Netflix und Co.: EU schafft Geoblocking ein bisschen ab

Wer beim deutschsprachigen Netflix angemeldet ist und etwa in Frankreich seine Serien schauen will, kann das bisher legal nicht. Das soll sich jetzt innerhalb der EU ändern – allerdings haben die EU-Vertreter eine Hintertür eingebaut. (Verbraucherschutz, Internet)

Wer beim deutschsprachigen Netflix angemeldet ist und etwa in Frankreich seine Serien schauen will, kann das bisher legal nicht. Das soll sich jetzt innerhalb der EU ändern - allerdings haben die EU-Vertreter eine Hintertür eingebaut. (Verbraucherschutz, Internet)

I have suicidal depression—and board games saved my life

Cardboard bits returned color to a monochrome life.

Behold Thirsty Meeples in Oxford, where you can find boardgames as far as the eye can see. (credit: Flickr user Kristina D.C. Hoeppner)

Welcome to Ars Cardboard, our weekend look at tabletop games! Check out our complete board gaming coverage right here—and let us know what you think.

I have suicidal depression.

That’s not a great opening line, and it’s not something I enjoy talking about, but it's an important piece of who I am. From the age of 16 onward, depression led me to slowly curl in upon myself until the idea of leaving the house left me pressed into the corner of my room, shaking.

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Flexcase: Forscher entwickeln Smartphone-Cover mit E-Paper-Display

Mit Flexcase sollen nicht nur Inhalte eines Smartphones auf einem zusätzlichen E-Paper-Bildschirm angezeigt, sondern auch ganz neue Eingabemöglichkeiten geschaffen werden. Auf dem zusätzlichen Bildschirm können nicht nur einfach weitere Inhalte angezeigt werden. (E-Paper, Smartphone)

Mit Flexcase sollen nicht nur Inhalte eines Smartphones auf einem zusätzlichen E-Paper-Bildschirm angezeigt, sondern auch ganz neue Eingabemöglichkeiten geschaffen werden. Auf dem zusätzlichen Bildschirm können nicht nur einfach weitere Inhalte angezeigt werden. (E-Paper, Smartphone)

Tummy problems? Just swallow this stomach-repairing origami robot made of meat

Magnetically controlled robot may fix lesions and remove accidentally-eaten batteries.

(credit: Melanie Gonick/MIT)

A chunk of meat that bursts open once eaten and unleashes a robot that crawls around inside of your stomach sounds like something from a horror movie. But the real-life stomach-roaming meat robot actually means no harm—on the contrary, it was designed to doctor your stomach troubles from the inside.

On Thursday, researchers at MIT revealed the origami meat robot that they designed to patch stomach wounds, deliver medicine, and remove dangerous foreign objects that patients may have accidentally swallowed. In early simulations with pig esophagus and gut tissue, the robot traveled down to the stomach in an ice capsule that melted along the way. Once there, the robot unfolded and could be steered around the stomach using external magnets. In a demonstration video provided by MIT News, the researchers show that the robot can move a button battery in their simulation stomach. The researchers presented their robot this week at the International Conference on Robotics and Automation.

“It’s really exciting to see our small origami robots doing something with potential important applications to health care,” said Daniela Rus, lead researcher on the study and director of MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.

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Samsung launches Charm fitness band (in select markets)

Samsung launches Charm fitness band (in select markets)

Samsung may have launched more smartwatches than just about any other company I’m aware of to date. But the company isn’t putting all its wearable eggs into one basket.

The company is launching a new activity tracker called the Charm in Korea, Italy, France, and Russia.

The Samsung Charm is smaller than the company’s smartwatches, offers up to 14 days of battery life from a tiny 17 mAh battery, and comes in three color options: gold, black, and “rose quartz,” which most of us would probably call pink.

Continue reading Samsung launches Charm fitness band (in select markets) at Liliputing.

Samsung launches Charm fitness band (in select markets)

Samsung may have launched more smartwatches than just about any other company I’m aware of to date. But the company isn’t putting all its wearable eggs into one basket.

The company is launching a new activity tracker called the Charm in Korea, Italy, France, and Russia.

The Samsung Charm is smaller than the company’s smartwatches, offers up to 14 days of battery life from a tiny 17 mAh battery, and comes in three color options: gold, black, and “rose quartz,” which most of us would probably call pink.

Continue reading Samsung launches Charm fitness band (in select markets) at Liliputing.

Berufungsurteil: The Pirate Bay verliert wieder seine Haupt-Domains

Nach einem erfolgreichen Einspruch hat ein Berufungsgericht in Schweden erneut entschieden, dass die Torrent-Seite The Pirate Bay ihre schwedischen Haupt-Domains verliert. Neuer Eigentümer wird der schwedische Staat. (Pirate Bay, Internet)

Nach einem erfolgreichen Einspruch hat ein Berufungsgericht in Schweden erneut entschieden, dass die Torrent-Seite The Pirate Bay ihre schwedischen Haupt-Domains verliert. Neuer Eigentümer wird der schwedische Staat. (Pirate Bay, Internet)

Model 3: Tesla heuert hochrangigen Audi-Manager für Massenproduktion an

Tesla Motors hat den ehemaligen Audi-Manager Peter Hochholdinger als neuen Vizepräsidenten für die Fahrzeugproduktion angestellt, nachdem das Unternehmen zunächst den Abgang von zwei Managern zu verkraften hatte. (Tesla Motors, GreenIT)

Tesla Motors hat den ehemaligen Audi-Manager Peter Hochholdinger als neuen Vizepräsidenten für die Fahrzeugproduktion angestellt, nachdem das Unternehmen zunächst den Abgang von zwei Managern zu verkraften hatte. (Tesla Motors, GreenIT)

RIAA Ceremony Commends ICE For “Historic” Pirate Site Shutdown

The RIAA has commended U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement investigators during a ceremony to celebrate the prosecution of RockDizMusic and RockDizFile operator Rocky Ouprasith. “On behalf of the major U.S. record labels, we are grateful for the excellent work of the ICE agents involved in this historic case,” said RIAA chief Cary Sherman.

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

In 2010, U.S. authorities launched Operation in Our Sites, an anti-piracy campaign aimed at pushing copyright-infringing sites offline.

In its early days several high-profile sites including the infamous Ninjavideo were taken down but over time authorities focused more on sites connected to the supply of counterfeit physical goods.

In 2014, however, two music-focused piracy sites were on the radar of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) investigators. RockDizFile.com and RockDizMusic.com were two interconnected operations and in October 2014 disappeared from the Internet to be replaced by the now famous ICE domain seizure banner.

RockDizMusic was an index for popular new music while RockDizFile was a file-storage site acting as a storage facility for its similarly named counterpart. Both were run by Rocky P. Ouprasith of Charlotte, N.C., who was arrested following the execution of a Homeland Security Investigations search warrant.

While the sites had a much lower profile than many of the world’s leading torrent indexes, in 2013 the RIAA branded RockDizFile “as the second largest online file-sharing site in the reproduction and distribution of infringing copies of copyrighted music in the United States.”

Subsequent court documents placed a value of $6 million on the amount of content pirated by the site. Ouprasith entered a guilty plea and last November was sentenced to serve a total of 36 months in prison with two years supervised release. The 23-year-old was also ordered to forfeit almost $51,000 and pay more than $45,000 in restitution.

This week, almost six months after the successful prosecution, the RIAA expressed gratitude to the U.S. law enforcement officers involved in the operation. During a special ceremony L. Carlos Linares, vice president of Anti-Piracy Legal Affairs at the RIAA, thanked ICE Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) agents stationed in the United States, Canada, France and the Netherlands for bringing Ouprasith’s sites to their knees.

“On behalf of the major U.S. record labels, we are grateful for the excellent work of the ICE agents involved in this historic case,” said RIAA Chairman & CEO Cary Sherman.

“Music creators cannot make a living doing what they love when sites like RockDizMusic and RockDizFile are allowed to permeate the marketplace with illegal music, creating a damaging domino effect throughout our entire economy.

“This agency has repeatedly shown that it will work vigilantly to protect consumers from illicit sites and preserve one of America’s greatest exports – the intellectual property of our creative industries.”

ICE-HSI Executive Associate Director Peter Edge said that cooperation with groups such as the RIAA is a vital aspect of anti-piracy operations.

“Collaboration with industry is absolutely critical to conducting effective intellectual property enforcement. The dedication from agents involved in this case is a testimony to the importance we place on defending the U.S. economy, protecting consumers and cracking down on criminal organizations engaged in counterfeiting and other forms of IP theft,” Edge said.

According to ICE, the RIAA initially referred the case to the Department of Justice’s Computer Crimes and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS) before it was transferred to Homeland Security Investigations offices in Norfolk, Virginia.

While music piracy remains as rampant as ever, this prosecution sent a message to would-be pirates in the United States that the highest levels of law enforcement are at the RIAA’s disposal, should they be required. That being said, most large sites are operated from outside U.S. borders.

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

Die Woche im Video: Wuuuuuuschhhhh!

Freie Fahrt für WLANs und den Hyperloop: Die Störerhaftung ist zu guter Letzt doch noch abgeschafft worden. Und das neue Transportmittel ist erstmals ein Stück gesaust. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Freie Fahrt für WLANs und den Hyperloop: Die Störerhaftung ist zu guter Letzt doch noch abgeschafft worden. Und das neue Transportmittel ist erstmals ein Stück gesaust. Sieben Tage und viele Meldungen im Überblick. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Internet)

Microsoft’s Project Spark becomes free-to-nobody on August 12

Downloads are done for Xbox free-to-play experiment; servers will close in August.

We hardly knew ye, Project Spark... because you were confusing, and now because you're about to be shut down. (credit: Microsoft Studios)

Your chance to play with Microsoft's curious Project Spark "game" and/or creativity engine is all but done, thanks to a late-Friday announcement. An official blog post declared that the game's download and store sites had immediately been taken offline. Anybody who currently owns or plays the game has until August 12 to access the online game before its content servers are shut down as well.

The writing was already on the wall for Microsoft's peculiar free-to-play, multi-device experiment when the company announced the product's "free transition" last September. At that time, refunds were announced for any Project Spark DLC or full-license purchases made after July 28, while Microsoft declared that active development of the game had been shut down. However, that announcement hadn't hinted at an impending full-game shutdown, which means Project Spark serves as a cold reminder of how hard it will be to archive a lot of today's modern games.

Spark's troubles began with a series of confusing sales pitches at various expos alongside the burgeoning (and then Kinect-saddled) Xbox One. Marketing teams never effectively sold the possibilities and power of Spark's make-your-own-game system. While short teaser videos hinted at the game enabling everything from kart racers to airborne battles, major demonstrations tended to revolve more around generic 3D platformers. Our own game reviewer Steven Strom appreciated the product's potential but bemoaned its barriers to entry, including how the game taught users and how its search engines made discoverability a pain in the tuchus.

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