Christopher Walken is an evil emperor in latest trailer for Dune: Part 2

“He who can destroy a thing has the real control of it.”

Timothée Chalamet's Paul Atreides is ready to fight in the new trailer for Dune: Part 2.

Warner Bros. has dropped a second eye-popping trailer for Dune: Part 2, the second part of Denis Villeneuve's visually stunning, ambitious adaptation of Frank Herbert's seminal sci-fi novel. Part 1, released in 2021, grossed over $400 million globally against a $165 million budget, earned critical acclaim (you can read the largely positive Ars review here), and snagged six Oscars. If this new trailer is any indication, Part 2 promises to be just as powerful.

As 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 (Timothée Chalamet) contends with rival House Harkonnen and strives to defeat the forces of Shaddam IV, Emperor of the Known Universe.

Part 1's finale left Paul and his mother, Lady Jessica (Rebecca Ferguson), presumed dead in the harsh desert of Arrakis, having fled their home when Baron Vladimir Harkonnen (Stellan Skarsgård) betrayed the family and killed Paul's father, Leto (Oscar Isaac). They were taken in by the Fremen, the planet's native inhabitants, who include Chani (Zendaya), a girl who had been appearing in Paul's dreams/visions.

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Asus ROG Flow X13 convertible notebook with Ryzen 9 7940HS now available for $1250

The Asus ROG Flow X13 (2023) is a 2.9 pound notebook with a 13.4 inch IPS LCD touchscreen display, a 360-degree hinge, and an AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS processor and an Asus ROG XG mobile interface for connecting an external GPU. When Asus first unveiled the…

The Asus ROG Flow X13 (2023) is a 2.9 pound notebook with a 13.4 inch IPS LCD touchscreen display, a 360-degree hinge, and an AMD Ryzen 9 7940HS processor and an Asus ROG XG mobile interface for connecting an external GPU. When Asus first unveiled the notebook earlier this year, a key selling point was […]

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Movie Companies Cannot Use Piracy Notice Scheme to Facilitate Class Action

Movie companies known for aggressively tracking down alleged pirates in pursuit of settlements have been denied permission to proceed in a reverse class action in Canada. A Federal Court judge said the plaintiffs’ plan, which envisaged using ISPs and the country’s notice-and-notice scheme to communicate with alleged BitTorrent pirates, would be illegal.

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

canada-pirateRightsholders operating business models that attempt to turn piracy into revenue are always looking for ways to streamline their work to reduce costs and maximize profits. Identifying infringers in bulk is one of the favored options.

In 2016, a group of movie companies known for their pursuit of alleged BitTorrent pirates attempted something rare in Canada. Voltage Pictures, Cobbler Nevada, Ptg Nevada, Clear Skies Nevada, and several other companies filed an application at Federal Court requesting certification of a reverse class action.

Their targets were an unspecified number of BitTorrent users who allegedly shared movies, including The Cobbler, Pay the Ghost, Good Kill, Fathers and Daughters, and American Heist.

Building a Case Around Single Defendant

The plaintiffs (collectively ‘Voltage’) built their case around a single customer of ISP Rogers, initially known only as John Doe #1. Voltage claimed the subscriber had uploaded all five movies and after obtaining his personal details via a so-called Norwich disclosure order (which included a trip to the Supreme Court), Robert Salna became the plaintiffs’ point of focus.

Salna owns several rental properties and provides internet access to his tenants. Salna said that they must be responsible for the alleged infringements, something they denied. Voltage subsequently added the tenants to the case but then discontinued the action against them.

Significant Opposition, Federal Court Denies Certification

Schemes targeting large numbers of internet subscribers are fraught with difficulties and rarely popular beyond the plaintiffs. Interveners in the case included Canadian Internet Policy & Public Interest Clinic (CIPPIC), Bell Canada, Cogeco Connexion, Rogers Communications, Sasktel, Telus Communications, Videotron, and Xplore.

All opposed the class action approach and in November 2019, the Federal Court supported their position. The Court found that since a file-sharing case involving many alleged infringers would require multiple individual fact-findings for each class member, class certification would be denied on all grounds.

Voltage’s Successful Appeal

Voltage and related plaintiffs have a reputation for exhausting every option before conceding defeat, a track record maintained in Canada. In 2021 at the Federal Court of Appeal, Justice Rennie set aside the 2019 Federal Court ruling, reversing it on all grounds.

The Court noted that while a reverse class action could benefit the plaintiffs, those accused of infringement could also take advantage by pooling their resources. The case was then referred back to the Federal Court with two questions: was a reverse class action the preferable procedure in this case, and did Voltage have a workable litigation plan?

In deciding the latter, the Federal Court would be required to revisit Voltage’s proposal to use Canada’s ‘notice-and-notice’ infringement warning program to communicate with alleged infringers. The system was put in place to allow rightsholders to notify subscribers, via their ISPs, that their connections had been monitored sharing copyrighted content.

The Federal Court previously ruled that the system could not be used to facilitate communication in a class action, a point on which the Court of Appeal subsequently disagreed.

Federal Court Again Weighs Arguments

In a process over six years old, Voltage’s goal of targeting more than 55,000 subscribers in a class action has faced deterioration over time. As of September 16, 2022, potential class members (internet account subscribers who allegedly infringed Voltage’s copyrights during the previous six months) had been reduced to less than 1,000.

According to the Federal Court’s estimate in its order handed down June 26, the figure is now ‘just’ 874 subscribers. Justice Fothergill said that even if the class comprised 874 members, he was satisfied that Voltage had demonstrated “some basis in fact” for the conclusion that a class proceeding is indeed the preferable procedure in this matter.

“A class proceeding will permit the determination of common issues based upon a single set of pleadings. The common issues will be decided on the basis of common evidence, including expert evidence. Respondent Class Members may pool resources to fund the defense, and may advance a coordinated position with the assistance of Class Counsel. This in turn alleviates the risk of inconsistent judgments,” his order reads

“A class proceeding may permit Respondents to benefit from a higher degree of anonymity. They may choose to identify themselves only to Class Counsel. By contrast, individual applications, including those commenced against multiple respondents, will require identification of each respondent by name unless the Court grants a confidentiality order.

“Another major advantage of a reverse class proceeding is that any settlement must be approved by the Court. This is an important safeguard against ‘copyright trolling’, where respondents are pressured to settle unmeritorious claims under threat of significant litigation costs.”

ISP Interveners Object

As is often the case when rightsholders target large numbers of internet users, ISPs are expected to assist in processes that involve their subscribers and their data. In this case the ISPs objected to Voltage’s plan, which would require them to send a class action “Certification Notice” to the alleged infringers and “retain data on identities of their subscribers until following final determination of the hearing on the merits (including any appeals).”

The ISPs said that retaining subscriber data would mean the unrealistic proposition of storing all data for all customers for years, redesigning their software and databases to automatically preserve only data retroactively selected by Voltage, or manually saving data for potentially tens of thousands of customers.

Inevitably the ISPs would face other subscriber-related issues, including customers calling for legal advice and the need to train staff to deal with these sensitive discussions. Some customers may choose to complain or blame their ISP for their predicament, or even leave to join another ISP. Others may be tempted to sign up with bogus contact information to avoid legal liability, preventing ISPs from contacting their own customers in relation to their accounts or developing business with them.

More fundamentally, the ISPs said that using the “notice-and-notice” system to communicate with class members would be illegal under Canadian law. The Federal Court agreed and said that would not happen.

“[V]oltage’s proposed use of the notice-and-notice regime to advance this class proceeding is inconsistent with the Copyright Act, and is contrary to law,” Justice Fothergill’s order reads. “It is therefore unnecessary to reach definitive conclusions regarding the ISPs’ concerns about cost, inconvenience and the potential disruption of their relationships with their subscribers.”

Federal Court Again Denies Class Certification

In conclusion, the Federal Court found enough deficiencies in Voltage’s litigation plan to deny class certification, at least for now.

“Voltage remains at liberty to present a revised litigation plan that does not depend on the notice-and-notice regime in the Copyright Act to identify and communicate with Class Members, and that makes adequate provision for the funding of Class Counsel,” the order reads.

How the case will progress from here is unclear. In very basic terms, the settlement model favored by Voltage is no different from any other business; costs of doing business are weighed against anticipated revenue (via settlements) and if the difference represents an acceptable return, there’s a reason to press ahead.

Since free use of the notice-and-notice has now been ruled out, costs appear to be going in the wrong direction, something particularly problematic in Canada. Unlike most other regions where Voltage is active, Canada places a $5,000 cap on non-commercial infringement, something that significantly dampens the psychological pressure to settle “or else”.

Justice Fothergill’s order can be found here (pdf)

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

Daily Deals (6-29-2023)

Several major PC game stores are running sales, which means you can score deals on titles purchased from Humble Games, GOG, or Steam. But Valve’s Steam Summer Sale also includes a deal on hardware, with discounts of 10 – 20 percent on the …

Several major PC game stores are running sales, which means you can score deals on titles purchased from Humble Games, GOG, or Steam. But Valve’s Steam Summer Sale also includes a deal on hardware, with discounts of 10 – 20 percent on the Steam Deck, letting you pick up 64GB, 256GB, and 512GB models of […]

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Two more EV charging networks will add support for Tesla-style NACS plugs

Lots may be read into this news, as Electrify America is owned by Volkswagen.

Directly above view taken with drone of a charging station for electric and hybrid cars using solar panels to generate electricity to charge cars battery while are parked in the city.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

The EV charging plug deathwatch might need to be kicked into a higher gear. This week two charging networks have announced that they're going to add support for the Tesla-style North American Charging Standard connectors. On Wednesday, Blink revealed that it integrated NACS into its level 2 and DC fast chargers. Today, it was Electrify America, the country's largest non-Tesla charging network, which will also add NACS plugs to its charging stations.

Tesla opened up the latest version of its charging protocols to the wider auto industry in November 2022, renaming it the North American Charging Standard as it did so. For a few months, nothing much happened, but in late May, Ford signed a deal to adopt NACS and obtain access to Tesla's Supercharger network. Two weeks later, General Motors followed, then Rivian, and most recently, Volvo joined the club.

At first, the move raised eyebrows from some industry watchers. It appeared that Ford, GM, and others were putting a hugely important aspect of their customers' EV experience into the hands of a rival—one run by a CEO known for impulsive, often rash decisions like suggesting making Tesla private again or deciding to close all its retail stores, both whims that were later backtracked.

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YouTube scammer who stole millions in song royalties sentenced to 5 years

YouTube scammer aggressively defended fake rights to 50,000 songs over 5 years.

YouTube scammer who stole millions in song royalties sentenced to 5 years

Enlarge (credit: Thomas Trutschel / Contributor | Photothek)

A YouTube scammer conspiring to run what Billboard described as possibly the largest music royalty scam in history, Jose Teran was recently sentenced by the US government to 70 months in prison.

He was hit with a "significant sentence," US attorney for the District of Arizona, Gary Restaino, wrote in the sentencing memo, because of the "greed and the great lengths" that Teran's scam went over the course of five years to fraudulently claim rights to 50,000 songs. Ultimately, the scam routed $23 million in royalty proceeds away from mostly Latin artists and into the bank accounts of Teran and his co-conspirators.

Teran, the sentencing memo said, "obtained more than $6 million in personal profits" and continued pocketing $190,000 in stolen royalties—which he hid from officials—even after he was indicted for the fraud. Partly because of this, Teran is considered a "high-risk to re-offend," Restaino wrote.

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This is what our Milky Way galaxy looks like when viewed with neutrinos

We now have strong evidence that the Milky Way is a source of high-energy neutrinos.

An artist’s composition of the Milky Way seen with a neutrino lens (blue).

Enlarge / An artist’s composition of the Milky Way seen with a neutrino lens (blue). (credit: IceCube Collaboration/NSF/ESO)

Scientists with the IceCube Neutrino Observatory have unveiled a striking new image of our Milky Way galaxy as seen by ghost-like messenger particles called neutrinos. This new analysis—announced at a Drexel University event today, with a paper being published in the journal Science tomorrow—offers the strongest evidence to date that the Milky Way is a source of high-energy neutrinos, shedding more light on the origin of high-energy cosmic rays.

"I remember saying, 'At this point in human history, we're the first ones to see our galaxy in anything other than light,'" said Drexel University physicist and IceCube member Naoko Kurahashi Neilson of the moment she and two graduate students first examined the image. “Observing our own galaxy for the first time using particles instead of light is a huge step. As neutrino astronomy evolves, we will get a new lens with which to observe the universe.”

As previously reported, ever since French physicist Pierre Auger proposed in 1939 that cosmic rays must carry incredible amounts of energy, scientists have puzzled over what produces these powerful clusters of protons and neutrons raining down into Earth's atmosphere. One way to identify the sources is to backtrack the paths that high-energy cosmic neutrinos traveled on their way to Earth since they are created by cosmic rays colliding with matter or radiation, producing particles that then decay into neutrinos and gamma rays.

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One Netbook OneMix 5 is a 10.1 inch convertible notebook with Core i7-1250U

One Netbook is probably best known these days for the Chinese PC maker’s handheld gaming computers. But the company got its start making mini-laptops… and never really stopped making them. Now One Netbook is showing off its next-gen model….

One Netbook is probably best known these days for the Chinese PC maker’s handheld gaming computers. But the company got its start making mini-laptops… and never really stopped making them. Now One Netbook is showing off its next-gen model. The OneMix 5 is compact laptop with a 10.1 inch display, a 9-watt Intel Core i7-1250U […]

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Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor will mine hours of auto-shooting joy from your life

This Vampire-like converted a skeptic, even in its closed early-access form.

Screenshot from Deep Rock Galactic Survivor showing lots of bugs and XP

Enlarge / Rock, stone, bugs, XP crystals, and a flying helper robot that is hopelessly outmatched: Welcome to Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor. (credit: Ghost Ship Games)

Some of the most hardcore tabletop gamers I know spent a good portion of last summer escaping into Vampire Survivors. I read the raves from reviewers, saw the game and its eye-catching minimalism in YouTube channels, and knew it had the stamp of approval from the types who spent days planning out D&D 5e one-shots.

And yet I avoided it because I wasn't sure it was my type of game. I don't enjoy bullet-hell games, and Vampire Survivors looked like one of the lowest levels of Dante's Bullet Hell, painted with a kitschy SNES tile set.

Deep Rock Galactic, on the other hand, is very much my type of game. When the creator of DRG announced a few months back that it would publish a Survivors-like game from developer Funday Games, set in the same universe of mining, shooting, and goofing, it felt inevitable that I'd give it a go. Instead of "a go," though, I've given Deep Rock Galactic: Survivor hours and hours over the past week, and I don't remember them passing at all.

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AYA Neo Air 1S handheld gaming PC combines AMD Ryzen 7 7840U with a 5.5 inch AMOLED display

Handheld gaming PC maker AYA is in the process of upgrading its lineup with new models sporting the latest AMD chips which should bring big gains in CPU and graphics performance. And the next in line has a few things that help set it apart from the co…

Handheld gaming PC maker AYA is in the process of upgrading its lineup with new models sporting the latest AMD chips which should bring big gains in CPU and graphics performance. And the next in line has a few things that help set it apart from the competition. The AYA Neo Air 1S is smaller than Valve’s […]

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