BiCS3: Toshibas 512-GBit-Flash-Chips werden in Mustern ausgeliefert

Nur wenige Wochen nach dem Start der Fertigung meldet Toshiba die Auslieferung von Musterstückzahlen seiner neuen 512-GBit-TLC-Chips. Mit Toshibas Technik wären 1-TByte-SSDs mit nur einem Chip-Package möglich. (Western Digital, Speichermedien)

Nur wenige Wochen nach dem Start der Fertigung meldet Toshiba die Auslieferung von Musterstückzahlen seiner neuen 512-GBit-TLC-Chips. Mit Toshibas Technik wären 1-TByte-SSDs mit nur einem Chip-Package möglich. (Western Digital, Speichermedien)

Google: With No Fair Use, It’s More Difficult to Innovate

Unlike the United States where ‘fair use’ exemptions are entrenched in law, Australia has only a limited “fair dealing” arrangement. As a result, Google’s head of copyright William Patry says that Australia wouldn’t be a safe place for his company to store certain data, a clear hindrance to innovation and productivity.

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

With Fair Use Week now in full swing, people around the world are celebrating the freedom to use copyrighted content in certain contexts without fear of prosecution, thereby enabling creativity and inspiring innovation.

The legal freedom offered by fair use is a cornerstone of criticism, research, teaching and news reporting, one that enables the activities of thousands of good causes and enriches the minds of millions. However, not all countries fully embrace the concept.

Perhaps surprisingly, Australia is currently behind the times on this front, a point not lost on Google’s Senior Copyright Counsel, William Patry.

Speaking with The Australian (paywall), Patry describes local copyright law as both arcane and not fit for purpose, while acting as a hindrance to innovation and productivity.

“We think Australians are just as innovative as Americans, but the laws are different. And those laws dictate that commercially we act in a different way,” Patry told the publication.

“Our search function, which is the basis of the entire company, is authorized in the US by fair use. You don’t have anything like that here.”

Australia currently employs a more restrictive “fair dealing” approach, but it’s certainly possible that fair use could be introduced in the near future.

Last year, Australia’s Productivity Commission released a draft report covering various aspects of the country’s intellectual property system. One of its key recommendations was to adopt fair use legislation.

“The Australian Government should amend the Copyright Act 1968 to replace the current fair dealing exceptions with a broad exception for fair use,” the Commission wrote in its report.

“The new exception should contain a clause outlining that the objective of the exception is to ensure Australia’s copyright system targets only those circumstances where infringement would undermine the ordinary exploitation of a work at the time of the infringement.”

Unfortunately, the concept of fair use is not universally welcomed. Local anti-piracy and royalty organizations are opposing its introduction, claiming that it will undermine their ability to make money.

Interestingly, broadcaster Foxtel says that the deployment of fair use would introduce “significant and unnecessary uncertainty into Australian law.” This is the exact opposite of Google’s position.

The search giant says that Australia’s current exceptions fail to offer legal certainty and that a US-style fair use system would be much more predictable.

“If you are a company like Google who wants to store information in the cloud, or internet searches or text and data mining, we can do that safely in the US. We can’t do it here,” Patry concludes.

In its final inquiry paper, Australia’s Productivity Commission renewed its calls for the introduction of fair use, noting that in the US, where fair use is long established, “creative industries thrive.”

Whether fair use will ever hit Aussie shores remains to be seen, but yet again there is a division between how technology companies and entertainment groups would like copyright law to develop. It’s a battle that’s set to continue well into the future.

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

Europäischer Haftbefehl: Britische Polizei nimmt mutmaßlichen Telekom-Hacker fest

Wer steckte hinter dem Telekom-Routerhack? In Großbritannien ist jetzt ein Mann festgenommen worden, im drohen bis zu zehn Jahre Haft. Unklar ist, ob er nach Deutschland ausgeliefert wird (Telekom, Netzwerk)

Wer steckte hinter dem Telekom-Routerhack? In Großbritannien ist jetzt ein Mann festgenommen worden, im drohen bis zu zehn Jahre Haft. Unklar ist, ob er nach Deutschland ausgeliefert wird (Telekom, Netzwerk)

Judge: No, feds can’t nab all Apple devices and try everyone’s fingerprints

“Such Fourth Amendment intrusions are [not] justified based on the facts articulated.”

Enlarge (credit: GLENN CHAPMAN/AFP/Getty Images)

A federal magistrate judge in Chicago recently denied the government’s attempt to force people in a particular building to depress their fingerprints in an attempt to open any seized Apple devices as part of a child pornography investigation.

This prosecution, nearly all of which remains sealed, is one of a small but growing number of criminal cases that pit modern smartphone encryption against both the Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure, and also the Fifth Amendment right to avoid self-incrimination. According to the judge’s opinion, quoting from a still-sealed government filing, "forced fingerprinting" is part of a broader government strategy, likely to combat the prevalence of encrypted devices.

Last year, federal investigators sought a similar permission to force residents of two houses in Southern California to fingerprint-unlock a seized phone in a case that also remains sealed. In those cases, and likely in the Illinois case as well, the prosecutors' legal analysis states that there is no Fifth Amendment implication at play. Under the Constitution, defendants cannot be compelled to provide self-incriminating testimony (“what you know”). However, traditionally, giving a fingerprint (“what you are”) for the purposes of identification or matching to an unknown fingerprint found at a crime scene has been allowed. It wasn’t until relatively recently, however, that fingerprints could be used to unlock a smartphone.

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Bodyhacking: Ich, einfach unverbesserlich

Elektroden, Chips, Magneten – mit verschiedenen Mitteln wollen Forscher und Hacker den menschlichen Körper verbessern. Doch wie ist das so als besseres Ich? Ein Bericht von Haluka Maier-Borst (Bodyhacking, RFID)

Elektroden, Chips, Magneten - mit verschiedenen Mitteln wollen Forscher und Hacker den menschlichen Körper verbessern. Doch wie ist das so als besseres Ich? Ein Bericht von Haluka Maier-Borst (Bodyhacking, RFID)

Akkufertigung: Tesla plant weitere drei Gigafactories

Tesla rechnet mit einem massiven Bedarf an Akkus und plant den Bau von mindestens drei weiteren Gigafactories. Das Unternehmen benötigt diese nicht nur für Elektroautos, sondern auch für Stromspeicher für Solaranlagen. (Tesla, Technologie)

Tesla rechnet mit einem massiven Bedarf an Akkus und plant den Bau von mindestens drei weiteren Gigafactories. Das Unternehmen benötigt diese nicht nur für Elektroautos, sondern auch für Stromspeicher für Solaranlagen. (Tesla, Technologie)

Samsung unveils 10nm Exynos 9 series chip (for Galaxy S8)

Samsung unveils 10nm Exynos 9 series chip (for Galaxy S8)

Samsung’s first chip manufactured using a 10nm FinFET process is coming soon. The Samsung Exynos 9 Series 8895 processor is an octa-core chip that will likely be used in some models of the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S8 smartphone, although the US version of the phone is expected to feature a Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 chip. The company […]

Samsung unveils 10nm Exynos 9 series chip (for Galaxy S8) is a post from: Liliputing

Samsung unveils 10nm Exynos 9 series chip (for Galaxy S8)

Samsung’s first chip manufactured using a 10nm FinFET process is coming soon. The Samsung Exynos 9 Series 8895 processor is an octa-core chip that will likely be used in some models of the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S8 smartphone, although the US version of the phone is expected to feature a Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 chip. The company […]

Samsung unveils 10nm Exynos 9 series chip (for Galaxy S8) is a post from: Liliputing

Tesla posts a Q4 loss but the company’s revenue grows amid acquisitions

Tesla plans 3 more Gigafactories, will have service, manufacturing expenses.

Enlarge / This is what every Tesla driver wants to see upon arrival at a Supercharger station. (credit: Tesla)

On Wednesday, Tesla posted a Q4 2016 loss of $121.3 million, but the loss was narrower than the $320 million net loss from the year earlier. The company said it made $2.28 billion in revenue in the quarter, up from $1.24 billion in Q4 the year before. Tesla reported $7 billion in annual gross revenue in 2016.

All that comes on the heels of a Q3 in which the company posted a rare profitable quarter that CEO Elon Musk called Tesla’s “best quarter ever.”

The company said its gross margin fell between the third and fourth quarters of 2016 due to lower Zero Emissions Vehicle credit sales in Q4 compared to the quarter before. In the last three months of the year, Tesla completed its acquisition of SolarCity as well as Grohmann Engineering, which will become Tesla Advanced Automation Germany.

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Chuwi Hi13 goes up for pre-order for $350 (13.5 inch 2-in-1 tablet)

Chuwi Hi13 goes up for pre-order for $350 (13.5 inch 2-in-1 tablet)

The Chuwi Hi13 is a tablet with a 13.5 inch, 3,000 x 2,000 pixel display and an Intel Celeron N3450 Apollo Lake processor. Chuwi unveiled the tablet last week, and now it’s up for pre-order from Gearbest or AliExpress for about $350. While there’s no shortage of inexpensive Windows tablets with Celeron or Atom chips, […]

Chuwi Hi13 goes up for pre-order for $350 (13.5 inch 2-in-1 tablet) is a post from: Liliputing

Chuwi Hi13 goes up for pre-order for $350 (13.5 inch 2-in-1 tablet)

The Chuwi Hi13 is a tablet with a 13.5 inch, 3,000 x 2,000 pixel display and an Intel Celeron N3450 Apollo Lake processor. Chuwi unveiled the tablet last week, and now it’s up for pre-order from Gearbest or AliExpress for about $350. While there’s no shortage of inexpensive Windows tablets with Celeron or Atom chips, […]

Chuwi Hi13 goes up for pre-order for $350 (13.5 inch 2-in-1 tablet) is a post from: Liliputing

How Blizzard distilled Overwatch’s hope from Project Titan’s failure

Finding “room for positivity and inclusiveness” in “a dark situation.”

Enlarge / Blizzard's Jeff Kaplan says he thinks they did a good job capturing the feel of this very early concept art for Overwatch in the final product. We have to agree. (credit: Kyle Orland)

LAS VEGAS—May of 2013 was not a very fun time to be at Blizzard if you hear Game Director and Vice President Jeff Kaplan tell it. After years of work on Project Titan, the massive MMO that was to be Blizzard's big follow-up to World of Warcraft, the game had been unceremoniously canceled (though official confirmation of that cancellation wouldn't come for another year). "For various reasons, we ran into a lot of trouble on the project," as Kaplan put it on stage at Las Vegas' DICE Summit today.

In the wake of the cancellation, most of the 140-person Project Titan team was forced to relocate with Blizzard's existing projects or put on "long-term loan" with those franchises. Forty of the remaining team members, however, were tasked with coming up with a brand-new, Titan-replacing idea in order to avoid the same ignominious relocation as their colleagues.

After years working on Titan, they were given just six weeks to craft this new game concept.

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