Apple Intelligence: Apples KI-Prompts in MacOS 15.1 Beta aufgedeckt
In der Beta von MacOS 15.1 haben Anwender die Prompts gefunden, mit denen Apple seine KI steuert, um beispielsweise Mails zusammenzufassen. (Apple Intelligence, KI)
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In der Beta von MacOS 15.1 haben Anwender die Prompts gefunden, mit denen Apple seine KI steuert, um beispielsweise Mails zusammenzufassen. (Apple Intelligence, KI)
Die Angreifer forderten ein Lösegeld. Da der Landwirt nicht zahlen wollte, ist ihm der Zugang zu wichtigen Informationen über seine Kühe verwehrt geblieben. (Cybercrime, Roboter)
Die Drogeriekette Rossmann hat angekündigt, keine Teslas mehr zu kaufen. Die Ansichten von Elon Musk passten nicht zur Firmenphilosphie. (Elon Musk, Elektroauto)
An den Börsen rappelt es gerade gewaltig. Insbesondere Tech-Werte stehen unter Druck. Woran liegt das? Ein Bericht von Stephan Lamprecht (Börse, KI)
Dart und Flutter vereinfachen die Entwicklung mobiler Apps durch ihre effizienten und skalierbaren Lösungen. Diese Workshops vermitteln grundlegende und erweiterte Techniken für innovative und intuitive Apps. (Golem Karrierewelt, Programmiersprachen)
Like Starlink, China’s Qianfan satellites have an easy-to-pack flat-panel design.
Chinese officials have long signaled their interest in deploying a satellite network, or maybe several, to beam broadband Internet signals across China and other nations within its sphere of influence.
There are two serious efforts underway in China to develop a rival to SpaceX's Starlink network, which the Chinese government has banned in its territory. The first batch of 18 satellites for one of those Chinese networks launched into low-Earth orbit Tuesday.
A Long March 6A rocket delivered the 18 spacecraft into a polar orbit following liftoff at 2:42 am EDT (06:42 UTC) from the Taiyuan launch base in northern China's Shanxi province. The Long March 6A is one of China's newest rockets—and the country's first to employ strap-on solid rocket boosters—with the ability to deploy a payload of up to 4.5 metric tons (9,900 pounds) into a 700-kilometer (435-mile) Sun-synchronous orbit.
The rebranded device appears better in every way but the price.
This is Google's new streaming box, the Google TV Streamer. It's meant to sit on your media console instead of hanging from your TV's USB port like the Chromecast. [credit: Google ]
Google is discontinuing the Chromecast brand and pulling its Chromecast hardware off the market after 11 years, but it's not leaving the streaming device business.
Rather, it's launching a new product called the Google TV Streamer that competes with high-end streaming boxes like the Apple TV or the Roku Ultra.
The new device is not a direct replacement for the Chromecast dongles, though, as it has a different design and is substantially more expensive. Google is replacing 2020's $50 4K Chromecast with Google TV USB dongle with an HDMI set-top box that costs $100.
“I especially have confidence since I have the final decision.”
NASA on Tuesday confirmed that it is delaying the launch of its next astronaut mission to the International Space Station, Crew 9, until at least September 24. This is a significant slip from the previous date of August 18.
The space agency said the delay was necessary for "operational flexibility" as it continues to deliberate on the viability of Boeing's Starliner spacecraft. In the release, NASA stated, "This adjustment allows more time for mission managers to finalize return planning for the agency’s Boeing Crew Flight Test currently docked to the orbiting laboratory."
NASA also cited other reasons for the delay, including a deconfliction of traffic at the space station, such as a Soyuz launch scheduled for mid-September.
Mass wiping occurs after hack of mobile device management platform.
Students in Singapore are scrambling after a security breach wiped notes and all other data from school-issued iPads and Chromebooks running the mobile device management app Mobile Guardian.
According to news reports, the mass wiping came as a shock to multiple students in Singapore, where the Mobile Guardian app has been the country’s official mobile device management provider for public schools since 2020. Singapore’s Ministry of Education said Monday that roughly 13,000 students from 26 secondary schools had their devices wiped remotely in the incident. The agency said it will remove the Mobile Guardian from all iPads and Chromebooks it issues.
Also on Monday, Mobile Guardian revealed its platform had been breached in a “security incident that affected users globally, including on the North America, European, and Singapore instances. This resulted in a small percentage of devices to be unenrolled from Mobile Guardian and their devices wiped remotely. There is no evidence to suggest that the perpetrator had access to users’ data.”
Uruguay’s Ministry of Industry issued a decree in October 2022 which heralded the country’s first pirate site blocking program. Since then the country has blocked over 300 pirate domains following requests from various broadcasters. Some other figures of interest; in December 2022, there were around 573,000 pay TV subscribers in Uruguay. A year later that figure had fallen to 496,000. Pay TV revenues were less affected than one might expect.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
According to the latest Freedom House report, citizens of the United States benefit from robust freedoms of expression and a wide array of other civil liberties. For that, the country receives a score of 83/100.
With just 3.4 million citizens, the relatively tiny country of Uruguay receives 96/100 and, while it’s certainly not perfect, it does a lot of things right. Given that the United States is currently mulling the introduction of a pirate site-blocking program, lawmakers may like to take a look at Uruguay’s program. Not necessarily the implementation, but the government’s dedication to transparency.
The first pirate site blockade in Uruguay was back in 2018. Fox Networks Group Latin America filed a criminal case against popular sports streaming portal RojaDirecta and a court ultimately instructed local ISPs to block the site. Fox described the ruling as “the beginning of judicial awareness on online piracy issues.”
With the passing of Article 712 of Law No. 19,924 in 2020, the Communications Services Regulatory Unit (URSEC) was set to take responsibility for processing blocking requests.
On October 25, 2022, the Ministry of Industry, Energy and Mining (MIEM) issued a decree noting that the State has an obligation to protect intellectual property; through a site-blocking program, it would seek to “eliminate the broadcasting of television signals broadcast through the Internet or similar networks, for unauthorized commercial purposes.”
The system required pay TV rightsholders to file “a well-founded complaint with the URSEC, as an affidavit,” and after an evaluation of the complaint, URSEC would advise local service providers to block the domains listed in the application for an initial 30-day period, in advance of a judicial review.
This semi-administrative approach to site-blocking appears to work well in Uruguay. In some countries where similar programs exist, limited or even no judicial oversight has translated into a veil of secrecy, where applications and decisions are made in private and transparency doesn’t exist. Uruguay’s approach is the polar opposite.
Taking the most recent successful application as an example, every application and decision has a reference number, every rightsholder applicant is named, and the channels to receive protection (and the domains to be blocked) are made available to the public with flawless transparency.
The decision above is notable for targeting RojaDirecta domains, some six years after Fox Networks first tried to block the platform in Uruguay. Overall, however, every decision handed down in Uruguay is notable due to URSEC’s transparency and the inclusion of each decision in a publicly available dataset.
The data reveals that the first blocking application was filed by Consorcio Cable Visión San José and requested the blocking of two domains; librefutboltv.com and sfntv.xyz.
URSEC granted the application under decision 78/0223 dated May 10, 2023. By the end of June 2023, Consorcio Cable Visión had filed successful applications that went on to block another 13 domains, including futbollibre.lol, futbol-libre.org, pirlo.tv, megatelevisionhd.live, and megadeportes.xyz.
The most prolific site-blocking applicant since launch, with over 220 domains blocked by URSEC, is broadcasting market leader Directv del Uruguay Ltda, with Trinidad Video Cable S.A a distant third place.
For those interested in the fine detail, URSEC provides a convenient spreadsheet of all successful applications from May 2023 to date. Continuously updated, it provides the name of the applicant, the domains to be blocked, and a reference number linking to each full decision.
To our knowledge, no other country in the world makes this much data available, and certainly not in such a convenient format. Italy’s approach is good but not quite as convenient; while some other countries in Europe offer limited data but force interested parties to hunt for it.
Spain’s reports are not bad if three months out of date is acceptable, but even that’s preferable to the approach of Portugal and France, which prefer to keep the public almost completely in the dark. That doesn’t inspire confidence in subsequent transparency reporting, at least in the event any exists.
In common with all blocking schemes, no matter where they are in the world, assessments on their effectiveness mostly rely on reporting from those who request the blocks. These reports aren’t particularly useful. It’s hardly surprising that, when all ISPs blocked the domain piratedmovies999.xyz, nobody could access it, so blocking was up to 100% effective for that domain.
A better accounting could include sales data or subscriber numbers, but those tend not to be suitable for public consumption. The opposite is true for pay TV subscriber numbers, which are made public for each region, along with the revenue those subscriptions generate overall.
Unfortunately, TV subscriber numbers are trending strongly in the wrong direction and have been for some time. Figures reported for December 2022, just a couple of months after the government confirmed blocking was on the way, reveal that there were 573,746 pay TV subscribers, a far cry from a peak of 733,002 in June 2018.
As the chart above shows, the number of (legitimate) subscribers didn’t improve in 2023, even when challenged by site blocking. When compared to the figures reported for December 2022, the number of subscribers in December 2023 was down 77,619, a reduction of 13.5% in 12 months.
The reasons behind such a dramatic fall in subscriber numbers are for the experts to address. However, no particular skills are needed to look at other transparency data provided by the government, which reveals how much revenue was generated from pay TV subscribers in Uruguay.
It appears that when pay TV revenues hit their peak in late December 2021, there were 606,909 pay TV subscribers. In late 2023, when the number of subscribers had fallen 18% to 496,127, revenue to broadcasters during the same period fell just 4.3%.
Uruguay’s Transparent Pirate Site Blocking Approach Can’t Prevent Pay TV Subscriber Decline
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
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