Der Wind dreht sich

Nach einer Woche ist die Empörung über die Schauspieleraktion #allesdichtmachen verebbt, die öffentliche Debatte verändert sich. Ein Medienkommentar

Nach einer Woche ist die Empörung über die Schauspieleraktion #allesdichtmachen verebbt, die öffentliche Debatte verändert sich. Ein Medienkommentar

A Military Career in Jeopardy For TV Piracy: Fair Punishment or a Step Too Far?

After almost two decades of lawsuits and criminal cases against pirates of all kinds, no one should be surprised that supplying infringing content has the potential to end badly. Nevertheless, it’s a risk that some people are still prepared to take, so…

After almost two decades of lawsuits and criminal cases against pirates of all kinds, no one should be surprised that supplying infringing content has the potential to end badly. Nevertheless, it's a risk that some people are still prepared to take, sometimes with life-altering consequences. Don't do the crime if you can't do the time? Perhaps, but there are real lives at stake here too, let's not forget that.

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

What became of 2009’s Left 4 Dead 2 boycott? Here’s the inside story

In gaming since L4D2, fan campaigns have even pressured devs to release entirely new endings.

Bill looks over the boycott's corpse to determine if it's still a threat...

Enlarge / Bill looks over the boycott's corpse to determine if it's still a threat...

The following piece, originally published in late 2009, looks back at that year's somewhat quixotic attempted boycott of Left 4 Dead 2—and how that effort eventually fell apart. Flawed as it was, that movement would serve as a precursor to more frequent attempts by organized fan communities trying to bring change in the game industry. The most famous example might be the outcry around the conclusion of Mass Effect 3 in 2012, where the developers actually released a downloadable patch changing the conclusion of a franchise-sweeping narrative to placate vocal fans.

This report and over a dozen more are collected in Save Point, a new collection from Ars Technica Senior Gaming Editor Kyle Orland. The book looks back on video games as they were between 2003 to 2011, a sometimes-uncomfortable "awkward adolescence" period where the industry did its best to grow up with the young audience that had grown up with games as their entertainment of choice through the '70s, '80s, and '90s. The pieces collected in the book analyze how games were learning from their past and influencing the future, report on some of gaming's growing and myriad sub-communities, and examine how the business of selling and marketing games was evolving alongside the explosive growth of the Internet.

Save Point is available exclusively as part of the Spring Getaway Games Bundle through May 13.

In general, gamers aren't very effective at organizing to effect change in the game industry. Sure, there are hundreds of online petitions demanding everything from a Full House game to a generalized end to game hacking, but the vast majority fail to garner much attention or support. Even well-organized and well-publicized efforts, like those seeking LAN support in StarCraft 2 or further support for the Earthbound games are met with official responses ranging from polite refusal to teasing hints, and rarely with real change.

But this year, many gamers took a different tack to protest what they saw as a betrayal of a publisher's past promises. Mere hours after Valve announced the planned November release of Left 4 Dead 2 (L4D2) at June's Electronic Entertainment Expo, a group calling for an L4D2 boycott popped up on Valve's Steam user community. The group's first public message asked a simple question that would come to define its cause: "Where's all the content and the updates you promised for [the original Left 4 Dead], Valve?"

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Chia Coin: SSD-Hersteller warnt vor Kryptomining

Eine neue Kryptowährung hat zu einem Boom bei Speichermedien geführt. Ein Hersteller warnt, durch Kryptomining könne die Garantie auf SSDs erlöschen. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

Eine neue Kryptowährung hat zu einem Boom bei Speichermedien geführt. Ein Hersteller warnt, durch Kryptomining könne die Garantie auf SSDs erlöschen. (Solid State Drive, Speichermedien)

An ambitious plan to tackle ransomware faces long odds

Heavyweight task force proposes framework to tackle a major cybersecurity problem.

An ambitious plan to tackle ransomware faces long odds

Enlarge (credit: Miragec | Getty Images)

Schools, hospitals, the City of Atlanta. Garmin, Acer, the Washington, DC, police. At this point no one is safe from the scourge of ransomware. Over the past few years, skyrocketing ransom demands and indiscriminate targeting have escalated, with no relief in sight. Today a recently formed public-private partnership is taking the first steps toward a coordinated response.

The comprehensive framework, overseen by the Institute for Security and Technology's Ransomware Task Force, proposes a more aggressive public-private response to ransomware, rather than the historically piecemeal approach. Launched in December, the task force counts Amazon Web Services, Cisco, and Microsoft among its members, along with the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Department of Homeland Security's Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the United Kingdom National Crime agency. Drawing from the recommendations of cybersecurity firms, incident responders, nonprofits, government agencies, and academics, the report calls on the public and private sector to improve defenses, develop response plans, strengthen and expand international law enforcement collaboration, and regulate cryptocurrencies.

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Ford’s ever-smarter robots are speeding up the assembly line

A transmission factory shows how AI may gradually creep into industrial processes

Ford is adding artificial intelligence to its robotic assembly lines.

Enlarge / Ford is adding artificial intelligence to its robotic assembly lines.

In 1913, Henry Ford revolutionized car-making with the first moving assembly line, an innovation that made piecing together new vehicles faster and more efficient. Some hundred years later, Ford is now using artificial intelligence to eke more speed out of today’s manufacturing lines.

At a Ford Transmission Plant in Livonia, Mich., the station where robots help assemble torque converters now includes a system that uses AI to learn from previous attempts how to wiggle the pieces into place most efficiently. Inside a large safety cage, robot arms wheel around grasping circular pieces of metal, each about the diameter of a dinner plate, from a conveyor and slot them together.

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