Won’t Download a Car? Let’s Try: “Piracy Turns Teenagers Into Gambling Addicts”

Even among those who accept piracy is illegal, there are some who still struggle to view casual streaming as a serious crime. By introducing credit card fraud, identity theft, and malware into the mix, it’s hoped that piracy will absorb the juices of these ‘real’ crimes and be taken more seriously. In South Korea, where pirate movies and careless clicks turn innocent teenagers into crazed gambling addicts, anti-piracy messaging may have hit the jackpot.

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

pirate-gamblersNo matter where people live or how much knowledge and experience they’ve accumulated, governments and corporations rarely shy away from an opportunity to offer behavioral advice.

Delivered via TV, radio and the internet, public service announcements enlighten the masses on topics seemingly so complex, they’re only fully understood by the few. Even if that was the case, 30 seconds of theatrics followed by what amounts to a blind order may have worked 40 years ago; today, people expect more than that and when it comes to anti-piracy PSAs, magnitudes more.

For the last few years the global anti-piracy message hasn’t wavered for a moment. There’s no memorable slogan to recall, but the message couldn’t be clearer: If people pirate content, using IPTV services in particular, more likely than not they will become infected with malware, have their identities stolen, credit cards maxed-out, and/or bank accounts emptied.

It’s one of the strongest and most united messages ever sent, and with multiple and significant caveats, even has some basis in truth. It appears to have done little to suppress demand, however.

Whether events unfolding in South Korea will dampen local demand remains to be seen, but the narrative playing out on national news could hardly be worse for pirate sites.

Piracy and Illegal Gambling Start Sharing a Cell

Before the advent of various international schemes that prevent gambling companies from advertising on pirate sites or contain an abstention agreement, gambling ads and pirate site were commonly seen together.

In South Korea, the government is no fan of piracy, but it tolerates illegal gambling even less. Online gambling within South Korea is outlawed, and government control in the rest of the market effectively amounts to a lucrative monopoly. When pressure mounted on former local piracy site Noonoo TV, the existence of ads promoting illegal gambling on the site receive dozens of mentions in the media.

noonoo

While Noonoo seems to be dead, the local piracy/gambling nexus is reportedly in full swing. With black market gambling reportedly worth up to $80 billion, national TV news channel KBS has run dozens of stories over the past couple of months, all with a common theme.

Enjoy the Movie, Stay For the Gambling

The story at the heart of the current controversy dates back to September; KBS published a video report (below, English translation via subtitle) in which the presenter explains (around the one-minute mark) that the channel’s reporters tested out an illegal streaming site offering Netflix content for free. When a reporter clicked on one of the ads, it led to a surprisingly open criminal who confirmed the channel’s suspicions, apparently with no hesitation.

“When I click on the advertising banner on the screen, I am taken directly to an online gambling site. On other illegal streaming sites, similar advertisements appear on the screen,” the presenter says.

“After checking them one by one, most of them were the same company. A reporter contacted the online gambling operator and asked if he had anything to do with the streaming site, and he answered ‘yes’. So, it appears that they are making money by offering free OTT services and luring users who are misled by them to gambling sites,”

Commenting on the allegations, police confirmed an investigation into the connections between gambling sites and pirate streaming portals, adding that accounts linked to five sites had been frozen, with two sites shut down.

“The problem with these illegal OTTs and the gambling sites connected to them,” the presenter adds, “is that even teenagers are exposed to them without protection.”

Teenage Gambling Addicts

How KBS identified and then obtained permission to interview school kids who used these sites isn’t clear. The channel disguised their voices and blurred out their faces, but there’s little to hide their naivety. One of the opening statements appears to show a lack of understanding, if not complete ignorance, of exactly the type of disclosure that can ruin people’s lives.

“Even though I was a minor, I signed up immediately after entering my name, date of birth, and phone number, and that’s how I started ‘gambling’,” a student revealed.

“I was trying to watch it for free, but a lot of windows appeared at the bottom and a window at the top,” added another.

“While watching a free movie on an illegal OTT site, I inadvertently saw an advertisement. I clicked and entered the gambling site,” the interviewer was told.

teenage gamblers

“At first, out of curiosity, I went to the gambling site. The money I sent later grew out of control, and I even resorted to private loans.”

The final horror story manages to sound even more miserable than the others.

“This year I earned about 10 million won [US7,600],” the student said. “I originally saved up the money by doing a part-time job. But my mother and her parents had to give luxury goods and gold, and I took all of the collateral, because the interest rates on the losses jumped 100% in three days.”

Video From Inside an Alleged Gambling/Pirate Site Operation

KBS News doesn’t reveal who provided the video, but it was allegedly recorded inside an office where a gambling operation was based. The channel says it shows both the gambling platform and the pirate site being operated from the same room, enough evidence for the channel to conclude direct links between pirate movies and TV shows, and illegal gambling.

“There are adult sites and drama-watching sites. Those are the ones that work best,” a company official explained.

“These days, [gambling] sites don’t work without kids.”

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

Developers can’t seem to stop exposing credentials in publicly accessible code

Many transgressions come from “very large companies that have robust security teams.”

Developers can’t seem to stop exposing credentials in publicly accessible code

Enlarge (credit: Victor De Schwanberg/Science Photo Library via Getty Images)

Despite more than a decade of reminding, prodding, and downright nagging, a surprising number of developers still can’t bring themselves to keep their code free of credentials that provide the keys to their kingdoms to anyone who takes the time to look for them.

The lapse stems from immature coding practices in which developers embed cryptographic keys, security tokens, passwords, and other forms of credentials directly into the source code they write. The credentials make it easy for the underlying program to access databases or cloud services necessary for it to work as intended. I published one such PSA in 2013 after discovering simple searches that turned up dozens of accounts that appeared to expose credentials securing computer-to-server SSH accounts. One of the credentials appeared to grant access to an account on Chromium.org, the repository that stores the source code for Google's open source browser.

In 2015, Uber learned the hard way just how damaging the practice can be. One or more developers for the ride service had embedded a unique security key into code and then shared that code on a public GitHub page. Hackers then copied the key and used it to access an internal Uber database and, from there, steal sensitive data belonging to 50,000 Uber drivers.

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ULA chief on the Vulcan rocket: “The path to flight one is clear”

“We are expecting Blue to keep up with us.”

United Launch Alliance's Vulcan Certification-1 first stage sits atop Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida for qualification testing.

Enlarge / United Launch Alliance's Vulcan Certification-1 first stage sits atop Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida for qualification testing. (credit: ULA)

United Launch Alliance is closing in on the debut flight of the Vulcan rocket, and it remains on track to fly the vehicle for the first time on December 24.

During a media roundtable on Wednesday afternoon, the chief executive of United Launch Alliance, Tory Bruno, said, “The path to flight one is clear" for Vulcan. The last major piece of hardware for the rocket, the Centaur V upper stage, arrived at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on Monday. All of the qualification testing necessary for the first flight, including for the upper stage, is complete.

In the coming days, Bruno said the Centaur upper stage would be integrated with the Vulcan first stage. Then, the combined vehicle will be rolled to the launch site for a fueling test known as a wet dress rehearsal in December. However, the rocket's main engines, BE-4s provided by Blue Origin, will not be fired. That's because the first stage already completed this hot fire test successfully in June.

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Dealmaster: Gaming monitors, big-screen TVs, home office gear, and more

Big screens, small screens, and everything in between ahead of Black Friday.

Kid playing with the Samsung Odyssey Ark 2nd Gen

Enlarge / Most won't have the space, budget, or need for this monitor, but it sure makes this kid look happy. (credit: Samsung)

TVs continue to be a Dealmaster mainstay this time of year as retailers load up big sales on 2023 models and closeout picks from last year. Monitors are on the same track, with a slew of high-end gaming options and budget buys alike, alongside plenty of other tech deals to help you spruce up everything from your home office to your home theater. So dig in now and get ahead of the shopping madness.

Featured deals

  • LG 55-inch Class C3 Series OLED evo 4K TV for $1,297 (was $1,397) at Amazon
  • Samsung Odyssey Neo G7 43-inch Mini 4K AMD FreeSync Premium Pro Gaming Monitor for $500 (was $1,000) at Best Buy
  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $189 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Insignia 140 W 4-Port USB and USB-C Desktop Charger Kit for $54 (was $120) at Best Buy
  • Apple 2023 MacBook Air Laptop with M2 chip, 256GB SSD Storage for $1,049 (was $1,299) at Amazon
  • JBL Boombox 3 Portable Bluetooth Speaker for $350 (was $500) at Best Buy
  • Netgear Orbi 650 Series AX3000 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (3-pack) for $307 (was $380) at Best Buy
  • Logitech MX Anywhere 2S Wireless Laser Mouse for $40 (was $60) at Best Buy

Home and office tech essentials

  • Logitech M325s Wireless Optical Ambidextrous Mouse for $10 (was $20) at Best Buy
  • Logitech MX Anywhere 2S Wireless Laser Mouse for $40 (was $60) at Best Buy
  • Dell KM7120W Full-size Wireless Scissor Clicky Switch Keyboard and Mouse Combo for $75 (was $90) at Best Buy
  • Insignia 140W 4-Port USB and USB-C Desktop Charger Kit for $54 (was $120) at Best Buy
  • Netgear EAX15 AX1800 Wi-Fi 6 Mesh Wall Plug Range Extender for $100 (was $130) at Best Buy
  • Netgear Orbi 850 Series AX6000 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (3-pack) for $714 (was $900) at Best Buy
  • Netgear Orbi 650 Series AX3000 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (3-pack) for $307 (was $380) at Best Buy
  • TP-Link Deco AX3000 WiFi 6 Mesh System 3-pack for $180 (was $230) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AX3000 WiFi 6 Router 802.11ax Wireless, Gigabit, Dual Band Internet $108 (was $130) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1750 Smart WiFi Router (Archer A7) Dual Band Gigabit for $53 (was $80) at Amazon
  • TP-Link Deco AX7800 Tri-Band Mesh WiFi 6 System (Deco X95) 2-pack for $350 (was $450) at Amazon
  • TP-Link AC1900 WiFi Extender (RE550) for $70 (was $80) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E AXE5400 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6E System (3-pack) for $400 (was $550) at Best Buy
  • Amazon eero Pro 6 AX4200 Tri-Band Mesh Wi-Fi 6 System (3-pack) for $240 (was $400) at Best Buy
  • Amazon eero mesh WiFi system router replacement for whole-home coverage (3-pack) for $127 (was $170) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi router, 2022 release for $180 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro mesh WiFi router for $70 (was $160) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 2-pack for $155 (was $240) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero Pro 6E mesh Wi-Fi System 2-pack for $280 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi router for $90 (was $140) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero 6+ mesh Wi-Fi system 3-pack, 2022 release for $195 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Amazon eero high-speed wifi 6 router and booster for $70 (was $90) at Amazon
  • Echo Show 8 (2nd Gen, 2021 release) for $70 (was $130) at Amazon

Monitors and displays

  • Samsung S61B Series 27-inch QHD (2560x1440) Computer Monitor, 75Hz for $150 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Samsung Odyssey Neo G7 43-inch Mini 4K AMD FreeSync Premium Pro Gaming Monitor for $500 (was $1,000) at Best Buy
  • Samsung 32-inch Viewfinity QHD 2K Computer Monitor, Fully Adjustable Stand for $300 (was $385) at Amazon
  • Samsung 32-inch S70A Series 4K UHD (3840x2160) Computer Monitor for $300 (was $350) at Amazon
  • Samsung 55-inch Odyssey Ark 4K UHD for $1,900 (was $2,700) at Samsung
  • Samsung 49-inch Odyssey G9 DQHD for $1,200 (was $1,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 32-inch Odyssey G32A FHD for $220 (was $330) at Samsung
  • Samsung Odyssey Ark 55-inch LED Curved 4K UHD Gaming Monitor for $1,800 (was $2,700) at Best Buy
  • HP Omen 34-inch VA LED Curved QHD 165Hz FreeSync Gaming Monitor for $330 (was $480) at Best Buy
  • LG 24-inch IPS 3-Side Borderless FHD AMD 100Hz FreeSync Monitor for $80 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • LG 34-inch 34WN80C-B UltraWide WQHD IPS for $400 (was $550) at LG
  • LG 27-inch UltraFine 4K OLED pro for $1,800 (was $1,900) at LG
  • LG 22-inch Class Full HD IPS for $80 (was $120) at LG
  • LG 24-inch IPS 3-Side Borderless FHD AMD 100Hz FreeSync Monitor for $80 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • Acer EZ321Q wi 31.5" Full HD (1920 x 1080) IPS Monitor for $160 (was $200) at Amazon
  • Acer Nitro 27-inch IPS LED FHD FreeSync Gaming Monitor for $160 (was $300) at Best Buy
  • Acer 23.8-inch Full HD 1920×1080 IPS Zero Frame Home Office Computer Monitor for $100 (was $150) at Amazon
  • Alienware AW2524H Gaming Monitor 24.5-inch 480Hz 1ms IPS Anti-Glare Display for $600 (was $800) at Amazon
  • Dell Curved Gaming Monitor 27 Inch Curved with 165Hz Refresh Rate, QHD for $200 (was $300) at Amazon
  • Dell Gaming Monitor 32 Inch, 165 Hz, Quad-HD Widescreen LED LCD, IPS Display for $300 (was $450) at Amazon
  • Dell S3221QS 32 Inch Curved 4K UHD, VA Ultra-Thin Bezel Monitor, AMD FreeSync for $320 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Dell S2722QC 27-inch 4K USB-C Monitor UHD (3840×2160) Display, 60Hz Refresh Rate for $280 (was $370) at Amazon
  • Dell 32-inch 4K Monitor, UHD (3840×2160), 60Hz, Dual HDMI 2.0 for $250 (was $365) at Amazon
  • Dell S2421HS Full HD 1920×1080, 24-Inch 1080p LED for $140 (was $180) at Amazon

Apple gear

  • Apple MacBook Air Laptop with M2 chip, 256GB SSD Storage for $1,049 (was $1,299) at Amazon
  • Apple MacBook Air 15-inch Laptop, M2 chip, 16GB Memory, 1TB SSD for $1,699 (was $1,899) at Best Buy
  • Apple MacBook Air 15-inch Laptop, M2 chip,16GB Memory, 512GB SSD for $1,499 (was $1,699) at Best Buy
  • Apple MacBook Pro 13.3-inch Laptop, Apple M2 chip, 8GB Memory, 512GB SSD for $1,299 (was $1,499) at Best Buy
  • Apple 2020 MacBook Air Laptop M1 chip, 13-inch for $849 (was $999) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $189 (was $249) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Air (5th Generation) with M1 chip, 64GB, Wi-Fi 6 + 5G Cellular for $650 (was $749) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad Air (5th Generation) with M1 chip, 64GB, Wi-Fi at Amazon for $549 (was $599) at Amazon
  • Apple iPad (9th Generation) with A13 Bionic chip,  64GB for $249 (was $329) at Amazon
  • Apple Watch Series 9 (GPS, 45mm) Smartwatch with Midnight Aluminum Case for $379 (was $429) at Amazon
  • Apple AirTag 4-pack for $87 (was $99) at Amazon
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $480 (was $549) at Amazon

Robo vacuums

  • eufy Clean X8 Pro Robot Vacuum Self-Empty Station, Twin-Turbine 2× 4,000 Pa Powerful Suction for $550 (was $650) at Amazon
  • Lefant M210 Pro Robot Vacuum Cleaner, Tangle-Free 2200Pa Suction for $110 (was $210) with coupon at Amazon
  • SwitchBot Mini Robot Vacuum K10+ with Self-Empty Base for $400 (was $500) with coupon at Amazon
  • Coredy Robot Vacuum, R650 Ultra Robotic Vacuum with 2200 Pa Strong Suction for $115 (was $230) with coupon at Amazon
  • Samsung Jet Bot AI+ Robot Vacuum Cleaner w/Object Recognition, Intelligent Cleaning for $690 (was $1,300) at Amazon
  • Samsung Jet Bot+ Robot Vacuum with Clean Station for $600 (was $800) at Best Buy
  • Shark AI Ultra Voice Control Robot Vacuum with Matrix Clean Navigation, Home Mapping For $398 (was $600) at Amazon
  • Shark  ION Robot Vacuum, Wi-Fi Connected for $150 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • roborock Q7 Max+ Wi-Fi Connected Robot Vacuum and Mop with Auto-Empty Dock for $500 (was $870) at Best Buy
  • roborock Q5+ Robot Vacuum with Self-Empty Dock for $525 (was $700) with coupon at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum for $350 (was $600) at Amazon
  • iRobot Roomba i7+ (7550) Wi-Fi Connected Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum for $500 (was $900) at Best Buy
  • TP-Link Tapo Robot Vacuum and Mop Combo with Self Empty Base for $250 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Ecovacs Deebot T20 Omni Robot Vacuum and Mop for $840 (was $1,100) at Amazon
  • Robot Vacuum and Mop Combo, 2 in 1 Mopping Robot Vacuum Cleaner with Schedule for $179 (was $730) at Amazon

Headphones

  • Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Gen, Lightning) Wireless Earbuds for $189 (was $249) at Amazon
  • 1MORE SonoFlow Active Noise Cancelling Headphones for $80 (was $100) at Amazon
  • Sony WH-1000XM5 Wireless Noise Canceling Over-Ear Headphones for $328 (was $400) at Amazon
  • Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II Noise Canceling Earbuds for $199 (was $279) at Amazon
  • Samsung Galaxy Buds 2 Pro Noise Canceling Earbuds for $190 (was $230) at Best Buy
  • Shure AONIC 40 Premium Wireless Headphones for $100 (was $200) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser Momentum 3 True Wireless Noise Cancelling In-Ear Headphones for $200 (was $280) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser Momentum 4 Wireless Adaptive Noise-Canceling Over-The-Ear Headphones for $300 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser HD 660S2 Wired Audiophile Bass-boosted Over-the-Ear Headphones for $500 (was $600) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser HD 458BT Wireless Noise Cancelling Headphones for $100 (was $200) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser Sport True Wireless Earbuds for $100 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser CX Plus True Wireless Noise Canceling Earbuds for $130 (was $180) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser  IE 200 In-Ear Wired Headphones for $120 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Sennheiser HD 560S Wired Open Aire Over-the-Ear Audiophile Headphones for $180 (was $230) at Best Buy
  • Jabra Elite 7 Active True Wireless Noise Canceling In-Ear Headphones for $115 (was $180) at Best Buy
  • Jabra Elite 7 Pro True Wireless Noise Canceling In-Ear Headphones for $130 (was $200) at Best Buy
  • Marshall Major IV Bluetooth Headphone with wireless charging for $109 (was $150) at Best Buy
  • Apple AirPods Max Wireless Over-Ear Headphones for $480 (was $549) at Amazon
  • Beats Studio Buds Wireless Noise Cancelling Earbuds for $100 (was $150) at AmazonBest Buy
  • Beats Studio Pro Wireless Noise Cancelling Over-the-Ear Headphones for $300 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • Beats Fit Pro True Wireless Noise Cancelling In-Ear Earbuds for $180 (was $200) at Best Buy
  • Beats Solo 3 Wireless On-Ear Headphones for $130 (was $200) at Best Buy
  • Poly - formerly Plantronics - Voyager 4320 for $158 (was $170) at Best Buy
  • Soundcore by Anker P20i True Wireless Earbuds for $20 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Soundcore by Anker A20i True Wireless Earbuds for $24 (was $40) at Amazon
  • Soundcore by Anker Life P3i Hybrid Active Noise Cancelling Earbuds for $50 (was $60) at Amazon

Soundbars and home audio

  • Samsung - A series 2.1.ch Dolby & DTS Soundbar for $120 (was $280) at Best Buy
  • Samsung HW-B650 Powered 3.1-channel sound bar and wireless subwoofer system for $208 (was $398) at Crutchfield
  • Samsung - Q-series 3.1.2 ch Dolby Atmos Soundbar w/Q-Symphony Q600C for $330 (was $600) at Best Buy
  • Samsung S-series 3.0 ch. Soundbar S50B for $150 (was $250) at Samsung
  • Samsung Sound Tower Party Audio ST40B for $230 (was $500) at Samsung
  • Samsung Q-series 3.1.2 ch. Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q700C for $400 (was $700) at Samsung
  • Samsung Q series 5.1.2ch Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q750C Symphony for $480 (was $800) at Best Buy
  • Samsung Q-series 5.1.2 ch. Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q800C for $690 (was $1,000) at Samsung
  • Samsung Q-series 7.1.2 ch. Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q900C for $990 (was $1,400) at Samsung
  • Samsung Q-series 9.1.2 ch. Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q910C for $990 (was $1,400) at Samsung
  • Samsung Q-series 11.1.4 ch. Wireless Dolby Atmos Soundbar Q990C for $1,400 (was $1,900) at Best Buy
  • Samsung HW-S50B/ZA 3.0ch All-in-One Soundbar for $148 (was $248) at Amazon
  • Klipsch Cinema 600 Sound Bar 3.1 Home Theater System for $380 (was $549) at Amazon
  • KEF Q Series 5.25-inch 2-Way Bookshelf Speakers (Pair) for $350 (was $600) at Best Buy
  • LG 5.1.2 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer for $300 (was $449) at Best Buy
  • LG 3.1 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer and DTS Virtual:X for $200 (was $350) at Best Buy
  • LG 9.1.5 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer, Dolby Atmos and DTS:X for $1,000 (was $1,400) at Best Buy
  • LG 5.1.3 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer, Dolby Atmos and DTS:X for $500 (was $800) at Best Buy
  • LG 3.1.3 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer, Dolby Atmos and DTS:X for $400 (was $600) at Best Buy
  • JBL Cinema SB170 2.1 Channel Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer for $150 (was $250) at Best Buy
  • LG Eclair 3.0 Channel Soundbar with Dolby Atmos for $300 (was $450) at Best Buy
  • Yamaha SR-C20 2.1-Channel Soundbar with Built-in Subwoofer for $130 (was $180) at Best Buy
  • LG 4.1 ch Soundbar with Wireless Subwoofer and Rear Speakers for $180 (was $400) at Best Buy
  • Sony HT-A7000 Dolby Atmos soundbar for $998 (was $1,398) at Crutchfield
  • Sony HT-S2000 soundbar for $348 (was $498) at Crutchfield
  • Sony HT-A3000 soundbar for $498 (was $698) at Crutchfield
  • Sennheiser AMBEO Dolby Atmos Soundbar | Max for $2,000 (was $2,500) at Crutchfield
  • Sony HT-A5000 Dolby Atmos soundbar for $698 (was $998) at Crutchfield
  • JBL Boombox3 Portable Bluetooth Speaker for $350 (was $500) at Best Buy

TVs

  • LG 42-inch Class C3 Series OLED evo 4K TV for $897 (was $997) at Amazon
  • LG 48-inch Class C3 Series OLED evo 4K TV for $1,047 (was $1,197) at Amazon
  • LG 55-inch Class C3 Series OLED evo 4K TV for $1,297 (was $1,397) at Amazon
  • LG 65-inch Class C3 Series OLED evo 4K TV for $1,597 (was $1,697) at Amazon
  • LG QNED85 Series 65-Inch Class QNED Mini-LED Smart TV (2022) for $1,097 (was $1,800) at Amazon
  • LG 65-inch Class G3 Series OLED 4K UHD TV for $2,300 (was $3,000) at Best Buy
  • LG 77-inch Class G3 Series OLED 4K UHD TV for $3,500 (was $4,300) at Best Buy
  • LG 83-inch Class G3 Series OLED 4K UHD TV for $5,000 (was $6,000) at Best Buy
  • TCL 55-inch Q7 QLED 4K Smart TV with Google TV for $498 (was $750) at Amazon
  • TCL 55-inch Q6 QLED 4K Smart TV with Google TV for $348 (was $500) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 65-inch Omni QLED Series 4K UHD smart TV for $590 (was $800) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 75-inch Omni QLED Series 4K UHD smart TV for $880 (was $1,100) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 43-inch 4-Series 4K UHD smart TV with Fire TV Alexa Voice Remote for $250 (was $370) at Amazon
  • Amazon Fire TV 40-inch 2-Series HD smart TV with Fire TV Alexa Voice Remote for $180 (was $250) at Amazon
  • Hisense 65-inch Class U8 Series Mini-LED ULED 4K UHD TV for $897 (was $1,400) at Amazon
  • Samsung 55-inch Class QLED 4K Q70C for $750 (was $1,000) at Samsung
  • Sony 55-inch 4K Ultra HD TV X85K Series: LED Smart Google TV for $698 (was $778) at Amazon
  • Sony 55-inch Class Bravia XR A95K 4K HDR OLED Google TV for $1,700 (was $2,800) at Best Buy
  • Sony 55-inch 4K Ultra HD TV X90K Series: BRAVIA XR Full Array LED Smart Google TV for $798 (was $1,300) at Amazon
  • Sony 65-inch Mini LED 4K Ultra HD TV X93L Series: BRAVIA XR Smart Google TV for $1,598 (was $1,798) at Amazon
  • Sony 65-inch 4K Ultra HD TV X80K Series: LED Smart Google TV for $698 (was $900) at Amazon
  • Sony 65-inch Class Bravia XR A80L OLED 4K smart Google TV for $1,700 (was $2,600) at Best Buy
  • Sony 55-inch Class Bravia XR A80L OLED 4K smart Google TV for $1,400 (was $1,900) at Best Buy
  • Sony 83-inch Class Bravia XR A80L OLED 4K UHD Smart Google TV for $4,500 (was $5,300) at Best Buy
  • Samsung 85-inch Class The Frame QLED 4K LS03B for $3,300 (was $4,300) at Samsung
  • Samsung 55-inch Class OLED S90C TV for $1,300 (was $1,900) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class OLED S90C TV for $1,600 (was $2,600) at Samsung
  • Samsung 83-inch Class OLED S90C TV for $3,500 (was $5,400) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class OLED S95C TV for $2,400 (was $3,300) at Samsung
  • Samsung 55-inch Class OLED S95C TV for $1,900 (was $2,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 77-inch Class OLED S95C TV for $3,600 (was $4,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 55-inch Class TU690T Crystal UHD 4K TV for $300 (was $380) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class QLED 4K QN90C TV for $1,700 (was $2,800) at Samsung
  • Samsung 98-inch Class QLED 4K Q80C TV for $5,000 (was $8,000) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 8K QN800C TV for $2,600 (was $3,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 120-inch Class The Premiere LSP7T 4K Smart Laser Projector for $3,000 (was $3,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 120-inch Class The Premiere LSP7T 4K Smart Laser Projector for $6,000 (was $6,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 70-inch Class QLED 4K QE1C TV for $880 (was $1,800) at Samsung
  • Samsung 70-inch Class QLED 4K QE1C TV for $1,500 (was $2,800) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 8K QN900C TV for $3,300 (was $5,000) at Samsung
  • Samsung 75-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 8K QN900C TV for $4,500 (was $6,300) at Samsung
  • Samsung 75-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 8K QN900C TV for $5,500 (was $8,000) at Samsung
  • Samsung 65-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 8K QN800C TV for $2,600 (was $3,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 43-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 4K QN90C TV for $1,000 (was $1,200) at Samsung
  • Samsung 85-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 4K QN90C TV for $2,800 (was $4,800) at Samsung
  • Samsung 55-inch Class Samsung Neo QLED 4K QN85C TV for $1,000 (was $1,500) at Samsung
  • Samsung 86-inch Class Crystal UHD TU9010 (2021) TV for $1,600 (was $1,700) at Samsung

Herman Miller office and gaming chairs

  • Herman Miller Aeron Chair for $1,354 (was $1,805) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Embody Chair for $1,703 (was $2,270) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Embody Gaming Chair for $1,384 (was $1,845) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Sayl Chair for $588 (was $735) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Sayl Chair, Special Gaming Edition for $816 (was $1,020) at DWR
  • Herman Miller Cosm Chair, Low Back for $1,048 (was $1,310) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Cosm Chair, Mid Back for $1,256 (was $1,570) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Cosm Chair, High Back for $1,680 (was $2,100) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller x Logitech G Vantum Gaming Chair for $636 (was $795) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller x Logitech G Embody Gaming Chair for $1,384 (was $1,845) at DWR
  • Herman Miller Eames Aluminum Group Chair, Executive for $2,040 (was $2,550) at DWR
  • Herman Miller Eames Aluminum Group Chair, Management for $2,296 (was $2,870) at DWR
  • Herman Miller Eames Soft Pad Chair, Executive Height for $3,516 (was $4,395) at DWR
  • Herman Miller Setu Chair, With Arms for $668 (was $835) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Aeron Chair, Special Gaming Edition for $1,354 (was $1,805) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Aeron Stool for $1,391 (was $1,855) at Herman Miller
  • Herman Miller Lino Chair for $684 (was $855) at Herman Miller

Lenovo deals

  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,327 (was $3,319) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Gen 2 (13-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 5650U) for $656 ($1,639) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1270P for $1,216 (was $3,379) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Yoga C940 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1035G4) for $615 (was $1,250) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Tower 7i Gen 8 (Intel Core i7-13700KF, RTX 4080) for $2,061 (was $2,900) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Slim Pro 7 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P) for $1,629 (was $3,629) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 Intel (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H) for $1,979 (was $4,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16v (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H) for $1,499 (was $3,339) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo Legion Pro 7i Gen 8 (16-inch, Intel Core i9-13900HX and RTX 4090) for $2,360 (was $2,850) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1335U) for $1,319 (was $2,399) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (15-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX 4050) for $1,030 (was $1,400) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7840HS and RTX 4050) for $911 (was $1,260) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo LOQ (15-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7640HS and RTX 3050) for $700 (was $950) at Lenovo
  • ThinkPhone by Motorola for $450 (was $700) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad L14 Gen 3 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 Pro 5675U) for $629 (was $2,688) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 3 (14-inch, Intel Core i5-1250P) for $945 (was $3,049) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkBook 14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Coire i5-1235U) for $632 (was $1,404) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16 Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700HX and RTX A1000) for $1,749 (was $3,899) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 7730U) for $894 (was $1,719) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen (16-inch, Intel Core i7-13700H and RTX A2000) for $1,979 (was $4,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E15 Gen 5 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 5 7530U) for $610 (was $1,219) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1365U) for $1,143 (was $2,859) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad T14 Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1355U) for $$1,484 (was $2,699) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad E16 Gen 1 (16-inch, Intel Core i5-1355U) for $725 (was $1,449) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P16s Gen 2 (16-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,629 (was $3,629) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 4 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1360P and RTX A500) for $1,529 (was $3,389) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo ThinkPad P14s Gen 4 (14-inch, AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 7840U) for $1,099 (was $2,199) at Lenovo
  • Lenovo X1 Carbon Gen 10 (14-inch, Intel Core i7-1260P) for $1,238 (was $3,439) at Lenovo

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The reviews are done—SpaceX is clear to launch Starship

Everything appears to be “go” for launch Friday of the tallest rocket ever built.

SpaceX's Starship rocket on its launch pad in South Texas.

Enlarge / SpaceX's Starship rocket on its launch pad in South Texas.

The Federal Aviation Administration approved a commercial launch license Wednesday for SpaceX to fly its second full-scale Starship rocket as soon as Friday, seven months after the giant vehicle’s first test flight.

"The FAA has given license authorization for the second launch of the SpaceX Starship Super Heavy vehicles," the FAA said in a statement. "The FAA determined SpaceX met all safety, environmental, policy and financial responsibility requirements."

The nearly 400-foot-tall rocket is scheduled to lift off from SpaceX’s privately owned Starbase spaceport in South Texas during a two-hour launch window opening at 7 am CT (13:00 UTC) Friday, shortly after sunrise on the Texas Gulf Coast. The weather forecast looks favorable for launch Friday morning, but the launch team will evaluate upper-level wind conditions throughout the countdown before giving the green light for liftoff.

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Apple’s China ties under Congressional scrutiny after Jon Stewart cancellation

Lawmakers demand that Apple commit to not censoring content critical of China.

Apple’s China ties under Congressional scrutiny after Jon Stewart cancellation

Enlarge (credit: Michael Reaves / Stringer | Getty Images North America)

Lawmakers apparently balked after learning that Apple canceled the critically acclaimed weekly streaming talk show, The Problem with Jon Stewart, last month—reportedly over issues with the show's planned programming related to both China and artificial intelligence.

In a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, the Republican and Democratic leaders of the House of Representatives' Select Committee on Competition with the Chinese Communist Party urged Apple to explain its decision to end production of The Problem with Jon Stewart and "accelerate its efforts to reduce its dependence on" China. These steps, lawmakers wrote, are critical to help address "broader concerns about indirect Chinese Communist Party (CCP) influence over the creative expression of American artists and companies on CCP-related topics."

While lawmakers acknowledged that Apple has "the right to determine what content is appropriate for their streaming service," they argued that "the coercive tactics of a foreign power should not be directly or indirectly influencing these determinations."

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Google’s 36% search revenue share with Apple is 3x what Android OEMs get

Cooperative Android manufacturers only get 12 percent of search revenue.

The logo for the board game Monopoly, complete with Uncle Pennybags, has been transformed to say Google.

Enlarge / Let's see, you landed on my "Google Ads" space, and with three houses... that will be $1,400. (credit: Ron Amadeo / Hasbro)

The biggest slip-up of the Department of Justice's Google search monopoly trial was the reveal that Google pays Apple 36 percent of Safari search revenue to remain the default search engine. Google stated it didn't want that number getting out because it “would unreasonably undermine Google’s competitive standing in relation to both competitors and other counterparties.” Google attorney John Schmidtlein apparently "visibly cringed" when the number was revealed by its witness (it was later confirmed by Google CEO Sundar Pichai) because Google knows it now has a mess on its hands.

Many of those "competitors and other counterparties" Google is worried about are Android manufacturers. They all get paid some amount of search revenue share, but seeing the huge amount Apple gets paid has probably ruffled some feathers.

How much more does Google pay for an Apple user than an Android one? A lot. It was recently revealed in the Epic v. Google trial (Google has a few monopoly lawsuits going on) that the highest tier of search revenue share for cooperative Android OEMs is only 12 percent, a third of what Google pays Apple. In terms of total cash amount, it's reasonable to assume Apple gets more total money than many smaller companies but to see the direct breakdown that each Apple user is worth three times more than an Android user is a new insight.

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Microsoft launches custom chips to accelerate its plans for AI domination

Amid GPU shortages, Microsoft reaches for custom silicon to run its AI language models.

A photo of the Microsoft Azure Maia 100 chip that has been altered with splashes of color by the author to look as if AI itself were bursting forth from its silicon substrate.

Enlarge / A photo of the Microsoft Azure Maia 100 chip that has been altered with splashes of color by the author to look as if AI itself were bursting forth from its silicon substrate. (credit: Microsoft | Benj Edwards)

On Wednesday at the Microsoft Ignite conference, Microsoft announced two custom chips designed for accelerating in-house AI workloads through its Azure cloud computing service: Microsoft Azure Maia 100 AI Accelerator and the Microsoft Azure Cobalt 100 CPU.

Microsoft designed Maia specifically to run large language models like GPT 3.5 Turbo and GPT-4, which underpin its Azure OpenAI services and Microsoft Copilot (formerly Bing Chat). Maia has 105 billion transistors that are manufactured on a 5-nm TSMC process. Meanwhile, Cobalt is a 128-core ARM-based CPU designed to do conventional computing tasks like power Microsoft Teams. Microsoft has no plans to sell either one, preferring them for internal use only.

As we've previously seen, Microsoft wants to be "the Copilot company," and it will need a lot of computing power to meet that goal. According to Reuters, Microsoft and other tech firms have struggled with the high cost of delivering AI services that can cost 10 times more than services like search engines.

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Pelosi attacker found guilty after pointing to Gamergate influence at trial

DePape: Searches for game tips led to “talk about how toxic Anita Sarkeesian is…”

Pelosi attacker found guilty after pointing to Gamergate influence at trial

Enlarge (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

David DePape—the man accused of violently attacking former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's husband in the couple's California home last year—was found guilty Thursday on federal charges of kidnapping and assaulting a federal official's immediate family member, The Washington Post reports. The jury decision comes after DePape argued at his trial this week that online searches for video game strategies ended up serving as his inadvertent introduction to a rabbit hole of far-right personalities and conspiratorial thought.

KQED reports that DePape said he'd look up strategies for defeating a video game boss, for instance, when he would stumble on a video that would "be a total different person, and these people would talk about how toxic Anita Sarkeesian is, over and over and over.” DePape said these videos inspired him to research more about Sarkeesian, the Feminist Frequency founder who was a long-time target for the amorphous, 4chan-inspired, anti-feminist online movement known as Gamergate. "I wanted to find out what was going on here. I wanted to get both sides of the story.”

This isn't the first time DePape has been linked to Gamergate; The New York Times reported last December that DePape's online writings explicitly referenced the group as inspiration for his politics. "How did I get into all this," Mr. DePape wrote in a blog post. “Gamer Gate it was gamer gate."

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Judge tosses social platforms’ Section 230 blanket defense in child safety case

Judge: Section 230 doesn’t cover platform design defects allegedly harming kids.

Judge tosses social platforms’ Section 230 blanket defense in child safety case

Enlarge (credit: ljubaphoto | E+)

This week, some of the biggest tech companies found out that Section 230 immunity doesn't shield them from some of the biggest complaints alleging that social media platform designs are defective and harming children and teen users.

On Tuesday, US district judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers ruled that discovery can proceed in a lawsuit documenting individual cases involving hundreds of children and teens allegedly harmed by social media use across 30 states. Their complaint alleged that tech companies were guilty of negligently operating platforms with many design defects—including lack of parental controls, insufficient age verification, complicated account deletion processes, appearance-altering filters, and requirements forcing users to log in to report child sexual abuse materials (CSAM)—and failed to warn young users and their parents about those defects.

Defendants are companies operating "the world’s most used social media platforms: Meta’s Facebook and Instagram, Google’s YouTube, ByteDance’s TikTok, and Snapchat." All of these companies moved to dismiss the multi-district litigation entirely, hoping that the First Amendment and Section 230 immunity would effectively bar all the plaintiffs' claims—including, apparently, claims that companies ignored addressing when moving to dismiss.

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