
Blade Runner 2049’s Ryan Gosling will star in Neil Armstrong biopic
Hey girl, it’ll be one small step for [a] man, but one giant leap for my heart.

Enlarge / Ryan Gosling is handsomer than you. (credit: Elen Nivrae / Flickr)
According to The Hollywood Reporter, Ryan Gosling will star in a film adaptation of James Hansen's First Man: A Life of Neil A. Armstrong. The film will be the second collaboration between Gosling and director Damien Chazelle, who directed Gosling in the recent musical film La La Land. Gosling and Chazelle were both nominated for Golden Globes for La La Land and are favorites for Oscar nominations in the new year.
Although Chazelle may seem like an unlikely pick to helm a science-y Armstrong biography, both La La Land and his previous film, Whiplash, have explored the devastating personal cost of enormous ambitions. And no ambition is larger than being the first human on the Moon. Famously, the drive to meet Kennedy's end-of-decade lunar landing deadline destroyed families and marriages all throughout the burgeoning space industry—though, interestingly, not Armstrong's (he remained married to his first wife Janet until 1993). The test pilot and moonwalker passed away in August 2012.
In addition to La La Land, Gosling has starred in films such as Drive, The Nice Guys, the forthcoming Blade Runner 2049, and roughly 10 billion “Hey girl” Internet memes. He was nominated for an Oscar for his role in Half-Nelson, in which he proved it was possible to do drugs and still be absurdly good-looking.
Amazon’s demented plans for its warehouse blimp with drone fleet
Giant airship will hover over your city, deploying drones for advertising and delivery.

Amazon has just gotten a patent for an "airborne fulfillment center utilizing unmanned aerial vehicles for item delivery." Though the patent was granted in April 2016, the plans for it have just gone public on the US Patent and Trade Office website. What they describe sounds like something out of a Philip K. Dick novel.
Here's how it works. First, get a very large airship and float it above a city. Then attach a giant warehouse full of Amazon items to the bottom (actually, you should probably attach this before the floating, but the patent is vague on this point). This warehouse is constantly restocked by smaller airships, which bring personnel and supplies from the ground, as well as carrying away waste. People on the ground use their computers to browse items currently floating over their heads, and order whatever they want. Then drones grab the items, hurl themselves out of the airship, and engage their rotors as they approach the ground. The human receives his or her item from the drone, and the drone ascends back up to its floating palace of boxes and workers.
Web of tax breaks and subsidies keeps iPhone production in China
Foxconn’s clout as Apple’s manufacturing partner nets billions in incentives.

Enlarge / The iPhone 6S Plus and 7 Plus. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)
Apple sells iPhones all over the world, but it builds them in China with the help of manufacturing companies like Foxconn and Pegatron. A particular Foxconn facility in the city of Zhengzhou, China, is the subject of a lengthy report in The New York Times today. The report details the complex series of tax breaks, subsidies, and other incentives that makes the Zhengzhou facility so uniquely suited to Foxconn's and Apple's needs.
Confidential government records obtained by the Times reveal, among other things, that the city of Zhengzhou helped finance the construction of Foxconn's factory and housing for its workers; that it provides discounted energy and constructed power generators and other infrastructure to support the facility; that it has waived and deeply cut corporate and value-added taxes; that it helps Foxconn hire and train workers; that it put its factory inside a "bonded zone" that made selling devices within China easier; and that it spent a total of $10 billion to upgrade an airport to make exporting products from China quicker and easier for Apple and other companies.
The report also highlights just how important Foxconn is to Apple and vice-versa. Apple relies on Foxconn to keep its costs down and profit margins up, and Foxconn relies on orders from Apple to maintain the size and clout that makes it possible for Foxconn to cut such favorable deals in the first place. The Zhengzhou plant can build as many as 500,000 iPhones in a day. While Foxconn also manufactures electronics for other companies, the bulk of the work is being done on Apple's behalf.
Obama tosses 35 Russians out of US, sanctions others for election meddling
Intelligence dump from DHS and FBI bolsters claims of Russian election interference.

Enlarge / Obama just left Donald Trump a nice little inauguration present—a fresh pack of sanctions against Russia and evidence of Russian interference in the presidential election. (credit: Win McNamee/Getty Images)
In an executive order issued today, President Barack Obama used his emergency powers to impose sanctions on a number of Russian military and intelligence officials and also to eject 35 Russians labeled by the administration as intelligence operatives. The order was issued as a response to the breach of the Democratic National Committee's network and the targeted intrusion into e-mail accounts belonging to members of Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.
Obama made the sanctions an extension of an April 2015 executive order "to take additional steps to deal with the national emergency with respect to significant malicious cyber-enabled activities."
The order is being accompanied by the publication of data from US intelligence communities bolstering findings that the breaches were part of an information operation to manipulate the results of the US presidential election. The data, released by the Department of Homeland Security and Federal Bureau of Investigation as a Joint Analysis Report (JAR), contains "declassified technical information on Russian civilian and military intelligence services’ malicious cyber activity, to better help network defenders in the United States and abroad identify, detect, and disrupt Russia’s global campaign of malicious cyber activities," according to an Obama administration statement. "The JAR includes information on computers around the world that Russian intelligence services have co-opted without the knowledge of their owners in order to conduct their malicious activity in a way that makes it difficult to trace back to Russia." Some of the data had been previously published by cyber-security firms, but in some cases the data is newly declassified government data.
Catch up on last season’s Ars Technica Live with our podcast!
Our interview series features guests who are experts in science, tech, and culture.
On the third Wednesday of every month, we returned to Longitude to interview interesting people who work at the intersection of technology, science, and culture. We talked to law professor Elizabeth Joh about the future of surveillance, and we talked to anthropologist Krish Seetah about the history of meat eating in human culture. Computer security researcher Morgan Marquis-Boire told us about defending journalists against state hackers, and space activist Ariel Waldman explained her role on the National Academy of Sciences Human Spaceflight Committee. We recorded everything (you can see video of the 2016 season here) thanks to videographer Chris Schodt and Ars' intrepid producer Jennifer Hahn. Ars editors Joe Mullin and Dan Goodin pitched in, too, bringing their expertise to discussions of patent reform and security. And luckily, Longitude bar owner Suzanne Long kept letting us come back. She seems to have a weak spot for nerds.
Now we're celebrating the end of 2016 and the dawning of our 2017 season by releasing all our interviews as podcasts. If you ever subscribed to the Ars Technicast, you may have already gotten these episodes in your feed. If not, now's the time.
DOJ won’t prosecute Redflex in exchange for restitution and cooperation
Red light firm adds “rigorous anti-bribery and anti-corruption compliance code.”

Enlarge (credit: mathieukor / Getty Images News)
Federal prosecutors in Ohio and Illinois have come to an agreement with the red light camera company Redflex. Earlier this year, the former chief executive of the embattled Australian company pleaded guilty to corruption charges in those states.
The "non-prosecution agreement" establishes a deal whereby the Department of Justice won’t prosecute Redflex in exchange for restitution and damages. Redflex will pay Chicago an amount to be determined and will also hand over $100,000 in restitution to the City of Columbus. The government praised Redflex, citing "extensive and thorough cooperation over recent years."
The DOJ statement, which was published Tuesday by the United States Attorney's Office for the Northern District of Illinois, continues:
Hackerangriffe: USA verhängen Sanktionen gegen Russland
Dealmaster: Get an Alienware 13 laptop with a GTX 1060 GPU for just $1199
Plus deals on games, laptops, TVs, and more.
Greetings, Arsians! Courtesy of our partners at TechBargains, we have a new list of deals to share. Now you can get a great price on a powerful gaming laptop: the Alienware 13 R3 notebook with a Core i5 processor, GTX 1060 GPU, and a 256GB SSD is now just $1199. That's over $200 off its original price, so it's a good time to grab it while you can. We also have a number of deals on Core i7-powered laptops, SSDs, and tax software to consider before the new year begins.
Check out the rest of the deals below.
Featured
2016 Was The Year Torrent Giants Fell
2016 has been a memorable year for torrent users but not in a good way. Over a period of just a few months, several of the largest torrent sites vanished from the scene. From KickassTorrents, through Torrentz to What.cd, several torrent giants have left the scene.
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
At TorrentFreak we have been keeping a close eye on the torrent ecosystem for more than a decade.
During this time, many sites have closed their doors, either voluntarily or after being forced by a court order.
However, 2016 has been a particularly ‘bad’ year for torrents, after two icons were pushed offline in a matter of weeks last summer. In total, three sites that were among the top ten most popular sites at the start of the year are now gone.
Perhaps just as importantly, with the demise of What.cd one of the largest private torrent trackers vanished as well.
KickassTorrents
The trouble started in July when Polish law enforcement officers arrested Artem Vaulin, the alleged founder of KickassTorrents (KAT). The arrest was part of a U.S. criminal case which also listed two other men as key players.
At the time, KAT was the most-used torrent site around, so the authorities couldn’t have hit a more prominent target.
The arrests meant the end of the torrent site and up until this day Artem remains in custody at a local hospital. While several KAT copies and mirrors appeared over the past several months, including one operated by original staffers, the original site is still dearly missed by many.
Torrentz
Not long after KickassTorrents went offline, Torrentz.eu decided to close its doors voluntarity. Without prior warning, all torrent listings were removed from the meta-search engine, which was the third largest torrent site at the time.
The site’s operator confirmed the shutdown to TorrentFreak and left its users with the following message: “Torrentz will always love you. Farewell.”

An official explanation for the drastic action was never given, but it’s likely that the trouble at KAT weighed into the decision.
Now, several months later, several copies and proxies have taken over the Torrentz brand. While these have nothing to do with the original site they are serving millions of pageviews a day, with Torrentz2.eu as the clear leader.
TorrentHound
TorrentHound is the third site out of last year’s top ten that shut its doors unexpectedly. The site was significantly smaller than the other two, but a home to many regular torrenters.
Initially, the site’s operator gave no official explanation. After a while, however, he confirmed to TorrentFreak that the closure was due to a combination of less revenue and constant pressure from anti-piracy groups.
“It’s a combination of less traffic, less revenue and our bills piling up. Then add on constantly getting bugged by anti-piracy agents, just wasn’t worth the headache anymore,” he said.
What.cd
The torrent troubles weren’t limited to public sites only. In fact, one of the biggest stories of the year is the shutdown of the world’s most comprehensive library of digital music, the private music tracker What.cd.
The site went offline after several of its servers were raided by the French military police. The local music industry group SACEM confirmed that the law enforcement efforts were part of a criminal investigation which is ongoing.

Soon after the first reports came out, What.cd’s operators shut down the site and deleted crucial data to keep its users safe. In addition, they released a detailed farewell message on Twitter.
“What.CD has completed its shutdown. We are confident that our staff and users are safe. It is with enormous sorrow in our hearts that we must now move on with our lives,” the site’s operators said.
However, music aficionados aren’t easily defeated. Within a matter of days several new trackers appeared online, growing harder than What.cd or its predecessor OiNK ever did.
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The above are just a few examples of major sites that have fallen, but it shows that 2016 was a year to remember. At the end of the week we’ll be heading into 2017 and the big question is; where will things go from here?
Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.
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