After escaping net neutrality probe, Verizon expands data cap exemptions

With net neutrality worries gone, FiOS TV goes “data-free” on Verizon Wireless.

Enlarge / Verizon's FiOS mobile app. (credit: Verizon)

Just a few weeks after escaping a net neutrality investigation into data cap exemptions, Verizon has decided to let its FiOS mobile video stream on its wireless network without counting against data caps.

Customers who have Verizon FiOS TV at home and a Verizon Wireless smartphone plan can watch TV outside their homes without using up the data allotments on limited mobile plans, the company announced today. Just two months ago, the Federal Communications Commission accused Verizon Wireless of violating net neutrality rules by letting its Go90 video service stream without counting against customers' data caps as the company charged other video providers for the same data cap exemptions (also known as "zero-rating"). But the FCC's new Republican leadership rescinded that claim and ended the investigation last month, giving carriers the green light to expand data cap exemptions.

Verizon's Go90 mobile video service hasn't been a smashing success, and 155 employees were reportedly laid off as a result in January. But Verizon has 4.7 million FiOS TV subscribers, and the data cap exemptions might make them more likely to pay for Verizon's mobile service as well.

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KickassTorrents Defense Fights Extradition and Human Rights Violations

The legal defense team of alleged KickassTorrents owner Artem Vaulin says it will appeal last week’s extradition ruling. Lead counsel Ira Rothken stresses that the refusal of the Polish court to grant bail and the unprecedented allegations violate the human rights of his client. The team is confident that they can book a positive outcome on all fronts.

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

Last week a Polish court ruled that Artem Vaulin, the alleged owner of KickassTorrents, can be extradited to the United States.

The decision came as a disappointment to the defense and lead counsel Ira Rothken informs TorrentFreak that they are planning to appeal the initial verdict.

Rothken just returned from a trip to Warsaw, where he met with Vaulin for the first time since his arrest last summer. Before last week he was not allowed to meet with his US counsel, so this represents a small breakthrough.

The alleged KickassTorrents owner still suffers back pain and is currently being treated in prison, where Vaulin and his counsel spoke extensively about the merits of the case as well as potential human rights violations.

“Artem is presumed innocent and the failure to provide him with bail in a novel copyright case on mere torrent files, which is an alleged non-violent crime, violates his human rights,” Rothken says.

“Artem’s incarceration makes it so he can’t meaningfully participate in his defense in a complex Internet copyright case where logically he needs access to the Internet to assist his global legal team.”

KickassTorrents’ defense team is now aiming for a positive outcome in Poland’s appellate court, as well as a win at the European Court of Human Rights.

The Human Rights case will also be, in part, based on the unprecedented punishment the alleged KAT owner faces.

The US indictment mentions over a billion dollars in alleged damage to the entertainment industries and suggests that Vaulin is liable for the criminal infringements of millions of KickassTorrent users.

Each separate offense amounts to several years in prison, bringing the total to a potential sentence of millions of years, which is unprecedented and a record even for the US, Rothken argues.

In addition to the Human Rights complaint, which is still being drafted, the defense has a motion pending in the U.S. where the defense urged the Illinois District Court to dismiss the indictment.

In February, Rothken argued that the case should be dropped since there’s no proof of actual criminal copyright infringement. The US prosecutor disagreed, however, describing KickassTorrents as a piracy haven that made millions of dollars per year.

Earlier this week the prosecution informed the Court about the Polish extradition ruling, but the defense swiftly countered that this should not impact the U.S. decision.

“We are hopeful that the United States Court will promptly rule on the pending motion to dismiss the indictment. We believe the indictment is defective and the motion to dismiss will be granted,” Rothken tells TorrentFreak.

“We also believe if the indictment is found defective then the US extradition request in Poland based on a defective and thus unreliable indictment should fail as a matter of law,” he adds.

As the above shows, the case continues on multiple fronts during the weeks to come. Despite the initial setback in Poland, the defense team remains confident about a positive outcome.

For their part, the US hopes that the extradition will go ahead and that the alleged KickassTorrents operator will argue his case during a trial in the United States.

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

Rumor: MediaTek is working on a 7nm, 12-core chip

Rumor: MediaTek is working on a 7nm, 12-core chip

MediaTek was the first mobile chip maker to launch a 10-core processor aimed at smartphones, and the company’s latest deca-core processor is also one of the first chips to be built on a 10nm process. So what’s next? Rumor has it that the company is already working on 7nm, 12-core chips. That’s according to “industry […]

Rumor: MediaTek is working on a 7nm, 12-core chip is a post from: Liliputing

Rumor: MediaTek is working on a 7nm, 12-core chip

MediaTek was the first mobile chip maker to launch a 10-core processor aimed at smartphones, and the company’s latest deca-core processor is also one of the first chips to be built on a 10nm process. So what’s next? Rumor has it that the company is already working on 7nm, 12-core chips. That’s according to “industry […]

Rumor: MediaTek is working on a 7nm, 12-core chip is a post from: Liliputing

Techrules shows how to make EVs interesting: Just add a jet engine

Turbine-powered range extender supercar is just the beginning for Chinese tech firm.

Newspress

Like all auto shows, Geneva has its share of vaporware projects that never go beyond the first hopeful display of dreams. Most people would have filed Techrules' turbine hybrid, seen in concept form a year ago, in the same category. But at this year's Geneva International Motor Show, which opened to the public on March 9, the Chinese R&D company was back with a production version of its supercar—and big plans for more accessible machines based on the same formula.

That formula is as simple as it is breathtaking. The Techrules Ren—the name comes from a Chinese word that roughly translates as ‘benevolence'—is a carbon composite supercar with race-style pushrod suspension and a modular layout with up to three seats. Power comes from TREV, the Turbine-Recharging Electric Vehicle system that uses one or more micro-turbines to drive generators that recharge the vehicle's lithium polymer batteries and power up to six traction motors.

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WikiLeaks promises to help tech companies fix security vulnerabilities

WikiLeaks promises to help tech companies fix security vulnerabilities

This week WikiLeaks released thousands of pages of documents related to the CIA’s tools for hacking smartphones, computers, and other devices. But the anti-secrecy organization says the full “Vault 7” archive also contains more code and technical details which haven’t yet been released. Now WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says the organization will share details with […]

WikiLeaks promises to help tech companies fix security vulnerabilities is a post from: Liliputing

WikiLeaks promises to help tech companies fix security vulnerabilities

This week WikiLeaks released thousands of pages of documents related to the CIA’s tools for hacking smartphones, computers, and other devices. But the anti-secrecy organization says the full “Vault 7” archive also contains more code and technical details which haven’t yet been released. Now WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says the organization will share details with […]

WikiLeaks promises to help tech companies fix security vulnerabilities is a post from: Liliputing

Google retools Hangouts for business with Hangouts Chat and Meet text and video services

Google retools Hangouts for business with Hangouts Chat and Meet text and video services

Google’s strategy for messaging apps has been a bit of a mess in recent years, but the company is hoping to clear things up (for real this time!) by focusing on Allo and Duo chat and video apps for consumers, and turning Hangouts into more of an enterprise service. To that end, today Google has […]

Google retools Hangouts for business with Hangouts Chat and Meet text and video services is a post from: Liliputing

Google retools Hangouts for business with Hangouts Chat and Meet text and video services

Google’s strategy for messaging apps has been a bit of a mess in recent years, but the company is hoping to clear things up (for real this time!) by focusing on Allo and Duo chat and video apps for consumers, and turning Hangouts into more of an enterprise service. To that end, today Google has […]

Google retools Hangouts for business with Hangouts Chat and Meet text and video services is a post from: Liliputing

Net neutrality hurts health care and helps porn, Republican senator claims

Does the senator’s argument make any sense? Let’s look at the facts.

Enlarge / Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.). (credit: Getty Images | Bill Clark)

Republican senators yesterday claimed that net neutrality rules are hurting broadband network investment and urged Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai to overturn them.

“Chairman Pai, I would encourage you and the commission to revisit that order and to rescind it in its entirety,” Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said during an FCC oversight hearing held by the Senate Commerce Committee yesterday. “I believe you would have the support of a majority of this committee and substantial support in Congress.”

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) agreed that net neutrality rules harm ISP investment and offered a lengthy analogy to explain why.

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Google is turning Hangouts into a Slack competitor

Google Hangouts finally gets that “enterprise” overhaul we’ve been hearing about…

With the launch of Google Allo—Google's newest (and something like ninth) instant messaging client—Google's older IM service, Google Hangouts, was put on notice. The company didn't have much concrete information on what it would do with Hangouts, only offering a vague indication that it would get a reboot focused on "business." Today, the company showed off the future of Hangouts: it's going to be a Slack competitor.

"Hangouts Chat" is Google's latest entry in the communication space, after the Android SMS app, Google Talk, Voice, Buzz, G+ Messenger, Hangouts, Spaces, and Allo. This one is a straight-up Slack clone, with rooms people can join and auto-completed @[username] mentions. Discussions are threaded, a feature Slack has been experimenting with recently, but in Hangouts Chat, threading seems to be much more front and center. While Slack is "optionally threaded," Hangouts Chat is more like "threaded by default"—the main input bar is actually labeled "Create a new discussion."

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On the heels of Zika comes its deadlier relative, yellow fever, experts warn

Outbreaks in Brazil are raging close to urban areas that could spark another big issue.

Enlarge (credit: Getty | RolfAasa)

Unusually active outbreaks of yellow fever in rural areas of Brazil are stoking fears among experts that the deadly mosquito virus could go the way of Zika and spark a massive and devastating epidemic in the Americas.

In a commentary published Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, infectious disease experts at the National Institutes of Health note that, so far, the outbreaks are mostly in rural areas and involve forest mosquitoes transmitting the virus to nonhuman primates as well as incidental humans. Since February, there have been 234 confirmed human infections, with 80 deaths and hundreds more cases currently under investigation. But those outbreaks are encroaching on densely packed urban areas.

“This proximity raises concern that, for the first time in decades, urban transmission of yellow fever will occur in Brazil,” experts Catharine Paules, of the NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Anthony S. Fauci, director of the NIAID, write.

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Dear Confide: “We would never” isn’t the same as “we can’t”

Confidential messenger service provides no authentication or integrity assurances.

Enlarge (credit: Confide)

A pair of damning advisories independently published Wednesday raise serious questions about the security assurances of Confide, a messaging app that's billed as providing "battle tested, military grade" end-to-end encryption and is reportedly being used by individuals inside the US government.

One of bulletins, published by security firm Quarkslab, warned that current versions of Confide—including those available for Macs, PCs, iPhones, Android devices, and Apple Watches—don't provide true end-to-end encryption at all, at least as that term is commonly defined. Unlike competing secure messaging app Signal—which prevents even authorized insiders from accessing the keys needed to decrypt messages—Confide engineers, or people who hack the Confide service, can easily create keys that can be used to decrypt messages as they're sent in real time.

Quarkslab researcher Jean-Baptiste Bédrune tested Confide and found that the main encryption layer protecting messages in transit is transport layer security (TLS), a protocol that's trivial for authorized people inside Confide to turn off. TLS has faced its share of bypass hacks over the more than two decades it has been in use. In Wednesday's post Bédrune wrote:

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