Z-SSD & Storage Class Memory: Wie die Konkurrenz Intels 3D Xpoint kontern will

Nachdem Intel und Micron mit Ankündigungen zu 3D-Xpoint-basierten Produkten vorgeprescht sind, ziehen Samsung und Flash Forward nach: Die Südkoreaner haben die Z-SSD entwickelt, das Joint Venture aus Toshiba und Western Digital setzt auf 3D-ReRAM. Samsung will noch 2016 vor Intel liefern und zeigte diverse Benchmarks. (Solid State Drive, Intel)

Nachdem Intel und Micron mit Ankündigungen zu 3D-Xpoint-basierten Produkten vorgeprescht sind, ziehen Samsung und Flash Forward nach: Die Südkoreaner haben die Z-SSD entwickelt, das Joint Venture aus Toshiba und Western Digital setzt auf 3D-ReRAM. Samsung will noch 2016 vor Intel liefern und zeigte diverse Benchmarks. (Solid State Drive, Intel)

Sling TV will stream football games via NFL Network and NFL RedZone

Streaming live football just got a little easier

Sling TV announced a much-anticipated pair of new channels to its TV streaming lineup. The company has added the NFL Network and NFL RedZone to its offerings; Sling Blue customers will automatically receive the NFL Network and those who want NFL RedZone can pay an extra $5 per month for the add-on "Sports Extra" package.

Those who have Sling Blue pay $25 per month, and there's no doubt that adding the NFL Network as standard in that lineup will make some existing customers very happy and likely entice new customers. In addition to watching on Sling TV, the press release states customers will also have access to NFL content on Watch NFL Network through NFL.com and the NFL app.

During the regular season, the NFL Network on Sling TV will show exclusive Thursday Night Football games, and other shows including NFL GameDay MorningA Football Life, TIMELINE, and a new weekday morning show called Good Morning Football. NFL RedZone jumps around each game all Sunday afternoon, showing each touchdown and every important play so fans don't miss a thing.

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Darknet drug dealers rake in millions each month

Major new research finds darknet markets are growing despite Silk Road demise.

The successors to Silk Road, the darknet drug market shut down by the FBI in 2013, are raking in tens of millions of pounds in total revenue every month, according to a new report.

British dealers apparently have a serious finger in the pie, taking home roughly 16 percent of the global revenues, or around £1.75 million, between an estimated 338 vendors.

The report, commissioned by the Dutch government to gauge the growth of darknet markets in the years following the demise of Silk Road, found some good news for beleaguered law enforcement: "cryptomarkets have grown substantially in the past few years, but not explosively," though the numbers of vendors and hosting sites have grown. In fact, researchers found around 50 of these markets in total, however, the total volume of listings is now only six times larger than in 2013.

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Judge tosses suit accusing Twitter of providing material support to ISIS

Plaintiffs say crowd-sourced execution spurred killing of US contractors.

(credit: Scott Beale)

A US District Judge in San Francisco dismissed a lawsuit against Twitter that claimed the social networking platform had provided “material support” to terrorists from ISIS. An American woman whose husband was working as a contractor in Jordan filed the suit after her husband and several others were shot and killed by a terrorist who allegedly was inspired by extremist propaganda disseminated on Twitter.

The lawsuit, Fields v. Twitter, claimed that Twitter violated the Anti-Terrorism Act by providing Twitter accounts to the terrorist group. The plaintiffs did not allege that any specific tweets instigated the terrorist to kill the US contractors, nor did they allege that ISIS recruited or trained the terrorist over Twitter. The plaintiffs did, however, say that the terrorist in question had been inspired by an execution publicized by ISIS, which crowd-sourced the method of execution on Twitter. The plaintiffs also accused Twitter of failing to “detect and prevent” violent, terroristic tweets on its platform.

Twitter argued that is protected from liability as a publisher of content by Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act.

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Vorratsdatenspeicherung: Regierung will jede Art von Kommunikation auswerten

Ganz egal, wie Nutzer im Netz kommunizieren: Bundesinnenminister de Maizière will alle Anbieter dazu verpflichten, die Verbindungsdaten auf Vorrat zu speichern. (Störerhaftung, Instant Messenger)

Ganz egal, wie Nutzer im Netz kommunizieren: Bundesinnenminister de Maizière will alle Anbieter dazu verpflichten, die Verbindungsdaten auf Vorrat zu speichern. (Störerhaftung, Instant Messenger)

Secure Boot snafu: Microsoft leaks backdoor key, firmware flung wide open

Microsoft quiet as researchers spot debug mode flaw that bypasses OS checks.

Microsoft has inadvertently demonstrated the intrinsic security problem of including a universal backdoor in its software after it accidentally leaked its so-called "golden key"—which allows users to unlock any device that's supposedly protected by Secure Boot, such as phones and tablets.

The key basically allows anyone to bypass the provisions Microsoft has put in place ostensibly to prevent malicious versions of Windows from being installed, on any device running Windows 8.1 and upwards with Secure Boot enabled.

And while this means that enterprising users will be able to install any operating system—Linux, for instance—on their Windows tablet, it also allows bad actors with physical access to a machine to install bootkits and rootkits at deep levels. Worse, according to the security researchers who found the keys, this is a decision Microsoft may be unable to reverse.

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Seagate’s new 60TB SSD is world’s largest

Seagate’s 60TB SSD comes a year after Samsung’s 15TB SSD.

Seagate has unveiled the world's largest SSD: a 60-terabyte monster. Pricing isn't available, but the company says the drive will provide "the lowest cost per gigabyte for flash" memory today.

The 60TB SSD was unveiled at the Flash Memory Summit in California—the same location that Samsung chose to reveal its 15.36TB SSD last year, which at the time was the world's largest hard drive.

The two drives aren't directly comparable, though, as the Samsung unit is a standard-size 2.5-inch SSD and the new Seagate drive uses the 3.5-inch hard drive form factor. Despite that, Seagate still claims that its drive has "twice the density" of Samsung's. I don't think the maths quite work out, considering a 3.5-inch drive has a far greater volume than a 2.5-inch drive, but Seagate is probably referring to the density of the memory chips themselves. Moore's law is still alive and kicking for NAND, apparently.

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Nach Silk Road: Drogenhandel im Darknet wächst kontinuierlich

Zahlreiche Plattformen verkaufen im Darknet illegale Drogen. Deren Umsatz nimmt einer Studie zufolge zwar zu. Doch der Anteil am gesamten Markt ist verschwindend gering. (TOR-Netzwerk, Internet)

Zahlreiche Plattformen verkaufen im Darknet illegale Drogen. Deren Umsatz nimmt einer Studie zufolge zwar zu. Doch der Anteil am gesamten Markt ist verschwindend gering. (TOR-Netzwerk, Internet)

FTC sues 1-800 Contacts for attacking competitors’ search ads

1-800-Contacts demanded search-engine silence from 14 competitors.

(credit: Library of Congress)

The Federal Trade Commission has sued online retailer 1-800 Contacts, saying the company illegally restrained competitors from buying search advertisements. It's a dramatic move that could mold the shape of online trademark law for years to come.

In the administrative complaint (PDF) filed Monday, FTC lawyers say that 1-800 Contacts reached deals with at least 14 competing contact lens sellers, in which they agreed to limit their advertising on search engines like Google and Bing. In the FTC's view, those agreements constituted unfair competition, because they limited truthful advertising and restrained price competition.

The 14 competitors aren't named in the FTC's lawsuit, but some of them are likely to be companies that Utah-based 1-800 Contacts sued in court. In 2008, 1-800 Contacts filed a lawsuit (PDF) LensFast.com, saying their keyword advertising violated trademark law; in 2010, ContactLensKing.com got sued (PDF) on similar grounds.

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