Amazon Fresh: Amazon prüft bundesweit Lieferung von frischen Lebensmitteln

Amazon Fresh sei nicht mehr, als zu Trockenware noch einen Kopf Salat oder 100 Gramm aufgeschnittenen Käse drauf zulegen. Das sieht man als spannende Aufgabe. (Amazon Fresh, Amazon)

Amazon Fresh sei nicht mehr, als zu Trockenware noch einen Kopf Salat oder 100 Gramm aufgeschnittenen Käse drauf zulegen. Das sieht man als spannende Aufgabe. (Amazon Fresh, Amazon)

Datensicherheit: Teslas Bordrechner speichern unverschlüsselt viele Daten

Ein Tesla ist ein rollender Datenspeicher: Die Elektroautos speichern ohne Unterlass große Menge Daten über das Auto, aber auch über dessen Insassen. Die Daten sind zudem nicht verschlüsselt. (Security, Elektroauto)

Ein Tesla ist ein rollender Datenspeicher: Die Elektroautos speichern ohne Unterlass große Menge Daten über das Auto, aber auch über dessen Insassen. Die Daten sind zudem nicht verschlüsselt. (Security, Elektroauto)

The possible, curious comeback of 3-inch vinyl records

Partially thanks to Jack White—perhaps its biggest cheerleader—the 3″ returns for RSD 2019.

This tiny turntable will be released, along with eight 3” singles from Epitaph Records and Third Man Records on April 13, 2019, aka Record Store Day.

Enlarge / This tiny turntable will be released, along with eight 3” singles from Epitaph Records and Third Man Records on April 13, 2019, aka Record Store Day. (credit: Chris Foresman)

History is littered with dead audio formats, from Elcaset to 8-track tapes, wire recording to "talking rubber." Yet so far, vinyl has consistently resisted going quietly into that good night. Today, unit sales are up 800 percent from ten years ago, and companies continue to produce turntables of all shapes and sizes (they even steal CES headlines from the latest Internet-of-whatever device).

So while we may no longer want them in our automobiles, in home record players appear to be thriving whether due to an appreciation of physical media, tactile rituals, or multi sensory experiences. And on this wave of modern record appreciation, one of the most obscure vinyl formats is getting a second lease on life thanks to Record Store Day.

If you’ve heard of 3” vinyl singles at all, you have the enigmatic frontman of The White Stripes to thank for that. Jack White’s label Third Man Records imported the tiny format from Japan nearly 15 years ago for a limited series of White Stripes singles. The original player—a cheap toy from Japanese maker Bandai—was abandoned almost as quickly as it launched. Outside of a few rabid White Stripes fans or Japan-o-philes willing to part with anywhere from a few hundred to as much two-thousand dollars on eBay, few in the US have even seen one, let alone listened to it.

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Virtual Reality: Valve kündigt eigenes VR-Headset namens Index an

Ohne den langjährigen Partner HTC hat Valve ein neues Virtual-Reality-Headset angekündigt, das offenbar im Mai 2019 unter dem Namen Index erscheinen oder zumindest mit mehr Details als bislang vorgestellt werden soll. Fans hoffen auf eine VR-Version vo…

Ohne den langjährigen Partner HTC hat Valve ein neues Virtual-Reality-Headset angekündigt, das offenbar im Mai 2019 unter dem Namen Index erscheinen oder zumindest mit mehr Details als bislang vorgestellt werden soll. Fans hoffen auf eine VR-Version von Half-Life. (Valve, Half-Life)

Can AI be a fair judge in court? Estonia thinks so

Estonians already use a national ID card for things like e-voting and digital tax filing.

Illustration of a toy robot using a rotary telephone.

Enlarge / An honorable Estonian future judge, presumably. (credit: Getty Images | Charles Taylor)

Government usually isn’t the place to look for innovation in IT or new technologies like artificial intelligence. But Ott Velsberg might change your mind. As Estonia's chief data officer, the 28-year-old graduate student is overseeing the tiny Baltic nation's push to insert artificial intelligence and machine learning into services provided to its 1.3 million citizens.

"We want the government to be as lean as possible," says the wiry, bespectacled Velsberg, an Estonian who is writing his PhD thesis at Sweden’s Umeå University on using the Internet of Things and sensor data in government services. Estonia's government hired Velsberg last August to run a new project to introduce AI into various ministries to streamline services offered to residents.

Deploying AI is crucial, he says. “Some people worry that if we lower the number of civil employees, the quality of service will suffer. But the AI agent will help us." About 22 percent of Estonians work for the government; that’s about average for European countries, but higher than the 18 percent rate in the US.

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Stellenabbau: Intel entlässt mehrere Hundert Mitarbeiter

Intel verkleinert seine Belegschaft: Mehrere Hundert Angestellte müssen gehen. Vom den Entlassungen sind verschiedene Standorte des Chipherstellers betroffen. (Intel)

Intel verkleinert seine Belegschaft: Mehrere Hundert Angestellte müssen gehen. Vom den Entlassungen sind verschiedene Standorte des Chipherstellers betroffen. (Intel)

Will Piracy-Focused Torrent & Streaming Sites Be Affected by Article 13/17?

This week the EU Parliament approved the final text of the Copyright Directive, meaning that user-uploaded content sites, such as YouTube, will have to strike licensing deals with rightsholders to avoid liability. But how will that affect piracy-focused torrent and streaming sites?

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

After the EU Parliament rubber-stamped Article 13 (renamed Article 17 in the final text) this week, speculation began in some media outlets that this signals the end of The Pirate Bay, ‘pirate’ streaming sites, and ‘pirate’ Kodi addons.

Copyright law is complex, as the recent controversies over the Copyright Directive have firmly underlined, but a fairly detailed outline can be found in the adopted text (pdf) published this week.

Teams of professional lawyers working for legal and mostly corporate platforms will undoubtedly spend hundreds of hours going through the text to fully understand what the future holds for various platforms that will defined as Online Content-Sharing Service Providers under the Directive.

What is an Online Content-Sharing Service Provider?

To begin, we can presume that most public torrent sites that operate like The Pirate Bay do not store content (only links to content) and most illicit Kodi add-ons are reliant upon sites that do host content – some or potentially most of it illegal.

“The definition of an online content-sharing service provider laid down in this Directive should target only online services that play an important role on the online content market by competing with other online content services, such as online audio and video streaming services, for the same audiences,” the document reads.

One can argue, strictly in this context, that both torrent and hosting/streaming sites (especially with piracy ambitions) fit that definition, but let’s continue.

“The services covered by this Directive are services, the main or one of the main purposes of which is to store and enable users to upload and share a large amount of copyright-protected content with the purpose of obtaining profit therefrom, either directly or indirectly, by organising it and promoting it in order to attract a larger audience, including by categorising it and using targeted promotion within it,” the final text reads.

Again, while torrent sites organize and promote links to content, they tend not to store it, but hosting and cyberlocker-type sites do. On the other hand, most platforms commonly used by pirates in the latter two categories don’t always organize and promote content on their platforms. This obviously excludes dedicated ‘pirate’ streaming portals that often display content in a Netflix-style interface.

So how is it determined whether a platform can be considered an Online Content-Sharing Service Provider under the Directive?

“The assessment of whether an online content-sharing service provider stores and gives access to a large amount of copyright-protected content should be made on a case-by-case basis and should take account of a combination of elements, such as the audience of the service and the number of files of copyright-protected content uploaded by the users of the service,” the text adds.

Again, this is open to legal interpretation but it seems that most hosting platforms that are dedicated to piracy will have servers packed with pirated content. They will also be heavily frequented by pirates. As a result, such services will always be viewed as pirate sites by rightsholders and treated as such, i.e with contempt.

This means that even if platforms do appear to qualify to be labeled as an Online Content-Sharing Service Provider, major rightsholders will never legitimize them by striking content licensing deals as required under Article 13 (now 17). First-run movies, for example, are simply impossible to license.

On the flip side, dedicated ‘pirate’ sites themselves are extremely unlikely (even if they could) to begin full-scale cooperation with rightsholders to take content down and then demonstrate “best efforts” to keep it down “in accordance with high industry standards of professional diligence.” If they did, what would they offer?

While some hosting sites do have takedown regimes, in the majority of cases rightsholders see ‘pirate’ sites as criminal operations that unfairly compete with their businesses.

The bottom line is that under existing EU law, piracy-focused torrent and cyberlocker-type sites are already operating outside the law. One only has to look at the various blocking orders around Europe that have declared The Pirate Bay – and sites like it – to be illegal.

Scooping platforms like this into Article 13 (now 17) doesn’t seem to be the key intention of rightsholders. The idea was to close the so-called “Value Gap” and the gap between paying something (in YouTube’s case) and paying absolutely nothing (in the case of torrent and streaming sites) is a gap that cannot be bridged.

There may be some borderline cases open for legal debate and even negotiation but, at the moment, there are bigger fish to fry – YouTube and YouTube-like sites, in particular.

Additionally, the Directive also includes a note that “to ensure a high level of copyright protection” the liability mechanism in the Directive “should not apply to service providers the main purpose of which is to engage in or to facilitate copyright piracy. “

There is still a lot of water to go under the bridge before the dust settles on this momentous occasion but it seems safe to say that the operators of The Pirate Bay and similar sites won’t really be extra-worried about Article 13/Article 17, because they’re on the wrong side of existing law already.

TorrentFreak sought the opinion of Tim Kuik, the boss of Dutch anti-piracy group BREIN, who has more experience than most when it comes to taking action against pirate sites.

We put it to him the theory that these kinds of platforms probably won’t be too affected by this week’s events, because they are already illegal under existing law, are unlikely to want to “go straight”, and rightsholders wouldn’t license or cooperate with them anyway.

“I’ll keep it short,” he said. “I agree.”

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and more. We also have VPN reviews, discounts, offers and coupons.

Drahtloses Ladesystem: Apple stellt Airpower ein

Die technischen Probleme waren nicht zu lösen: Apple hat angekündigt, dass das Induktionsladesystem Airpower nicht auf den Markt kommt. Das Unternehmen werde aber weiter an drahtlosen Systemen arbeiten, kündigte Hardware-Chef Dan Riccio an. (Apple, Mob…

Die technischen Probleme waren nicht zu lösen: Apple hat angekündigt, dass das Induktionsladesystem Airpower nicht auf den Markt kommt. Das Unternehmen werde aber weiter an drahtlosen Systemen arbeiten, kündigte Hardware-Chef Dan Riccio an. (Apple, Mobil)

Wochenrückblick: Vages von Apple, Scharfes von Huawei, Schlimmes von der EU

Apple streamt Worthülsen und startet eine Herzensangelegenheit. Huawei innoviert mit Handykameras. Und im EU-Parlament verdrücken sich zu wenig Abgeordnete bei der Abstimmung. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Apple TV)

Apple streamt Worthülsen und startet eine Herzensangelegenheit. Huawei innoviert mit Handykameras. Und im EU-Parlament verdrücken sich zu wenig Abgeordnete bei der Abstimmung. (Golem-Wochenrückblick, Apple TV)

Valve’s long-rumored VR headset is finally real: the Valve Index, coming in May

Months of barely contained rumors have now been confirmed.

What do we know about Valve's new VR headset? Not much, beyond this image.

Enlarge / What do we know about Valve's new VR headset? Not much, beyond this image. (credit: Valve)

Valve Corporation's long-rumored VR headset is finally real. After allying with HTC to launch the Vive as a SteamVR product in 2016, Valve has moved ahead with plans to launch its own headset, the Valve Index, in "May 2019."

The news came on Friday in the form of a single teaser image, shown above, of a headset with the phrase "Valve Index" written on its front. The front of the headset is flanked by at least two sensors. This shadow-covered hardware matches the leaked headset reported by UploadVR in November of last year. That report hinted to Valve's headset supporting a wider, 135-degree field-of-view (FOV), as opposed to the roughly 110-degree FOV of the original HTC Vive and Oculus Rift.

Valve's dedicated website for the new device includes no other information than the above image and the date "May 2019." It does not include any mention of the new SteamVR Knuckles controllers, which Valve has advertised pretty heavily via developer outreach since their 2016 reveal and a later series of improved prototypes in 2018. This page also doesn't mention a series of three Valve-produced VR games that have been repeatedly advertised by Valve co-founder Gabe Newell since 2017.

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