See a garbage truck’s CNG cylinders explode after lithium-ion battery fire

It happened recently in Arlington Heights, Illinois.

Garbage truck fires are never ideal, but they are usually not catastrophic. When a fire broke out on December 6 in the back of a garbage truck making its Friday rounds through the Chicago suburb of Arlington Heights, the fire department responded within five minutes. Firefighters saw flames shooting five feet into the air out the back of the truck, and they prepared to put the fire out using hoses and water. Four minutes after their arrival on scene, however, the garbage truck exploded in rather spectacular fashion, injuring several firefighters and police officers, damaging several homes in the vicinity, and scattering debris through the neighborhood.

The truck, it turned out, was powered by compressed natural gas (CNG), stored in five carbon-fiber-wrapped cylinders on the roof. The cylinders had pressure relief valves installed that should have opened when they reached a temperature between 212° and 220° Fahrenheit (100°–140° Celsius). This would vent (flammable) methane gas into the atmosphere, often creating a powerful flamethrower but keeping the tanks from exploding under the rising pressure caused by the heat. In this case, however, all the pressure relief devices failed—and the CNG tanks exploded.

Fire officials now believe that the whole incident began when a resident improperly disposed of a lithium-ion battery by placing it in a recycling bin.

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Cloudflare Asks Court to End LaLiga’s “Illegal” Blocking Response to Encrypted Client Hello

After the gloves came off earlier this week, Cloudflare has asked a Spanish court to declare LaLiga’s “disproportionate” piracy blocking measures illegal. Details are currently scarce, but Cloudflare looks set to challenge the legitimacy of the court’s original order. LaLiga and Telefonica sought enhanced blocking measures to counter internet users’ adoption of Encrypted Client Hello.

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

The background to events currently underway in Spain is detailed in our earlier reports but can be summarized as follows.

Through various court orders, top Spanish football league LaLiga may issue instructions for local ISPs to block pirate streaming sites and IPTV services.

Blocking is carried out by domain, URL, IP address, or meddling with DNS entries. Those actions are based on information supplied by LaLiga each week, no scrutiny from the court required.

LaLiga and Cloudflare Collide

In an effort to mitigate the effects of blocking or benefit from other features, pirate sites using Cloudflare are less easily taken offline. That caused tempers to boil over at LaLiga and then keep boiling throughout the current two to three week crisis.

LaLiga’s general position is that since Cloudflare is in a position to make LaLiga’s life easier by tackling piracy, it has an obligation to do so. Cloudflare says that LaLiga will be treated just like other rightsholders, and given access to the same tools.

Precisely what LaLiga demanded and on what basis, remains unclear, but when Cloudflare refused to cooperate, LaLiga told ISPs to block Cloudflare IP addresses. That blocked the pirate services, but it also restricted access to Cloudflare’s customers’ websites and prevented people from visiting them.

LaLiga says that, if people have website issues, they should blame Cloudflare – while also getting ready for more because it won’t be backing down anytime soon.

Cloudflare, in turn, has now responded with legal action that asks a court to rule that LaLiga’s blocking is illegal, and then on that basis, revoke LaLiga’s authority to issue blocking instructions previously authorized by the court.

Cloudflare Statement

As a long-time advocate for the open Internet, Cloudflare provides security and reliability services that protect millions of websites from cyberattacks and strengthen the Internet’s infrastructure.

In recent weeks, LaLiga and the Spanish ISPs have wrongly attempted to address the issue of illegal streaming, on the purported basis of a recently issued ruling that would order the blocking of shared IP addresses of Cloudflare and other cloud service providers, a clumsy and ineffective approach that has prevented millions of users from accessing thousands of websites unrelated to such activities.

LaLiga obtained this ruling without addressing the cloud service providers, thereby concealing from the Court the foreseeable harm to third parties and the public interest. LaLiga’s actions pose a clear threat to the open Internet.

Cloudflare has today filed a motion to annul the ruling, seeking to establish that LaLiga’s disproportionate blocking measures are illegal.

Cloudflare routinely works with rights holders to help resolve issues such as illegal streaming, but LaLiga has left Cloudflare with no choice but to pursue this legal avenue. Rather than addressing Spanish users’ concerns about over-blocking of content, LaLiga has attempted to divert attention by making unfounded accusations against Cloudflare, while stepping up its illegal blocking practices.

Cloudflare hopes this court action will help prevent future indiscriminate blocking measures and make clear that rights holders cannot put their commercial interests before the fundamental right of millions of consumers to access an open Internet.

(Courtesy of Bandaancha, translated from Spanish)

Cloudflare’s mention of a recent ruling is interesting for several reasons. On a fundamental level, not involving Cloudflare in a process that directly affects its ability to go about its business, was likely to cause friction sooner or later.

Second, it appears that the motivation for the ruling in question turns out to be quite unusual.

Targeting ECH

The judgment in question, dated December 18, 2024, was issued by Commercial Court No. 6 of Barcelona following legal action by LaLiga and Telefónica Audiovisual Digital (owner of broadcaster Movistar Plus+), which requested ISPs including Vodafone, MásOrange, Digi and Movistar, to block pirate sites/services.

The unusual feature of the complaint is the focus on Encrypted Client Hello, or ECH for short. As highlighted earlier, this can effectively be used to bypass site blocking.

A brief explanation of ECH and its benefits to internet users is available from Cloudflare but in short, whenever a user visits a website on Cloudflare that has ECH enabled, intermediaries (like ISPs) will be able to see the user is visiting a site using Cloudflare, but won’t be able to identify which one.

Both Cloudflare and Google are mentioned in the LaLiga/Telefonica complaint, with ECH acknowledged as a hindrance to the companies’ site-blocking measures, in a section of the decision cited below.

This protocol, initially designed as a solution to alleged breaches in the area of ​​Internet users’ privacy, currently prevents the development of blocks by domains and URLs, as it allows traffic to be encrypted, and thus blocks can be made by domains and/or URLs, as Internet access service providers (ISPs) can no longer inspect the part relating to SNI5 necessary to apply blocks, according to reports on the application of the ECH protocol issued by LLCP and the anti-piracy department of [Telefonica].

The conclusion of the technical analysis is that the actual effectiveness of domain blocking (URLs/Domains) decreases as users use browsers (Google’s Chrome) that use ECH technology. A similar case occurs with Apple’s “Private Relay” feature, introduced as part of iCloud+, focused on web traffic.

According to Bandaancha, which published sections of the decision, the above issues were presented as justification for enhanced blocking measures against 119 entities, listed alongside their domain names, ports, IP addresses, and the hosting companies used.

LaLiga obtained permission to carry out dynamic blocking against new IP addresses, domains etc, in the event countermeasures were deployed by pirate sites.

Around 35 of the services are reportedly using Cloudflare and since the blocking measures requested were not considered “contrary to the law, public order or harmful to third parties,” the order was granted.

LaLiga used that authority to block the pirate sites, by blocking Cloudflare IP address and by extension, its users in Spain.

All in all, this case highlights the tension between copyright enforcement and intermediaries such as Cloudflare. The outcome could have significant implications for how these blocking issues are addressed in the future.

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

FTC investigates “tech censorship,” says it’s un-American and may be illegal

“Tech firms should not be bullying their users,” Chairman Andrew Ferguson says.

The Federal Trade Commission today announced a public inquiry into alleged censorship online, saying it wants "to better understand how technology platforms deny or degrade users' access to services based on the content of their speech or affiliations, and how this conduct may have violated the law."

"Tech firms should not be bullying their users," said FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson, who was chosen by President Trump to lead the commission. "This inquiry will help the FTC better understand how these firms may have violated the law by silencing and intimidating Americans for speaking their minds."

The FTC announcement said that "censorship by technology platforms is not just un-American, it is potentially illegal." Tech platforms' actions "may harm consumers, affect competition, may have resulted from a lack of competition, or may have been the product of anti-competitive conduct," the FTC said.

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AOOSTAR WTR Pro 4-bay NAS gets an Intel N150 “Twin Lake” option

The AOOSTAR WTR Pro is a relatively small desktop computer with room inside for up to four 3.5 inch hard drives and one M.2 2280 connector for an SSD. While the computer is positioned for use as a network attached storage (NAS) device, it’s basic…

The AOOSTAR WTR Pro is a relatively small desktop computer with room inside for up to four 3.5 inch hard drives and one M.2 2280 connector for an SSD. While the computer is positioned for use as a network attached storage (NAS) device, it’s basically a general purpose computer that supports a lot of storage. AOOSTAR […]

The post AOOSTAR WTR Pro 4-bay NAS gets an Intel N150 “Twin Lake” option appeared first on Liliputing.

Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti review: An RTX 4080 for $749, at least in theory

It’s hard to review a product if you don’t know what it will actually cost!

Nvidia's RTX 50-series makes its first foray below the $1,000 mark starting this week, with the $749 RTX 5070 Ti—at least in theory.

The third-fastest card in the Blackwell GPU lineup, the 5070 Ti is still far from "reasonably priced" by historical standards (the 3070 Ti was $599 at launch). But it's also $50 cheaper and a fair bit faster than the outgoing 4070 Ti Super and the older 4070 Ti. These are steps in the right direction, if small ones.

We'll talk more about its performance shortly, but at a high level, the 5070 Ti's performance falls in the same general range as the 4080 Super and the original RTX 4080, a card that launched for $1,199 just over two years ago. And it's probably your floor for consistently playable native 4K gaming for those of you out there who don't want to rely on DLSS or 4K upscaling to hit that resolution (it's also probably all the GPU that most people will need for high-FPS 1440p, if that's more your speed).

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Study: Cuttlefish adapt camouflage displays when hunting prey

They can take on the features of a mangrove leaf or branching coral, or run dark stripes down their bodies.

Crafty cuttlefish employ several different camouflaging displays while hunting their prey, according to a new paper published in the journal Ecology, including mimicking benign ocean objects like a leaf or coral, or flashing dark stripes down their bodies. And individual cuttlefish seem to choose different preferred hunting displays for different environments.

It's well-known that cuttlefish and several other cephalopods can rapidly shift the colors in their skin thanks to that skin's unique structure. As previously reported, squid skin is translucent and features an outer layer of pigment cells called chromatophores that control light absorption. Each chromatophore is attached to muscle fibers that line the skin's surface, and those fibers, in turn, are connected to a nerve fiber. It's a simple matter to stimulate those nerves with electrical pulses, causing the muscles to contract. And because the muscles are pulling in different directions, the cell expands, along with the pigmented areas, changing the color. When the cell shrinks, so do the pigmented areas.

Underneath the chromatophores, there is a separate layer of iridophores. Unlike the chromatophores, the iridophores aren't pigment-based but are an example of structural color, similar to the crystals in the wings of a butterfly, except a squid's iridophores are dynamic rather than static. They can be tuned to reflect different wavelengths of light. A 2012 paper suggested that this dynamically tunable structural color of the iridophores is linked to a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine. The two layers work together to generate the unique optical properties of squid skin.

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ISP sued by record labels agrees to identify 100 users accused of piracy

Legal discovery targets names of Altice users hit with copyright notices.

Cable company Altice agreed to give Warner and other record labels the names and contact information of 100 broadband subscribers who were accused of pirating songs.

The subscribers "were the subject of RIAA or third party copyright notices," said a court order that approved the agreement between Altice and the plaintiff record companies. Altice is notifying each subscriber "of Altice's intent to disclose their name and contact information to Plaintiffs pursuant to this Order," and telling the notified subscribers that they have 30 days to seek relief from the court.

If subscribers do not object within a month, Altice must disclose the subscribers' names, phone numbers, addresses, and email addresses. The judge's order was issued on February 12 and reported yesterday by TorrentFreak.

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SpaceX engineers brought on at FAA after probationary employees were fired

Hiring comes under policy creating “employment opportunities for people with disabilities.”

Engineers who work for Elon Musk’s SpaceX have been brought on as senior advisers to the acting administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), sources tell WIRED.

On Sunday, Sean Duffy, secretary of the Department of Transportation, which oversees the FAA, announced in a post on X that SpaceX engineers would be visiting the Air Traffic Control System Command Center in Virginia to take what he positioned as a tour. “The safety of air travel is a nonpartisan matter,” Musk replied. “SpaceX engineers will help make air travel safer.”

By the time these posts were made, though, according to sources who were granted anonymity because they fear retaliation, SpaceX engineers were already being onboarded at the agency under Schedule A, a special authority that allows government managers to “hire persons with disabilities without requiring them to compete for the job,” according to the Office of Personnel Management (OPM).

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Meta claims torrenting pirated books isn’t illegal without proof of seeding

Meta’s copyright defense may hinge on court ignorance of torrenting terminology.

Just because Meta admitted to torrenting a dataset of pirated books for AI training purposes, that doesn't necessarily mean that Meta seeded the file after downloading it, the social media company claimed in a court filing this week.

Evidence instead shows that Meta "took precautions not to 'seed' any downloaded files," Meta's filing said. Seeding refers to sharing a torrented file after the download completes, and because there's allegedly no proof of such "seeding," Meta insisted that authors cannot prove Meta shared the pirated books with anyone during the torrenting process.

Whether or not Meta actually seeded the pirated books could make a difference in a copyright lawsuit from book authors including Richard Kadrey, Sarah Silverman, and Ta-Nehisi Coates. Authors had previously alleged that Meta unlawfully copied and distributed their works through AI outputs—an increasingly common complaint that so far has barely been litigated. But Meta's admission to torrenting appears to add a more straightforward claim of unlawful distribution of copyrighted works through illegal torrenting, which has long been considered established case-law.

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