Maschinelles Lernen: Googles KI schreibt schlechte Liebesgedichte

Mit maschinellem Lernen will Google sinnvolle Dialoge erzeugen. Als Trainingsdaten dienen dafür unter anderem Liebesromane. Das Ergebnis erinnert aber teils mehr an absurde Gedichte als an schmachtende Texte. (Maschinelles Lernen, Google)

Mit maschinellem Lernen will Google sinnvolle Dialoge erzeugen. Als Trainingsdaten dienen dafür unter anderem Liebesromane. Das Ergebnis erinnert aber teils mehr an absurde Gedichte als an schmachtende Texte. (Maschinelles Lernen, Google)

Rightscorp Revenues Collapse, Pirates Too Hard to Track

Anti-piracy outfit Rightscorp has just turned in another set of dismal results. During the past three months revenues plummeted 78% versus the same period last year with the company recording a net loss of $784,000. Pirates, it appears, are becoming harder to track and threaten.

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

According to the world’s leading entertainment industry companies, piracy continues to run riot on the Internet. Movies, TV shows, music and software are downloaded in their millions every day, with most anti-piracy measures a mere band-aid.

As a result companies have sprung up to take advantage of this situation, with U.S.-based Rightscorp a prime example. Rightscorp sends DMCA notices to ISPs in the hope they’ll forward them to their pirating customers. Attached to each one is a demand for around $30 to make a supposed lawsuit go away.

While Rightscorp were originally less offensive than some of the larger copyright trolls in the United States, it didn’t take long for their “speeding ticket” type model to start developing into lawsuits, against both regular users and even Internet service providers such as Cox Communications.

Unfortunately for the company this aggression doesn’t appear to be paying off. Rightscorp has never made a profit and in 2015 had its worst year yet after turning in a net loss of $3.5m. The first three months of 2016 are not only worse, but can best be described as dismal.

In its latest quarterly report Rightscorp says that during the three months ended March 31, 2016, the company generated just $68,283 in revenue. To put that into perspective, in the same period last year the company pulled in $307,904. That’s a decrease of $239,621 or 78%.

So what justification does Rightscorp give for losing eight-tenths of its business? Well, as per its 2015 summary the company’s explanation is somewhat vague so we’ll have to read between the lines.

Reason A: Changes in the filesharing software intended to defeat detection of copyrights being illegally distributed

Seemingly deliberately cryptic, this seems to reference file-sharers hiding their online activities, probably though the use of VPNs, proxies and other anonymous technologies.

Reason B: Less forwarding of the Company’s notices by ISPs

If ISPs really are forwarding less notices, Rightscorp are in serious trouble. The company relies on this mechanism to reach alleged file-sharers and if it cannot do that, its business model lies in tatters.

Reason C: The shutting down of some filesharing network infrastructure.

Again, the company gives no details, but it’s certainly possible that the demise of several large torrent trackers during the year made Rightscorp’s job of harvesting IP addresses a lot more difficult since they now have to rely more on BitTorrent’s DHT (1,2).

TF spoke with someone who was close to one of the largest now-defunct trackers who gave us his theory.

“With enough requests, you could find every IP address sharing a torrent via a tracker. Not so with DHT,” he explained. “You could do it with DHT but it would take days, by which time most people have already drive-by-downloaded the file and stopped seeding.”

Since Rightscorp deals mainly with small music downloads the time people spend on a torrent is already much shorter than for movies. It therefore makes sense that the expanded amount of time to track them via DHT could be hurting the company.

Of course, falling revenues are not only a problem for Rightscorp, they’re also a problem for the company’s copyright holder partners. Rightscorp pays out 50% of the revenues it collects to record companies such as BMG, but no one will be getting rich after the first three months of 2016.

“For the three months ended March 31, 2016 we accrued $49,142 due to copyright holders. For the three months ended March 31, 2015 we accrued $153,952 to copyright holders,” the company says.

That decrease of 68% is a pretty poor result, particularly since Rightscorp struggles to maintain even five major clients. Even if the profits were split equally that would be just over $3,000 per month each. With smaller clients on board too, that amount diminishes even further.

But of course that’s not the full picture, Rightscorp has lots of costs too. In the first three months of the year legal fees amounted to $127,617, wages and related charges topped $303,000, with sundry other costs building to a grand total of $961,105.

As a result the company recorded a net loss of $784,180 during the past three months. At this rate the company will lose another $3.1m this year, unless it can stop people from hiding with VPNs, force ISPs to cooperate more, or find a better way to harvest IP addresses.

None seem likely at this point.

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

New Moto G lineup brings 1080p and fingerprint sensors to midrange phones

Phones launch in Brazil and India, with US and elsewhere to follow this summer.

Today Lenovo made the rumors official: the company’s mid-range Moto G lineup has been refreshed with not one but three different phones. The Moto G (hereafter the Moto G4) and the Moto G Plus bring spec bumps inside and out, while the lower-end Moto G Play is more like a redesign of last year’s Moto G. The phones will be available in Brazil and India to start, but all three of them should come to the US, Europe, and elsewhere later this summer.

The Moto G4 is the mainstream option, and for £169 (about $244, though US pricing hasn’t been announced) you get a decent amount for your money. Its larger 5.5-inch display jumps from 720p to 1080p, and it picks up an octa-core Snapdragon 617 SoC. The phone has dual-band 802.11n Wi-Fi, a nice upgrade over the 2.4GHz-only wireless in previous models, Bluetooth 4.1, 2GB of RAM, and 16 or 32GB of storage that can be expanded by up to 128GB with a microSD card. All three of the Motos G continue to use Micro USB rather than USB Type-C.

The phone also includes a 3,000mAh battery, a “water repellent nano-coating,” LTE that should work “on all major carriers,” a 13MP rear camera and 5MP front camera, and a skin-free build of Android 6.0.1. Visually, Lenovo has tweaked the Moto G design to look a bit flatter, and the camera now bulges out slightly from the back. Given the amount of time it takes to develop a smartphone, this is probably the first Moto G designed mostly by Lenovo rather than being a leftover from the Google days, but it doesn’t drastically shake up the formula.

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Motorola Moto G Play is a smaller, cheaper Moto G4

Motorola Moto G Play is a smaller, cheaper Moto G4

Lenovo-owned Motorola is expanding its Moto G line of affordable smartphones. The company held a launch event for the new 2016 Moto G and Moto G Plus smartphones in India. But it looks like there are actually three new models, not just two.

Meet the Moto G Play.

While the other members of the 2016 Moto G lineup have 5.5 inch, full HD displays and Qualcomm Snapdragon 617 octa-core chips, the Moto G Play is smaller and less powerful.

Continue reading Motorola Moto G Play is a smaller, cheaper Moto G4 at Liliputing.

Motorola Moto G Play is a smaller, cheaper Moto G4

Lenovo-owned Motorola is expanding its Moto G line of affordable smartphones. The company held a launch event for the new 2016 Moto G and Moto G Plus smartphones in India. But it looks like there are actually three new models, not just two.

Meet the Moto G Play.

While the other members of the 2016 Moto G lineup have 5.5 inch, full HD displays and Qualcomm Snapdragon 617 octa-core chips, the Moto G Play is smaller and less powerful.

Continue reading Motorola Moto G Play is a smaller, cheaper Moto G4 at Liliputing.

Trainerbot will push your ping-pong skills to the limit

Train yourself or remotely kick all of your friends’ butts.

Video shot/edited by Jennifer Hahn. (video link)

Playing ping-pong has always been a two-person experience—until now. Trainerbot is a new household robot that is almost guaranteed to be your toughest ping-pong opponent. Brothers Alex and Harrison Chen developed Trainerbot after years of playing ping-pong with each other. While away at college, Harrison developed the first Trainerbot prototype out of a garbage can so he could practice in secret while away from his brother. A dozen or so prototypes later, the newest version of Trainerbot is going up on Kickstarter today.

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Otto fährt autonom: Ex-Google-Mitarbeiter entwickeln Nachrüstsatz für Lkw

Nicht nur große Lkw-Hersteller arbeiten am selbstfahrenden Güterverkehr. Ein kleines Startup stellt überraschend ein eigenes Konzept vor. Dahinter stehen bekannte Köpfe von Google. (Autonomes Fahren, Technologie)

Nicht nur große Lkw-Hersteller arbeiten am selbstfahrenden Güterverkehr. Ein kleines Startup stellt überraschend ein eigenes Konzept vor. Dahinter stehen bekannte Köpfe von Google. (Autonomes Fahren, Technologie)

Here’s why many in aerospace remain skeptical of the Journey to Mars

Asked about the “plan” for Mars, a senior NASA official can’t give a direct answer.

NASA Deputy Administrator Dava Newman speaks to NASA Social attendees at Kennedy Space Center in December. (credit: NASA)

On Tuesday, hundreds of Mars enthusiasts are gathering in Washington, DC to celebrate the red planet at the annual Humans to Mars conference. Buzz Aldrin will discuss his “cycler” plan for going to Mars. Andy Weir, author of The Martian, will be on hand to sign books and talk about his vision for Mars exploration. And representing NASA by giving the plenary speech, NASA Deputy Administrator Dava Newman will update the gathering about the Journey to Mars.

Since the conference is more or less a conclave of Mars devotees, there will probably be few hard questions asked about the feasibility of NASA's plans. But those hard questions are coming, and it’s not clear that NASA has the answers. Although space has not been an issue in the presidential election, whether a Republican or Democrat is elected this fall, a transition team will review the panoply of government spending, including NASA’s human exploration programs. Among those questions that will be asked are these: What is the plan for NASA to get to Mars? And can the space agency make it there within a reasonable budget?

In late April, Newman was asked these very questions at a meeting of the Federal Aviation Administration’s Commercial Space Transportation Advisory Committee. The FAA regulates commercial space launches, and Newman had given the standard speech about NASA’s activities. During a Q&A period, Newman took a question from Jeff Greason, a rocket scientist who founded XCOR and is now a consultant with Agile Aero, about the viability of the Mars plan.

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Now you can buy a smartwatch with a projector (in China)

Now you can buy a smartwatch with a projector (in China)

Smartwatches tend to have pretty small screens, because it’d look silly strapping a device with a 3 inch display to your wrist. But sometimes a 1.5 inch display just isn’t good enough.

So Chinese company Asu has decided to pack a tiny projector into a smartwatch. The Asu Cast 1 is an Android-powered smartwatch with a laser projector that lets you shine images on a screen or tabletop. It’s kind of like having a smartwatch with a screen up to 60 inches.

Continue reading Now you can buy a smartwatch with a projector (in China) at Liliputing.

Now you can buy a smartwatch with a projector (in China)

Smartwatches tend to have pretty small screens, because it’d look silly strapping a device with a 3 inch display to your wrist. But sometimes a 1.5 inch display just isn’t good enough.

So Chinese company Asu has decided to pack a tiny projector into a smartwatch. The Asu Cast 1 is an Android-powered smartwatch with a laser projector that lets you shine images on a screen or tabletop. It’s kind of like having a smartwatch with a screen up to 60 inches.

Continue reading Now you can buy a smartwatch with a projector (in China) at Liliputing.

Android-Smartphone: Lenovos neues Moto G gibt es gleich zweimal

Lenovo hat das Moto G neu aufgelegt – in zwei Ausführungen. Die vierte Generation des Smartphones hat ein deutlich schärferes Display und in der Plus-Ausführung eine verbesserte Kamera. Doch das treibt den Preis nach oben. (Moto G, Smartphone)

Lenovo hat das Moto G neu aufgelegt - in zwei Ausführungen. Die vierte Generation des Smartphones hat ein deutlich schärferes Display und in der Plus-Ausführung eine verbesserte Kamera. Doch das treibt den Preis nach oben. (Moto G, Smartphone)

Sony launches Xperia XA Ultra with big screen, big cameras

Sony launches Xperia XA Ultra with big screen, big cameras

Sony started taking orders for its Xperia X line of smartphones just a few weeks ago, but the company is already expanding the lineup with a new model featuring.

The Sony Xperia XA Ultra has a 6 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display, a 21.5MP rear camera with hybrid auto-focus, and a 16MP front-facing camera for selfies or video chat. Both cameras feature optical image stabilization, flash bulbs, and support for low-light photography.

Continue reading Sony launches Xperia XA Ultra with big screen, big cameras at Liliputing.

Sony launches Xperia XA Ultra with big screen, big cameras

Sony started taking orders for its Xperia X line of smartphones just a few weeks ago, but the company is already expanding the lineup with a new model featuring.

The Sony Xperia XA Ultra has a 6 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display, a 21.5MP rear camera with hybrid auto-focus, and a 16MP front-facing camera for selfies or video chat. Both cameras feature optical image stabilization, flash bulbs, and support for low-light photography.

Continue reading Sony launches Xperia XA Ultra with big screen, big cameras at Liliputing.