Selbstfahrendes Auto: VWs autonomer Golf heißt Sedric

Volkswagen hat vor dem Genfer Automobilsalon sein Konzept für ein selbstfahrendes Auto vorgestellt. Sedric heißt das Konzeptfahrzeug, das eigenständig die Kinder zur Schule bringt und Einkäufe abholt. (VW, Technologie)

Volkswagen hat vor dem Genfer Automobilsalon sein Konzept für ein selbstfahrendes Auto vorgestellt. Sedric heißt das Konzeptfahrzeug, das eigenständig die Kinder zur Schule bringt und Einkäufe abholt. (VW, Technologie)

Neuauflage: Das iPhone 6 ist mit 32 GByte zurück

Apple bringt das knapp drei Jahre alte iPhone 6 wieder auf den Markt. Das alte Smartphone mit 4,7 Zoll großem Display wird mit 32 GByte großem Speicher verkauft, allerdings nur in einigen Ländern. (iPhone 6, Smartphone)

Apple bringt das knapp drei Jahre alte iPhone 6 wieder auf den Markt. Das alte Smartphone mit 4,7 Zoll großem Display wird mit 32 GByte großem Speicher verkauft, allerdings nur in einigen Ländern. (iPhone 6, Smartphone)

Playbase im Hands On: Sonos bringt kraftvolles Lautsprechersystem fürs Heimkino

Mit der Playbase hat Sonos ein neues Lautsprechersystem vorgestellt, das insgesamt zehn Speaker in einem Gehäuse vereint. Die Playbase wird unter einen Fernseher gestellt und sorgt für einen satten Klang und eine gute Kanaltrennung, wie Golem.de in einem ersten Höreindruck feststellen konnte. Ein Hands on von Tobias Költzsch (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

Mit der Playbase hat Sonos ein neues Lautsprechersystem vorgestellt, das insgesamt zehn Speaker in einem Gehäuse vereint. Die Playbase wird unter einen Fernseher gestellt und sorgt für einen satten Klang und eine gute Kanaltrennung, wie Golem.de in einem ersten Höreindruck feststellen konnte. Ein Hands on von Tobias Költzsch (Sonos, Sound-Hardware)

It’s finally over: Mastermind behind Prenda Law porn trolls pleads guilty

Disgraced lawyer made $6 million filing lawsuits over porn—some of which he filmed.

(credit: Steele Law Firm)

One of the attorneys behind the Prenda Law "copyright trolling" scheme has pleaded guilty to federal charges of fraud and money laundering.

After years of denial, John Steele admitted Monday that he and co-defendant Paul Hansmeier made more than $6 million by threatening Internet users with copyright lawsuits.

It's perfectly legal to sue Internet pirates—but not the way Steele did it. Steele and Hansmeier set up "sham entities" to get copyrights to pornographic movies, "some of which they filmed themselves," according to the Department of Justice's statement on the plea. Steele and Hansmeier then uploaded those movies to file-sharing websites such as The Pirate Bay, and then sued the people who downloaded the content.

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This hard drive will self destruct. Data-wiping malware targets Europe

Meaner strain of Shamoon makes comeback, joined by new, never-before disk wiper.

Enlarge (credit: William Warby)

Shamoon—the mysterious disk wiper that popped up out nowhere in 2012 and took out more than 35,000 computers in a Saudi Arabian-owned gas company before disappearing—is back. Its new, meaner design has been unleashed three time since November. What's more, a new wiper developed in the same style as Shamoon has been discovered targeting a petroleum company in Europe, where wipers used in the Middle East have not previously been seen.

Researchers from Moscow-based antivirus provider Kaspersky Lab have dubbed the new wiper "StoneDrill." They found it while they were researching the trio of Shamoon attacks, which occurred on two dates in November and one date in late January. The refurbished Shamoon 2.0 added new tools and techniques, including less reliance on outside command-and-control servers, a fully functional ransomware module, and new 32-bit and 64-bit components.

StoneDrill, meanwhile, features an impressive ability to evade detection by, among other things, forgoing the use of disk drivers during installation. To accomplish this, it injects a wiping module into the computer memory associated with the user's preferred browser. StoneDrill also includes backdoor functions that are used for espionage purposes. Kaspersky researchers found four command-and-control panels that the attackers used to steal data from an unknown number of targets. Besides sharing code similarities with Shamoon, StoneDrill also reuses code used in an espionage campaign dubbed "NewsBeef," which targeted organizations around the world.

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German institute successfully tests underwater energy storage sphere

The Fraunhofer Institute is working on a seabed-based pumped-storage structure.

Fraunhofer IWES | Energy system technology

Pumped storage is a decades-old technology with a relatively simple concept: When electricity is cheap and plentiful, use it to pump water up into a reservoir above a turbine, and when electricity is scarce and expensive, send that pumped water down through a turbine to generate more power. Often, these pumped storage facilities are auxiliary to other electricity-generating systems, and they serve to smooth out fluctuations in the amount of power on the grid.

A German research institute has spent years trying to tailor pumped storage to ocean environments. Recently, the institute completed a successful four-week pilot test using a hollow concrete sphere that it placed on the bottom of Lake Constance, a body of water at the foot of the Alps. The sphere has a diameter of three meters and contains a pump and a turbine. Much like traditional pumped storage, when electricity is cheap, water can be pumped out of the sphere, and when it’s scarce, water can be let into the sphere to move the turbine and generate electricity.

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DRM in HTML5 is a victory for the open Web, not a defeat

W3C’s decision to publish a DRM framework will keep the Web relevant and useful.

(credit: Bart Maguire)

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the industry body that oversees development of many Web-related technologies, is again considering the development of a specification enabling DRM-protected media in HTML content. And the group working on Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) is running up against a deadline: the group's charter expires at the end of April. W3C working groups can only publish specifications with an active charter. So if W3C wants to publish a DRM specification, either the EME proposal must be published as a standard before the end of April or the group's charter must be extended.

Last year, the working group asked for such an extension, but the Advisory Committee could not come to any consensus on whether to grant it. W3C director and inventor of the Web Tim Berners-Lee last week voiced his support for the EME plan, but the future of EME and the working group's efforts are currently in limbo. Many of the arguments being made today mirror those made in 2013 when the working group first set about developing EME. And in light of this pending decision, we're resurfacing the op-ed below (from May 2013) that outlines the supporting view.

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the group that orchestrates the development of Web standards, has today published a Working Draft for Encrypted Media Extensions (EME), a framework that will allow the delivery of DRM-protected media through the browser without the use of plugins such as Flash or Silverlight.

EME does not specify any DRM scheme per se. Rather, it defines a set of APIs that allow JavaScript and HTML to interact with decryption/protection modules. These modules will tend to be platform-specific in one way or another and will contain the core DRM technology.

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Italy’s Pirate Site Blocklist Expands with Flashx, RARBG and Others

Following complaints from copyright holders, Italian ISPs are required to block hundreds of websites, a list that continues to expand. During the past week a handful of new sites were added including Flashx and RARBG, with streaming site 123movies being next in line. The question remains, however, how effective these measures are.

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

Website blockades are becoming more common throughout Europe, but with a flurry of recent orders Italy takes the crown.

In recent months hundreds of domain names have been added to the nation’s pirate blocklist, based on complaints from a wide range of copyright holders.

An overview of most of the key cases available on the website of local telecoms watchdog AGCOM lists 300 blocked urls alone.

Over the past week several new domain names were added once again, including ddlhqfilm.com, flashx.tv, games.torrentsnack.com, mega-wii.com, musicplayon.com and rarbg.to.

The applications came from a variety of rightsholder groups and companies, listing several examples of copyright infringements. For Mega-Wii, for example, Digital Content Protection listed several pirated games belonging to EA, Nintendo and Warner Bros. Entertainment.

Based on the information provided, AGCOM ordered local ISPs to block access to the site within two days, as required by law.

TorrentFreak spoke to a site operator whose domain name was blocked recently. He says that in absolute terms, the effect is fairly obvious. Italian traffic to the site tanked soon after Internet providers processed the order, as can be seen below.

Traffic drop following blockade

Still, whether this means that these visitors will stop pirating is less clear. The operator, who prefers not to have his site named, points out that people will simply find ways arount the restrictions.

“These blockades definitely have major effects on site users. Users learn to circumvent them, realizing how stupid their governments are,” the operator informs TorrentFreak.

The effectiveness of the blockades is also put in doubt by academic research. University of Padua professor Giorgio Clemente previously ran a comprehensive analysis, comparing traffic data before and after the Italian blocking measures were implemented.

This research used the same methodology as an earlier MPAA-commissioned study which examined UK blockades. However, instead of merely looking at the blocked domains, Professor Clemente also took domain name changes into account because site operators commonly switch domains to bypass censorship efforts.

With this more complete set of datapoints, he found that Government-sanctioned blockades actually increased traffic to the targeted sites.

“The most important conclusion is that blocking access to websites increases their popularity. In particular, AGCOM helps to advertise pirated works, creating the classic and well-known Streisand effect,” Professor Clemente told TF at the time.

Still, AGCOM and rightsholders are convinced that their actions help people to stay away from pirate sites. In addition to the domains mentioned above, there’s also an application pending against the popular streaming site 123movies, which is the next target to be blocked.

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

Consumer Reports spearheads new privacy, security standard for electronic products

Consumer Reports spearheads new privacy, security standard for electronic products

Thirty years ago plenty of people had personal computers that weren’t connected to the internet. These days everything from the phones in our pockets to the locks on our front doors might have internet access. On the one hand, that can make life a lot of convenient. You can monitor your home security system from […]

Consumer Reports spearheads new privacy, security standard for electronic products is a post from: Liliputing

Consumer Reports spearheads new privacy, security standard for electronic products

Thirty years ago plenty of people had personal computers that weren’t connected to the internet. These days everything from the phones in our pockets to the locks on our front doors might have internet access. On the one hand, that can make life a lot of convenient. You can monitor your home security system from […]

Consumer Reports spearheads new privacy, security standard for electronic products is a post from: Liliputing

US will suspend fast processing for H-1B visas

US Customs Service says time is needed to plow through backlog of old petitions.

Enlarge / USCIS office in Portland, Oregon. (credit: Getty Images)

Customs and immigration officials will stop offering a "premium processing" service that allows applicants for H-1B visas to speed through the process in just 15 days.

The program's suspension comes as the Trump Administration considers wider changes to the H-1B visa system, although no details have been offered about what those changes might entail. In a press release about the change, US Customs and Immigration Services (USCIS) say the suspension is temporary and that it could last up to six months. The goal is to "process long-pending petitions."

The "premium processing service" cost employers $1,225 in addition to other required H-1B fees.

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