LibreOffice 7.6 released with new features, improved compatibility, and a legacy version name (next up, LibreOffice 24.2)

The Document Foundation has announced the release of LibreOffice 7.6 Community edition, featuring a number of new features and improvements. But this release of the open source, cross-platform, community-supported office suite is also noteworthy becau…

The Document Foundation has announced the release of LibreOffice 7.6 Community edition, featuring a number of new features and improvements. But this release of the open source, cross-platform, community-supported office suite is also noteworthy because it’s the last version that will use the legacy 2-digit naming convention. So rather than LibreOffice 7.7 or 8.0, the […]

The post LibreOffice 7.6 released with new features, improved compatibility, and a legacy version name (next up, LibreOffice 24.2) appeared first on Liliputing.

China keeps buying hobbled Nvidia cards to train its AI models

Nvidia’s weakened processors are still more powerful than the alternatives.

The Nvidia H100 Tensor Core GPU

Enlarge / A press photo of the Nvidia H100 Tensor Core GPU. (credit: Nvidia)

The US acted aggressively last year to limit China’s ability to develop artificial intelligence for military purposes, blocking the sale there of the most advanced US chips used to train AI systems.

Big advances in the chips used to develop generative AI have meant that the latest US technology on sale in China is more powerful than anything available before. That is despite the fact that the chips have been deliberately hobbled for the Chinese market to limit their capabilities, making them less effective than products available elsewhere in the world.

The result has been soaring Chinese orders for the latest advanced US processors. China’s leading Internet companies have placed orders for $5 billion worth of chips from Nvidia, whose graphical processing units have become the workhorse for training large AI models.

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US judge: Art created solely by artificial intelligence cannot be copyrighted

“US copyright law protects only works of human creation,” judge writes.

AI-generated image looks like a painting of a train track running through a tunnel overgrown with flowers.

Enlarge / AI-generated art titled, "A Recent Entrance to Paradise." The image cannot be copyrighted, a judge ruled.

Art generated entirely by artificial intelligence cannot be copyrighted because "human authorship is an essential part of a valid copyright claim," a federal judge ruled on Friday.

The US Copyright Office previously rejected plaintiff Stephen Thaler's application for a copyright because the work lacked human authorship, and he challenged the decision in US District Court for the District of Columbia. Thaler and the Copyright Office both moved for summary judgment in motions that "present the sole issue of whether a work generated entirely by an artificial system absent human involvement should be eligible for copyright," Judge Beryl Howell's memorandum opinion issued Friday noted.

Howell denied Thaler's motion for summary judgment, granted the Copyright Office's motion, and ordered that the case be closed.

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Flawless IPTV Fugitive Detained in Thailand Following UK Police Request

In May five men behind pirate IPTV service Flawless TV were sentenced to more than 30 years in prison following a Premier League prosecution. Fugitive Zak Smith was detained in Thailand last month and now faces sentencing back in the UK. Photographs of his arrest have been circulating in Thailand along with an allegation of Smith selling IPTV from a rented home. TorrentFreak was able to review a video recorded by the authorities that has clearly been edited.

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

flawless-logo1Private criminal prosecutions are complex and expensive but can also offer some great perks; the taxpayer picking up the bill for the prosecution and then paying to keep those convicted in prison, for example.

In the case of the five men sentenced in May for running pirate IPTV service Flawless TV, it’s unlikely the Premier League will be left out of pocket. They also benefited from a free anti-piracy deterrent campaign via the media, at the expense of the five men jailed for more than 30 years.

While that was the icing on the cake, the cake was missing a cherry. Six men were due to be sentenced in May yet only five sentences were handed down.

Sixth Defendant Left UK Before Sentencing

Since the unprecedented sentences were handed down late May, TorrentFreak has been filling in the gaps on the Flawless operation, the subsequent investigation, and the roles played by some of those imprisoned.

In June our focus was on Zak Smith, a former employee at an anti-piracy company working with the Premier League who supplied Flawless with inside information that helped to undermine IPTV blocking in the UK. Our information indicates that Smith was the first Flawless defendant to enter a guilty plea, way back in February 2020.

An early guilty plea is one of several factors typically associated with more lenient sentencing. However, Smith was apparently unavailable to be sentenced along with the other defendants in May, so a warrant was issued for his arrest. None of our sources knew or were prepared to confirm Smith’s whereabouts outside the UK, when he left the country, or whether overseas trips were normal for the 30-year-old.

Smith Detained in Thailand

While all of the Flawless defendants are intriguing as individuals, Smith is perhaps the most puzzling. Obviously talented and unusually polite, Smith had access to valuable information that most likely would’ve grown more valuable over time, yet the evidence shows he made almost nothing from his involvement with Flawless.

When UK police recently discovered that Smith was probably in Thailand and requested help from local authorities, it’s unclear how they characterized him. A fugitive from justice in the most significant IPTV piracy case in the UK’s history? Or a guy who received a grand total of £3,297.02 for his work and has no criminal record?

Whether Thai authorities cared one way or the other was masked by Smith carelessly (or perhaps knowingly) outstaying his visa by 16 days. He was arrested by officers from the Immigration Office in Koh Samui after being tracked down to a rented property he shared with his girlfriend in Ban Khao Le, a quiet area according to Thai authorities, “suitable for sheltering from officers’ scrutiny.”

When foreigners are arrested in Thailand that often triggers a photoshoot of the suspect in various locations, flanked by arresting officers. We’ll keep those to a minimum here, starting with a replacement image of the rental property we managed to track down using Google Earth.

smith-rental-thai

Differing Accounts of Arrest

Images of immigration authorities talking to Smith inside the rental property appear on several Thai websites. It’s unclear whether some publications were provided with inaccurate information or simply made errors themselves, but claims that the Flawless defendants were sentenced to 30 years EACH in prison are not hard to find.

Of more concern is this article containing several official photographs, featuring Smith inside the property and the following claim: “Officers inspected the house and found that Mr Zak Timothy Smith used a computer to control the release of codes to watch Premier League football.” The screenshot of the website, the images, and the allegation appear below for context.

smith-code-allegations

On one hand this appears to be an allegation that Smith is still somehow involved with the sale of illegal Premier League IPTV packages. On the other, we cannot find any other site that repeats the claim in their own articles, but many still link back to this news article as the source.

As mentioned earlier, Smith entered a guilty plea in the UK years ago so when he is sentenced, it’s a question of how much time he’ll serve, not whether he will serve any at all. We have no idea whether claims of alleged offending in Thailand have the potential to affect the sentencing judge’s decision in the UK, but we wanted to rule the claim in or out independently, if that was even possible.

Not Just Photographs: Authorities Have Video Too

After speaking with a TF source in the region who has proven reliable in the past, we learned that the authorities video these types of arrests and if we’re lucky, someone will come up with a copy at some point. We got very lucky; not only a video, one with mostly audible voices too.

In the image above, where Smith is sitting down and facing a gentleman (Man1) with very short hair (with a man wearing a hat behind), the conversation goes like this:

Man1: [inaudible]

Smith: I’ve been sick. I meant to get an extension but i’ve been sick.

Man1: [mostly inaudible but man asks if Smith has a plan to leave “the land”]

Smith: Yeah, in like a month after i’ve got an extension. I was going to get a 30-day extension [mostly inaudible]

Following this exchange, Smith and Man1 walk to the room shown in the second photograph (Man1 standing over Smith as he sits in an office chair in front of a computer)

Man1: What is this? [gestures towards computer screen]

Smith: This is a program for a game, an online game. So, we write code for people to play the game

Man1: Hmmmm. Which game?

Smith: Do you know a game called Runescape?

Man1: Football game?

Smith: No, no, no, no, no. Runescape, it’s like a [inaudible] click game online.

Man1: You have been at work, in England? What kind of work?

Smith: It would be comp…[inaudible]

At this point the video has obviously been edited to remove something. Who said or did what is unknown and it’s impossible to say how much video has been removed. When the video returns, the topic of conversation is IPTV.

Smith: No. I don’t have IPTV, no.

Man1: IPTV in England, you know.

Smith: I know about IPTV…

Man1: What about IPTV, what about it?

Smith: The IPTV is..

Once again the video is cut. It returns with Smith walking towards the chair, sitting down, and explaining the function of the software still running on his screen. The quality is terrible and the image below is the best we could manage. If anyone knows what it is, that would be helpful.

smith-screen

Smith: It basically plays a video game for me. It’s nothing..erm… This is like a hobby, not really a….this is a hobby. It’s a game

Man1: Ahhhh [something appears on screen, too blurred to describe from the video] And you don’t IPTV?

Smith: Well I know what IPTV is…

Man1: IPTV is…a set-top box…you share..

Smith: You share the programs over the internet

Man1: You share the programs [inaudible] the football live on the IPTV and you can see the television, live football.

Smith: That’s not me, no.

Man1: [man1 looks at someone in the room, behind and to the left of the camera. Man1 starts laughing]

Man1: How long to be here?

Smith: Two weeks, about two weeks.

Man1: Before you stay? [man speaks Thai, video ends]

Smith’s current whereabouts are unknown but Thai authorities say that he will not be permitted to return to Thailand.

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

ULTRARAM low-power memory could offer the speed of DRAM and non-volatility of flash storage

Researchers from Lancaster University have developed a new type of computer memory product that they say combines the best features of DRAM memory and SSD storage…. and then surpasses them. Like flash storage, ULTRARAM is said to be non-volatile…

Researchers from Lancaster University have developed a new type of computer memory product that they say combines the best features of DRAM memory and SSD storage…. and then surpasses them. Like flash storage, ULTRARAM is said to be non-volatile memory. That means it can save data indefinitely without consuming power. According to press materials, data […]

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The failure of Luna 25 cements Putin’s role as a disastrous space leader

“There is no place for modernization, there is only the mission of survival.”

Vladimir Putin, center, and Dmitry Rogozin, far right, tour Russia's new Vostochny Cosmodrome in October 2015.

Vladimir Putin, center, and Dmitry Rogozin, far right, tour Russia's new Vostochny Cosmodrome in October 2015. (credit: Kremlin)

On Saturday, the Russian space program lost the Luna 25 spacecraft, a relatively small vehicle that was due to land on the Moon this week. After a problem with the spacecraft's propulsion system, instead of entering a low orbit around the Moon, it crashed into the lunar surface.

The Russian mission to the Moon was one of several spacecraft that were to attempt a landing on the Moon in the next six months, alongside probes from Japan, India, and the United States. In this sense, Russia is just one of many nations participating in a second space race back to the Moon, alongside nations and private companies alike.

But unlike NASA, China, India, and several companies in the United States and Japan, the Luna 25 effort does not presage the coming of a golden era of exploration for Russia. Rather, it is more properly seen as the last gasp of a dying empire, an attempt by the modern state of Russia, and President Vladimir Putin, to revive old glories.

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Ford’s recall of Mustang Mach-Es in 2022 is under investigation by feds

There have been 12 complaints of power loss following the software update.

A Ford Mustang Mach-E seen from the front 3/4 angle

Enlarge / Like the FedEx arrow or the elephant in GM's new logo, once you see the bandito mustache, you'll never unsee it. (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)

Last year, Ford issued a recall for almost 49,000 Mustang Mach-E crossovers due to a problem with the electric vehicles' high-voltage battery contactors. The automaker's fix was a software update to two control modules on the Mach-E, but on Monday Reuters reported that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's Office of Defects Investigation has opened a recall query to see if Ford's software recall actually did the job.

On June 21, 2022, Ford issued a recall for 48,924 Mustang Mach-Es, also instructing dealerships to stop delivering the EVs to customers until the software fix was ready. The problem was battery contactors that could overheat during DC fast charging or with repeated use of full throttle; that overheating could lead to either arcing or the contact surfaces deforming, which in turn could lead to a complete loss of power while driving.

According to the recall safety notice, Ford had 286 warranty claims for open or welded contactors between July 2021 and May 2022. Ford's fix was a software update to the secondary on-board diagnostic control module and the battery energy control module.

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