
Donald Trump: Tiktok bleiben 45 Tage bis US-Verbot
US-Präsident Donald Trump sieht in Tiktok eine Bedrohung der nationalen Sicherheit. Er setzt der beliebten Video-App eine Frist für ein Verbot. (Tiktok, Soziales Netz)

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US-Präsident Donald Trump sieht in Tiktok eine Bedrohung der nationalen Sicherheit. Er setzt der beliebten Video-App eine Frist für ein Verbot. (Tiktok, Soziales Netz)
In der explosiven Situation zwischen den USA und China zündelt Norbert Röttgen, CDU-Politiker mit Aspirationen auf den Parteivorsitz und die Kanzlerschaft, mit unrichtigen Aussagen zu 5G und Huawei. Eine Analyse von Achim Sawall (Huawei, Handy)
Die amerikanisch-chinesische “Entkopplung” wird auf das Internet ausgeweitet. China reagiert empört und erinnert an den NSA-Skandal
Die Elektroautos von Bentley sollen mit Motoren ohne Seltenerdmagnete und ohne Kupferwicklungen auskommen. (Elektroauto, Technologie)
Der Toyota Prius ist in Deutschland wegen schlechter Verkaufszahlen vom Markt genommen worden. Die eigenständige Plug-in-Version bleibt. (Toyota, Technologie)
Weshare vermietet den E-Golf jetzt nicht nur minuten- und tageweise, sondern als Wedrive auch mehrere Monate lang. Der Strom ist nicht im Preis enthalten. (VW, Technologie)
“Exconfidential Lake” leak includes docs Intel provided under NDA as recently as May.
Enlarge (credit: Tillie Kottman)
Intel is investigating the purported leak of more than 20 gigabytes of its proprietary data and source code that a security researcher said came from a data breach earlier this year.
The data—which at the time this post went live was publicly available on BitTorrent feeds—contains data Intel makes available to partners and customers under NDA, a company spokeswoman said. Speaking on background, she said Intel officials don’t believe the data came from a network breach. She also said the company is still trying to determine how current the material is and that, so far, there is no signs the data includes any customer or personal information.
“We are investigating this situation,” company officials said in a statement. “The information appears to come from the Intel Resource and Design Center, which hosts information for use by our customers, partners and other external parties who have registered for access. We believe an individual with access downloaded and shared this data.”
GM’s head of electric powertrains tells us more about the new platform.
The Cadillac Lyriq is the first battery EV to use General Motors' new 3rd-generation EV platform. [credit: Cadillac ]
On Thursday night, Cadillac unveiled a new SUV, the Lyriq. It's the brand's first battery electric vehicle, and the first vehicle to use General Motors' new BEV3 platform and Ultium battery technology, which is set to spawn 22 new BEVs across the company's range of brands between now and 2023. Cadillac isn't spilling all the beans about the Lyriq just yet, but it did share some info with Ars ahead of the livestream launch. The headline figures are a range of "beyond 300 miles" (482km) on a single charge, DC fast charging at "over 150kW", and the fact that it will come in rear- and all-wheel drive configurations.
Additionally, it's going to feature a massive 33-inch display on the dashboard that combines the main instrument panel and the infotainment system, a dual-plane augmented reality heads-up display (that features information like vehicle speed on a close plane, and navigation directions on a far plane), and advanced driver assistance systems including the latest version of Super Cruise and the ability to remotely park itself.
Recently, I spoke with Michael Harpster, global chief engineer for electric and hybrid propulsion systems at GM, to find out a bit more about the new BEV3 platform and the lessons that GM has learned from its previous vehicles like the EV1 and Chevrolet Bolt EV. "We were doing the math, and you know, we've got 25 years of production EV experience, going back to the EV1. So, there's a huge history of General Motors and electric vehicles," he told me, adding that his team at GM still includes a couple of engineers who worked directly on the EV1, which was in production between 1996 and 1999.
20GB of Intel documents that were obtained without permission have been released onto the internet. They contain previously undisclosed information about Intel’s chips, software, and other intellectual property. According to Intel, the data dump…
20GB of Intel documents that were obtained without permission have been released onto the internet. They contain previously undisclosed information about Intel’s chips, software, and other intellectual property. According to Intel, the data dump seems to have come from its “Intel Resource and Design Center, which hosts information for use by our customers, partners, and […]
The post Lilbits: Intel breach, new Android and macOS betas, and more appeared first on Liliputing.
Delivery bookings doubled last quarter while ride bookings plunged 75 percent.
Enlarge / Passengers load their luggage into their Uber cars Sydney Airport on August 05, 2020. (credit: James D. Morgan/Getty Images)
The coronavirus pandemic hammered Uber's finances in the second quarter of 2020, the company announced on Thursday. Gross bookings for Uber's core ride-hailing business plunged by 75 percent compared with a year earlier—from $12.2 billion to $3 billion.
That was offset somewhat by rapid growth in Uber's delivery business. Delivery bookings more than doubled from $3.4 billion to $7 billion.
The company lost $1.8 billion in the second quarter on a GAAP basis. Ignoring one-time charges, Uber has been losing around $1 billion per quarter for the last couple of years.