
Er war Polizist: Krypto-Betrüger renovierte sein Bad auf Kosten der Anleger
Ein Polizist aus den USA sammelte für einen neuen Krypto-Token mehr als 620.000 US-Dollar ein. Mit einem Teil davon renovierte er sein Bad. (Cybercrime, Security)

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Ein Polizist aus den USA sammelte für einen neuen Krypto-Token mehr als 620.000 US-Dollar ein. Mit einem Teil davon renovierte er sein Bad. (Cybercrime, Security)
DJI bietet eine Bandbreite an tollen Drohnen mit Kameras. Der Topseller bei Amazon kommt aber von Potensic und ist derzeit im Sonderangebot. (Drohne, DJI)
Jackery erweitert seine Powerstations um ein Modell mit 1.260 und eines mit 288 Wh. Die kleine Explorer 300 Plus kommt standardmäßig mit Solarmodul. (Powerstation, Solarstation)
Action für Literaten: Alan Wake 2 will eine ungewöhnlich ambitionierte Story erzählen. Ob da alle Fans mitgehen? Von Peter Steinlechner (Alan Wake, Spiele)
Das Generieren von fiktiven Charakteren in pornografischem Kontext ist die eine Sache. Mit KI-Tools lassen sich aber auch Sexbilder von echten Personen erstellen. (Bilderkennung, KI)
Der Netzbetreiber T-Mobile US baut in den kommenden 5 Wochen insgesamt 5.000 Stellen ab. Teilweise soll KI die Mitarbeiter ersetzen. (Telekom, Mobilfunk)
Responding to an inquiry on future anti-piracy strategies, Creative Future CEO Ruth Vitale calls on U.S. lawmakers to consider site blocking as a much-needed solution. Blocking foreign pirate sites could be a “game changer”, she argues. The Association of American Publishers also sees site blocking as an ideal tool to fight piracy more effectively and efficiently.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
For a long time, pirate site blocking was regarded as a topic most U.S. politicians would rather avoid.
This stance was a remnant of the SOPA defeat, which drove copyright holders to focus on blocking efforts in other countries instead, with success.
Those challenging times are now more than a decade old, and momentum is shifting. After more than forty countries around the world instituted site-blocking measures, including in Canada, U.S. lawmakers may be more receptive to revisiting this topic.
An ideal opportunity to discuss the site-blocking potential arrived earlier this year when the U.S. Government’s Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) launched a consultation to discuss future anti-piracy and counterfeiting strategies.
Several stakeholders submitted their comments this week and while the responses cover a wide range of issues, site blocking is mentioned repeatedly.
Technically, it is already possible for rightsholders to request blocking injunctions, and that has happened in the past. However, the text of the law is not entirely clear on whether ISPs have to be held liable or not. That further complicates the issue.
Ideally, rightsholders would like to change the legal framework in the United States to allow for so-called ‘no fault’ injunctions on home turf. Supporters argue that, with proper judicial oversight, courts should be able to instruct Internet providers to block foreign pirate sites, without holding intermediaries liable.
Creative Future is one of the most vocal proponents of site blocking. The group represents hundreds of companies and organizations, as well as 300,000 individuals who work in the creative industry. According to CEO Ruth Vitale, piracy is an existential threat to the livelihood of these people.
“Our nation’s creative economy, the world’s best, continues to be under siege by digital piracy despite the almost universal availability of our work in the legitimate digital marketplace,” Vitale writes.
Concerns about piracy are nothing new but the fact that the U.S. harbors the most pirates worldwide and lacks simple and effective tools to combat known pirate sites, is a real issue.
“To make matters worse, most piracy that is consumed in the United States is coming from territories beyond the reach of U.S. law enforcement. What is as incomprehensible? The fact that there are commonsense measures in place around the world that have proven to be effective anti-piracy tools in situations like this, but that are not available here at home.”
Court-ordered site-blocking injunctions are the most obvious tool, according to Vitale, who mentions that these have proven to be effective in other parts of the world.
“Such site blocking has proven to be an effective remedy against piracy in the more than 40 countries that have implemented court-adjudicated site blocking – including western democracies like Canada and the UK,” she notes.
The submission reads as a personal plea but also cites various studies and statistics to argue in favor of blocking. This includes academic research which found that, if done right, blocking injunctions can trigger some pirates to pay for additional legal subscriptions.
With dozens of millions of pirates in the United States, this translates into significant revenues; that could be a potential game changer.
“This kind of shift away from illegal pirate sites and toward the legal marketplace could be a game-changer not only for America’s film and television industry and its 2.4 million workers, but for all Americans,” Vitale writes.
Creative Future is well aware of the site-blocking concerns voiced by opponents. This includes the concern that overblocking can restrict freedom of expression.
While we have seen serious but isolated incidents in other countries, Vitale believes that these “outdated arguments” shouldn’t stop Congress from seriously considering site-blocking.
Creative Future is not the only organization urging the Government to consider site-blocking legislation. The Association of American Publishers (AAP) requests the same.
AAP has two main legislative suggestions. The first is to implement a takedown-staydown policy, to ensure that content isn’t reuploaded on platforms once it’s removed. The second is site-blocking.
“Website blocking works to disrupt piracy or large-scale copyright infringement occurring on or facilitated by blatant pirate sites located in foreign jurisdictions,” AAP writes.
The publishers stress that thousands of domains have been blocked in dozens of countries around the world, but not in the US. While the association admits that it’s no “silver bullet to cure all online piracy ills,” it will help to combat the problem.
“This remedy has already proven effective in multiple jurisdictions around the world, and a similar remedy should be adopted in the United States,” AAP writes.
This isn’t the first time that rightsholders have urged U.S. rightsholders to consider site blocking. Thus far, no concrete plans have surfaced, but there is some movement in the Capitol.
US Senator Thom Tillis previously asked the public to share their views on site blocking. This triggered unanimous support from the Motion Picture Association, but there was plenty of opposition too, as always.
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A copy of Creative Future’s response to the USPTO’s inquiry is available here (pdf) and AAP’s version can be found here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Elon Musk may again be in trouble for his social media posts.
Enlarge / SpaceX's Super Heavy booster, numbered Booster 9, rolls back to its launch pad in Texas for more testing. The rocket now has a new structural staging ring on top. (credit: SpaceX)
Welcome to Edition 6.08 of the Rocket Report! The US Department of Justice is taking SpaceX to court over allegations of hiring discrimination, but the government is relying more than ever on SpaceX's technical prowess. Once again, Elon Musk's social media posts are part of the story. This week, we also cover the successes and struggles of small rockets, where Rocket Lab is leading the pack.
As always, we welcome reader submissions, and if you don't want to miss an issue, please subscribe using the box below (the form will not appear on AMP-enabled versions of the site). Each report will include information on small-, medium-, and heavy-lift rockets, as well as a quick look ahead at the next three launches on the calendar.
Rocket Lab re-flies engine after ocean splashdown. Rocket Lab launched its 40th Electron mission this week and achieved an important milestone in its quest to reuse orbital rockets, Ars reports. As part of the mission, the launch company reused a previously flown Rutherford engine on its first stage for the first time. In terms of orbital rockets, only NASA's space shuttle and SpaceX's Falcon 9 vehicles have demonstrated the capability of re-flying an engine. With Rutherford, Rocket Lab has now also flown a rocket engine that landed in the ocean for the first time.
Unusual and often breathtaking, the genre is relatively unknown in the West.
Enlarge / Inside the Submarine by Kim Kwang Nam, from the series "The Future is Bright." (credit: Koryo Studio)
A plane is flying to the Philippines, gliding above "the infinite surface" of the Pacific Ocean. Suddenly, a few passengers start to scream. Soon, the captain announces there's a bomb on board, and it’s set to detonate if the aircraft drops below 10,000 feet.
"The inside of the plane turned into a battlefield," the story reads. "The captain was visibly startled and vainly tried to calm down the screaming and utterly terrorized passengers."
Only one person keeps his cool: a young North Korean diplomat who has faith that his country will find a solution and save everyone. And he’s right. North Korea's esteemed scientists and engineers create a mysterious anti-gravitational field and stop the plane in mid-air. The bomb is defused, and everyone gets off the aircraft and is brought back safely to Earth.
Golem.de erklärt, welche Instrumente die indische Mondmission auf die Oberfläche gebracht hat und wie sie funktionieren. Von Frank Wunderlich-Pfeiffer (Mond, Raumfahrt)
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