Vorbereitung auf Schlafmodus: Die Corona-Warn-App warnt nicht mehr

Nach fast drei Jahren verliert die Corona-Warn-App ihre ursprünglich wichtigste Funktion. Die Regierung prüft bereits andere Einsatzmöglichkeiten. Von Friedhelm Greis (Corona-App, Datenschutz)

Nach fast drei Jahren verliert die Corona-Warn-App ihre ursprünglich wichtigste Funktion. Die Regierung prüft bereits andere Einsatzmöglichkeiten. Von Friedhelm Greis (Corona-App, Datenschutz)

University Websites Are Being Flooded with Online Piracy Scams

Universities and colleges tend to have strict anti-piracy policies for students. In the United States, this is very much a necessity since its required by law. While most students play by the rules, a worrying trend is developing where outsiders exploit university websites to promote piracy scams.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

pirate-flagAt the turn of the century, online piracy hubs began to surface at universities around the world.

Seemingly unlimited broadband connections and the presence of many tech-savvy students provided an ideal breeding ground for the rapid expanision of the file-sharing craze.

Napster and Limewire played a major role in this growth, as well as DC++ and i2hub, which typically relied on closed networks. Students exchanged hub/server addresses with each other in order to share files at very high speeds within local networks or between universities.

Universities Ordered to Tackle Piracy

This virtual free-for-all lasted for years and in some places continues today. In the United States, however, higher education institutions were forced to put the brakes on piracy due to the passing of the Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA) in 2008.

Students today may not be aware of it, but the HEOA requires American universities and colleges to adopt and implement effective anti-piracy policies. These should include technological anti-piracy measures as well as educational material to deter piracy.

It’s not hard to find these policies outlined on various university websites, paired with obligatory warnings. Here’s what the University of Texas writes.

“If you copy and distribute copyrighted material without legal permission, you may be found liable for civil or criminal copyright infringement. Civil penalties for Federal Copyright infringement range from $750 per song to $150,000 in damages for each willful act.”

Piracy Scammers Abuse Universities

While universities and colleges do their best to abide by the rules, outsiders have started to exploit these same institutions to promote piracy-related scams.

When we conducted some Google searches targeting the official website for The University of Texas at Austin, several scammy results came up, advertising pirated movies including The Super Mario Bros. Movie.

google texas

Some of these links have since disappeared but at the time of writing, we are still able to access several of the links. These include a PDF file that advertises a free copy of “Avatar: The Way of Water”, as shown below.

One of the PDFs

scammy ad

Like many others, the advert shown above arrives as a file containing a link to a third-party website. In this case, the link goes to a dodgy movie platform that immediately triggers anti-virus alerts warning of potential harm to devices or risks to personal data.

Scams Target Many Universities

These PDFs are not clever guerilla marketing tactics by Robin Hood-inspired pirates. Instead, they tend to trick people into believing that there are free films available but in reality link to scams or attempt to obtain victims’ credit card details.

It’s worth pointing out that Texan University is by no means the only site with this type of spam problem, we have seen similar piracy ‘ads’ at the University of Oregon, UMass Amherst, The George Washington University, The University of Rhode Island, and many others.

The scammers have struck gold by exploiting the university websites. These sites are seen as authoritative by search engines such as Google. As a result, the scammy PDFs are now among the top results for several piracy-related queries, beating ‘real’ pirate sites.

We have to say though, that most universities and colleges are quick to remove most of these PDFs, which are typically added through public upload tools. In many cases, the files are gone within a few days.

How many people ultimately fall for these dubious advertisements is unknown. Most people will probably recognize the scams right away but it requires only a few victims to make it worthwhile for the scammers.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Driving across the American West in techno-excess with the BMW XM

“Hey Batman, turn on the seat massage.”

A BMW XM next to a very large Saguro cactus

Enlarge / Big power, big cactus, mostly big price tag. (credit: Roberto Baldwin)

I’m barreling down Interstate 10 in Arizona toward California in the BMW XM, the latest luxury performance SUV from the German automaker. A dagger of extravagance, the black-on-black SUV is all about more. But it's more than just a vehicle you stand next to while posing for social media shots; it's a bold expression from BMW that it can merge luxury with the latest technology.

The drive

With a starting price of $160,000, the BMW XM is actually quite a deal when you look at its closest competitor, the Lamborghini Urus. I've driven both over long distances, and the XM delivers on a long road trip while saving the person behind the wheel about $75,000—that's less than the price of the 2023 BMW i4 M50. So you get your showoff car and, well, another showoff car that's an electric vehicle.

The XM is a plug-in hybrid, so you could spend most of your time behind the wheel in electric mode. It has an electric-only range of about 30 miles, so trips to Whole Foods and back could be far cleaner than what the Urus offers, as it's a gas-only proposition. But driving cross-country, I burned through the range within the first 30 minutes. Efficiency-wise, plug-in hybrids lose most of their appeal on a long road trip. I could have tried to find a level 2 charger along the way, but it would have been a waste of my time, and I would have been the jerk who's stopping someone with an EV from charging.

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Curious about screen-based fitness machines? Here are the best we’ve found

We tried he most unique devices on the market to see what’s worth your dollar.

Curious about screen-based fitness machines? Here are the best we’ve found

Enlarge

A home gym makes working out convenient, which will ideally lead to consistency, the key to any exercise regimen. There are a few key points to setting up a home gym that will engage you and fit your space. Mirror- and screen-based fitness devices aim to roll these solutions into one device that delivers diverse, engaging training.

These systems can make exercising much more fun and convenient while providing a solid foundation for every level of exerciser to build on with different hardware packages and progressive content. The devices can range from around $200 all the way up to $6,000 or more, and that’s without mandatory subscription fees for content.

The device manufacturers swear by the engagement, convenience, and resultant efficacy of such machines, and there’s a case to be made for how these initial expenditures can save you money compared to a traditional gym-based experience. We tested a bunch of mirror fitness devices with a wide range of prices to see where the sweet spot lies and determine which could be worth the money for different types of people.

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An ominous heating event is unfolding in the oceans

Average sea surface temperatures have soared to record highs—and stayed there.

To call what’s happening in the oceans right now an anomaly is a bit of an understatement. Since March, average sea surface temperatures have been climbing to record highs, as shown in the dark line in the graph below.

(credit: Sean Birkel/University of Maine)

Since this record-keeping began in the early 1980s—the other squiggly lines are previous years—the global average for the world’s ocean surfaces has oscillated seasonally between 19.7° and 21° Celsius (67.5° and 69.8° Fahrenheit). Toward the end of March, the average shot above the 21° mark and stayed there for a month. (The most recent reading, for April 26, was just a hair under 21°.) This temperature spike is not just unprecedented, but extreme.

“It’s surprising to me that we’re this far off the trajectory,” says Robert Rohde, lead scientist at Berkeley Earth, a nonprofit that gathers climate data. “Usually when you have a particular warming event, we’re beating the previous record by a little bit. Right now we’re sitting well above the past records for this time of year, for a considerable period of time.”

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