Rapper Pras’ lawyer used AI to defend him in criminal case—it did not go well

Pras seeks new trial, says lawyer had “undisclosed financial stake” in AI tool.

Rapper Pras Michel performing on stage while holding a microphone.

Enlarge / Pras Michel performs during the Roots Picnic at The Mann on June 3, 2023, in Philadelphia. (credit: Getty Images | Taylor Hill )

After being convicted of federal crimes related to a foreign influence campaign, rapper Prakazrel "Pras" Michel says he should get a new trial because his lawyer "used an experimental AI program to write his closing argument." In a motion for a new trial filed Monday, the Fugees rapper's new lawyers say Michel's previous representation used "an experimental AI program in which they had a financial stake to write the closing argument, resulting in a frivolous and ineffectual closing argument."

Michel was represented at trial by defense counsel David Kenner, who is accused of failing to provide a cogent defense and misattributing two songs to the Fugees. The allegations about Kenner's use of AI are reminiscent of a previous incident in which a lawyer admitted using ChatGPT to help write court filings that cited six nonexistent cases invented by the artificial intelligence tool.

According to the motion for a new trial, "Kenner failed to familiarize himself with the charged statutes, causing him to overlook critical weaknesses in the Government's case," and he "did not understand the facts or allegations."

Read 16 remaining paragraphs | Comments

At TED AI 2023, experts debate whether we’ve created “the new electricity”

Is AI going to replace us all, or is it just humanity’s newest tool?

TED AI 2023

Enlarge / A view of the stage at TED AI 2023 on October 17, 2023, at the Herbst Theater in San Francisco. (credit: Benj Edwards)

SAN FRANCISCO—On Tuesday, dozens of speakers gathered in San Francisco for the first TED conference devoted solely to the subject of artificial intelligence, TED AI. Many speakers think that human-level AI—often called AGI, for artificial general intelligence—is coming very soon, although there was no solid consensus about whether it will be beneficial or dangerous to humanity. But that debate was just Act One of a very long series of 30-plus talks that organizer Chris Anderson called possibly "the most TED content in a single day" presented in TED's nearly 40-year history.

Hosted by Anderson and entrepreneur Sam De Brouwer, the first day of TED AI 2023 featured a marathon of speakers split into four blocks by general subject: Intelligence & Scale, Synthetics & Realities, Autonomy & Dependence, and Art & Storytelling. (Wednesday featured panels and workshops.) Overall, the conference gave a competent overview of current popular thinking related to AI that very much mirrored Ars Technica's reporting on the subject over the past 10 months.

Indeed, some of the TED AI speakers covered subjects we've previously reported on as they happened, including Stanford PhD student Joon Sung Park's Smallville simulation, and Yohei Nakajima's BabyAGI, both in April of this year. Controversy and angst over impending AGI or AI superintelligence were also strongly represented in the first block of talks, with optimists like veteran AI computer scientist Andrew Ng painting AI as "the new electricity" and nothing to fear, contrasted with a far more cautious take from leather-bejacketed AI researcher Max Tegmark, saying, "I never thought governments would let AI get this far without regulation."

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Reddit’s blockchain-based “Community Points” rewards crash after sunsetting

Tokens based on subreddit reputation saw dips over 85% after the announcement.

Reddit logo amidst darkened coins

Enlarge

Reddit's Community Points, a blockchain-based rewards system for quality posts, comments, and other contributions in a subset of subreddits, is going the way of many similar tokens launched during the crypto boom times: away.

As of November 8, coins like the "MOON" that r/CryptoCurrency used for tips, premium features, and even voting shares will be removed from users' Vaults. Noticing this, the value of most Reddit-based coins took a nearly straight drop on Tuesday after Reddit's announcements. MOON was trading just over $0.20 at 1 pm Eastern, shortly before the announcement in its subreddit. Shortly before 3 pm, MOON had dropped just below $0.02, a loss of more than 85 percent, with fellow Reddit currencies BRICK (r/FortNiteBR) and DONUT (r/EthTrader) seeing similarly precipitous plunges.

MOON's price, as seen on TradingView, during the day when Reddit announced its sunsetting of Community Points, such as MOON.

MOON's price, as seen on TradingView, during the day when Reddit announced its sunsetting of Community Points, such as MOON. (credit: TradingView)

While most people likely never noticed the loss of their Community Points, some who actively acquired them, or even bought more on the blockchain, are reporting losses of thousands of dollars. Conspiratorial claims of Reddit having "rugged" the currencies—pulling money from the system before a sudden shutdown—floated on social media.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Android will now scan sideloaded apps for malware at install time

Sideloaded app installs can be delayed by a fullscreen virus-scanner interface.

Google's new malware scanner for sideloaded apps.

Enlarge / Google's new malware scanner for sideloaded apps. (credit: Google)

The Google Play Store might not be perfect for stopping Android malware, but its collection of scanning, app reviews, and developer requirements makes it a lot safer than the wider, unfiltered Internet. The world outside Google's walled garden has no rules at all and offers a countless number of questionable apps available for sideloading. To help combat the surge of sideloaded malware, Google Play can now pop up a malware scanner at install time if it decides the app you're trying to sideload is interesting.

Google Play's malware system, called "Google Play Protect," has always been able to check sideloaded apps for malware, but it used faster techniques like a definition file, and this happened quietly in the background. This new technique will delay your app installation with a full-screen "scanning" interface while Google runs a deep scan of the app code. Google's blog post says this is "real-time scanning at the code-level to combat novel malicious apps" and that Google Play Protect can "recommend a real-time app scan when installing apps that have never been scanned before to help detect emerging threats."

The scan will involve sending bits and pieces of the app to Google for analysis. Google says:

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Windows 11’s adoption continues to lag Windows 10’s, but it’s hard to compare

Leaked internal data claims Windows 11 is running on 400 million active PCs.

A laptop PC running Windows 11 sitting next to a coffee mug.

Enlarge / A PC running Windows 11. (credit: Microsoft)

As we've written before, Windows 11's adoption among PC users has been a bit slower than Windows 10's, and that has continued into the operating system's second year. Internal Microsoft data obtained by Windows Central claims that Windows 11 is currently in use on around 400 million PCs, almost exactly two years after the operating system's October 2021 release.

Windows 10 had been installed on over 500 million systems by its second birthday, which backs up data we've seen from sources like Statcounter and the Steam Hardware Survey—Windows 11 just isn't being adopted at the same rate as its predecessor. Worldwide Windows market share data from Statcounter suggests that Windows 11 runs on between 23 and 24 percent of Windows PCs, compared to 72 percent for Windows 10, and Statcounter shows Windows 11's growth has stagnated in recent months. Still, Windows 11's numbers are said to surpass Microsoft's internal expectations.

It's difficult to directly compare Windows 10's adoption rate and Windows 11's. Windows 10 was explicitly intended to run on any system that could already run Windows 7 and Windows 8, the two most popular versions of the operating system at the time of its release. Microsoft also offered it to those users as a free upgrade for one year, a then-unprecedented move meant to spur people to upgrade their existing PCs rather than wait to get Windows 10 on a new one. By contrast, Windows 11's system requirements generally limit it to PCs released in or after late 2017 and 2018, cutting off a large number of PCs that are running Windows 10 just fine.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Vietnam Forms Specialist Unit to Tackle Pirate Sites Linked to “Organized Crime”

Vietnam’s Ministry of Information and Communications says it will partner with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and the Ministry of Public Security, to establish a specialized unit to crack down on pirate sites. Authorities using the terms “organized crime” and “copyright infringement” in the same sentence is uncommon in Vietnam, a country that plays host to many of the world’s most popular pirate sites.

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

piracy encryptAccurately predicting how, when and where the next wave of pirate sites will emerge to become the next big threat is much easier said than done.

At any point, one of several moving parts could rule a country out for a few years, or propel it straight into pole position. From rapid development of internet infrastructure to a new generation blessed with the right skills, joining the workplace at just the right time, anything is possible in the shifting sands of piracy.

The MPA accurately predicted the chances of Vietnam becoming an online piracy hotbed many years ago. Yet despite every conceivable effort, progress to disrupt sites like Fmovies and Aniwatch (formerly Zoro.to) which enjoy close to a quarter billion visits every month, progress has been slow when compared to efforts in other regions.

The current state of play features Vietnam as the home of some of the world’s most popular pirate sites, together servicing at least two billion visits each month, but potentially many more.

What Can Be Done About the Worst of the Worst?

Following a September report highlighting piracy of live sports in Vietnam, last weekend the Ministry of Information and Communications held a workshop where stakeholders discussed matters related to pirate sites.

Inevitably, notorious sports streaming sites operating under the ‘Xoi Lac’ banner received several mentions due to unusual resilience and overall share of the ‘pirate’ market. Xoi Lac has evaded every disruption measure deployed over the past five years while attracting the wrong kind of attention from rightsholders thousands of miles away.

In a recent report to the USTR, the Premier League said that it considers Xoi Lac one of the worst platforms it has ever seen.

[The Xoilac websites] are some of the most egregious the Premier League has encountered, with infringement continuing on the site despite Vietnamese authorities attempting to block access to domains associated with the service, and widespread news coverage highlighting that the sites are infringing. In total, the operators have created over 300 domains within the Xoilac family to try and avoid disruption efforts.

Pirate sites can benefit from the publicity that goes hand-in-hand with this kind of attention; as The Pirate Bay said on many occasions: “This will just give us more traffic, as always. Thanks for the free advertising.”

Becoming a household name is a considerable milestone for any website. Unfortunately, the millstones of infamy are less beneficial, harder to shake, and for those in power, an obvious potential target. When other crimes enter the mix, anything can happen.

“They Are Associated With Organized Crime”

The Premier League’s USTR submission states that Xoi Lac’s operators appear to be based in the capital, but the follow-up comment is potentially more interesting. Major overseas rightsholders claim to know the identities of the people behind several Vietnam-based sites, yet many continue to operate with apparent impunity.

“The operators of the site appear to be based in Hanoi, Vietnam and seemingly operate with little concern for enforcement action being taken against them,” the submission notes.

While that’s a major concern for rightsholders, comments made during the workshop may signal changes ahead.

“The issue of copyright infringement is associated with organized crime. For example, the Xoi Lac channel is not simply a form of live-streaming online; it is also associated with online fraud, online gambling, and loan sharking for football betting,” said Nguyen Thanh Lam, Vietnam’s Deputy Minister of Information and Communications.

Comments like these are uncommon, especially when accompanied by a commitment to fight piracy.

Ministries Combine to Form Specialized Unit

Lam told the workshop that the Ministry of Information and Communications, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and the Ministry of Public Security, will establish a specialized unit to tackle copyright issues.

The Minister also highlighted the need to educate the public on why they should avoid pirate sites. That raises interesting questions in itself.

Aside from the popular state-run lottery, gambling is heavily restricted in Vietnam and those caught facilitating illegal gambling can end up in prison. Loan shark-style money lending is also illegal and an aggravating factor in illegal gambling prosecutions. Those who simply participate in illegal gambling face punishment if caught, yet even that hasn’t proven much of a deterrent.

On the assumption that the Minister’s claims about Xoi Lac are true, yet people still flood to the site, it seems likely that some are borrowing money from loan sharks to participate in illegal gambling. There are few scenarios in any country where that ends well for the in-debt gambler, people know it, yet still aren’t deterred.

That raises the question of what type of messaging could possibly deter people from watching pirated football streams, when anti-gambling measures have so obviously failed. A local report suggests that messaging may receive support from the police.

“In the near future, the Ministry of Information and Communications will have a plan to discuss with the police force to launch a peak attack and suppress crime in this field,” the report concludes.

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

Dealmaster: Lenovo deals, sales on charging solutions, and more

From toys to a new laptop, there’s an assortment of practical, fun, and tech deals.

Photo of a laptop.

Enlarge / The ThinkPad P1 showing off its ThinkPad branding. (credit: Lenovo)

Today's Dealmaster ranges from Lenovo laptops to Lego toys. As we head into the holiday shopping season, our list of deals includes popular tech favorites like Anker chargers, Apple AirTag trackers, LG OLED TVs, and  Lenovo mobile workstations. Or, for a fun and whimsical gift, check out Lego's Advent calendar to unwrap a small surprise each day.

Featured deals

  • Lego Star Wars 2023 Advent Calendar 75366 Christmas Holiday Countdown for $40 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Samsung 32-inch Odyssey Neo G8 for $1,000 (was $1,500) at Amazon
  • JBL Tour PRO+ TWS True Wireless Bluetooth Earbuds for $90 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Roomba s9+ Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum for $900 (was $1,000) at iRobot
  • Roomba i4 Robot Vacuum for $300 (was $400) at iRobot
  • Theragun PRO 4th Gen for $499 (was $599) at Therabody
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Sennheiser MOMENTUM True Wireless 3 for $143 (was $280) at Amazon
  • Lego Ideas Vincent Van Gogh The Starry Night 21333 for $136 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Soundcore by Anker A20i True Wireless Earbuds for $30 (was $40) at Amazon
  • OnePlus 11 5G | 16GB RAM+256GB for $700 (was $800) at Amazon
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,375 (was $3,439) at Lenovo
  • Anker Prime 67 W USB C Charger for $45 after coupon (was $60) at Amazon
  • LG C2 55-inch Class 4K OLED for $1,312 (was $1,499) at LG
  • LG 65-inch Class B2 OLED 4K UHD for $1,514 (was $2,300) at LG
  • Jabra Elite 7 Pro for $110 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Pebblebee Clip 2-pack for $55 (was $60) at Peblebee | 4-pack for $100 (was $120) at Peblebee
  • Pebblebee Card & Clip Multi-pack for $80 (was $120) at Peblebee
  • Chipolo CARD Spot 1-pack for $60 (was $70) at Chipolo
  • Chipolo ONE Point 4-pack for $79 (was $112) at Chipolo
  • DeWalt Screwdriver Bit Set, Impact Ready, FlexTorq, 40-Piece for $30 (was $40) at Amazon

Lenovo deals

  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,660 (was $3,319) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,624 (was $3,609) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,375 (was $3,439) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3 (15-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $495 (was $700) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 7 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7735U) for $850 (was $1,150) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 7i (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $870 (was $1,100) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 7i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4060) for $1,450 (was $1,820) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 7 Gen 8 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS and RTX 4060) for $1,340 (was $1,680) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Slim 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 4050) for $1,020 (was $1,349) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,689 (was $3,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T16 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1240P) for $1,131 (was $2,829) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T16 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1270P) for $1,580 (was $3,769) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Pro 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX 4060) for $1,300 (was $1,700) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Pro 5i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500HX and RTX 4050) for $1,090 (was $1,480) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,809 (was $3,629) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,389 (was $2,789) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,458 (was $2,859) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 3 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1250P) for $1,372 (was $3,049) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13620H and RTX 4050) for $1,000 (was $1,360) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 4050) for $840 (was $1,200) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16v (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A500) for $1,669 (was $3,339) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A2000) for $2,189 (was $4,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A1000) for $1,949 (was $3,899) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad Z16 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 6850H and RX 6500M) for $1,284 (was $2,919) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (15-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 3050) for $770 (was $1,020) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (15-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4050) for $1,050 (was $1,400) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Nano Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1340P) for $1,279 (was $1,969) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $1,105 (was $2,009) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1265U) for $1,633 (was $2,969) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i7-1255U) for $1,292 (was $2,349) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1245U) for $1,138 (was $2,069) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5875U) for $1,242 (was $2,259) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Gen 3 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5875U) for $1,275 (was $2,319) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 3 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1245U) for $1,209 (was $2,199) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 15 Gen 4 (15-inch, Intel Core i5-1235U) for $780 (was $1,499) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 14 Gen 4 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 5825U) for $764 (was $1,469) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo IdeaPad Pro 5i (16-inch, Intel Core i5-13500H and RTX 3050) for $990 (was $1,500) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Slim 7i (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1340P) for $875 (was $1,180) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga 6 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $625 (was $860) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $797 (was $1,449) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $707 (was $1,219) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7730U) for $945 (was $1,719) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E14 Gen 5 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $775 (was $1,409) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A1000) for $1,949 (was $3,899) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,445 (was $2,889) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X13 Yoga Gen 4 (13-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $1,220 (was $2,219) at Lenovo

Lego deals

  • Lego Star Wars Luke Skywalker's Landspeeder 75341 for $201 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Lego Ideas Vincent Van Gogh The Starry Night 21333 for $136 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Lego Creator 3-in-1 Exotic Parrot to Frog to Fish for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Spider Tank 75361 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego City 2023 Advent Calendar 60381 for $31 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars 2023 Advent Calendar 75366 Christmas Holiday Countdown for $40 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Lego Icons Succulents 10309 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego Creator 3-in-1 Mighty Dinosaurs 31058 for $11 (was $15) at Amazon
  • Lego Icons Flower Bouquet 10280 for $45 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions Aston Martin Valkyrie AMR Pro & Vantage GT3 2 Collectible Model 76910 for $36 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Lego Technic Bugatti Bolide 42151 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego City Lunar Research Base Outer Space 60350 for $103 (was $130) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions McLaren Solus GT & McLaren F1 LM 76918 for $29 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions Pagani Utopia 76915 for $20 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars The Mandalorian’s N-1 Starfighter Microfighter 75363 for $12 (was $16) at Amazon
  • Lego Icons Orchid 10311 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego Marvel Hulkbuster 76210 for $405 (was $550) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars TIE Bomber 75347 for $52 (was $65) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions 007 Aston Martin DB5 76911 for $15 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Technic Monster Jam Dragon 42149 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Technic Jeep Wrangler 4x4 Toy Car 42122 for $38 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars 501st Clone Troopers Battle Pack 75345 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Architecture Collection: The White House 21054 for $81 (was $100) at Amazon
  • Lego Harry Potter Hogwarts Chamber of Secrets 76389 for $120 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Lego Ideas Tree House 21318 for $195 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Lego Jurassic World Quetzalcoatlus Plane Ambush Set 76947 for $28 (was $45) at Amazon
  • Lego Technic Monster Jam Monster Mutt Dalmatian 42150 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions Mercedes-AMG F1 W12 E 76909 for $28 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars Captain Rex Helmet Set 75349 for $56 (was $70) at Amazon
  • Lego Harry Potter Hogwarts: Dumbledore’s Office 76402 for $64 (was $80) at Amazon
  • Lego Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Fighter Plane Chase 77012 for $28 (was $35) at Amazon
  • Lego Architecture Skyline Collection 21044 for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars 501st Clone Troopers Battle Pack 75345 for $16 (was $20) at Amazon
  • Lego Speed Champions Porsche 963 76916 for $20 (was $25) at Amazon
  • Lego Star Wars The Mandalorian's N-1 Starfighter 75325 for $48 (was $60) at Amazon

Apple deals

  • Apple MacBook Air 13.3-inch Laptop M1 for $800 (was $999) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods (3rd Generation, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $160 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $480 (was $549) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Air (5th Generation) for $559 (was $599) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Mini (6th Generation) for $469 (was $499) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Pro 12.9-inch (6th Generation) for $1,049 (was $1,099) at Amazon
  • Apple AirTag 4 Pack for $89 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple Magic Keyboard with Numeric Keypad for $96 (was $129) at Amazon

Soundbars

  • Samsung HW-Q700C for $398 (was $700) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 2.0 All-in-One MK2 for $130 (was $200) at Crutchfield
  • Bose Smart Soundbar 900 for $699 (was $899) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 2.1 Deep Bass MK2 for $250 (was $350) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-B550 for $228 (was $278) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 300 for $300 (was $400) at Crutchfield
  • Yamaha SR-B20A for $150 (was $200) at Crutchfield
  • Yamaha SR-C30A for $230 (was $280) at Crutchfield
  • Polk Audio Signa S4 for $299 (was $399) at Crutchfield
  • Polk Audio React Sound Bar for $199 (was $269) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 500 for $400 (was $600) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 700 for $600 (was $900) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 1000 for $850 (was $1,200) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Bar 1300X for $1,300 (was $1,700) at Crutchfield
  • Sennheiser AMBEO Soundbar | Plus for $1,200 (was $1,500) at Crutchfield
  • Denon DHT-S517 for $299 (was $499) at Crutchfield
  • LG S90QY for $797 (was $897) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q900C for $988 (was $1,398) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q800C for $688 (was $1,000) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q990C for $1,398 (was $1,900) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-S800B for $748 (was $898) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q600B for $378 (was $598) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q600C for $328 (was $600) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-S801B for $748 (was $898) at Crutchfield
  • Bose Smart Soundbar 900 / Bose Bass Module 500 for $1,198 (was $1,398) at Crutchfield
  • Bowers & Wilkins Formation Bar for $598 (was $1,299) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung HW-Q60C for $248 (was $500) at Crutchfield
  • Devialet Dione Opéra for $2,799 (was $2,900) at Crutchfield
  • Denon Home Sound Bar 550 & Home Subwoofer Bundle for $998 (was $1,248) at Crutchfield

PC components deals

  • Intel Core i5-12400 for $172 (was $238) at Amazon
  • Intel Core i5-12400F for $150 (was $206) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D for $370 (was $449) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5500 for $97 (was $159) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5600 for $134 (was $199) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5600G for $124 (was $259) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 5 5600X for $155 (was $309) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 7 5700X for $170 (was $319) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 7 5700G for $163 (was $359) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 7 5800X for $209 (was $449) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 7 7700X for $310 (was $399) at Amazon
  • AMD Ryzen 5 7600X for $249 (was $299) at Amazon
  • Predator BiFrost Intel Arc A770 for $379 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Asus TUF Gaming NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti OC for $390 (was $435) at Amazon
  • Gigabyte GeForce RTX 4070 WINDFORCE OC for $550 (was $600) at Amazon
  • Zotac Gaming GeForce RTX 3050 Twin Edge OC for $240 (was $300) at Amazon
  • MSI Gaming GeForce RTX 3060 for $286 (was $460) at Amazon
  • Gigabyte GeForce RTX 3060 WINDFORCE OC for $300 (was $430) at Amazon
  • Asus Dual NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 V2 OC for $300 (was $410) at Amazon
  • XFX Speedster SWFT309 AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT CORE for $330 (was $410) at Amazon
  • PowerColor Fighter AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT for $320 (was $350) at Amazon
  • Zotac Gaming GeForce RTX 3050 Twin Edge OC for $240 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Gigabyte GeForce RTX 4070 Ti WINDFORCE OC for $800 (was $900) at Amazon
  • Asus TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 4060 Ti OC for $423 (was $460) at Amazon
  • MSI Gaming Radeon RX 6750 XT for $360 (was $445) at Amazon

LG OLED TVs

  • LG 77-inch Class B3 series OLED 4K UHD for $2,019 (was $3,300) at LG
  • LG C2 55-inch Class 4K OLED for $1,312 (was $1,499) at LG
  • LG 65-inch Class B2 OLED 4K UHD for $1,514 (was $2,300) at LG

Chargers and USB-C cables

  • Anker Prime 67 W USB C Charger for $45 after coupon (was $60) at Amazon
  • Anker USB C Charger, 735 Charger (Nano II 65 W) for $38 (was $56) at Amazon
  • Anker GaNPrime 10K Power Bank 2-in-1 Hybrid Charger for $70 (was $100) at Amazon
  • Anker USB C Charger (GaN II 100 W) for $43 (was $75) at Amazon
  • Anker Prime 240 W USB C Charger for $170 (was $200) at Amazon
  • UGREEN RG 65 W USB C Charger, Nexode Robot GaN Fast Charger Block 3-Port for $40 (was $50) at Amazon
  • UGREEN 300 W USB C Charger Nexode GaN 5 Ports Desktop Charging Station for $200 after coupon (was $270) at Amazon
  • UGREEN Nexode 100 W USB C Charger with 15 W MagSafe Charger Wireless for iPhone for $150 after coupon (was $180) at Amazon
  • UGREEN Micro SD Card Reader USB C for $11 (was $16) at Amazon

Router deals

  • TP-Link Deco AX3000 Wi-Fi 6 Mesh System(Deco X55) 3-pack for $200 (was $230) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AXE5400 Tri-Band Wi-Fi 6E Mesh System(Deco XE75) 2-pack for $270 (was $300) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Wi-Fi Extender with Ethernet Port for $30 after coupon (was $50) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Wi-Fi Extender with Ethernet Port for $15 after coupon (was $35) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Powerline Ethernet Adapter Starter Kit for $45 (was $50) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco Mesh Wi-Fi System(Deco M5) 3-pack for $140 (was $190) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro mesh Wi-Fi router for $70 (was $160) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6 mesh Wi-Fi 6 router for $120 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6 mesh Wi-Fi 6 system 2-pack for $180 (was $405) at Amazon

Video game deals

  • Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope — Standard Edition for $30 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Octopath Traveler II — Nintendo Switch for $43 (was $60) at Amazon | $30 (was $60) for PlayStation 5 at Amazon
  • Legend of Zelda Link's Awakening — Nintendo Switch Standard Edition (European Version) for $45 (was $60) at Amazon
  • Mario Golf: Super Rush — Nintendo Switch for $48 (was $60) at Amazon
  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom — Nintendo Switch (International Version) for $56 (was $59) at Amazon
  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom — The Complete Official Guide: Collector's Edition Hardcover for $27 (was $45) at Amazon

Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs.

Read on Ars Technica | Comments

Elon Musk launches test to see if users are willing to pay $1 a year for X

“It is not a profit driver,” X says.

Elon Musk launches test to see if users are willing to pay $1 a year for X

Enlarge (credit: Steven Puetzer | The Image Bank)

X has confirmed a Fortune report revealing that the platform formerly known as Twitter has begun charging a $1 annual fee to new users in New Zealand and the Philippines. Unless new users in these locations cough up the dollar, they'll be blocked from accessing basic platform features, including posting, replying, or quoting posts.

The new fee kicked in yesterday, X Support posted on X.

"Starting today, we're testing a new program (Not-a-Bot) in New Zealand and the Philippines," X Support said. "New, unverified accounts will be required to sign up for a $1 annual subscription to be able to post and interact with other posts. Within this test, existing users are not affected."

Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

KAMRUI AK1 Plus is an Intel N95 mini PC with a detachable base for an optional hard drive

The Kamrui AK1 Plus is a dirt cheap mini PC with a 15-watt Intel Processor N95 quad-core chip and list prices starting as low as $180 (although the AK1 Plus is currently on sale for as little as $126). But one thing I hadn’t noticed when includi…

The Kamrui AK1 Plus is a dirt cheap mini PC with a 15-watt Intel Processor N95 quad-core chip and list prices starting as low as $180 (although the AK1 Plus is currently on sale for as little as $126). But one thing I hadn’t noticed when including this little computer in Liliputing’s Prime Day mini PC […]

The post KAMRUI AK1 Plus is an Intel N95 mini PC with a detachable base for an optional hard drive appeared first on Liliputing.

IRS to offer free tax filing in competition against much-criticized TurboTax

IRS Direct File pilot in 2024 is for taxpayers with simple returns in 13 states.

Advocates in front of an H&R Block building hold signs that tell TurboTax and H&R Block to

Enlarge / Advocates gather on April 17, 2023, in Washington, DC, to call out tax prep firms like TurboTax-maker Intuit and H&R Block, and to support the Internal Revenue Service's exploration of free tax filing. (credit: Getty Images | Tasos Katopodis )

The Internal Revenue Service yesterday announced details for a pilot of its free filing program for the 2024 tax season. People in 13 states "may be eligible to participate in the 2024 Direct File pilot, a new service that will provide taxpayers with the choice to electronically file their federal tax return directly with the IRS for free," the IRS said.

The pilot "will allow the IRS to identify issues and make changes prior to any potential large-scale launch in the future," the agency said. It will assess customer support and technology needs, and help "evaluate the costs, benefits and operational challenges associated with providing a voluntary Direct File option to taxpayers." That includes testing fraud detection and integration with state systems.

Pilot eligibility is for those with "relatively simple returns" because it "is limited by the types of income, tax credits and deductions that the product can initially support." The IRS said it invited all 50 states, but only some are participating at first:

Read 15 remaining paragraphs | Comments