Warum man Menschen lieber keine Zahlen sagen soll, die nicht rund sind

Nicht runde Zahlen seien schrill, so eine Studie, und lenken die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Zahl und genauere Vergleiche, was die Wirksamkeit einer Produktwerbung oder einer gesundheitlichen Empfehlung in Zeiten einer Pandemie beeinträchtigen könnte

Nicht runde Zahlen seien schrill, so eine Studie, und lenken die Aufmerksamkeit auf die Zahl und genauere Vergleiche, was die Wirksamkeit einer Produktwerbung oder einer gesundheitlichen Empfehlung in Zeiten einer Pandemie beeinträchtigen könnte

Bright House Doesn’t Directly Profit From Pirating Subscribers, Court Rules

A federal court in Florida has dismissed the vicarious copyright infringement claims against ISP Bright House Networks. The company is being sued by a group of prominent record labels who argue that the Internet provider directly profited from piracy. The court disagrees, characterizing the accusations as “a sort of ‘dog-whistle’ theory.”

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

cassette tapeLast year a group of music industry giants, including Sony, Universal, and Warner Bros, sued Bright House Networks for failing to disconnect pirating subscribers.

Bright House is owned by Charter, which was sued in a separate complaint simultaneously. In both cases, the music companies demanded compensation for their alleged losses.

The lawsuits, which are part of a broader legal campaign against ISPs, have continued on their own paths since. Both Bright House and Charter submitted motions to dismiss the claims. For Bright House, this resulted in a victory late last week.

In February, the ISP submitted a motion to dismiss the vicarious copyright infringement claims. Bright House refuted the claim that it profited directly from pirating subscribers, something which the court now agrees.

Florida Court Dismisses Vicarious Infringement Claim

US District Court Judge Mary Scriven dismisses the music companies’ allegations, describing their argumentation as insufficient.

The music companies argued that some subscribers are “drawn” by the ability to pirate and Bright House’s “failure to police” piracy, which resulted in copyright infringement on a “massive” scale.

However, according to the court, this is not enough to show that there’s a direct financial benefit. Judge Scriven notes that the ability to download infringing content is just one of many reasons people may have to subscribe to Bright House’s services.

“At most, Plaintiffs allege that access to infringing content generally available on the internet is one of many reasons motivating some subscribers to enroll with any ISP,” Scriven writes.

“Plaintiff do not allege that there is anything unique about the service Bright House offers as a portal to the internet or as a portal to this alleged contraband content,” she adds.

Even if the ability to pirate is a draw, the music companies still fail to show that this is the primary draw, which is required to prove vicarious copyright infringement.

Dog-Whistle Theory

According to Judge Scriven, the copyright holders rely on some sort of “dog-whistle” theory which claims that prospective pirates are lured in by Bright House’s ads for high-speed downloads.

“It is not readily apparent or plausibly alleged that an internet thief would be ‘drawn’ by the efficiency of internet service any more than the average law-abiding purchaser of copyrighted content. All users presumably seek faster, more reliable internet service,” Judge Scriven writes.

order on motion to dismiss

If that theory held up, it would essentially apply to all Internet providers, she clarifies, while stressing that high speeds and access to BitTorrent downloads are not exclusive to Bright House’s services.

Based on these and other arguments, the Florida district court dismissed the vicarious copyright infringement claim.

“The Court concludes that Plaintiffs have failed to adequately allege that Bright House receives a direct financial benefit from its users’ infringing activity. For this reason, the vicarious liability claim fails,” US District Court Judge Mary Scriven writes.

This doesn’t mean that the lawsuit is over. Bright House didn’t request dismissal of the contributory copyright infringement allegation, so for now, the case will go ahead based on that claim.

A copy of US District Court Judge Mary Scriven’s order on the motion to dismiss the vicarious liability claim is available here (pdf)

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

Russian space chief questions NASA plans, praises partnership with China

“Today relations between Russia and China are very good.”

China's Vice Premier Wang Yang (standing) and Russia's then-Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin at Russian-Chinese talks at Constantine Palace in 2016.

Enlarge / China's Vice Premier Wang Yang (standing) and Russia's then-Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin at Russian-Chinese talks at Constantine Palace in 2016. (credit: Alexander AstafyevTASS via Getty Images)

The chief of Russia's space corporation, Dmitry Rogozin, offered less-than-flattering comments about NASA's Moon program in a recent interview with a Russian tabloid newspaper, Komsomolskaya Pravda.

Asked about Russia's interest in sending humans to the Moon and possibly partnering with NASA, Rogozin dismissed the Artemis program. He responded: "Frankly speaking, we are not interested in participating in such a project."

The Russian space chief has publicly complained for some time that NASA has chosen a 2024 landing date for political reasons. He has also compared US efforts to build a sustainable program of exploration on the surface of the Moon to American invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq.

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Disappointed by Formula E’s plan for its next car? Here’s an alternative

Cheaper, faster, and more powerful—a Formula E champ talks to Ars about his idea.

A cartoon race car appears to be made out of a comically shaped 9-volt alkaline battery.

Enlarge / The future Formula E car will look almost nothing like this. (credit: Matthias Kulka/Getty Images)

Formula E only adopted its second-generation electric race car at the beginning of last season, but the motorsport is finalizing plans for the next iteration—called Gen3—set to debut in season nine (2022/2023). The plan is to make the car more powerful and lighter, with more ability to regenerate energy under braking. It will even adopt mid-race fast-charging. All of that is an improvement on the Gen2 car, but here at Ars, we can't help but feel that Formula E is missing an opportunity to be bolder. And we're not alone. Lucas di Grassi—season 3's champion—has his own idea for the direction Gen3 should take, and it's one the EV crowd will probably like.

Formula E’s plan

Formula E's plan for the Gen3 car is evolutionary rather than revolutionary. Power is going up, with 350kW (469hp) available in qualifying, compared to the current 250kW (335hp), which will put speeds somewhere between Formula 3 and Formula 2. (Power output during the 45-minute races is capped at 300kW/402hp.) The battery is going to get considerably lighter, weighing 397lbs (180kg) compared to the current 547lbs (248kg), albeit with a slight reduction in capacity to 51kWh.

The battery will be able to charge at 600kW, more than twice the power of even the best EVs on sale today. That will enable mid-race fast charging, which will add 4kWh in 30 seconds. And the cars will be able to regenerate energy under deceleration at the same power level, thanks to a front-axle 250kW generator unit that works in conjunction with the 350kW motor-generator unit (MGU). However, the front wheels will only regenerate energy—there's no plan to allow the cars to deploy power to the front wheels, unlike just about every high-performance electric road car on sale or in development.

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FunKey S is a tiny retro console that looks like a Game Body Advance SP (crowdfunding)

While there’s no shortage of retro-inspired handheld game consoles that you can use to play classic games on the go, the FunKey S might just be one of the smallest to date. Designed to look like a Game Boy Advanced SP, the Funkey S is smaller. L…

FunKey S

While there’s no shortage of retro-inspired handheld game consoles that you can use to play classic games on the go, the FunKey S might just be one of the smallest to date. Designed to look like a Game Boy Advanced SP, the Funkey S is smaller. Like about 1/6th the size in volume. It’s small […]

The post FunKey S is a tiny retro console that looks like a Game Body Advance SP (crowdfunding) appeared first on Liliputing.

Early hominins made a cutting tool from a hippopotamus femur

The rare find suggests H. erectus toolmakers were more versatile than we realized.

Early hominins made a cutting tool from a hippopotamus femur

Enlarge (credit: By Diego Delso, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74486418)

Hand axes are fairly common finds at sites dating between 2 million and 1 million years old. These sturdy tools have two sides (also called faces) and a sharp edge at one end. But hand axes are usually made of stone, so archaeologists working at the Konso Formation in southern Ethiopia were surprised to find a hand axe worked from a large chunk of bone buried in a 1.4 million-year-old layer of sediment. When Tohoku University archaeologist Katsuhiro Sano and his colleagues compared the bone to a collection of bone samples from large mammals, they found that their ancient hand axe had once been part of a hippopotamus femur (thigh bone).

From hippopotamus to hand axe

The Konso find is only the second bone hand axe archaeologists have ever found, and one of just a handful of bone tools from sites older than 1 million years. Based on fossils found at Konso, the hominin who flaked off a chunk of hippo femur and worked it into a nice, sharp hand axe was probably a Homo erectus. Members of the species walked upright and were built a lot like modern humans, and they eventually spread from Africa, across Europe and Asia, and all the way to modern Indonesia.

At least one member of this species left behind a 13cm-long hand axe that is, according to Sano and his colleagues, an excellent piece of craftsmanship. The toolmaker apparently flaked a large, flattish piece of bone off the side of a hippo femur; you can still see the outer surface of the bone on one side of the hand axe. That fits the standard Acheulean approach to making hand axes and other tools; the first step is to make a large “blank” in the right general shape, then gradually flake off smaller pieces to shape the finished product.

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Ars readers hated this startup’s privacy policy—so the company changed it

Neeva’s new privacy policy is a significant improvement over the original.

Black-and-white photo of two 1950s style women whispering.

Enlarge / This isn't the relationship you want to see between a company with access to your private data and its affiliates. (credit: Camerique / Getty Images)

When we covered subscription-based search engine startup Neeva in June, most reader focus wasn't on the search engine itself so much as its privacy policy, which left much to be desired—particularly given the option Neeva gives its users to search their email via the service. Shortly after publication, Neeva CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy reached out to Ars to discuss what went wrong and how the company planned to fix it.

Updated privacy policy

Ramaswamy told Ars that the company's intention was to provide a secure and privacy-respecting platform from the start. But, he added—and we're paraphrasing here—"lawyers will be lawyers," and it was "on him" that he had not inspected the policies drafted by the company's legal counsel closely enough. He told us that he heard our readers' feedback loud and clear, and he pledged to overhaul the policy to bring it in line with the company's actual vision.

The gallery above displays the three areas in the policy that have changed since the call with Ars. Both references to third-party advertising—and tracking technologies associated with such advertising—have been entirely removed. The major impact here lies in expectations for third-party intrusions into the Neeva site itself, and it's an important one—there isn't much point in paying a monthly subscription in return for privacy if your search metadata might be leaking to the public giants you're trying to avoid in the first place.

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Ignitial Tukhla will be a high-end, open hardware single board computer (developed by Olimex)

Open hardware company Olimex has announced its developing a “high end open source Linux board” for a French company called Ignitial. The upcoming Ignitial Tukhla will have an NXP iMX8 processor, support for up to 16GB of RAM, and plenty of…

Open hardware company Olimex has announced its developing a “high end open source Linux board” for a French company called Ignitial. The upcoming Ignitial Tukhla will have an NXP iMX8 processor, support for up to 16GB of RAM, and plenty of options for storage, input, and output. What makes it an open hardware project is that […]

The post Ignitial Tukhla will be a high-end, open hardware single board computer (developed by Olimex) appeared first on Liliputing.

How COVID-19 transformed Pokémon Go into “Pokémon stay-at-home”

Players worry how remote play will affect a game centered on social encounters.

Gotta catch 'em all while not catching coronavirus (TM).

Enlarge / Gotta catch 'em all while not catching coronavirus (TM). (credit: Niantic / Aurich Lawson)

Since its launch in 2016, the premise of mobile titan Pokémon Go has centered on roaming the outdoors in search of mystical little creatures. As a result, it’s a game that’s particularly ill-suited to pandemic-derived restrictions on movement.

In an attempt to remedy this, Pokémon Go developer Niantic has rolled out regular updates to make the game more quarantine-compatible in recent months. This has led to a new era of play among many in the Pokémon Go scene. Call it “stay-at-home, play-at-home.”

Such a systemic change in the way Pokémon Go is played was likely necessary for the game to survive in an era where many (if not most) players were unable or afraid to travel and gather together for their usual raids. By providing players with a way to play from home, Niantic is effectively removing the golden geese taunting them from the park across the road.

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