
Deutsches Rotes Kreuz im Visier: DRK-Kreisverband Mannheim bestätigt Cyberangriff
Ende Februar ist der DRK-Kreisverband Mannheim Ziel eines Cyberangriffs geworden. Die Kommunikation des Verbandes ist derzeit eingeschränkt. (Cybercrime, Server)

Just another news site
Ende Februar ist der DRK-Kreisverband Mannheim Ziel eines Cyberangriffs geworden. Die Kommunikation des Verbandes ist derzeit eingeschränkt. (Cybercrime, Server)
A company in Spain and seven of its workers have been fined between 540 and 673,000 euros for their role in an international IPTV piracy operation shut down by the authorities almost eight years ago. The sentences are described as ‘historic’ since they target corporate actors rather than private individuals. However, background to the case makes this case historic for entirely different reasons.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
News that the Provincial Court of Pontevedra has handed down substantial fines to individuals behind a very large pirate IPTV operation was first reported by ElMundo on Tuesday.
Seven employees and managers of Spanish company Engel Systems SL received fines ranging from 540 euros to 7,290 euros for their part in the sale of pirate decoders, plus IPTV boxes and services, through their company over eight years ago.
Engel Systems as a company was hit hardest; a 673,000 euro fine according to the El Mundo report, plus a total ban on future decoder sales. The company’s directors were disqualified for seven years, but after certain compensation was paid and the lengthy prosecution delay was factored in, none of those convicted received a prison sentence.
Considering the background, that’s fairly historic in its own right.
Between 2010 and 2016, Engel Systems sold a range of devices that provided illegal access to pirated TV content. The business initially sold TV decoders reliant on card-sharing systems delivered over the internet, before progressing to pirate IPTV services offering access to around 1,600 channels. Engel Systems worked with international partners, including in Germany and Lithuania, where at least some of its servers were hosted.
A statement by Europol back in 2016 suggested that the illicit operation appeared on the radar of law enforcement when a “legitimate Spanish provider of TV decoders filed a complaint against another company for counterfeiting and selling their decoders.”
More recent information indicates that anti-piracy group EGEDA, Mediapro and Movistar Plus+ “inherited” the case via owner Telefónica’s acquisition of satellite broadcaster (and complainant) Digital+. The companies have since collected around 300,000 euros in compensation from Engel. Another 300,700+ euros should be paid off over the next two years, all thanks to a massive law enforcement operation in May 2016.
Operation FAKE began as a joint investigation by Spain’s National Police and tax authorities, with support from German police, Europol and Eurojust, and culminated on the morning of May 18, 2016.
Europol deployed mobile investigation units to the offices of Engel Systems in Barcelona, allowing experts to analyze intelligence in real-time and extract data from mobile phones and storage devices on-site.
Simultaneous raids in seven Spanish cities targeted 38 homes. A total of 30 suspects were arrested in Spain and the authorities reported the seizure of 48,800 decoders imported from China. They were said to contain custom firmware created by the team in Spain. Also included in the haul, 183,200 euros in cash, financial documents, and IT equipment, plus other items of interest.
The nature of the 10 seized luxury vehicles and the private plane wasn’t detailed at the time while the counterfeit luxury vehicle could’ve been almost anything.
However, during the 2018 International Content Protection Summit in Poland, Chief Inspector Mónica Dopico Martínez, Head of the Intellectual Property Section at Spain’s National Police, revealed the brand of the car, along with other minor details…
An image released by Europol shows hardware seized from the bitcoin mining operation trailing into the distance. It’s an extremely impressive image but viewed through the prism of today’s power prices, mostly terrifying.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Dodge hat mit dem Dodge Charger Daytona ein Muscle Car mit E-Antrieb enthüllt, das Fahrunterstützung für Donuts und Drifts bietet. (Elektroauto, Auto)
Apple hat iOS 17.4 veröffentlicht, das in der EU alternative App Stores und Browser-Engines ermöglicht. Neue Features gibt es auch. (iOS, Apple)
Das Verwaltungsgericht München stellt sich hinter die Entscheidung der TU München, einen Bewerber aufgrund eines KI-generierten Essays abzulehnen. (ChatGPT, KI)
Babboe hat eine Rückrufaktion in Deutschland angekündigt, weil es Sicherheitsprobleme bei mehreren Lastenradmodellen gibt. (Mobilität, E-Bike)
Cloud-Technologien prägen die Technologielandschaft entscheidend. Diese Kurse der Golem Karrierewelt vermitteln essenzielle Fähigkeiten zur Container-Orchestrierung, Cloud Competence und Konfigurationsmanagement. (Golem Karrierewelt, Sicherheitslücke)
WBD looking for ways to grow newfound streaming business profitability.
Enlarge / Max viewers will soon need their own account to watch Ellie in The Last of Us (credit: Liane Hentscher/HBO)
Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) has confirmed that it will be cracking down on password sharing for its Max streaming service starting this year. The news follows streaming rivals, including Netflix and, soon, Disney-owned Disney+ and Hulu, in banning the sharing of account login information with people outside of the account holder's household.
As spotted by TheWrap, while speaking at Morgan Stanley's Technology, Media and Telecom 2024 conference in San Francisco on Monday, JB Perrette, CEO and president of global streaming and games at WBD, said that WBD sees a password sharing crackdown as a “growth opportunity."
“Obviously Netflix has implemented [its password crackdown] extremely successfully. We’re gonna be doing that starting later this year and into ’25,” Perrette said.
SpaceX wants to make these kinds of days the norm, not the exception.
Enlarge / A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket streaks into orbit Sunday night from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, ferrying a crew of four to the International Space Station. (credit: Joshua Conti/US Space Force)
Between Sunday night and Monday night, SpaceX teams in Texas, Florida, and California supervised three Falcon 9 rocket launches and completed a full dress rehearsal ahead of the next flight of the company's giant Starship launch vehicle.
This was a remarkable sequence of events, even for SpaceX, which has launched a mission at an average rate of once every three days since the start of the year. We've reported on this before, but it's worth reinforcing that no launch provider, commercial or government, has ever operated at this cadence.
SpaceX has previously had rockets on all four of its active launch pads. But what SpaceX accomplished over a 24-hour period was noteworthy. Engineers inside at least four control centers were actively overseeing spacecraft and rocket operations simultaneously.
The Countryman SE goes on sale later in 2024, starting at $45,200.
Enlarge / Mini has made a fully electric version of its Countryman compact crossover, replacing the outgoing plug-in hybrid Countryman. (credit: Jonathan Gitlin)
Over the last couple of weeks, we've brought you test drives of a pair of related small cars, the 2024 BMW X2 M35i and the 2025 Mini JCW Countryman. Today it's time for the third member of the family destined for US sales, and the one that we think Ars readers will be most interested in—the fully electric Mini Countryman SE ALL4.
This is the third-generation Mini Countryman, replacing the plug-in hybrid version we last tested in 2017. It's a little larger now, although not by much: at 174.5 inches (4,433 mm) long, 72.6 inches (1,843 mm) wide, and 65.2 inches (1,656 mm) tall, it is still a pretty small car by most standards. It's also a pretty aero-efficient one; the drag coefficient is just 0.26.
As the ALL4 name might suggest, this is an all-wheel drive electric vehicle, with a combined 313 hp (230 kW) and 365 lb-ft (494 Nm), fed by a 66.5 kWh lithium ion traction battery. That makes it nearly as peppy off the line as a Ferrari Testarossa, capable of reaching 62 mph (100 km/h) from a standing start in 5.6 seconds. (The Ferrari took 5.2 seconds to reach 60 mph.) Top speed is limited to 112 mph (180 km/h).
You must be logged in to post a comment.