Kein Nachfolger: Tim Höttges soll Telekom-Chef bleiben
Tim Höttges macht weiter, bis er 66 ist. Das wurde aus dem Telekom-Konzern bekannt. (Timotheus Höttges, Telekom)
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Tim Höttges macht weiter, bis er 66 ist. Das wurde aus dem Telekom-Konzern bekannt. (Timotheus Höttges, Telekom)
Diesel equipment will be replaced with hydrogen- or electric-power gear.
Raquel Garcia has been fighting for years to clean up the air in her neighborhood southwest of downtown Detroit.
Living a little over a mile from the Ambassador Bridge, which thousands of freight trucks cross every day en route to the Port of Detroit, Garcia said she and her neighbors are frequently cleaning soot off their homes.
“You can literally write your name in it,” she said. “My house is completely covered.”
Der Sony PS-LX310BT mit Bluetooth ist Amazons meistgekaufter Plattenspieler. Dank hohen Rabatts ist er zum Bestpreis im Angebot. (Sony, Bluetooth)
On this timeline Russia is nearly a decade and a half behind SpaceX.
Like a lot of competitors in the global launch industry, Russia for a long time dismissed the prospects of a reusable first stage for a rocket.
As late as 2016, an official with the Russian agency that develops strategy for the country's main space corporation, Roscosmos, concluded, "The economic feasibility of reusable launch systems is not obvious." In the dismissal of the landing prospects of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, Russian officials were not alone. Throughout the 2010s, competitors including space agencies in Europe and Japan, and US-based United Launch Alliance, all decided to develop expendable rockets.
However, by 2017, when SpaceX re-flew a Falcon 9 rocket for the first time, the writing was on the wall. "This is a very important step, we sincerely congratulate our colleague on this achievement," then-Roscosmos CEO Igor Komarov said at the time. He even spoke of developing reusable components, such as rocket engines capable of multiple firings.
Es sind traurige Zeiten für Star-Trek-Fans: Innerhalb weniger Tage hieß es gleich zweimal Abschiednehmen. Zeit für eine Würdigung. Von Peter Osteried (Star Trek, Disney)
After DAZN received a warning for the blunder that saw Google Drive blocked in Italy, a company behind a smart TV video player app had a DAZN-initiated blocking decision revoked after a successful appeal. That may seem like a win, but the finer details reveal a legal framework that favors rightsholders so strongly, online services incurring liability for the actions of users seems inevitable.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
While judicial oversight may be initially unavoidable when site-blocking is first introduced to a country, systems with less friction are strongly preferred.
The law that supports Italy’s Piracy Shield system allows for blocking with no judicial oversight. An amendment passed quietly last year now allows rightsholders to block online resources without any input from telecoms regulator AGCOM. The system has almost no friction at the blocking stage. That comes at the cost of significant blunders, which could been prevented by proper checks and balances.
Details of a complaint alleging more unwarranted blocking reveal an unusual situation where the interpretation of new law and its blocking boundaries appear to be determined by rightsholders alone. There’s no case law to provide guidance and any complaints are handled at a significantly slower pace than initial blocking takes place.
DAZN added https://tizen.smartone-iptv.com and https://lg.smartone-iptv.com to the Piracy Shield blocking platform on August 18, rendering both inaccessible in Italy. This action is based on assertions that the domains were violating its Serie A football broadcasting rights.
According to AGCOM, DAZN’s evidence was supported by a declaration that the reported domain names are “unequivocally intended for the violation of copyright or related rights of audiovisual works,” including sporting events broadcast live.
The regulator’s report clearly states that DAZN’s declaration was provided “under its own responsibility.” On face value that seems to indicate that no other entity is responsible when things go wrong.
After being placed on the system, Italian ISPs blocked both resources. Two days later, on August 20, SmartOne filed a formal complaint with AGCOM to protest the blocking. An excerpt of that correspondence, translated but otherwise ‘as-is’, reads as follows;
The domains (DNS) belong to a Smart TV application, it’s a player and entertainment application agreed and approved by so many TV manufacturers like Samsung, LG, Hisense, Toshiba, VIDAA OS and so many others.
We don’t sell any contents and IPTV data, our domain includes the IPTV word and might cause confusion for so many parties, but we can provide any info or proof to show that we don’t offer any piracy contents or illegal contents. We hereby request to remove our domains from the block system: tizen.smartone-iptv.com, lg.smartone-iptv.com, and any other domain related to smartone- iptv.com […]
The subdomains in the two fully qualified domain names (FQDNs) supplied by DAZN suggest that each brand is allocated its own subdomain.
We can confirm that the subdomains androidtv, webos, foxxum, vestel and others also exist, indicating a typical setup for an app catering for different technical requirements on a per-manufacturer basis. Those FQDN subdomains are not blocked.
In its report responding to the complaint, AGCOM refers again to DAZN’s evidence, which clearly states content being made available, in violation of DAZN’s rights.
“From the checks carried out on the domain names reported through the relevant documentation attached by the reporting party, it appeared that the live broadcast of the matches of the Italian Serie A football championship were made available in violation of articles 1, paragraph 1, 12, 13, 16 and 78-bis, 78-ter, of the aforementioned law no 633/41,” AGCOM explains.
On September 2, 2024, SmartOne sent counter-arguments to AGCOM for use in the complaint procedure.
“We do not provide any content or transfer any matches or videos that are owned by any other company such as ‘Dazn’ or ‘la Società’ claims, the content operated on the program is under the user’s responsibility,” the communication reads.
“The links https:// tizen.smartone-iptv.com and https:// lg.smartone-iptv.com are links that contain some program operating files and do not contain any link to broadcasts of the Italian League, and we are ready to provide any other clarifications or other information.”
Nevertheless, DAZN had made its position clear and in its counter-arguments, refused to concede even an inch.
“These FQDNs were found to be linked to IP addresses that we reported for suspicious activity. Forensic analysis […] confirmed that the detected IP addresses are unique and directly linked to the illicit IPTV broadcasts,” DAZN said in its response.
“It is important to underline that, although Smartone-IPTV may initially appear as a simple generic player, the evidence collected and uploaded to the Piracy Shield Platform clearly indicates that it plays not only a Player role, but also an active role in the distribution of abusive content.”
Our checks on an unofficial Piracy Shield database revealed that both FQDNs were added to the blocklist on August 18, 2024, around 18:40. In both cases the main domain (smartone-iptv.com) operates via Cloudflare IP addresses, but the subdomains do not.
Each subdomain has its own IP address at hosting provider Hetzner Online which link to other domains, each with a reference to LG/Tizen. As DAZN points out, the IP addresses used are indeed unique.
What “active role” they play in the distribution of ‘abusive’ content isn’t immediately clear but neither the IP addresses nor the domains were put on the Piracy Shield blocklist. Why that’s the case given the role they allegedly play only makes things even more unusual.
AGCOM’s summing up of DAZN’s evidence and what that means for the complaint is a bit of a rollercoaster; it begins with good news for SmartOne, then cites information that suggests suspicion of illicit activity, but without sufficient confidence to act accordingly.
The SmartOne IPTV application does not provide pre-configured streaming video content lists, but these must be uploaded by users. In particular, SmartOne IPTV implements the ‘Upload playlist’ functionality via the web with which it is possible to create lists of content and distribute them to specifically accredited SmartOne users.
That said, the activity generally carried out by SmartOne IPTV appears to consist in a service for making available an application that allows access to IPTV channels uploaded by users, as well as making available a web control panel to manage the distribution of playlists and the related users associated with it.
However, in this case, through the reported FQDNs, SmartOne IPTV has made available its own FQDNs tizen.smartone-iptv.com and lg.smartone-iptv.com to allow access to its server and, through the next part of the address (which determines the complete URL), to access other servers with a presumed role of gateway to illegal IPTV, enabling access to the illegal content present on a third-party server.
Despite these allegations, AGCOM says that there’s no evidence to show that SmartOne is directly responsible for the illicit streams DAZN highlighted in its declaration.
“In fact, the IP source of the illegal video streaming traffic, as it appears in the report, is not directly attributable to the smartone-iptv.com domain but corresponds to companies that manage gateway services, as shown by the reverse DNS query,” AGCOM notes.
“Considering that the company SmartOne IPTV, although having, through the reported FQDNs, enabled access to illegal content present on third-party servers, does not originate said content through its own servers.”
With that, AGCOM accepted SmartOne’s complaint of August 20 and revoked the blocking orders against tizen.smartone-iptv.com and lg.smartone-iptv.com.
After finding no evidence to directly link SmartOne with the illegal streams mentioned in DAZN’s declaration, to the extent that the blocking measures were revoked, AGCOM’s decision has a sting in the tail for SmartOne.
Regardless of whether SmartOne customers load their own playlists, it must now implement proactive measures to ensure that content owned by DAZN isn’t accessed by end users of its platform, ever again.
Given that any of SmartOne’s users can choose to upload an IPTV playlist providing access to DAZN content, it may mean that compliance can only be achieved by preventing all users – not just Italians – from using its service, period.
AGCOM’s decision can be appealed at the Lazio Regional Court but whether SmartOne will do so is currently unknown.
AGCOM’s decision (110/24/CSP) is available here (pdf)
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
Vattenfall plant eine Expansion im deutschen Energiemarkt. Nach dem Verkauf des Berliner Fernwärmegeschäfts wird in den Ausbau erneuerbarer Energien investiert. (Vattenfall, Solarenergie)
Die USA haben TSMC angewiesen, keine für KI-Anwendungen geeigneten Chips mehr nach China zu liefern. (TSMC, Wirtschaft)
“You’ve taken this idea way too far,” a mentor told Prof. Fei-Fei Li.
During my first semester as a computer science graduate student at Princeton, I took COS 402: Artificial Intelligence. Toward the end of the semester, there was a lecture about neural networks. This was in the fall of 2008, and I got the distinct impression—both from that lecture and the textbook—that neural networks had become a backwater.
Neural networks had delivered some impressive results in the late 1980s and early 1990s. But then progress stalled. By 2008, many researchers had moved on to mathematically elegant approaches such as support vector machines.
I didn’t know it at the time, but a team at Princeton—in the same computer science building where I was attending lectures—was working on a project that would upend the conventional wisdom and demonstrate the power of neural networks. That team, led by Prof. Fei-Fei Li, wasn’t working on a better version of neural networks. They were hardly thinking about neural networks at all.
Das britische Start-up Space Solar will bis 2030 eine Demonstrationsanlage für weltraumgestützte Solarenergie bauen. (Solarenergie, Technologie)
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