Android Piracy Group Leaders Plead Guilty to Criminal Copyright Infringement

The leaders of two major Android app piracy groups have pleaded guilty to copyright infringement charges. The men, aged 22 and 29, ran the Applanet and SnappzMarket groups before they were shut down by the FBI in 2012.

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

Assisted by police in France and the Netherlands, in the summer of 2012 the FBI took down three unauthorized Android app stores.

Appbucket, Applanet and SnappzMarket all had their domains seized in a first of its kind operation. Several men were arrested and over the past four years have been slowly pleading guilty to various copyright infringement charges.

According to the Department of Justice, two more can now be added to the list.

Before his 16th birthday Aaron Blake Buckley launched Applanet, a service dedicated to the sharing of Android software. After being raided in 2012, Buckley attempted to crowdfund a defense against the U.S. government in 2014.

Now a 22-year-old, Buckley has just pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement and to one count of criminal copyright infringement before U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten Sr. of the Northern District of Georgia.

Co-conspirator Gary Edwin Sharp II, 29, of Uxbridge, Massachusetts, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement in January.

applanet“According to statements made in court, the conspirators identified themselves as members of the Applanet Group,” the DoJ said in a statement.

“From May 2010 through August 2012, they conspired to reproduce and distribute more than four million copies of copyrighted Android apps through the Applanet alternative online market without permission from the victim copyright owners, who would otherwise sell copies of the apps on legitimate online markets for a fee.”

In addition to his role within Applanet, Sharp also pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement as the leader of SnappzMarket. Sharp admitted that along with two other members the group conspired to distribute more than a million pirate Android apps worth $1.7m.

Overall, the groups are said to have distributed Android apps with a retail value in excess of $17 million.

The guilty pleas come on the heels of several others (1,2) since the raids in 2012. Buckley and Sharp will be sentenced in August.

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

Sony Xperia X series phones go up for pre-order (sort of)

Sony Xperia X series phones go up for pre-order (sort of)

Sony’s 2016 flagship smartphone family is expected to hit the streets later this month, and now Sony has announced that pre-orders are open for some models in the new Sony Xperia X series.

And by pre-orders, the company apparently means you can register to receive a notification when the phones are actually available for purchase.

The top-of-the-line model is called the Sony Xperia X Performance, and its’a  phone with a 5 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor, a 23MP rear camera, a 13MP front camera, 3GB of RAM, and up to 32GB of storage (plus a microSD card slot.

Continue reading Sony Xperia X series phones go up for pre-order (sort of) at Liliputing.

Sony Xperia X series phones go up for pre-order (sort of)

Sony’s 2016 flagship smartphone family is expected to hit the streets later this month, and now Sony has announced that pre-orders are open for some models in the new Sony Xperia X series.

And by pre-orders, the company apparently means you can register to receive a notification when the phones are actually available for purchase.

The top-of-the-line model is called the Sony Xperia X Performance, and its’a  phone with a 5 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 processor, a 23MP rear camera, a 13MP front camera, 3GB of RAM, and up to 32GB of storage (plus a microSD card slot.

Continue reading Sony Xperia X series phones go up for pre-order (sort of) at Liliputing.

Dell rebrands Dell to Dell Technologies, Dell EMC, and Dell

Michael Dell shakes family tree of names on company’s 32nd birthday.

(credit: Peter Bright)

Dell has followed in the footsteps of its rival HP by hitting the reboot button on its various brands.

Chief Michael Dell confirmed in a letter to employees that Dell—which turned 32 years of age on Tuesday—had a new name: "our family of businesses will officially be known as Dell Technologies," he said. The announcement will be made formally at the EMC World trade show, which kicks off today in Las Vegas.

Dell's family of affected brands includes Dell itself, EMC, VMware, Pivotal, SecureWorks, RSA, and Virtustream—all of which now fall under the "Dell Technologies" banner.

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DNS:NET: “Vectoring bringt Glasfaser nur an jeden dritten KVz”

Laut DNS:NET ist das Vectoring der Deutschen Telekom nicht einfach ein Schritt zum Glasfaserausbau. Nur rund jeder dritte Kabelverzweiger (KVz) erhält so direkt eine Glasfaseranbindung, die anderen werden demnach mit Kupfer versorgt. (Glasfaser, DSL)

Laut DNS:NET ist das Vectoring der Deutschen Telekom nicht einfach ein Schritt zum Glasfaserausbau. Nur rund jeder dritte Kabelverzweiger (KVz) erhält so direkt eine Glasfaseranbindung, die anderen werden demnach mit Kupfer versorgt. (Glasfaser, DSL)

Marines test autonomous robot-drone teams for future on battlefield

Marine Warfighting Lab tests tag-team squad of robots to hunt enemies.

The Unmanned Tactical Autonomous Control and Collaboration (UTACC), a ground robot and small drone team, patrols a simulated town indoors in Ellis Hall at Marine Corps Base Quantico. (credit: Sgt. Terry Brady, US Marine Corps)

NEW ORLEANS—The problem with robots on the battlefield today, according to Marine Corps Colonel Jim "Jinx" Jenkins, is that they still have to be driven by humans. That's why the Marine Corps and the Department of Defense are researching ways for robots to act more like teammates on the battlefield than just another piece of hardware.

Jenkins, who serves as Director of Science and Technology at the Marine Corps' Warfighting Lab at Quantico, Virginia, said in a presentation at the Association for Unmanned Systems International's XPONENTIAL conference that while robots such as those used for explosive ordnance disposal and other roles on the battlefield take soldiers and Marines out of some dangerous situations, they take their operators out of the fight.

"A marine is driving, so we haven't improved our manpower situation, and sometimes it costs more manpower." he noted, since operators have to pay such close attention to what they're doing with the robot that they need someone watching their back. "We need to move toward autonomy" for robots and other uncrewed systems, he said. Eventually, the Marine Corps wants swarms of collaborating drones and robots to act at the command of a single operator as a force multiplier at every level of operations.

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Supreme Court to hear copyright fight over cheerleader uniforms

3D printing companies are cheering for a cheerleading industry underdog.

Iowa State Cyclones cheerleaders during the 2016 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament. (credit: Jamie Squire/Getty Images)

The US Supreme Court said yesterday it will hear a case between two cheerleader uniform suppliers that could affect the state of copyright nationwide.In 2010, Star Athletica published its first catalog of cheerleading uniforms and was promptly sued. Varsity Brands, the world's biggest manufacturer of cheerleading and dance-team uniforms, alleged that Star Athletica's uniforms violated Varsity's copyrighted designs.

The clothiers' conflict could have wide effects in the fashion world and beyond. A trio of 3D printing companies have already filed an amicus brief asking the high court to take the case, seeking clarity on how to separate creative, copyrightable designs from utilitarian objects that aren't subject to copyright.

The case below

Star argues that Varsity's copyrights were on utilitarian elements of the uniforms, and thus shouldn't be allowed. The US has never allowed copyrights on "useful articles," and that's long been held to include clothing. Star won its case in district court, but a split panel at the US Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit overturned the win, siding with Varsity.

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Wileyfox Swift: Cyanogen-OS-Smartphone für 140 Euro

Die nur auf Amazon angebotenen Cyanogen-OS-Smartphones von Wileyfox gibt es für eine Woche zu reduzierten Preisen. Das Swift-Modell bietet für einen Preis von 140 Euro eine gute Ausstattung. Beim teureren Storm-Modell lassen sich 50 Euro sparen. (Swift, Smartphone)

Die nur auf Amazon angebotenen Cyanogen-OS-Smartphones von Wileyfox gibt es für eine Woche zu reduzierten Preisen. Das Swift-Modell bietet für einen Preis von 140 Euro eine gute Ausstattung. Beim teureren Storm-Modell lassen sich 50 Euro sparen. (Swift, Smartphone)

Liquid Jade Primo: Acers Windows-10-Smartphone mit Continuum ist erschienen

Das eigentlich für Januar versprochene Windows-10-Mobile-Smartphone Liquid Jade Primo von Acer ist inzwischen im Handel verfügbar. Wer sich für das Modell ohne Dockingstation interessiert, muss immer noch warten. (Smartphone, Acer)

Das eigentlich für Januar versprochene Windows-10-Mobile-Smartphone Liquid Jade Primo von Acer ist inzwischen im Handel verfügbar. Wer sich für das Modell ohne Dockingstation interessiert, muss immer noch warten. (Smartphone, Acer)

Bundeskriminalamt: Geldfälscher sind zunehmend über das Netz aktiv

Im Darknet gibt es nicht nur gehackte Netflix-Accounts und Malware, sondern offenbar auch gefälschtes Geld, Druckplatten und Kopiervorlagen. Das Bundeskriminalamt sieht einen Trend, Falschgeld vermehrt online zu vertreiben. (BKA, Malware)

Im Darknet gibt es nicht nur gehackte Netflix-Accounts und Malware, sondern offenbar auch gefälschtes Geld, Druckplatten und Kopiervorlagen. Das Bundeskriminalamt sieht einen Trend, Falschgeld vermehrt online zu vertreiben. (BKA, Malware)

Peter Sunde: Flattr kooperiert für Bezahlmodell mit Adblock Plus

Der kriselnde Bezahldienst Flattr will nichts weniger als einen “Geburtsfehler des Internets” beheben. Dafür kooperiert Gründer Peter Sunde mit dem Erzfeind der Werbeindustrie. (AdBlocker, Opera)

Der kriselnde Bezahldienst Flattr will nichts weniger als einen "Geburtsfehler des Internets" beheben. Dafür kooperiert Gründer Peter Sunde mit dem Erzfeind der Werbeindustrie. (AdBlocker, Opera)