Xbox One minus two: Microsoft kills console versions before Series X launch

Xbox One S will still exist; adds fuel to fire about a possible “Lockhart” launch.

Xbox One X, we hardly knew ye.

Enlarge / Xbox One X, we hardly knew ye. (credit: Aurich Lawson)

Ahead of this holiday season's new Xbox Series X console launch, Microsoft has confirmed a surprising change on the production side: the discontinuation of two existing Xbox One console versions.

Following a report from The Verge, Xbox representatives confirmed directly to Ars Technica that the company will no longer produce either 2017's Xbox One X or 2019's Xbox S All-Digital Edition. The company described this discontinuation as "the natural step of stopping production" due to "ramp[ing] into the future with Xbox Series X," only to then confirm that an older version of the console, 2016's Xbox One S, will still be produced worldwide.

"Gamers can check with their local retailers for more details on Xbox One hardware availability," an Xbox rep said to Ars Technica. So if you're interested in the Xbox One X, now might be the time to snap one up.

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Microsoft: Game over für zwei Xbox One

Die Xbox One X und die laufwerklose Xbox One S werden nicht mehr produziert. Immerhin die kleine Standardversion soll es noch länger geben. (Xbox One X, Microsoft)

Die Xbox One X und die laufwerklose Xbox One S werden nicht mehr produziert. Immerhin die kleine Standardversion soll es noch länger geben. (Xbox One X, Microsoft)

YouTube & Uploaded Not Liable For Pirate Uploads Advises EU Advocate General

Platforms such as YouTube and Uploaded are not directly liable for the copyright-infringing uploads of their users. That’s according to an opinion from Advocate General Saugmandsgaard Øe published by the EU Court of Justice today. Importantly, however, the advice relates only to current EU law, which will change next year with a new liability regime under Article 17.

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

After millions of Internet users became content uploaders over the past two decades, copyright holders faced a new and growing problem with online infringement.

On top of legitimately uploaded content, platforms such as YouTube became hosts to millions of infringing uploads, with rightsholders having to devote considerable resources to have them taken down. As a result, some rightsholders have taken legal action against the platforms themselves, trying to hold them liable for the infringements of their users.

Two Cases Reached Europe’s Highest Court

The first, brought by music producer Frank Peterson against YouTube and Google in Germany, complained that tracks by artist Sarah Brightman from the album ‘A Winter Symphony’ were uploaded to YouTube in 2008 without his permission.

The second, also filed in Germany, saw publisher Elsevier filing a complaint against Cyando, the owner of file-hosting platform Uploaded. The company complained that its copyrighted works, including ‘Gray’s Anatomy for Students’, ‘Atlas of Human Anatomy’ and ‘Campbell-Walsh Urology’, had been stored on Uploaded in 2013 by the site’s users in breach of the publishers’ exclusive rights.

Both of these cases are being heard by the Federal Court of Justice, which referred several questions to the EU Court for a preliminary ruling. Today the EU Court published Advocate General Saugmandsgaard Øe’s opinion, advising that platforms such as YouTube and Cyando/Uploaded are not directly liable under the Copyright Directive when their users upload copyright-protected content.

The Advocate General’s Advice to the EU Court

“[O]perators such as YouTube and Cyando do not, in principle, carry out an act of ‘communication to the public’ themselves in such a case. The role played by those operators is, in principle, that of an intermediary providing physical facilities which enable users to carry out a ‘communication to the public’. Any ‘primary’ liability arising from that ‘communication’ is therefore borne, as a rule, solely by those users,” a statement on the opinion reads.

Advocate General Saugmandsgaard Øe notes that uploads initiated by users of YouTube and Uploaded are processed automatically and that any check made in advance by the platforms “does not constitute selection in so far as that [the] check is confined to identifying illegal content and does not therefore reflect its intention to communicate certain (and not other) content to the public.”

Furthermore, platforms like YouTube (at least in principle) are able to benefit from an exemption from liability for infringing files uploaded by users, provided they do not play an active role that gives them knowledge of or control over the content. In short, if the platforms are not aware that content is infringing and process takedown requests to remove it when appropriate, they cannot be held liable.

Rightsholders Still Able to Obtain Injunctions Against Platforms

Irrespective of the question of liability, the Advocate General advises the EU Court that rightsholders can still apply for injunctions against online platforms in order to defend their rights.

“Rightholders must be able to apply for such an injunction where it is established that third parties infringe their rights through the service provided by platform operators, without the need to wait for an infringement to take place again and without the need to show improper conduct by the intermediary,” his advice adds.

Conclusion and Article 17 (formerly Article 13)

While the Advocate General’s opinion is not binding, in most cases the EU Court of Justice adopts such recommendations in its final decision. When that happens the cases will head back to the Federal Court of Justice in Germany but unlike previous important copyright rulings that set the stage for years to come, the situation on the ground for companies like YouTube will soon change.

As reported extensively last year, the EU has a new Copyright Directive which includes the so-called “upload filter” requirements of Article 17 (formerly Article 13). That legislation mandates a lot more responsibility for platforms like YouTube and Uploaded.

“That directive, which must be transposed by each Member State into its national law by 7 June 2021 at the latest, requires, inter alia, those operators to obtain an authorization from the rightholders, for example by concluding a licensing agreement, for the works uploaded by users of their platforms,” the EU Court noted in today’s opinion, adding that since the directive is not yet in force, it doesn’t apply to the cases above.

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

Georgia’s Republican governor orders cities to stop requiring masks

Governor battles Atlanta and other cities that require masks during pandemic.

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp putting on a mask at a public event.

Enlarge / Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp during a "Wear A Mask" tour stop in Dalton, Georgia, on Thursday, July 2, 2020. (credit: Getty Images | Bloomberg)

Georgia Governor Brian Kemp yesterday issued an executive order that overturns local mask-wearing requirements.

Kemp's executive order says that "any state, county, or municipal law, order, ordinance, rule, or regulation that requires persons to wear face coverings, masks, face shields, or any other Personal Protective Equipment while in places of public accommodation or on public property are suspended to the extent that they are more restrictive than this Executive Order."

Kemp, a Republican, issued the order despite evidence that masks are an effective tool in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. Wearing masks is one of several important steps people can take to limit the spread of coronavirus, among others, such as hand-washing and social distancing. Kemp acknowledges that, as his executive order says, "all residents and visitors of the State of Georgia are strongly encouraged to wear face coverings as practicable while outside their homes or place of residence, except when eating, drinking, or exercising outdoors." Kemp also went on a tour of various cities to encourage mask wearing, but he has said, "we don't need a government mandate to do the right thing."

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Wireless Samsung DeX mode may be on the way (use your phone like a desktop)

Samsung’s DeX software allows you to connect certain recent Samsung phones and tablets to an external display and use them like desktop computers. Soon you may be able to that without the need to run a cable from your phone. Xda-developers disco…

Samsung’s DeX software allows you to connect certain recent Samsung phones and tablets to an external display and use them like desktop computers. Soon you may be able to that without the need to run a cable from your phone. Xda-developers discovered clues pointing to wireless DeX mode in the Samsung Tips app. The “tip” […]

The post Wireless Samsung DeX mode may be on the way (use your phone like a desktop) appeared first on Liliputing.

A handful of top Fitbit fitness trackers is on sale today

Dealmaster also has AMD Ryzen processors, Switch accessories, and more.

A handful of top Fitbit fitness trackers is on sale today

Enlarge (credit: Ars Technica)

Today's Dealmaster is headlined by a trio of deals on Fitbit fitness trackers. The discounts include the Fitbit Inspire HR for $69, about $30 off its usual going rate online; the new Fitbit Charge 4 for $130, which is a $20 discount; and the Fitbit Versa Lite smartwatch for $100, which is $25 off its typical street price. All three deals bring their respective devices within a dollar of the lowest prices we've seen.

The Fitbit Inspire HR is currently the top pick in our guide to the best fitness trackers. While it lacks some of the more advanced features of the other discounted trackers, we like it for providing a light and waterproof design, (relatively) accurate sleep and exercise tracking, a useful touchscreen, and a solid five-day battery life at an affordable price. If you don't need to go super in-depth with your activity tracking, it's still a worthwhile choice.

That said, stepping up to the recently released Charge 4 does add useful features such as a built-in GPS (instead of relying on a connected phone, a la the Inspire HR), Spotify and contactless payment support, and an active minutes tracker. We haven't reviewed the device on the site, but feedback around the Web has generally been positive, and we previously reviewed the Charge 3 favorably. The Versa Lite, meanwhile, is closer to the Inspire HR in functionality (with slightly less battery life), but it might work better if you prefer a bigger color touchscreen in a smartwatch form factor.

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Russia-linked hackers accused of targeting COVID-19 vaccine developers

UK, US, and Canada attribute attacks to group “almost certainly” working for Moscow.

Image of vials and syringes on a tray.

Enlarge / Test doses of another potential SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. (credit: MLADEN ANTONOV / Getty Images)

Hackers backed by the Russian state are targeting pharmaceutical companies and academic institutions in the UK, US, and Canada that are working on potential COVID-19 vaccines, British intelligence officials have warned.

The UK’s National Cyber Security Centre, working with Canada’s Communications Security Establishment, attributed the attacks to hacking group APT29, also known as “Cozy Bear,” which it alleged was “almost certainly” working for Russian intelligence services. The findings have been endorsed by the US National Security Agency.

Dominic Raab, UK foreign secretary, said it is “completely unacceptable that the Russian intelligence services are targeting those working to combat the coronavirus pandemic."

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Daily Deals (7-16-2020)

The Epic Games Store is giving away Torchlight II for free this week. Newegg is selling a barebones NUC mini PC with a 28W Intel Core i3-8109U processor, Iris Plus 655 graphics, and 16GB of RAM for $315. And the Microsoft Store is selling Surface Lapt…

Torchlight II

The Epic Games Store is giving away Torchlight II for free this week. Newegg is selling a barebones NUC mini PC with a 28W Intel Core i3-8109U processor, Iris Plus 655 graphics, and 16GB of RAM for $315. And the Microsoft Store is selling Surface Laptop 3 models for up to $401 off. Here are […]

The post Daily Deals (7-16-2020) appeared first on Liliputing.

Please insert disc: Microsoft Flight Simulator will spread across ten DVDs

90GB package is a drop in the bucket compared to the game’s cloud-streamed data.

Not shown: Four more DVDs of game data, if you can believe it.

Enlarge / Not shown: Four more DVDs of game data, if you can believe it. (credit: Aerosoft)

European players who want to play Microsoft's upcoming Flight Simulator reboot next month will be able to buy a physical edition of the game that is spread across a massive ten dual-layered DVDs. The retail package comes courtesy of the simulation add-on specialists at Aerosoft, which announced the publishing partnership with Microsoft and developer Asobo earlier this week.

That physical package, which Aerosoft says should cost "very close to the price you pay Microsoft [for the digital edition]" will include over 90GB of data, the bulk of which are graphical assets for the airplanes and detailed ground scenery in the game. After installing the game from those discs, players will still be encouraged to download update files to the simulation itself, as well as stream copious cloud-based data like high-res satellite photos, geographic details, and live weather updates for an even higher level of realism.

"This is very much a simulator that depends on the cloud if you want to use it to its full potential," Aerosoft community manager Mathijs Kok wrote in a forum thread discussing the physical edition. "If you use the sim offline you get a world that looks a lot better than [Prepar3d] or X-Plane, but you will miss the full high-def coverage of the world with a photo base and all that goes with it (correctly placed trees, etc.)," he added later.

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