Sunfleet: Volvo plant globales Carsharing

Volvo meint es ernst mit dem Carsharing und will mit Sunfleet ein globales Netzwerk aufbauen, dessen Mitglieder in vielen Ländern Autos online kurzfristig buchen und nutzen können. Andere Autohersteller sind schon weiter. Der Volvo-Chef will damit auf das veränderte Nutzungsverhalten reagieren. (Carsharing, Technologie)

Volvo meint es ernst mit dem Carsharing und will mit Sunfleet ein globales Netzwerk aufbauen, dessen Mitglieder in vielen Ländern Autos online kurzfristig buchen und nutzen können. Andere Autohersteller sind schon weiter. Der Volvo-Chef will damit auf das veränderte Nutzungsverhalten reagieren. (Carsharing, Technologie)

Lucasfilm: Carrie Fisher will not return to Star Wars in CGI form

Still leaves major questions about Leia’s role in Episode IX unanswered.

This report contains possible spoilers for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story.

In the wake of actor and writer Carrie Fisher’s tragic passing in December, reports about the current Star Wars trilogy have been full of questions and guesses. What exactly should we expect from the popular character of Princess Leia in the remaining two episodes, and how will the film's producers deal with her original actor not being able to complete Leia's plot arc?

Lucasfilm took the unusual step of confirming one major detail about the series’ future on Friday, announcing that the company does not intend to recreate the actor’s persona using digital means.

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Apple in Trumpland: How the new administration could upend Apple’s business

Tax policies, trade wars, and tweets present both opportunities and obstacles.

Enlarge / Tim Cook (right) looks engaged and enthusiastic sitting next to President-elect Donald Trump and Peter Thiel at Trump's tech summit in New York City last month. (credit: Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Apple has a busy 2017 ahead of it. Most credible rumors say the company is launching a revamped iPad lineup in the early part of the year, as well as long-anticipated desktop Mac refreshes. We can always expect a new iPhone in September, and you can bet that Apple will continue making the case for newer platforms like the Apple Watch and the Apple TV, too.

Most importantly, the company needs to return to year-over-year financial growth after a disappointing 2016. Last year, revenue fell for the first time since 2001, and Apple missed some of its own internal sales goals. Ordinarily, Apple’s success hinges mostly on the products it announced and those products’ quality. But 2017 has a new and unforeseen variable: President-elect Donald J. Trump.

Trump’s journey from dark horse candidate in a crowded Republican field to unlikely nominee to president-elect was powered by unending media coverage and harsh rhetoric. And much of his rhetoric was about American companies and jobs—chiefly, the desire that they bring manufacturing jobs into America and stop outsourcing them to other countries. Apple was a frequent target of Trump’s criticism on the campaign trail. This was the candidate, remember, who encouraged supporters to boycott Apple because of its encryption policies while also condemning the company for building its products overseas.

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How a robot got Super Mario 64 and Portal “running” on an SNES

Or: How to stream video using 1.2 million console button presses per second.

If you missed it live, watch TASBot's AGDQ 2017 run then read about it below.

Can you really, playably emulate games like Super Mario 64 and Portal on a stock standard SNES only by hacking in through the controller ports? The answer is still no, but for a brief moment at this week's Awesome Games Done Quick (AGDQ) speedrunning marathon, it certainly looked like the impossible finally became possible.

For years now, AGDQ has featured a block where TASBot (the Tool-Assisted Speedrun Robot) performs literally superhuman feats on classic consoles simply by sending data through the controller ports thousands of times per second. This year's block (viewable above) started off simply enough, with some show-offy perfect play of Galaga and Gradius on the new NES Classic hardware (a system that TASbot organizer Allan Cecil says is "absolutely horrible" when it comes to automation).

After that, TASBot moved on to a few "total control runs," exploiting known glitches in Super Mario Bros. 3 and Mega Man to insert arbitrary code on the NES. This is nothing new for the computer-driven TASBot—the basics of the tricks vary by game, but they generally involve using buffer overflows to get into memory, then bootstrapping a loader that starts reading and executing a stream of controller inputs as raw assembly level opcodes. The method was taken to ridiculous extremes last year, when TASbot managed to "beat" Super Mario Bros. 3 in less than a second with a very specific total control glitch.

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More Pirated Movie Screeners Leak Online

After weeks of anticipation, more pirated copies of awards screeners began appearing online this week. With leaked copies of Arrival, Hidden Figures, Patriots Day, Moonlight and La La Land, it appears that the pirate “screener season” is properly underway.

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

scrTowards the end of the year, movie screeners are sent out to industry insiders who have to cast their votes for the Oscars and other awards.

Usually, quite a few of these films start to leak on various pirate sites around Christmas, but this year it remained surprisingly quiet.

In fact, it took until early January before the first pirated screener showed up, a copy of the Denzel Washington movie Fences.

While the slow start remains largely unexplained, it appears that at least some pirate groups have become a bit more cautious with their release strategies. The infamous Hive-CM8, which put out the lion’s share of screeners last year, said it would no longer release any films before their theatrical release, for example.

Cautious or not, this week the screener ball started to get rolling again when five DVD screeners appeared online. ‘Hidden Figures’ and ‘Patriots Day’ were the first two to become available, followed by ‘La La Land,’ ‘Moonlight’ and ‘Arrival’ this weekend.

dvdscr

The copies were released and distributed by various P2P pirate groups, not just a single source. The most popular Arrival copy is tagged by the unknown group “4rrived,” for example, and Hive-CM8 is also back in the game with screener copies of La La Land and Moonlight.

Arrival screener

arrived

A few weeks ago, Hive-CM8 said they were ready to release screeners and a few hours ago they uploaded their first copy of the year.

“Finally first quality release, we do think this is a hot title and we decided to share it with the public,” the group writes in the release note of La La Land.

While some people believe that the group already has access to additional disks, they are still in the market for more material. They hope that insiders with access to screeners are in a sharing mood.

“We are looking for the guys sitting at home with all the 30 discs and posting pictures all over the net, but not sharing with anyone. Not sure why you are hiding it can be done safe and secure, for private viewing only if requested. Just msg us if you need help, we dont bite.”

Pirates will certainly welcome all the activity, but it’s unlikely that we’ll see a leak-fest similar to last year. Not from Hive-CM8 at least, who say that they don’t plan to share everything they have with the public this year.

It will be interesting to see how many screeners will leak during the weeks to come. With five releases so far this year, the leaked screener count is still at an all time low for now.

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

Misfit Phase proves hybrid smartwatches could replace basic activity trackers

Review: Could ugly wristbands be no more now that we have real smart watches?

Enlarge (credit: Valentina Palladino)

Misfit hasn't changed much since joining the Fossil family. Its Phase hybrid smartwatch came out late last year and represents the most collaboration with Fossil the company has had. Around the same time as the Phase's launch, Fossil announced that most of its brands will come out with "hybrid" smartwatches, or fashionable timepieces that have some connected features.

The Phase is Misfit's hybrid. It combines smart features like activity tracking with a design that fits in with the rest of its device family and that will (hopefully) appeal to Misfit fans. Starting at $175, the Phase hopes to prove that the right mix of crucial smart features and minimalist style is worth the same amount of money as a device that focuses on only one of those aspects.

Design: More watch than smartwatch

Misfit has always masked its wearables with stylish shells, but the Phase is its first attempt to make a true smartwatch. As far as design goes, the company succeeded: the 41mm case has an analog face with thin dashes instead of numbers or Roman numerals for each hour. There are just two buttons on its right side, and the two parts of its band can be easily detached using their button-like closures.

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Nintendo Switch: Eltern bekommen totale Kontrolle per App

Da hat der minderjährige Nachwuchs keine Chance mehr auf eine heimliche Runde mit Ballerspielen: Per App können Eltern bei Nintendo Switch auch von unterwegs aus kontrollieren, was die lieben Kleinen auf der Hybridkonsole anstellen. Der Hersteller zeigt das System in einem witzigen Video. (Nintendo Switch, Nintendo)

Da hat der minderjährige Nachwuchs keine Chance mehr auf eine heimliche Runde mit Ballerspielen: Per App können Eltern bei Nintendo Switch auch von unterwegs aus kontrollieren, was die lieben Kleinen auf der Hybridkonsole anstellen. Der Hersteller zeigt das System in einem witzigen Video. (Nintendo Switch, Nintendo)

Rechercheverbund: Facebook kämpft mit Correctiv gegen Fake News

Auch künftig will Facebook in Deutschland keine Fake News löschen, aber sie klar als Falschmeldung kennzeichnen. Dazu arbeitet das Unternehmen in Zukunft mit dem Recherchezentrum Correctiv zusammen. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Auch künftig will Facebook in Deutschland keine Fake News löschen, aber sie klar als Falschmeldung kennzeichnen. Dazu arbeitet das Unternehmen in Zukunft mit dem Recherchezentrum Correctiv zusammen. (Facebook, Soziales Netz)

Maluuba: Microsoft kauft Experten für Deep Learning

Natürliche Sprache und Entscheidungsprozesse sind die Spezialität von Maluuba, einem kanadischen Startup. Nun gibt Microsoft die Übernahmen des Teams bekannt – dessen Deep-Learning-Algorithmen zum Beispiel lernen können, immer besser “Schiffe versenken” zu spielen. (Microsoft, KI)

Natürliche Sprache und Entscheidungsprozesse sind die Spezialität von Maluuba, einem kanadischen Startup. Nun gibt Microsoft die Übernahmen des Teams bekannt - dessen Deep-Learning-Algorithmen zum Beispiel lernen können, immer besser "Schiffe versenken" zu spielen. (Microsoft, KI)

Piracy Notices? There Shouldn’t Be Many UK Torrent Users Left to Warn

During the next few weeks, ISPs in the UK will begin sending out warnings to subscribers who use BitTorrent to share pirated content. It’s a curious situation. Since every major torrent site and hundreds of others are already blocked by those very same ISPs, few people should even have access to torrents.

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

Later this month in partnership with the Creative Content UK (CCUK) initiative, four major ISPs will begin sending warning notices to subscribers whose connections are being used to pirate content.

BT, Sky, TalkTalk and Virgin Media are all involved in the scheme, which will be educational in tone and designed to encourage users towards legitimate services. The BBC obtained a copy of the email due to be sent out, and it’s very inoffensive.

“Get it Right is a government-backed campaign acting for copyright owners who think their content’s been shared without their permission,” the notice reads.

“It looks like someone has been using your broadband to share copyrighted material (that means things like music, films, sport or books). And as your broadband provider, we have to let you know when this happens.”

The notice then recommends where people can obtain tips to ensure that the unlawful sharing doesn’t happen again. Since the scheme will target mainly BitTorrent users, it’s likely that one of the tips will be to stop using torrents to obtain content. However, that in itself should be an eyebrow-raising statement in the UK.

For the past several years, UK Internet service providers – including all of the ones due to send out piracy notices this month – have been blocking all of the major torrent sites on the orders of the High Court. The Pirate Bay, KickassTorrents (and all their variants), every site in the top 10 most-visited torrent list and hundreds more, are all blocked at the ISP level in the UK.

By any normal means, no significant public torrent sites can be accessed by any subscriber from any major UK ISP and it’s been that way for a long time. Yet here we are in 2017 preparing to send up to 2.5 million warning notices a year to UK BitTorrent users. Something doesn’t add up.

According to various industry reports, there are around six million Internet pirates in the UK, which give or take is around 10% of the population. If we presume that a few years ago the majority were using BitTorrent, they could have conceivably received a couple of notices each per year.

However, if site-blocking is as effective as the music and movie industries claim it to be, then these days we should be looking at a massive decrease in the number of UK BitTorrent users. After all, if users can’t access the sites then they can’t download the .torrent files or magnet links they offer. If users can’t get those, then no downloads can take place.

While this is probably true for some former torrent users, it is obvious that massive site blocking efforts are being evaded on an industrial scale. With that in mind, the warning notices will still go out in large numbers but only to people who are savvy enough to circumvent a blockade but don’t take any other precautions as far as torrent transfers are concerned.

For others, who already turned to VPNs to give them access to blocked torrent sites, the battle is already over. They will never see a warning notice from their ISP and sites will remain available for as long as they stay online.

There’s also another category of users who migrated away from torrents to streaming sites. Users began to notice web-based streaming platforms in their millions when The Pirate Bay was first blocked several years ago, and they have only gained in popularity since. Like VPN users, people who frequent these sites will never see an ISP piracy notice.

Finally, there are those users who don’t understand torrents or web-based streaming but still use the latter on a daily basis via modified Kodi setups. These boxes or sticks utilize online streaming platforms so their users’ activities cannot be tracked. They too will receive no warnings. The same can be said about users who download from online hosting sites, such as Uploaded and Rapidgator.

So, if we trim this down, we’re looking at an educational notice scheme that will mainly target UK pirates who are somehow able to circumvent High Court blockades but do not conceal their IP addresses. How many of these semi-determined pirates exist is unclear but many are likely to receive ‘educational’ notices in the coming months.

Interestingly, the majority of these users will already be well aware that file-sharing copyrighted content is illegal, since when they’ve tried to access torrent sites in recent years they’ve all received a “blocked” message which mentions copyright infringement and the High Court.

When it comes to the crunch, this notice scheme has come several years too late. Technology has again outrun the mitigation measures available, and notices are now only useful as part of a basket of measures.

That being said, no one in the UK will have their Internet disconnected or throttled for receiving a notice. That’s a marked improvement over what was being proposed six years ago as part of the Digital Economy Act. Furthermore, the notices appear to be both polite and considered. On that basis, consumers should have little to complain about.

And, if some people do migrate to services like Netflix and Spotify, that will only be a good thing. Just don’t expect them to give up pirating altogether since not only are pirates the industry’s best customers, site blockades clearly don’t work.

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