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Philips hat sein Hue-Sortiment erweitert und bietet jetzt ein Leuchtmittel namens Philips Hue White Ambiance an, dessen Farbtemperatur sich per App passend zur Situation verändern lässt. Wer will, kann mit den LEDs auch Sonnenauf- und untergang im Wohnzimmer simulieren. (Philips Hue, Technologie)
Google offers its Android operating system as free, open source software that any device maker can pre-install on a smartphone. But some of the most popular, useful Android apps such as Gmail, Google Maps, and the Google Play Store are not free… and if you want to include those apps on a phone or tablet you […]
Russian court ruling could force Google to unbundle some apps from Android phones is a post from: Liliputing
Google offers its Android operating system as free, open source software that any device maker can pre-install on a smartphone. But some of the most popular, useful Android apps such as Gmail, Google Maps, and the Google Play Store are not free… and if you want to include those apps on a phone or tablet you […]
Russian court ruling could force Google to unbundle some apps from Android phones is a post from: Liliputing
Twitter: “Not even the thinnest of reeds connects Twitter to this terrible event.”
An Image used by ISIS supporters combines the Twitter logo with the ISIS flag. (credit: Federal Court documents)
Twitter says US law forbids it from being legally liable for what others write on the micro-blogging service, so it is citing the Communications Decency Act in a bid to stamp out a lawsuit accusing the platform of being a "tool for spreading extremist propaganda" that allegedly led to the murder of a US citizen working in Jordan last year. Twitter said:
In enacting Section 230, Congress unequivocally resolved (PDF) the question whether computer service providers may be held liable for harms arising from content created by third parties. Announcing the policy of the United States to preserve the “free market that presently exists for the Internet... unfettered by Federal or State regulation,” 47 U.S.C. § 230(b)(2), Congress broadly immunized entities like Twitter against lawsuits that seek to hold them liable for harmful or unlawful third-party content, including suits alleging that such entities failed to block, remove, or alter such content, id. § 230(c)(1).
The suit concerns a Louisiana woman whose husband, Lloyd "Carl" Fields Jr., was murdered in Jordan last year where he was working as a private contractor. Tamara Fields claims Twitter's platform was a vehicle for terrorists to spew their hatred and plot jihad.
Damit in der virtuellen Realität das Gefühl von Präsenz nicht durch Ruckler zunichte gemacht wird, ist zum Teil deutlich schnellere Hardware erforderlich, als sie HTC für das Vive empfiehlt. (Vive, Grafikhardware)
Politician will introduce federal bill to fund online crime-fighting grants for police.
AUSTIN, Texas—In October, the South By Southwest festival canceled plans to host a pair of 2016 SXSW Interactive panels amid worries about threats of violence and disruption. Public outcry soon followed, with critics pointing out the irony of a panel about online threats and abuse being canceled for that very reason. SXSW responded by not only reinstating the panels but by attaching them to an even larger, full-day Online Harassment Summit.
While the resulting event on Saturday proved notable for its variety of speakers and their diverse thoughts on how to both moderate and protect various kinds of online speech, it was nearly overshadowed by a frosty pall. SXSW's Online Harassment Summit is the only event in the festival's 22-year run to include a security checkpoint—which visitors had to pass through every time they re-entered its building—and its panels were introduced with reminders that unattended bags would be "confiscated and destroyed" by guards on site, no questions asked.
Between those issues, an overstuffed panel schedule, and the summit venue's long walk from the SXSW downtown-Austin core, the resulting event was dampened by small and thinly spread crowds. There was nothing meek about the content, however. What the Online Harassment Summit lacked in headline-grabbing conflict, it made up for with compelling voices that saw tech, policy, and academic experts finding common ground on the subject of antagonistic and threatening online speech. At its best, the results included informed analysis, mountains of data, and calls to specific action—all while trying to balance both free and responsible speech with paradigms that looked beyond the United States' model.
“PiDrive” is based on WD Blue, has intro price of $31.42.
(credit: Western Digital)
The Raspberry Pi 3 was released earlier this month with some significantly improved hardware, including a quad-core 64-bit ARM CPU, an upgraded GPU, and embedded wireless—updates that will let people use it for a wider variety of tasks than before. For people whose use cases require a decent amount of storage, Western Digital has just announced a specialized low-profile hard drive called the PiDrive.
The 314GB drive, which will normally cost $45.81 but is currently available for $31.42, is a 7mm-high drive based on the basic Western Digital Blue drives that still ship in many budget and mid-end laptops and PCs. The difference is the interface, which has been changed from SATA to USB and is designed to connect to the Pi directly without drastically increasing the footprint of the device. WD says it has customized the drive in order to "reduce the electrical power load of the hard drive on Raspberry Pi while still maintaining sufficient performance to deliver maximum USB data transfer rate." It's also a cheaper solution than the 1TB PiDrive kit the company already sells for $79.99.
Western Digital says that the 314GB PiDrive will come with the BerryBoot bootloader to make it as easy as possible to install and run multiple operating systems from the same drive. The new PiDrive is compatible with WD's existing PiDrive cables and enclosures and is available for purchase today.
Throttled users forced into arbitration, but AT&T still faces FTC and FCC wrath.
(credit: Chris Young)
Customers who sued AT&T over its practice of throttling unlimited data plans will not be able to pursue a class-action lawsuit against the company. AT&T argued that the customers could only have their complaints heard individually in arbitration, and Judge Edward Chen of US District Court in Northern California has sided with the cellular company.
The customers' contracts with AT&T required them to arbitrate disputes with AT&T on an individual basis. But customers argued that the arbitration cause would violate their First Amendment right to petition a court for a redress of grievances. While the arbitration clause allowed claims to be brought in small claims court, the plaintiffs argued that such a court would not be an adequate forum.
But Chen accepted AT&T's argument, noting that the Supreme Court previously upheld AT&T's arbitration provision in a 2011 decision. In the 2011 case, AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion, the Supreme Court found that the Federal Arbitration Act preempted a California state law that limited the power of companies to force customers into arbitration.