Erneuerbare Energie: Gigantische Solaranlage auf Metro-Logistikzentrum in Marl

In Marl im Ruhrgebiet ist die größte Solaranlage auf einem Dach in Deutschland in Betrieb genommen worden. Auf zwei Logistikhallen des Großhändlers Metro sind Photovoltaikmodule mit einer Gesamtleistung von 18 Megawatt installiert. (Metro, Bundesregier…

In Marl im Ruhrgebiet ist die größte Solaranlage auf einem Dach in Deutschland in Betrieb genommen worden. Auf zwei Logistikhallen des Großhändlers Metro sind Photovoltaikmodule mit einer Gesamtleistung von 18 Megawatt installiert. (Metro, Bundesregierung)

Balkonkraftwerke: Probleme mit Deyes Nachrüstbox für Wechselrichter

Etliche Nutzer berichten von Problemen mit der Nachrüstlösung von Deye. Demnach funktionieren manche Balkonkraftwerke plötzlich nicht mehr. Ein Bericht von Günter Born (Balkonkraftwerk, Fernwartung)

Etliche Nutzer berichten von Problemen mit der Nachrüstlösung von Deye. Demnach funktionieren manche Balkonkraftwerke plötzlich nicht mehr. Ein Bericht von Günter Born (Balkonkraftwerk, Fernwartung)

Chinese hackers have unleashed a never-before-seen Linux backdoor

SprySOCKS borrows from open source Windows malware and adds new tricks.

Trojan horse on top of blocks of hexadecimal programming codes. Illustration of the concept of online hacking, computer spyware, malware and ransomware.

Enlarge

Researchers have discovered a never-before-seen backdoor for Linux that’s being used by a threat actor linked to the Chinese government.

The new backdoor originates from a Windows backdoor named Trochilus, which was first seen in 2015 by researchers from Arbor Networks, now known as Netscout. They said that Trochilus executed and ran only in memory, and the final payload never appeared on disks in most cases. That made the malware difficult to detect. Researchers from NHS Digital in the UK have said Trochilus was developed by APT10, an advanced persistent threat group linked to the Chinese government that also goes by the names Stone Panda and MenuPass.

Other groups eventually used it, and its source code has been available on GitHub for more than six years. Trochilus has been seen being used in campaigns that used a separate piece of malware known as RedLeaves.

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Lilbits: Amlogic’s new chip could power next-gen TV boxes, and MS Paint is getting… good?

Microsoft is adding a bunch of new features to Paint, a graphics editing app that had been pretty barebones up until recently. The company is also rolling out experimental new updates to the Windows Subsystem for Linux. And the first performance notes…

Microsoft is adding a bunch of new features to Paint, a graphics editing app that had been pretty barebones up until recently. The company is also rolling out experimental new updates to the Windows Subsystem for Linux. And the first performance notes about a new Amlogic processor that could power next-gen Google and Android TV […]

The post Lilbits: Amlogic’s new chip could power next-gen TV boxes, and MS Paint is getting… good? appeared first on Liliputing.

More than half of Americans plan to get updated COVID shot

There’s a sharp partisan divide, but interest blows away uptake of the last booster.

A vial of the updated 2023-2024 formula of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine at a CVS Pharmacy in Eagle Rock, California, on September 14, 2023.

Enlarge / A vial of the updated 2023-2024 formula of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine at a CVS Pharmacy in Eagle Rock, California, on September 14, 2023. (credit: Getty | Irfan Khan)

Despite last year's abysmal fall booster campaign, more than half of US adults say they plan to get the latest COVID-19 vaccine, which was greenlit by federal authorities last week.

According to polling by Politico and Morning Consult, 57 percent of registered voters said they would "probably" or "definitely" get the vaccine, which is a monovalent shot that targets the recent omicron subvariant, XBB.1.5. Specifically, 20 percent of voters said they would probably get the shot, while 37 percent said they definitely would.

Collectively, that's nearly triple the actual uptake of last year's updated vaccine, a bivalent shot that targeted both the ancestral strain and the omicron subvariants BA.4/5. In total, 20.5 percent of people aged 18 or older received that shot, according to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Overall, 17 percent of the US population got the bivalent booster.

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Keeping Google’s search secrets protects its monopoly, DOJ argues in court

The DOJ objected when the court removed the public from the Google trial on Monday.

Keeping Google’s search secrets protects its monopoly, DOJ argues in court

Enlarge (credit: Christopher Ames | iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Since Google has a right to protect its trade secrets during the US Department of Justice's trial digging into how the tech giant allegedly monopolized Internet searches, some of the trial's most revealing moments will come during sealed testimony closed to the public.

On Monday, that process of keeping Google's secrets began with the court sealing off two hours of testimony from Verizon executive Brian Higgins, Reuters reported. Higgins had been called in to discuss how Verizon "always" pre-installed Google's Chrome browser with Google search on its mobile phones. The public was able to hear 30 minutes of testimony before they were removed from the court.

But it looks like the DOJ doesn’t plan to sit back and let Google seal off all the testimony it wants. Today, the DOJ objected when the court removed the public during discussions of Google's online advertising pricing, Reuters reported, pushing back against what Google considers privileged information.

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A water carrier just won the hardest cycling race on the planet

The cycling drama came to a head on top of the most demanding mountain in Europe.

Cyclist Sepp Kuss, center, on the podium of the 21st stage of the Vuelta a España with Jonas Vingegaard, left, and Primoz Roglic, right.

Enlarge / Cyclist Sepp Kuss, center, on the podium of the 21st stage of the Vuelta a España with Jonas Vingegaard, left, and Primoz Roglic, right. (credit: Ricardo Rubio/Europa Press via Getty Images)

Something amazing happened this past weekend.

If you are an American, you probably have not heard about it. You probably don't know who did it or what he did. And until you clicked on this article, you probably didn't care. But you should.

Sepp Kuss won the Vuelta a España.

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Trump Doesn’t Deserve Copyright Win Over Eddie Grant But Still Might Get One

One of the most depressing copyright lawsuits in recent memory celebrated its third birthday this month. How much has been spent by musician Eddy Grant and defendant Donald Trump over 40 seconds of unlicensed music is unclear, but it’s likely to be an obscene amount better spent on almost anything else. The chilling effect on fair use can’t be measured in money.

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

Donald TrumpFormer President Trump is one of the most interesting characters to ever appear on the American political landscape.

Trump’s ability to attract and generate controversy will go down in history, as will his numerous appearances in copyright infringement lawsuits.

Musician Eddy Grant filed a complaint against Trump in 2020 and three years later there’s little positivity to report for anyone involved.

Ignorance and Emotion Fuel Fire

The background to the lawsuit can be summarized as follows: during the presidential election campaign, someone affiliated with Trump and his campaign posted this animation on Twitter depicting a struggling Joe Biden.

The Trump campaign’s decision to include the 1982 hit ‘Electric Avenue’ as background music infuriated Eddy Grant, the British singer-songwriter behind the track. While his song being used without permission provided Grant with a legal avenue for retaliation, court filings made it clear that Grant was deeply offended that his music was being used to promote Trump’s campaign.

A confident Trump recently claimed he could end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours. That sits in stark contrast to the record in this case which currently consists of 108 filings spanning over 36 months.

Three Years of Toxic Waste

While Grant is a principled man, he doesn’t come off as unreasonable. A short phone call from Trump, freshly enlightened after 10 minutes on Wikipedia learning about the Brixton Riots, what caused them, and why the use of Electric Avenue was never meant to offend, couldn’t have hurt. Bridges can always be built towards common ground; the parties’ shared appreciation of Chuck Berry, for example, or how Grant survived a heart attack in 1971 and may be willing to share some tips.

Instead, Trump rejected Grant’s offer to settle the case. In a motion to dismiss, the soon-to-be most powerful man in the world, rich beyond most people’s imaginations, told Grant he would get nothing for his involuntary contribution to the presidential campaign. Because Grant had created the track for entertainment purposes and Trump had used it for political commentary, that was a “fundamentally different and new purpose” and covered by the doctrine of fair use.

Use Was Not Fair

In October 2021, U.S. District Judge John Koeltl said each of the fair use factors weighed in favor of Grant. The Trump campaign’s use of Electric Avenue was little more than “wholesale copying” and it had no license or permission in place to render that legal.

However, in a move that validated calls for justice and social equality found in many of Grant’s songs, Trump’s legal team reminded the musician that some people remain more equal than others.

“Plaintiffs’ claims against Donald J. Trump are barred, either in whole or in part, by Presidential absolute immunity.”

What was said during the subsequent deposition of Donald Trump is not part of the public record but the fact that a deposition took place at all is both remarkable and by now, fittingly depressing.

Grant’s Motion for Summary Judgment

On September 15, 2023, the plaintiffs and defendants filed motions for summary judgment at a Manhattan federal court in an effort to avoid the case going to trial. Grant’s motion states that despite the earlier rejection of a fair use defense, Trump’s team remain undeterred.

“Defendants will rely on the affirmative defense of fair use, which the Court rejected at the pleading stage. Discovery has revealed unequivocally that Defendants’ use of the Works was not transformative and does not comport with any theory of the fair use doctrine,” the motion reads.

“The defense, which Defendants have the burden of proving, should be rejected again as a matter of law and Plaintiffs’ motion that Defendants committed copyright infringement should be granted in its entirety.”

For reasons that are not immediately obvious, large sections of the motion are redacted, especially those relating to the deposition of Dan Scavino, Trump’s social media advisor.

grant v trump - dep

In summary, Grant believes he’s on solid ground and $300,000 in potential damages can’t be nullified by a defense of fair use.

Trump’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment

The motion from the defense opens with the plaintiff’s assertion that the animation in question, provided to the Trump team by a third party, infringed two copyrights; a sound recording and composition in the Electric Avenue backing music. But then the following:

“There can be no material dispute, however, that Plaintiffs only plead a copyright registration covering the composition (i.e., the written music and lyrics) of Electric Avenue, registered at around the time of its publication in 1983,” the motion reads.

“Plaintiffs nevertheless claim that they own a valid copyright registration covering the sound recording (i.e., the fixation of a series of musical and spoken sounds to a ‘phonorecord’) of Electric Avenue by virtue a copyright registration for a ‘greatest hits’ album (which they described to the Copyright Office as a ‘compilation’) that contains the song Electric Avenue.”

To put things mildly, that isn’t ideal for Grant. As the plaintiffs explain, the Copyright Office’s position on compilations is that registrations do not cover their constituent parts, unless they were unpublished at the time of registration.

“Because Electric Avenue was indisputably published long before the registration that Plaintiffs assert covers its sound recording, Plaintiffs failed to plead and produce a valid copyright registration for the sound recording of Electric Avenue.

“Therefore, their claim for infringement of the Electric Avenue sound recording (Count II of their Complaint) must be summarily dismissed, as it is axiomatic that Plaintiff own and plead a valid copyright registration covering the alleged infringed work is a prerequisite for maintenance of a federal copyright infringement action,” the motion adds.

With no valid copyright registration covering the sound recording, Count II of the complaint must be dismissed, Trump’s legal team conclude.

Lawsuit Hurts All

On the basis that fair use is a legal defense, not immunity from legal action, the Trump team’s actions represent yet another chilling effect on those who rely on fair use to conduct research, teach, learn or report on current events.

The message here is that if a third party is wealthy and stubborn, a fair use defense that has no realistic chance of success can be dragged out for years until the rightsholder runs out of money, or indeed the will to carry on.

In this case, a fundamental administrative issue could mean that the court has no other choice than to side with those who benefited from a copyright work, refused to pay for that right, and then prevailed through sheer financial staying power and pure luck. That fair use was the vehicle adds insult to injury.

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

Autoworker strike could give GM breathing room to fix battery production

A production pause could let GM solve a battery cell manufacturing headache.

A naked GM Ultium rolling chassis

Enlarge / The Ultium platform is the foundation of GM’s EV strategy, including the battery cells, modules and pack, plus drive units containing electric motors and integrated power electronics. It underpins GM’s EV architecture and was developed with a common set of components, providing energy for nearly every segment on the road. At least that's if it can ramp up production. (credit: General Motors)

Last Thursday, the United Auto Workers went on strike at a trio of factories owned by Ford, General Motors, and Stellantis. Negotiations to replace an expiring contract reached a stalemate, leading to thousands of UAW members stopping work in Michigan, Missouri, and Ohio. The strike has been targeted to disrupt profitable production lines like Ford's Bronco, but there might be a silver lining to the strike for General Motors.

That curious idea appeared over the weekend in Reuters. You see, GM has been having somewhat of a production problem. The automaker has publicly committed to going all-in on electrification, developing a new battery platform to be shared across Brightdrop, Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, and GMC.

An Ultium-shaped headache

Known as Ultium, the new batteries are meant to be far cheaper to produce than the batteries that power the Chevy Bolt; when Ultium was first announced, CEO Mary Barra said that costs would drop below $100/kWh "early in the platform's life."

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