the campaign and the fact that the government is behind it, this apparent blunder is all the more extraordinary.

Reducing Online Harms…

The entertainment industries claim apps like CyberFlix often contain malware and malicious advertising, perhaps the most common online harms encountered by the majority of all internet users. However, determining whether a piracy app is actually malicious isn’t always straightforward since many are able to pass virus/malware scans.

That may mean they’re clean but there are no guarantees, especially for apps with CyberFlix branding. There isn’t just one version of the app, many modified versions are available online, most likely under the control of different people.

For example, if people in the UK search for ‘CyberFlix’ today (looking for a campaign that reduces their exposure to online harms, perhaps), the item at the very top of Google’s results is a website where visitors can download and receive advice about a particular CyberFlix variant:

cyberflix-mal

The advice doesn’t mention the third option (not installing the app at all) but in this case the Android APK (installation) file passes most malware checks. It also communicates with a server in Germany along with other CyberFlix variants. The same server also has connections to other apps, with the majority flagged for some type of malware issue. For whatever reason (probably some of these), Google isn’t happy with it either.

In summary, CyberFlix is a) a popular piracy app and b) a government campaign to help kids avoid trouble online. Got it.

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