GOG Gives Gamers Option to Redeem DRM-Free Copy of Their Steam Games

You can now get DRM-free copies of selected Steam games by importing your Steam game library into GOG.GOG, who have long championed the DRM-free philosophy, are putting their wallet where their mouth is by offering gamers free copies of selected games …



You can now get DRM-free copies of selected Steam games by importing your Steam game library into GOG.

GOG, who have long championed the DRM-free philosophy, are putting their wallet where their mouth is by offering gamers free copies of selected games they already own on Steam, except these games will be completely free of DRM!

Users who choose to do this via the GOG Connect feature will still have unchanged access to the Steam version of these games, but they will also now have the same games available for (DRM-free) download in their GOG accounts.

Currently, only 23 games, mostly indie hits like Bit Trip Runner, Braid, and Xenonauts, are supported by GOG Connect. A couple of commercial games are also supported, including Saints Row 2, Unreal Gold, and GOG's own The Witcher. Users have limited time to import the titles into their GOG library.

GOG is compensating developers out of their own pocket to enable the transfer, and the company says they're negotiating with more developers to expand the list of supported games.

You can get started by going to the official GOG Connect website.

TeamViewer users are being hacked in bulk, and we still don’t know how

Service blames password reuse for attacks used to drain financial accounts.

(credit: modpr0be)

For more than a month, users of the remote login service TeamViewer have taken to Internet forums to report their computers have been ransacked by attackers who somehow gained access to their accounts. In many of the cases, the online burglars reportedly drained PayPal or bank accounts. No one outside of TeamViewer knows precisely how many accounts have been hacked, but there's no denying the breaches are widespread.

Over the past three days, both Reddit and Twitter have exploded with such reports, often with the unsupported claim that the intrusions are the result of a hack on TeamViewer's network. Late on Friday afternoon, an IBM security researcher became the latest to report a TeamViewer account takeover.

"In the middle of my gaming session, I lose control of my mouse and the TeamViewer window pops up in the bottom right corner of my screen," wrote Nick Bradley, a practice leader inside IBM's Threat Research Group. "As soon as I realize what is happening, I kill the application. Then it dawns on me: I have other machines running TeamViewer!"

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Second-in-command at Silk Road 2.0 sentenced to 8 years in prison

DOJ: “The Silk Road model presents a new threat to public safety and health.”

The second-highest administrator on Silk Road 2, the copycat site that followed the shuttered underground drug website Silk Road, was sentenced Friday to eight years in prison—the same term that government prosecutors asked the judge to impose.

The sentencing came months after Brian Farrell, known online as "DoctorClu," pleaded guilty to one count of distribution of heroin, cocaine, and methamphetamine. Such crimes carry a minimum sentence of five years in prison.

Federal agents searched Farrell’s home on January 2, 2015 after they got information that he was closely involved in SR2. There, they "seized three handguns, various computer media, various prescription medications, drug paraphernalia, 20 silver bullion bars valued at $3,900.00, and approximately $35,000 in US currency." In addition to the prison sentence, the cash and silver bullion will be forfeited to the government.

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Tony Fadell leaves Nest, Marwan Fawaz to be CEO

Fadell “won’t be present day to day” at Nest, but he remains at Alphabet.

Tony Fadell. (credit: BBC News)

After six years at the smart home company Nest, Tony Fadell will be stepping down as CEO. He announced his decision via a Nest blog post, which details that Fadell will be transitioning to an advisory role at Alphabet, the parent company of Google. Google bought Nest back in 2014.

The new Nest CEO will be Marwan Fawaz, who previously worked at Motorola Mobility as executive vice president. The blog post sites Fawaz's engineering and connected home background as well as his "experience with global service providers" as credentials for his leadership role at Nest. It also stated that Nest has a two-year product roadmap already in place for Fawaz to take over as he begins.

Fadell's transition has been in the works since "late last year," and his new role at Alphabet will give him the flexibility to dabble in other fields. Here's Fadell's statement:

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Luxembourg wants to become the Silicon Valley of asteroid mining

We could live comfortably on resources just from space. But is it economical?

Concept image of a harvester for Deep Space Industries. (credit: Deep Space Industries)

Luxembourg, a small European country about the size of Rhode Island, wants to be the Silicon Valley of the space mining industry. The landlocked Grand Duchy announced Friday it was opening a €200 million ($225 million) line of credit for entrepreneurial space companies to set up their European headquarters within its borders.

Luxembourg has already reached agreements with two US-based companies, Planetary Resources and Deep Space Industries, to open offices in Luxembourg and conduct major research and development activities. "We intend to become the European center for asteroid mining," said Étienne Schneider, deputy prime minister and minister of the economy, during a news conference Friday.

The mining of space resources is a long bet. Although some deep-pocketed investors from Google and other companies have gotten behind Planetary Resources, and people like Amazon's Jeff Bezos have speculated that within a couple of decades most manufacturing and resource gathering will be done off Earth, there is precious little activity today. Humans have never visited an asteroid, and NASA is only just planning to launch its first robotic mission to visit and gather samples from an asteroid, OSIRIS-REx, this summer.

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Duskers is spooky space exploration—with a command console

Explore derelicts with drones—but don’t disturb the monsters therein.

Enlarge / Poor little Ron the Drone. Something bad is beyond this door and he's going to have to face it by himself.

My ship is docked at one end of an abandoned space station, and I’m staring intently at a flickering schematic view of the facility. Jill, one of my three squatty remote maintenance drones, is funneling energy into a power inlet so I can operate a few doors. Twiki is gathering scrap in what looks like an abandoned corridor—scrap I desperately need in order to repair my ship’s video system, which has been on the fritz. Ron is carefully scanning rooms for hidden materials for Twiki to gather up.

The situation is tense but manageable. This outpost showed an unknown infestation type, but I’m being careful, closing doors behind my drones, making sure to not leave a drone for too long in a room with a vent—because things can crawl out of vents.

Without warning, a door flashes red. "DOOR 22 IS BEING ATTACKED" appears on the console. It’s the door to the room where Jill is powering the ship, and I quickly decide it’s time to get the hell out.

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Intel CEO: Most people only replace a PC after 5-6 years

Intel CEO: Most people only replace a PC after 5-6 years

Most computer makers release new desktop, notebook, or tablet PCs at least twice a year. PC chip maker Intel tends to launch new processors about once a year. But computer users? They’re only replacing their old computers after 5 or 6 years.

That’s what Intel CEO Brian Kzranich said at an event in New York this week, and it’s a change from a few years ago, when the upgrade cycle was closer to four years.

Continue reading Intel CEO: Most people only replace a PC after 5-6 years at Liliputing.

Intel CEO: Most people only replace a PC after 5-6 years

Most computer makers release new desktop, notebook, or tablet PCs at least twice a year. PC chip maker Intel tends to launch new processors about once a year. But computer users? They’re only replacing their old computers after 5 or 6 years.

That’s what Intel CEO Brian Kzranich said at an event in New York this week, and it’s a change from a few years ago, when the upgrade cycle was closer to four years.

Continue reading Intel CEO: Most people only replace a PC after 5-6 years at Liliputing.

“Judges love Game of Thrones too: “Qyburnian” enters US legal lexicon”

This isn’t Qyburn’s resurrection of Gregor Clegane—it’s of the Jiffy June standard.

Depending on one's life view, the character Qyburn in the HBO hit series Game of Thrones is evil, a genius, or an evil genius.

The former "maester" of the Citadel engaged in vivisecting people, and he holds the power to bring back the dead (or at least the moribund). Qyburn once famously brought back a poisoned and moribund Gregor Clegane, the character referred to as "The Mountain."  In short, he has mad, resurrection-like skills—and this fact didn't go unnoticed by a US federal appeals court on Thursday.

Qyburn's name, or at least a play off it, has officially entered the US law books. In a published concurring opinion by the nation's largest federal appeals court, two judges from the San Francsico-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals wrote that the majority's opinion "comes very close to a qyburnian resurrection (PDF) of the Jiffy June standard."

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Gas, brake, honk: Google is teaching its self-driving car to assert itself

“Our goal is to teach our cars to honk like a patient, seasoned driver,” Google says.

A Google self-driving car. (credit: Google)

According to Google’s May 2016 Self-Driving Car report (PDF), the company has been teaching its self-driving prototype “bubble cars” how to honk. A human driver can be easily distracted, says Google, and if a bubble car encounters a distracted driver on the road, it should have a mechanism to get that driver's attention back on driving.

“The human act of honking may be (performance) art," says Google, "but our self-driving cars aim to be polite, considerate, and only honk when it makes driving safer for everyone.” (That’s what Google says now, but just wait until its cars achieve sentience and have something to celebrate. Or when another autonomous vehicle goes off the rails and two self-driving cars get caught in an endless honking loop.)

Prototype bubble cars equipped with internal horns can now honk when they see another car backing out of a driveway or swerving into their lane. Why no external horn? Untrained software that honks at a bad time is more likely to confuse or distract nearby drivers with an external horn than an internal one. Over the course of 10,000 to 15,000 test-driven miles per week, Google engineers noted when the cars honked appropriately and when they honked inappropriately and trained the software to become more accurate.

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Punctual time travel depends on how fast the Earth spins

Can sea level changes help explain variations over the last 3,000 years?

(credit: Adrien Hebert)

Want to set your time machine to catch a solar eclipse with a group of curious Mesopotamians in the year 700 BCE? It's not as simple as you think. You need to adjust for the subtle slowing of Earth’s rotation over time and know the history of sea level change—and even those bits of knowledge might not be able to get you there on time. That's the conclusion that a team led by Harvard’s Carling Hay reached when it looked at what the ancient astronomical record tells us about our planet's timekeeping.

Tidal forces caused by the gravitational pull of the Sun and Moon act like a brake on the spinning Earth, gradually increasing the length of the day. It takes a long time for this to add up to anything meaningful, but the Earth has been around a long time: 400 million years ago, each year contained 400 days. At the current rate, days are growing just a couple milliseconds longer per century, so it would take more than 3.5 million years to add a minute.

This is not the answer to your plea for more time in the day to tackle your workload.

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