Breitbart, other conservative outlets escalate anti-SpaceX campaign

In Washington D.C., politics sometimes matter more than a rocket’s power or price.

Enlarge / SpaceX has launched 16 rockets this year, including two national security missions for the US military. (credit: SpaceX)

The articles began appearing in late August, mostly in conservative publications such as Town Hall, Breitbart, and the Daily Caller and have since continued to trickle out through October. All of the dozen or so web commentaries, variously styled as op-eds or contributions, have made the same essential point—that Elon Musk is benefiting from crony capitalism and must be stopped.

This is not a particularly new line of attack against Musk, especially among some conservatives who decry the public money his companies have received to build solar power facilities, electric cars, and low-cost rockets. Yet most of these articles have been quite specific in their attacks, pinpointing a single section in the 2018 National Defense Authorization Act as particularly troublesome to the republic.

The articles, several of which are written by former US Rep. Ron Paul or his associates, have the same general theme: Musk has given lavishly to politicians, especially Arizona senator John McCain (R). In return, McCain added Section 1615 to this year's defense authorization bill, which includes language to restrict the military from investing in new launch systems. With this language, the articles assert, Musk seeks a monopoly on the US national security launch market. In addition to fleecing taxpayers, some of the more overdone authors assert this could kill Americans.

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Vastking G800 is like a cross between a Nintendo Switch and a Windows tablet

Chinese company Vastking is showing off a new tablet with an 8 inch full HD display, an Intel Apollo Lake processor, and up to 6GB of RAM. Oh, and it has removable game controllers that can attach to the sides of the tablet, making the Vastking G800 lo…

Chinese company Vastking is showing off a new tablet with an 8 inch full HD display, an Intel Apollo Lake processor, and up to 6GB of RAM. Oh, and it has removable game controllers that can attach to the sides of the tablet, making the Vastking G800 look like a Nintendo Switch. You can’t buy […]

Vastking G800 is like a cross between a Nintendo Switch and a Windows tablet is a post from: Liliputing

New science fiction and fantasy books to help you escape this holiday season

Get ready for sentient bread, state-controlled magic, Moon heists, and djinn cities.

Enlarge / Cover detail from New York 2150, by Kim Stanley Robinson. (credit: Illustration by Stephan Martiniere)

It is the dreaded season of airport delays, family "fun," and long weekends spent in delightful locations with no cellular reception. That means it's book reading time! Whether you want to fire up your brain or just need to escape, we've got a handful of new releases from 2017 in science fiction and fantasy that should keep you distracted for as long as you need.

Sourdough, by Robin Sloan

If you've ever worked insane hours at a tech job, not knowing whether anything you do will make a difference, this novel is for you. Sloan is the author of the bestseller Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore, and his second novel Sourdough is just as delightful and weird. Lois spends all day writing software for robotic arms at a startup, where she's beginning to feel numbed out and depressed. All her colleagues are obsessed with drinking Slurry, a Soylent-like food substitute, but her only joy in life is ordering the "double spicy" soup and sandwich from a local popup in her neighborhood. Eventually the guys who run the popup skip town but leave Lois with their special, secret sourdough starter. Lois becomes fascinated with making her own bread, eventually joining a strange community of scientist chefs who ask her to make bread with robot arms. Things get even more bizarro from there, taking us deep into the world of yeast biohackers. Throughout it all we're buoyed by Sloane's funny-but-sometimes-dark observations about the San Francisco tech scene.

Null States, by Malka Older

We loved Infomocracy, the first novel in Older's Centenal series about a newly born global democracy on the brink of destruction. Null States, the sequel, just came out. After a nationalist party almost wrecks the election, using a combination of fake news propaganda and targeted violence, peace has been (kind of) restored. But now the newly elected Supermajority must convince the world of its legitimacy. Plus the Google-like information company that manages the elections must recover from internal corruption.

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Crypto-Messenger: Signal-Desktop-Client wechselt von Chrome auf Electron

Der Crypto-Messenger Signal nutzt für seinen Desktop-Client nun Electron als Basis statt Chrome-Apps. Der Client ist damit unabhängig vom Browser nutzbar und eine eigenständige Anwendung. Linux-Nutzer werden vorerst aber nur teilweise bedient. (Securit…

Der Crypto-Messenger Signal nutzt für seinen Desktop-Client nun Electron als Basis statt Chrome-Apps. Der Client ist damit unabhängig vom Browser nutzbar und eine eigenständige Anwendung. Linux-Nutzer werden vorerst aber nur teilweise bedient. (Security, iPhone)

Coradia iLint: Brennstoffzellenzug von Alstom soll in Brandenburg fahren

Schluss mit Diesel: Pendler aus dem Berliner Umland sollen künftig mit sauberen Zügen fahren. Die brandenburgische Eisenbahngesellschaft NBB will sie mit Brennstoffzellenzügen befördern. (Verkehr, Technologie)

Schluss mit Diesel: Pendler aus dem Berliner Umland sollen künftig mit sauberen Zügen fahren. Die brandenburgische Eisenbahngesellschaft NBB will sie mit Brennstoffzellenzügen befördern. (Verkehr, Technologie)

Windows 10: Gratis-Upgrade für Nutzer von Assistenztechnik endet bald

Die unbestimmte Zeit wird zum bestimmten Termin: Silvester 2017 ist der letzte Tag, an dem Nutzer von spezieller Peripherie für die alternative Bedienung ihr Betriebssystem kostenlos auf Windows 10 aktualisieren können. Der Stichtag kommt still und une…

Die unbestimmte Zeit wird zum bestimmten Termin: Silvester 2017 ist der letzte Tag, an dem Nutzer von spezieller Peripherie für die alternative Bedienung ihr Betriebssystem kostenlos auf Windows 10 aktualisieren können. Der Stichtag kommt still und unerwartet. (Barrierefreiheit, Microsoft)

Smartphone-Kameras im Test: Die beste Kamera ist die, die man dabeihat

Der Herbst 2017 hat uns einige neue Smartphones im Topbereich beschert – und damit auch eine Reihe an sehr guten Smartphone-Kameras. Aber welche ist die beste? Wir haben uns vier aktuelle Geräte geschnappt und genau verglichen. Ein Test von Tobias Költ…

Der Herbst 2017 hat uns einige neue Smartphones im Topbereich beschert - und damit auch eine Reihe an sehr guten Smartphone-Kameras. Aber welche ist die beste? Wir haben uns vier aktuelle Geräte geschnappt und genau verglichen. Ein Test von Tobias Költzsch (Smartphone, Google)

ARM-Prozessoren: Macom verkauft Applied Micro

Die X-Gene-Chips haben einen neuen Besitzer: Macom hat Applied Micros Compute-Sparte an eine Investorengruppe veräußert, die dort als Project Denver Holdings neu aufgestellt wird. Wie es mit den ARM-Server-CPUs weitergeht, bleibt vorerst unklar. (Proze…

Die X-Gene-Chips haben einen neuen Besitzer: Macom hat Applied Micros Compute-Sparte an eine Investorengruppe veräußert, die dort als Project Denver Holdings neu aufgestellt wird. Wie es mit den ARM-Server-CPUs weitergeht, bleibt vorerst unklar. (Prozessor, Server)

Microsoft: Pubg erscheint Mitte Dezember 2017 für die Xbox One

Viel los bei Playerunknown’s Battlegrounds (Pubg): Mitte Dezember 2017 soll im Rahmen einer Game Preview die offizielle Umsetzung für die Xbox One erscheinen. Wenig später soll von dem Actionspiel dann auch Version 1.0 für Windows-PCs fertig sein. (Playerunknown’s Battlegrounds, Microsoft)

Viel los bei Playerunknown's Battlegrounds (Pubg): Mitte Dezember 2017 soll im Rahmen einer Game Preview die offizielle Umsetzung für die Xbox One erscheinen. Wenig später soll von dem Actionspiel dann auch Version 1.0 für Windows-PCs fertig sein. (Playerunknown's Battlegrounds, Microsoft)

Trolls Want to Seize Alleged Movie Pirates’ Computers

New legal cases filed on behalf of copyright trolls are requesting authority to seize alleged pirates’ computers after they failed to pay cash settlement offers. A Finnish law firm says there’s a risk of another ‘Chisugate’, the massive controversy that ensued when police raided a home and confiscated a child’s Winne the Pooh laptop in 2012.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

Five years ago, a massive controversy swept Finland. Local anti-piracy group CIAPC (known locally as TTVK) sent a letter to a man they accused of illegal file-sharing.

The documents advised the man to pay a settlement of 600 euros and sign a non-disclosure document, to make a threatened file-sharing lawsuit disappear. He made the decision not to cave in.

Then, in November 2012, there was an 8am call at the man’s door. Police, armed with a search warrant, said they were there to find evidence of illicit file-sharing. Eventually the culprit was found. It was the man’s 9-year-old daughter who had downloaded an album by local multi-platinum-selling songstress Chisu from The Pirate Bay, a whole year earlier.

Police went on to seize the child’s Winnie the Pooh-branded laptop and Chisu was horrified, posting public apologies on the Internet to her young fans. Five years on, it seems that pro-copyright forces in Finland are treading the same path.

Turre Legal, a law firm involved in defending file-sharing matters, has issued a warning that copyright trolls have filed eight new cases at the Market Court, the venue for previous copyright battles in the country.

“According to information provided by the Market Court, Crystalis Entertainment, previously active in such cases, filed three new copyright cases and initiated five pre-trial applications in October 2017,” says lawyer Herkko Hietanen.

The involvement of Crystalis Entertainment adds further controversy into the mix. The company isn’t an official movie distributor but obtained the rights to distribute content on BitTorrent networks instead. It doesn’t do so officially, instead preferring to bring prosecutions against file-sharers’ instead.

Like the earlier ‘Chisu’ case, the trolls’ law firms have moved extremely slowly. Hietanen reports that some of the new cases reference alleged file-sharing that took place two years ago in 2015.

“It would seem that right-holders want to show that even old cases may have to face justice,” says Hietanen.

“However, applications for enforceability may be a pre-requisite for computer confiscation by a bailiff for independent investigations. It is possible that seizures of the teddy bears of the past years will make a comeback,” he added, referencing the ‘Chisu’ case.

Part of the reason behind the seizure requests is that some people defending against copyright trolls have been obtaining reports from technical experts who have verified that no file-sharing software is present on their machines. The trolls say that this is a somewhat futile exercise since any ‘clean’ machine can be presented for inspection. On this basis, seizure on site is a better option.

While the moves for seizure are somewhat aggressive, things haven’t been getting easier for copyright trolls in Finland recently.

In February 2017, an alleged file-sharer won his case when a court ruled that copyright holders lacked sufficient evidence to show that the person in question downloaded the files, in part because his Wi-Fi network was open to the public

Then, in the summer of 2017, the Market Court tightened the parameters under which Internet service providers are compelled to hand over the identities of suspected file-sharers to copyright owners.

The Court determined that this could only happen in serious cases of unlawful distribution. This, Hietanen believes, is partially the reason that the groups behind the latest cases are digging up old infringements.

“After the verdict of the summer, I assumed that rightsholders would have to operate with old information, at least for a while,” he says. “Rightsholders want to show that litigation is still possible.”

The big question, of course, is what people should do if they receive a settlement letter. In some jurisdictions, the advice is to ignore, until proper legal documentation arrives.

Hietanen says the matter in Finland is serious and should be treated as such. There’s always a possibility that after failing to receive a response, a copyright holder could go to court to obtain a default judgment, meaning the alleged file-sharer is immediately found guilty.

In the current cases, the Market Court will now have to decide whether unannounced seizures are required to preserve evidence. For cases already dating back two years, there will be plenty of discussions to be had, for and against. But in the meantime, Hedman Partners, the company representing the copyright trolls, warn that more cases are on the way.

“We have put in place new requests for information after the summer. We have a large number of complaints in preparation. More are coming,” lawyer Joni Hatanmaa says.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.