SpaceX says regulators will keep Starship grounded until at least November

SpaceX blames the regulatory delay on “issues ranging from the frivolous to the patently absurd.”

Artist's illustration of catch arms ensnaring SpaceX's Super Heavy booster.

Enlarge / Artist's illustration of catch arms ensnaring SpaceX's Super Heavy booster. (credit: SpaceX)

The Federal Aviation Administration has signaled to SpaceX that it won't approve a launch license for the next test flight of the Starship rocket until at least late November, the company said in a statement on Tuesday.

This is more than two months later than the mid-September timeframe the FAA previously targeted for determining whether to approve a launch license for the next Starship flight. SpaceX says the Super Heavy booster and Starship upper stage for the next launch—the fifth full-scale test flight of the Starship program—have been ready to launch since the first week of August.

"The flight test will include our most ambitious objective yet: attempt to return the Super Heavy booster to the launch site and catch it in mid-air," SpaceX said in a statement.

Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

AI ruling on jobless claims could make mistakes courts can’t undo, experts warn

Nevada’s plan to let AI rule on unemployment claims is risky, experts warn.

AI ruling on jobless claims could make mistakes courts can’t undo, experts warn

Enlarge (credit: Westend61 | Westend61)

Nevada will soon become the first state to use AI to help speed up the decision-making process when ruling on appeals that impact people's unemployment benefits.

The state's Department of Employment, Training, and Rehabilitation (DETR) agreed to pay Google $1,383,838 for the AI technology, a 2024 budget document shows, and it will be launched within the "next several months," Nevada officials told Gizmodo.

Nevada's first-of-its-kind AI will rely on a Google cloud service called Vertex AI Studio. Connecting to Google's servers, the state will fine-tune the AI system to only reference information from DETR's database, which officials think will ensure its decisions are "more tailored" and the system provides "more accurate results," Gizmodo reported.

Read 21 remaining paragraphs | Comments

“HAIL HOLY TERROR”: Two US citizens charged for running online “Terrorgram Collective”

White accelerationist terror meets social media.

The US government recently announced multiple charges against the alleged leaders of the "Terrorgram Collective," which does just what it sounds like—it promotes terrorism on the Telegram messaging platform. In this case, the terrorism was white racial terror, complete with a "hit list" of US officials and activists, a homemade "White Terror" video glorifying "saints" who had killed others, and instructions for taking down US infrastructure such as electrical substation transformers. (Read the indictment.)

Chaos was the point. Terrorgram promoted "white supremacist accelerationism," which believes that society must be incited into a civil war or apocalyptic confrontation in order to bring down the existing system of government and establish a white nationalist state.

The group's manifestos and chat rooms sometimes felt suffused with the habits of the extremely online: hand-clap emojis between every important word, instructional videos on how to make bombs, the language of trolling, catchphrases so over the top they sound ironic ("HAIL HOLY TERROR" in all caps).

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Woman drips with sweat from a bite of food due to rare nerve-wiring mix-up

After just 75 seconds of chewing, large drops of sweat ran down the woman’s face.

Woman drips with sweat from a bite of food due to rare nerve-wiring mix-up

Enlarge (credit: Getty | MICHAEL KAPPELER)

The human body is full of marvels, some even bordering on miraculous. That includes the limited ability for nerves to regenerate after injuries, allowing people to regain some function and feeling. But that wonder can turn, well, unnerving when those regenerated wires end up in a jumble.

Such is the case for a rare neurological condition called gustatory hyperhidrosis, also known as Frey's syndrome. In this disorder, nerves regenerate after damage to either of the large saliva glands that sit on either side of the face, just in front of the ears, called the parotid glands. But that nerve regrowth goes awry due to a quirk of anatomy that allows the nerves that control saliva production for eating to get tangled with those that control sweating for temperature control.

In this week's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine, doctors in Taiwan report an unusual presentation of the disorder in a 76-year-old woman. She told doctors that, for two years, every time she ate, her face would begin profusely sweating. In the clinic, the doctors observed the phenomenon themselves. They watched as she took a bite of pork jerky and began chewing.

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Lilbits: PS5 Pro announced, KDE Slimbook 16 launched, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series leaked, and Flipper Zero gets firmware version 1.0

Samsung has dominated the premium Android tablet space in recent years, and if recent leaks are to be believed, this year’s tablets will bring more of the same… with an emphasis on more. The new Galaxy Tab Ultra, for example, will still be …

Samsung has dominated the premium Android tablet space in recent years, and if recent leaks are to be believed, this year’s tablets will bring more of the same… with an emphasis on more. The new Galaxy Tab Ultra, for example, will still be a 14.6 inch tablet with a flagship processor with up to 16GB of […]

The post Lilbits: PS5 Pro announced, KDE Slimbook 16 launched, Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series leaked, and Flipper Zero gets firmware version 1.0 appeared first on Liliputing.

Huawei’s $2,800 trifold phone is a real thing it wants people to hold and use

“It’s a piece of work that everyone has thought of but never managed to create.”

Shot of a red phone that folds into three, against a black background

Enlarge / In the U.S., a folding phone has you carrying around nearly $2,000 of fragile, folding OLED phone. In China and export-friendly countries, the Mate XT adds $1,000 and yet another hinge. (credit: Huawei)

Huawei's Mate XT Ultimate is a phone that does not flip or fold, at least in the way of its Samsung or Google contemporaries. You could say it collapses, really, across two hinges, from a full 10.2-inch diagonal rectangle (about a half-inch short of a standard iPad) down to a traditional 6.4-inch rectangle phone slab. There's also an in-between single-fold configuration at 7.9 inches. And there's an optional folding keyboard.

This phone, which Huawei calls a "trifold," would cost you the USD equivalent of $2,800 (19,999 yuan) if you could buy it in the US. Most notably, the phone launched just hours after Apple's iPhone 16 event. As noted by The New York Times, Huawei's product launches are often timed for maximum pushback against the US, which has sanctioned and attempted to stymie Huawei's chip tech.

“It’s a piece of work that everyone has thought of but never managed to create,” Richard Yu, Huawei’s consumer group chairman, said during the Mate XT livestream unveiling. “I have always had a dream to put our tablet in my pocket, and we did it.”

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Juno Tab 3 is an overpriced Linux tablet with an Intel N100 processor and 12GB RAM

The Juno Tab 3 is a tablet with a 12.1 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel, 330 nit IPS LCD display, 12GB of LPDDR5-4800 memory, and an M.2 2242 SATA III SSD with at least 512GB of storage. It’s powered by a 6-watt Intel N100 quad-core processor based on Int…

The Juno Tab 3 is a tablet with a 12.1 inch, 2160 x 1440 pixel, 330 nit IPS LCD display, 12GB of LPDDR5-4800 memory, and an M.2 2242 SATA III SSD with at least 512GB of storage. It’s powered by a 6-watt Intel N100 quad-core processor based on Intel Alder Lake-N architecture. What sets it apart […]

The post Juno Tab 3 is an overpriced Linux tablet with an Intel N100 processor and 12GB RAM appeared first on Liliputing.

Daily Deals (9-10-2024)

Amazon’s Fire HD 8 tablet is on sale for more than 50% off, bringing the price for a model with 64GB of storage down to $60 for the most recent version of Amazon’s 8 inch tablet. Just keep in mind that the latest release is about two years …

Amazon’s Fire HD 8 tablet is on sale for more than 50% off, bringing the price for a model with 64GB of storage down to $60 for the most recent version of Amazon’s 8 inch tablet. Just keep in mind that the latest release is about two years old, so I wouldn’t be surprised to […]

The post Daily Deals (9-10-2024) appeared first on Liliputing.

Watch Japanese eels escape through a predatory fish’s gills

It took escaping eels 56 seconds on average to free themselves from death

still image of An eel escaping via a fish’s gills

Enlarge / "The only species of fish confirmed to be able to escape from the digestive tract of the predatory fish after being captured.” (credit: Hasegawa et al./Current Biology)

Imagine you're a Japanese eel, swimming around just minding your own business when—bam! A predatory fish swallows you whole and you only have a few minutes to make your escape before certain death. What's an eel to do? According to a new paper published in the journal Current Biology, Japanese eels opt to back their way out of the digestive tract, tail first, through the esophagus, emerging from the predatory fish's gills.

Per the authors, this is the first such study to observe the behavioral patterns and escape processes of prey within the digestive tract of predators. “At this point, the Japanese eel is the only species of fish confirmed to be able to escape from the digestive tract of the predatory fish after being captured,” co-author Yuha Hasegawa at Nagasaki University in Japan told New Scientist.

There are various strategies in nature for escaping predators after being swallowed. For instance, a parasitic worm called Paragordius tricuspidatus can force its way out of a predator’s system when its host organism is eaten. There was also a fascinating study in 2020 by Japanese scientists on the unusual survival strategy of the aquatic beetle Regimbartia attenuata. They fed a bunch of the beetles to a pond frog (Pelophylax nigromaculatus) under laboratory conditions, expecting the frog to spit the beetle out. That's what happened with prior experiments on bombardier beetles (Pheropsophus jessoensis), which spray toxic chemicals (described as an audible "chemical explosion") when they find themselves inside a toad's gut, inducing the toad to invert its own stomach and vomit them back out.

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Sky Calls Out IPTV Piracy Facilitators, Including Cloudflare & Facebook

UK broadcaster Sky has submitted its report to the European Commission providing its overview of the latest piracy threats. These submissions guide the EC as it updates its ‘Counterfeit and Piracy Watch List’ and this time around some rightsholders want intermediaries to receive special attention. Sky’s submission dedicates more space to Cloudflare than even the most egregious pirate IPTV hosting providers, and Facebook doesn’t get off lightly either.

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

sky-cloud-ecIn an article published yesterday, we featured the Motion Picture Association’s submission to the European Commission (EC) for its next Counterfeit and Piracy Watch List.

While still calling out familiar targets, such as torrent sites, streaming portals, and piracy apps, the MPA clearly wants to draw attention to the role of third-party intermediaries in the piracy ecosystem. UK broadcaster Sky’s submission to the EC adopts an identical strategy.

Sky starts from the now-familiar position that large-scale commercial piracy isn’t just a problem for rightsholders. Organized crime has negative consequences for consumers and society as a whole, Sky says, including significant losses in tax revenues for EU Member States.

Non-Responsive & Infringing Hosting Providers (Outside EU)

Sky begins by calling out several particularly problematic hosting providers. Not only do these operations have no qualms about doing business with pirate IPTV providers, requests to remove infringing content quickly aren’t processed speedily enough to be of practical use to the broadcaster; if they’re processed at all.

In common with the MPA’s submission, Sky says that some hosts do business with anonymity in mind, including anonymous registrations, payment via cryptocurrency, and offshore hosting.

kybc-errorPoor adoption of Know Your Business Customer (KYBC) processes among these hosts presents difficulties for rightsholders in the event they want to track pirates down. The options don’t improve with other hosts, some of which simply refuse to disclose any information.

The ‘top infringing host’ according to Sky is ‘RESERVED, ZZ'[AS27161]. Previously known as Litnics, Sky recorded a total of 284,454 unique ‘infringing incidents’ between January 1, 2024, and July 29, 2024.

DNS records reveal no shortage of pirate IPTV entities using this host, which Sky says is located in the United States, as opposed to the Middle East, Hong Kong or Macau like some of the others in the list. While AS27161 is clearly operational, whether it should be is up for debate.

Cloudflare: “One of the Top Infringing Hosts”

When Cloudflare was nominated for the EC’s Watch List a few years ago, the company wasn’t impressed with its characterization as an infringer (pdf). The EC should focus on “Commission-verified allegations of illegal behavior,” Cloudflare said, not companies that have simply declined to take voluntary action.

Yet after a short absence, those same descriptions are back on the agenda. Sky says that it categorized Cloudflare as an infringing host in a 2022 list and according to data, Cloudflare remains “one of the top infringing hosts” today.

The broadcaster notes that in the same seven-month period this year, 107,307 unique ‘infringing incidents’ were identified at Cloudflare. Noting that Cloudflare is believed to provide DNS services to more than 15 per cent of all known global websites, Sky says that Cloudflare services are “easily exploited” by pirates to conceal their true hosts. But Sky goes further still.

“Many pirate services are believed to use Cloudflare. This was demonstrated in the 2019 Milan Court Order involving ‘EnergyIPTV’ and ‘IPTVTheBest’, with both services using Cloudflare’s infrastructure to distribute infringing content, without Cloudflare taking adequate steps to prevent infringement,” the broadcaster informs the EC.

Cloudflare hasn’t responded to Sky as part of the public process, but the company’s own submission to the EC may solve at least some of Sky’s problems. The company explains that rightsholder members of Cloudflare’s Trusted Reporter Program are granted access to pirate site IP addresses, which counters the “easily exploited” features.

cloudflare-trusted

Unfortunately, Sky’s alleged problems pertaining to legitimate United States-based companies don’t end with Cloudlare.

Facebook Marketplace & Google

Sky’s criticism of Facebook Marketplace contains some remarkable data for the six-month period between February and July 2024.

firestick-marketplaceThe company says that it identified and reported a total of 16,500 listings for piracy-enabling devices (including pre-loaded Amazon Firesticks), a figure that represents 96% of all Firestick listings identified across all online platforms in this period.

“Meta states that it has proactive measures in place to identify and remove piracy enabling devices as well as IPTV services from Marketplace, but the continued volume of these listings suggests that the measures are largely ineffective,” Sky’s submission reads.

“The relevant policies on Facebook Marketplace need to be updated and improved. While Meta is willing to engage, to date any countermeasures have not resolved the significant challenges faced.”

The statement that Meta is willing to engage seems unusual in the context of a piracy watchlist submission. Nevertheless, Sky says that Meta should implement “significant proactive measures” to stop infringing listings being uploaded while ensuring that users banned from the platform are unable to sign back up. That seems to suggest that deploying an effective repeat infringer policy may still fall short of requirements.

Google Has Done a Lot, But Not Enough

Google’s alleged role in assisting consumers to find infringing content is something that never seems to go away. Sky highlights organic search results and sponsored adverts as problematic but criticizes the search giant for not going above and beyond when requests are received to remove content.

“While Google will respond to take-down notices against specific infringing URLs, it will not take action against whole domains, meaning that illegal streaming sites can be the subject of numerous individual page takedown requests without any clear delisting impact against the overall site,” the broadcaster’s submission reads.

“Google will not accept delisting requests for pages/sites encouraging copyright infringement, such as sites that openly encourage the use of VPN technology to circumvent pay TV offerings. Google also fails to provide rights holders with functioning APIs for delisting, meaning that the process of submitting delisting requests is manual and time consuming.”

Like Cloudflare, Google offers advanced takedown tools as part of its Trusted Copyright Removal Program (TCRP), which allows “high-volume submitters that send high-quality notices” to bulk submit copyright removal requests on Google Search.

Why TCRP is not being used here is unclear but if the targets are sites “encouraging” infringement or championing the use of VPNs to circumvent geo-blocks, the DMCA is already the wrong tool, regardless of the submitting mechanism.

Other platforms in the Sky submission operate in the file-hosting/cyberlocker, live-streaming, and mobile app markets. All are listed below for convenience but covered in much more detail in the report linked below.

Sky’s submission to the European Commission is available here (pdf). The problematic sites and services by category are as follows:

Hosting Providers

ISTQSERVERSES (Jordan)
HHXYTC haoxiangyun (Hong Kong)
HBING (Great Britain)
YURTEH-AS (Ukraine)
VIRTUAL SYSTEMS (Ukraine)
NETSOLUTIONS (Macao)
RESERVED, ZZ (United States per report, possible BOGON)
CLOUDFLARENET (United States)
CLOUDFLARESPECTRUM (United States)

Marketplaces and Search Engines

Facebook Marketplace
Alibaba
Google

File-Hosting Sites (Cyberlockers)

chomikuj.pl
ddl.to
dood.so
doodstream.com
mixdrop.co
mixdrop.sx
mixdrop.to
nitroflare.com
orvidcloud.co
rapidgator.net
rapidrar.com
streamtape.com
voe.sx

File-Hosting Sites Live Streaming)

srv93221.tservone.lol
iptvtree.net
mteve.online
sansat.net
myvipmedia.com
www.sportp2p.com
azdouiptv.com
vodkom.net
tv.pro-ott.com
aziz.social

Apps (Official/Unofficial Stores, Premium / Advertising)

RepelisPlus Pelis Stream
Scarica film | VC
PTV Sports: Live Cricket TV
YACINE TV Store
Football Livestreaming HD TV
Live Cricket TV 2024
MovieFlex
Salama TV – Angalia Mpira Live
Magis – Peliculas y Series
Hotlflix

Social Media

Telegram

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