
Jahreswechsel: Massiver Cyberangriff auf Japan Airlines
Die Fluggesellschaft Japan Airlines ist am Donnerstag mit massiven betrieblichen Störungen konfrontiert worden. Der Grund: ein Cyberangriff. (Cybercrime, Cyberwar)

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Die Fluggesellschaft Japan Airlines ist am Donnerstag mit massiven betrieblichen Störungen konfrontiert worden. Der Grund: ein Cyberangriff. (Cybercrime, Cyberwar)
Russland hat die Verwendung von Bitcoin und anderen Kryptowährungen für internationale Handelstransaktionen eingeführt. (Bitcoin, Wirtschaft)
Erneut wurde unterseeische Infrastruktur in der Ostsee gestört. Diesmal handelt es sich um ein Stromkabel zwischen Finnland und Estland. (Energie & Klima, Ukrainekrieg)
How I tackled takeout, spices, and meal ideas with spreadsheets and Glide.
It started, like so many overwrought home optimization projects, during the pandemic.
My wife and I, like many people stuck inside, were ordering takeout more frequently. We wanted to support local restaurants, reduce the dish load, and live a little. It became clear early on that app-based delivery services like DoorDash and Uber Eats were not the best way to support local businesses. If a restaurant had its own ordering site or a preferred service, we wanted to use that—or even, heaven forfend, call the place.
The secondary issue was that we kept ordering from the same places, and we wanted to mix it up. Sometimes we'd want to pick something up nearby. Sometimes we wanted to avoid an entire category ("Too many carbs this week, no pasta") or try the newest places we knew about, or maybe a forgotten classic. Or just give me three places randomly, creative constraints, please—it's Friday.
Trotz neuer Technologien und Tools: Der Umstieg von Red auf Unreal Engine 5 bei The Witcher 4 ist für die Entwickler offenbar machbar. (Unreal Engine 5, Rollenspiel)
What do eating rocks, rat genitals, and Willy Wonka have in common? AI, of course.
It's been a wild year in tech thanks to the intersection between humans and artificial intelligence. 2024 brought a parade of AI oddities, mishaps, and wacky moments that inspired odd behavior from both machines and man. From AI-generated rat genitals to search engines telling people to eat rocks, this year proved that AI has been having a weird impact on the world.
Why the weirdness? If we had to guess, it may be due to the novelty of it all. Generative AI and applications built upon Transformer-based AI models are still so new that people are throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks. People have been struggling to grasp both the implications and potential applications of the new technology. Riding along with the hype, different types of AI that may end up being ill-advised, such as automated military targeting systems, have also been introduced.
It's worth mentioning that aside from crazy news, we saw fewer weird AI advances in 2024 as well. For example, Claude 3.5 Sonnet launched in June held off the competition as a top model for most of the year, while OpenAI's o1 used runtime compute to expand GPT-4o's capabilities with simulated reasoning. Advanced Voice Mode and NotebookLM also emerged as novel applications of AI tech, and the year saw the rise of more capable music synthesis models and also better AI video generators, including several from China.
Nachts blinken Windräder, um Flugzeuge zu warnen. Das strapaziert viele Menschen. Nun soll der Störfaktor weitestgehend abgeschafft werden. (Windkraft, Erneuerbare Energien)
Frisches Geld für mehr Rechenpower: Das von Elon Musk gegründete Unternehmen xAI hat unter anderem Nvidia und AMD als Investoren gewonnen. (Elon Musk, KI)
Gefertigt aus Aluminium, Tasten mit 800 Mikrolöchern: Ein Keyboard namens The Icebreaker bietet interessante Technik – zu einem hohen Preis. (Tastatur, Eingabegerät)
According to a phrase popularized by Carl Sagan, extraordinary claims should be supported by extraordinary evidence. A new piracy scare story published on Sunday takes a different approach. The extraordinary claim is that fake IPTV portals run by law enforcement are entrapping “ordinary users” to obtain evidence of their crimes. Supported by exactly zero evidence, the report claims that hundreds of internet users have already been identified.
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
In the post-Napster, pre-YouTube world of 2004, a peculiar TV miniseries began to circulate online.
The main character in The Scene went by the nickname Drosan. He was a member of a piracy release group called CPX and soon found himself up to his neck in drama after selling leaked movies to contacts in Asia.
While entertained and intrigued by the storyline, the show’s target pirate audience became more suspicious with every passing episode. Conspiracy theories were shared back and forth, gaining traction thanks to the discovery of on-screen ‘evidence’ and perceived hints and clues.
Were The Scene’s video files acting as bait to identify pirates in the now-booming BitTorrent community? Was the storyline about to coincide with real world events, a major bust perhaps, with viewers somehow implicated in a forthcoming crackdown?
Perhaps more urgently, were some pirate sites actually honeypots set up by the feds and, if so, which ones were safe? In that paranoia-soaked, mostly VPN-less era, the honeypot theory made perfect sense. Two decades later, could the same hold true?
After constantly hearing about pirate IPTV providers in the media, it’s inevitable that some people will want to try things out for themselves. For those with no experience, search engine results are unpredictable at best and there’s always a risk of spending money and getting nothing in return.
Launched last year in the UK, the BeStreamWise anti-piracy campaign showed how regular people blindly handed over their names, addresses, and credit card details, for a streaming service that didn’t even exist. Yet, according to a Repubblica report published on Sunday, potential IPTV subscription buyers in Italy face something much worse.
“If you’re thinking of subscribing to a pirate site, if you dream of watching football matches, dramas, films, and TV shows for just a handful of euros a year, take into account that not everything will end smoothly,” the report begins.
“For a year, law enforcement has deployed a weapon capable of disrupting the plans of [pirate IPTV] customers. The pirate site that asks you to share your name and surname, including your personal credit card, could actually be the subject of investigators.”
Since the rest of what promises to be a big story sits behind a subscription paywall, once again it’s time to hand over credit card details to online strangers and then hope for the best.
Experienced IPTV subscribers report that a good quality pirate service can be mistaken for the real thing. The article claims that bogus pirate IPTV portals operated by law enforcement are so perfect, they’re “completely indistinguishable” from real pirate sites. So with the initial deception a success, what now?
“For a year now, there have been decoy sites (created by law enforcement) on the Internet that have a specific goal: to attract ordinary users by acquiring proof of their illegitimate conduct,” the report notes.
“In the hands of investigators, there are thus hundreds of names of Italians who have tried to enjoy Serie A or the best fiction, but without subscribing legally to DAZN, Sky, Infinity.”
The report strongly implies that these sites exist to lure in unsuspecting customers, gather evidence of wrongdoing, then use self-provided names and addresses to issue fines. It doesn’t state that directly but most reasonable readers seem likely to draw that conclusion.
“The initiative by law enforcement is part of a specific strategy that is very popular with both DAZN and Serie A,” the piece continues, adding: “[T]hey are calling for fines – from 500 to 5,000 euros – for ordinary people who do not pay a regular subscription.”
The revelation that those employed to uphold the law are using deception to encourage new offenses, sounds like a pretty big story. A 2022 analysis (pdf) of so-called sting operations and entrapment defenses in Italy, Europe, and the United States, notes the following:
“Art. 55 of the Italian code of criminal procedure provides that the Judicial Police has the duty to ‘prevent crimes from being carried to further consequences, search for the perpetrators, carry out the necessary acts to secure evidence and collect whatever else may be useful under the law.’
“For this reason, without reform, there is no room in Art. 55 c.p.p. to include ‘inciting to committing a crime’ among public officials’ functions, as, under Italian law, a duty to prevent further consequences stands, and it forbids any kind of instigation conduct.”
More fundamentally, perhaps, is whether a crime has been committed at all. In two cases handled by different judges this year, 23 pirate IPTV subscribers were acquitted due to there being no evidence of a crime. The general principle that criminal law should not be invoked when another branch of law can be used to solve an issue was applied here; all defendants received small administrative fines of 150 euros instead.
In summary, we have an unsourced claim that bogus pirate IPTV portals, designed to deceive “ordinary people” (the term is used twice in the article), have been operated by law enforcement in Italy for the last year. The alleged purpose is to gather evidence in support of an administrative offense punishable by a 150 euro fine, if indeed any offenses were even committed by the hundreds of people reportedly identified.
On the balance of probabilities, the scenario as portrayed seems unlikely at best. If the storyline had appeared in The Scene back in 2004, the conspiracy theorists may have struggled with the lack of substance, but that alone rules nothing out.
Incidentally, the creators of The Scene denied having an agenda; the idea that the show was “some kind of anti-piracy propaganda is truly silly,” director Mitchell Reichgut later said. Some still had their suspicions and not entirely without cause.
It later transpired that one of the people behind the show was Bruce Forest, a long-time member of the secretive piracy community known as The Scene, from where the show obtained its name. Forest, the self-styled Prince of Darknet, later admitted that for much of the time he’d also been working undercover for the entertainment industry.
“I guess you can call me a true double agent,” he said. “I lead a very comfortable double life.”
From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.
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