Tales of the Shire: Der Herr der Rezeptsammlungen

Sauron – kann man das essen? Das Herr-der-Ringe-basierte Tales of the Shire schickt uns als Hobbit nach Wasserau. Golem.de hat probegekocht. Ein Hands-on von Peter Steinlechner (Der Herr der Ringe, Rollenspiel)

Sauron - kann man das essen? Das Herr-der-Ringe-basierte Tales of the Shire schickt uns als Hobbit nach Wasserau. Golem.de hat probegekocht. Ein Hands-on von Peter Steinlechner (Der Herr der Ringe, Rollenspiel)

Solarflow Hyper: Zendures neuer Wechselrichter lässt sich zusammenschalten

Zendures Wechselrichter Solarflow Hyper kann mit mehreren Einheiten auf der gleichen Phase betrieben werden, die dann die Leistung untereinander verteilen. (Solarenergie, Smart Meter)

Zendures Wechselrichter Solarflow Hyper kann mit mehreren Einheiten auf der gleichen Phase betrieben werden, die dann die Leistung untereinander verteilen. (Solarenergie, Smart Meter)

Mindestens 42 Prozent: Tausende deutsche Exchange-Server sind laut BSI angreifbar

Rund 18.000 Exchange-Server sind nach Angaben des BSI anfällig für mindestens eine bekannte Sicherheitslücke, die die Ausführung von Schadcode aus der Ferne ermöglicht. (Sicherheitslücke, Microsoft)

Rund 18.000 Exchange-Server sind nach Angaben des BSI anfällig für mindestens eine bekannte Sicherheitslücke, die die Ausführung von Schadcode aus der Ferne ermöglicht. (Sicherheitslücke, Microsoft)

(g+) Greenwashing in der IT: Die Zeit der freiwilligen Ökolabels ist vorbei

Die EU will stärker gegen Greenwashing vorgehen, der Bitkom beklagt potenziell mehr Bürokratieaufwand für kleine Unternehmen. Freiwillige Zertifizierungen bringen aber auch niemanden weiter. Ein IMHO von Florian Zandt (GreenIT, IMHO)

Die EU will stärker gegen Greenwashing vorgehen, der Bitkom beklagt potenziell mehr Bürokratieaufwand für kleine Unternehmen. Freiwillige Zertifizierungen bringen aber auch niemanden weiter. Ein IMHO von Florian Zandt (GreenIT, IMHO)

Police Make New Pirate IPTV Arrest as Public Criticism Over Priorities Persists

UK police are reporting yet another pirate IPTV-related arrest. A warrant was executed at a flat in Nottingham where a 42-year-old was detained on suspicion of offenses related to the provision of pirated Sky broadcasts. For deterrent purposes, both the police and Sky want reports like this to reach the public, and that is being achieved. The response, however, is one of almost universal criticism, on grounds that in many cases have little or nothing to do with piracy.

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

police-skyOver several years but much more intensively during the last 18 months, police in the UK have warned that those involved in the supply and sale of pirate IPTV streams will face the consequences.

Whether any suppliers of significance took those threats seriously is difficult to say, but a noticeable increase in reported arrests recently suggests that police are responding as promised. News this week concerning a previously convicted pirate suggests that law enforcement agencies are also working to ensure that those found guilty aren’t allowed to simply disappear when it’s payback time.

Extradition For Convicted Pirate

Between 2014 and 2017, Michael Hornung supplied around 2,700 set-top boxes that provided unauthorized access to subscription broadcasters’ content, notably that to which Sky owned the rights. An investigation led to a private criminal prosecution on behalf of Sky through FACT, who called on lawyer Ari Alibhai, the UK’s leading expert in piracy-related private prosecutions, to do the honors.

Skipping bail is generally ill-advised but faced with a private prosecution, the worst possible scenario for any IPTV pirate in the UK, Hornung failing to answer his bail in March 2020 hardly came as a surprise.

While still hiding out in Northern Cyprus to avoid extradition back to the UK, in June 2022 Hornung was found guilty in his absence. He was sentenced to four and half years in prison for causing a potential loss of £2m to broadcasters, while generating £350,000 in fraudulent income, around £258,000 of which is payable back to the state under the Proceeds of Crime Act.

As reported this week by FACT and the National Crime Agency, Hornung was arrested in Cyprus on June 2 and after a hearing there, agreed to be extradited back to the UK. For jumping bail he received an additional 12-week jail sentence, and he still has to pay back the £258,000. The sum is already long overdue and in the event of non-payment, Hornung could face an additional three years in prison.

Promised Arrests Keep Coming

In addition to Hornung, we believe that at least three other men prosecuted in separate IPTV cases disappeared rather than face the music in the UK.

And let’s not forget, a single prosecution put five men behind bars for over 30 years in 2023; deterrent messaging doesn’t get any better than that. Yet still the arrests keep on coming, including that of a 52-year-old man from Stockton-on-Tees recently, to a background of a school headteacher being sent to prison in the West Midlands.

And There’s More

Adding to the overall total, police and broadcaster Sky have a just announced yet another IPTV-related arrest, after officers executed a warrant at a flat in Queen Street, Nottingham.

Police say that on June 11, a 42-year-old man allegedly involved “in the provision of illegal streams of Sky television content,” was arrested under the Proceeds of Crime Act, Computer Misuse Act, and the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, before being released on bail while investigations continue.

Credit: Nottingham Policenotts-arrest-iptv

As is customary in these cases, Matt Hibbert, Group Director of Anti-Piracy at Sky, thanked the police for their work.

“We’d like to thank Nottinghamshire Police’s Cyber Crime Team for taking this strong action against illegal streaming operators,” Hibbert said.

“We will continue to support law enforcement to protect our content, tackle illegal streaming, and help keep consumers safe from the risks illegal streaming can pose.”

But while Sky says it wants to keep consumers safe, what qualifies as safe for members of the public seems to diverge quite considerably from whatever Sky has in mind.

Policing Isn’t a Popularity Contest….

While it’s possible to assess sentiment across social media posts, social media users tend to group around certain topics which can lead to bias. In this case the discussion takes place on police social media accounts where piracy-related matters represent a tiny minority.

Since last year, those behind the BeStreamWise anti-piracy campaign operated by Sky have made extensive use of social media to press home the message that illegal streaming is dangerous, due to malware and other ‘hidden dangers’. Cast the net a little further and people appear to have other things on their minds.

What’s immediately evident when police forces announce this type of action is the wall-to-wall criticism that appears under those posts on police social media accounts. As one might expect, pirates tend not to enjoy services being shut down. However, it’s clear that most complaints have little or even nothing to do with piracy.

In this case, the comments appear to show regular members of the public, expressing frustrations over perceived prioritization of one type of crime, in favor of a foreign-owned corporation (Sky is owned by U.S. company Comcast), when there are no resources available to tackle serious local crime, affecting ordinary local people.

sky-iptvcomments-1

Whether any, all, or none of these comments are accurate or even a reasonable assessment of the reality on the ground, is neither here nor there.

What matters is the belief and how that manifests itself when faced with anti-piracy campaigns and pleas to pay for content instead of pirating it. It’s hard to imagine any scenario where the current mindset would prove beneficial.

Policing Isn’t a Popularity Contest….

From posts like this on Facebook, to others on Twitter/X (and more or less anywhere else these stories appear), people are overwhelmingly opposed to the allocation of precious enforcement resources to assist corporations, when the people whose taxes actually fund the police continue to be underserved.

Obviously the traditional complaints, concerning pricing and the need to buy multiple subscriptions to get just a part of the content, are persistent. However, they only represent just a small part of the overall commentary which is overwhelmingly critical of the police and the allocation of resources.

sky-iptvcomments-2

In one form or another, the police have heard this all before. With limited resources available, various groups will always jostle for position to protect their own interests.

Unfortunately, without public support this campaign and others like it are even less likely to succeed. (More public comments on X here)

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

Kopfhörer Ace mit Fehler ausgeliefert: Käufer des ersten Sonos-Kopfhörers sind verärgert

Obwohl Sonos vor dem Verkaufsstart des Ace darauf hingewiesen wurde, hat das Unternehmen den Kopfhörer mit einem Fehler an Kunden geliefert. Von Ingo Pakalski (Sonos, Audio/Video)

Obwohl Sonos vor dem Verkaufsstart des Ace darauf hingewiesen wurde, hat das Unternehmen den Kopfhörer mit einem Fehler an Kunden geliefert. Von Ingo Pakalski (Sonos, Audio/Video)

NatGeo documents salvage of Tuskegee Airman’s lost WWII plane wreckage

The Real Red Tails investigates the fatal crash of 2nd Lt. Frank Moody in 1944.

Michigan's State Maritime Archaeologist Wayne R. Lusardi takes notes underwater at the wreckage.

Enlarge / Michigan's State Maritime Archaeologist Wayne R. Lusardi takes notes underwater at the Lake Huron WWII wreckage of 2nd Lt. Frank Moody's P-39 Airacobra. Moody, one of the famed Tuskagee Airmen, fatally crashed in 1944. (credit: National Geographic)

In April 1944, a pilot with the Tuskegee Airmen, Second Lieutenant Frank Moody, was on a routine training mission when his plane malfunctioned. Moody lost control of the aircraft and plunged to his death in the chilly waters of Lake Huron. His body was recovered two months later, but the airplane was left at the bottom of the lake—until now. Over the last few years, a team of divers working with the Tuskegee Airmen National Historical Museum in Detroit has been diligently recovering the various parts of Moody's plane to determine what caused the pilot's fatal crash.

That painstaking process is the centerpiece of The Real Red Tails, a new documentary from National Geographic narrated by Sheryl Lee Ralph (Abbot Elementary). The documentary features interviews with the underwater archaeologists working to recover the plane, as well as firsthand accounts from Moody's fellow airmen and stunning underwater footage from the wreck itself.

The Tuskegee Airmen were the first Black military pilots in the US Armed Forces and helped pave the way for the desegregation of the military. The men painted the tails of their P-47 planes red, earning them the nickname the Red Tails. (They initially flew Bell P-39 Airacobras like Moody's downed plane, and later flew P-51 Mustangs.) It was then-First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt who helped tip popular opinion in favor of the fledgling unit when she flew with the Airmen's chief instructor, C. Alfred Anderson, in March 1941. The Airmen earned praise for their skill and bravery in combat during World War II, with members being awarded three Distinguished Unit Citations, 96 Distinguished Flying Crosses, 14 Bronze Stars, 60 Purple Hearts, and at least one Silver Star.

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