Texas can require age-verification on porn sites, 5th Circuit judges rule

One judge dissents, saying Texas law “limits adults’ access to protected speech.”

A Texas state flag blowing in the wind.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | PA Thompson)

Texas can enforce a law requiring age-verification systems on porn websites, the US Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled Thursday. The appeals court vacated an injunction against the law's age-verification requirement but said that Texas cannot enforce a provision requiring porn websites to "display health warnings about the effects of the consumption of pornography."

In a 2-1 decision, judges ruled that "the age-verification requirement is rationally related to the government's legitimate interest in preventing minors' access to pornography. Therefore, the age-verification requirement does not violate the First Amendment."

The Texas law was challenged by the owners of Pornhub and other adult websites and an adult-industry lobby group called the Free Speech Coalition. "We disagree strenuously with the analysis of the Court majority," the Free Speech Coalition said. "As the dissenting opinion by Judge [Patrick] Higginbotham makes clear, this ruling violates decades of precedent from the Supreme Court."

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Daily Deals (3-11-2024)

The HP Pavilion Plus is a 14 inch laptop that debuted in 2022 as an affordable notebook with premium features including a metal body, thin and light design, and optional support for an OLED display or discrete graphics, among other features. HP has ex…

The HP Pavilion Plus is a 14 inch laptop that debuted in 2022 as an affordable notebook with premium features including a metal body, thin and light design, and optional support for an OLED display or discrete graphics, among other features. HP has expanded the line since then, offering models with Intel or AMD processor […]

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Google’s self-designed office swallows Wi-Fi “like the Bermuda Triangle”

Bad radio propagation means Googlers are making do with Ethernet cables, phone hotspots.

Google's Bay View campus was designed with the world's strangest roof line.

Enlarge / Google's Bay View campus was designed with the world's strangest roof line. (credit: Google)

Google's swanky new "Bay View" campus apparently has a major problem: bad Wi-Fi. Reuters reports that Google's first self-designed office building has "been plagued for months by inoperable or, at best, spotty Wi-Fi, according to six people familiar with the matter." A Google spokesperson confirmed the problems and said the company is working on fixing them.

Bay View opened in May 2022. At launch, Google's VP of Real Estate & Workplace Services, David Radcliffe, said the site "marks the first time we developed one of our own major campuses, and the process gave us the chance to rethink the very idea of an office." The result is a wild tent-like structure with a striking roofline made up of swooping square sections. Of course, it's all made of metal and glass, but the roof shape looks like squares of cloth held up by poles—each square section has high points on the four corners and sags down in the middle. The roof is covered in solar cells and collects rainwater while also letting in natural light, and Google calls it the "Gradient Canopy."

All those peaks and parabolic ceiling sections apparently aren't great for Wi-Fi propagation, with the Reuters report saying that the roof "swallows broadband like the Bermuda Triangle." Googlers assigned to the building are making do with Ethernet cables, using phones as hotspots, or working outside, where the Wi-Fi is stronger. One anonymous employee told Reuters, "You’d think the world’s leading Internet company would have worked this out."

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Nvidia sued over AI training data as copyright clashes continue

Copyright suits over AI training data reportedly decreasing AI transparency.

Nvidia sued over AI training data as copyright clashes continue

Enlarge (credit: Yurii Klymko | iStock / Getty Images Plus)

Book authors are suing Nvidia, alleging that the chipmaker's AI platform NeMo—used to power customized chatbots—was trained on a controversial dataset that illegally copied and distributed their books without their consent.

In a proposed class action, novelists Abdi Nazemian (Like a Love Story), Brian Keene (Ghost Walk), and Stewart O’Nan (Last Night at the Lobster) argued that Nvidia should pay damages and destroy all copies of the Books3 dataset used to power NeMo large language models (LLMs).

The Books3 dataset, novelists argued, copied "all of Bibliotek," a shadow library of approximately 196,640 pirated books. Initially shared through the AI community Hugging Face, the Books3 dataset today "is defunct and no longer accessible due to reported copyright infringement," the Hugging Face website says.

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ONEXPLAYER 2 Pro handheld gaming PC with Ryzen 7 8840U launches for $1049 and up

The ONEXPLAYER 2 Pro is a handheld gaming PC with an 8.4 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel display,  an AMD Ryzen 7 processor featuring RDNA 3 graphics and a set of detachable controllers that give the little like a Nintendo Switch. One Netbook first launched t…

The ONEXPLAYER 2 Pro is a handheld gaming PC with an 8.4 inch, 2560 x 1600 pixel display,  an AMD Ryzen 7 processor featuring RDNA 3 graphics and a set of detachable controllers that give the little like a Nintendo Switch. One Netbook first launched the ONEXPLAYER 2 Pro in the summer of 2023, and […]

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