ISIS via WhatsApp: “Blow yourself up, O Lion”

How Europe-based terrorists use encrypted messaging apps to plan attacks.

After assembling suicide bomb vests for the attacks that slaughtered 130 people in Paris last November, Najim Laachroui went underground in his native Brussels.

The 24-year-old explosives expert wasn't just hiding from the biggest manhunt in Europe's recent history. He was plotting. In a dingy apartment converted into a bomb factory, Laachroui exchanged a series of messages in French with Abu Ahmed, a shadowy commander in the Islamic State based in Syria.

If law enforcement agencies had intercepted the communications, they would have been immediately alarmed. Laachroui asked militants in Syria to test chemical mixtures so he could assemble powerful bombs. He discussed his hopes to strike France again and disrupt a soccer championship there. He reported that he and half a dozen other fugitives from the Paris attacks had split up among three safe houses, according to Belgian and French counterterror officials.

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NASA’s Solar System program is just about the greatest thing ever

Celebrate NASA’s amazing record with space probes. Don’t take it for granted.

NASA Planetary Science Division Director Jim Green (left) and other key science officials celebrate Juno's orbital insertion on Monday night. (credit: NASA)

Carlos Entrena, one of the bright young minds in aerospace, asked a fair question last week in the wake of the Juno mission's successful insertion into orbit around Jupiter: "So why is a spacecraft doing a pre-planned burn a big deal again?" He was right, it did seem a relatively straightforward maneuver.

Another young scientist, Christopher Stelter, offered a series of answers that put the Juno spacecraft's 35-minute engine burn into perspective. Among the reasons, he said, was that, "Most burns a spacecraft does are not critical. If there's a glitch, you can try again later. Not this time. And it's a very long burn."

This exchange captured my attention because NASA in recent years has made the extremely difficult—flying robotic probes throughout the Solar System—look easy. The agency's record of achievement appears more impressive still when compared to other space agencies. In reality, no other country or space agency can really be considered NASA's peer, especially when it comes to Mars and beyond. (Admittedly, the Soviet Union does have a better record with Venus).

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Deals of the Day (7-13-2016)

Deals of the Day (7-13-2016)

Amazon Prime Day may be over, but that doesn’t mean fake holidays designed to sell you stuff are over. Dell is running a “Black Friday in July” sale today, with deep discounts on laptops, convertibles, desktops, and more.

The company is also offering deep discounts on products purchased from the Dell Outlet Store.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Dell laptops

  • Dell Inspiron 11 3000 Series w/Core m3/4GB/500GB for $400 – Dell
  • Dell Inspiron 11 3000 Series w/Celeron N3050/2GB/32GB for $150 – Dell
  • Save $250 on any Dell XPS 12 2-in-1 priced at $900 and up – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo250XPS12)
  • Dell Chromebook 11 for 35% off (starting at $129) – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo35Cb113120)

Dell convertibles and tablets

  • Dell Inspiron 13 convertible notebook w/Core i7/8GB/256GB for $699 – Microsoft Store
  • Save 45% on any Dell Latitude 12 rugged tablet – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo45Lat12Rug)

Alienware gaming PCs

  • Alienware Steam Machine mini-desktop w/Core i3-4170T/NVIDIA/4GB/500GB for $350 – Dell
  • Alienware Alpha mini PC w/Windows 10/Core i3-4170T/4GB/500GB/NVIDIA for $400 – Dell
  • Alienware 13 laptop w/Core i7-6500u/NVIDIA GTX 965M/16GB/512GB for $1450 and up – Dell

Other computers

  • Refurb Acer Aspire Switch 11 V 2-in-1 w/Core M/4GB/128GB for $300 – NeweggFlash
  • Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga 12 convertible notebook w/Core i5/8GB/516GB for $600 – Woot
  • Lenovo ThinkCentre M73 Tiny desktop for $200 and up – Woot

Microsoft Surface products

  • Refurb Microsoft Surface 3 w/64GB for $310 – Geekdeal (via eBay)
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 4 w/Core M3/4GB/128GB for $650 – Northwest Outdoor (via eBay)
  • Students save up to $449 on Surface Pro 4 + Xbox One bundles – Microsoft Store

Other

  • Google Nexus 5X w/32GB for $235 – NeweggFlash
  • Seiki Pro 4K monitors for $260 and up – Woot
  • Refurb UE Boom wireless speakers for $54 – AMazon
  • Cambridge SoundWorks OontZ 3XL Bluetooth speaker for $80 – Amazon
  • Aukey 10,000 mAH portable battery with Quick Charge 2.0 for $15 – Amazon (coupon: PBT17133)
  • Name your price for 10 Japanese Sci-Fi eBooks – StoryBundle

You can find more bargains in our daily deals section.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (7-13-2016) at Liliputing.

Deals of the Day (7-13-2016)

Amazon Prime Day may be over, but that doesn’t mean fake holidays designed to sell you stuff are over. Dell is running a “Black Friday in July” sale today, with deep discounts on laptops, convertibles, desktops, and more.

The company is also offering deep discounts on products purchased from the Dell Outlet Store.

Here are some of the day’s best deals.

Dell laptops

  • Dell Inspiron 11 3000 Series w/Core m3/4GB/500GB for $400 – Dell
  • Dell Inspiron 11 3000 Series w/Celeron N3050/2GB/32GB for $150 – Dell
  • Save $250 on any Dell XPS 12 2-in-1 priced at $900 and up – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo250XPS12)
  • Dell Chromebook 11 for 35% off (starting at $129) – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo35Cb113120)

Dell convertibles and tablets

  • Dell Inspiron 13 convertible notebook w/Core i7/8GB/256GB for $699 – Microsoft Store
  • Save 45% on any Dell Latitude 12 rugged tablet – Dell Outlet (coupon: wo45Lat12Rug)

Alienware gaming PCs

  • Alienware Steam Machine mini-desktop w/Core i3-4170T/NVIDIA/4GB/500GB for $350 – Dell
  • Alienware Alpha mini PC w/Windows 10/Core i3-4170T/4GB/500GB/NVIDIA for $400 – Dell
  • Alienware 13 laptop w/Core i7-6500u/NVIDIA GTX 965M/16GB/512GB for $1450 and up – Dell

Other computers

  • Refurb Acer Aspire Switch 11 V 2-in-1 w/Core M/4GB/128GB for $300 – NeweggFlash
  • Lenovo Thinkpad Yoga 12 convertible notebook w/Core i5/8GB/516GB for $600 – Woot
  • Lenovo ThinkCentre M73 Tiny desktop for $200 and up – Woot

Microsoft Surface products

  • Refurb Microsoft Surface 3 w/64GB for $310 – Geekdeal (via eBay)
  • Microsoft Surface Pro 4 w/Core M3/4GB/128GB for $650 – Northwest Outdoor (via eBay)
  • Students save up to $449 on Surface Pro 4 + Xbox One bundles – Microsoft Store

Other

  • Google Nexus 5X w/32GB for $235 – NeweggFlash
  • Seiki Pro 4K monitors for $260 and up – Woot
  • Refurb UE Boom wireless speakers for $54 – AMazon
  • Cambridge SoundWorks OontZ 3XL Bluetooth speaker for $80 – Amazon
  • Aukey 10,000 mAH portable battery with Quick Charge 2.0 for $15 – Amazon (coupon: PBT17133)
  • Name your price for 10 Japanese Sci-Fi eBooks – StoryBundle

You can find more bargains in our daily deals section.

Continue reading Deals of the Day (7-13-2016) at Liliputing.

Patchday: Sicherheitslücke lässt Drucker Malware verteilen

Ein Fehler in der Druckerverwaltung von Windows ermöglicht es, Schadcode im Netzwerk zu verteilen und mit Systemberechtigung auszuführen. Diese und andere Lücken hat Microsoft heute gepatcht. (Security, Microsoft)

Ein Fehler in der Druckerverwaltung von Windows ermöglicht es, Schadcode im Netzwerk zu verteilen und mit Systemberechtigung auszuführen. Diese und andere Lücken hat Microsoft heute gepatcht. (Security, Microsoft)

Radeon Software 16.7.2: Neuer Grafiktreiber macht die RX 480 etwas schneller

Ein paar Tage vor dem Start der Geforce GTX 1060 legt AMD nach: Die Radeon Software 16.7.2 steigert die Leistung der Polaris-Grafikkarte RX 480 in einigen Spielen. Grund ist ein behobener Fehler. (Polaris, Grafikhardware)

Ein paar Tage vor dem Start der Geforce GTX 1060 legt AMD nach: Die Radeon Software 16.7.2 steigert die Leistung der Polaris-Grafikkarte RX 480 in einigen Spielen. Grund ist ein behobener Fehler. (Polaris, Grafikhardware)

Twitch Plays Pokemon Go combines two unavoidable gaming trends

Vote with the IRC crowd to catch ’em all.

(credit: Twitch)

So you want to play Pokemon Go, but you're stuck at the office and/or too lazy to get up and walk around? You could go to the trouble of jury-rigging an elaborate Pokemon Go emulator on your PC. Or you could just go on Twitch and help control a similar emulator with a few hundred strangers.

Yes, nearly two years after Twitch Plays Pokemon first hit the scene, the idea has now evolved into Twitch Plays Pokemon Go, a new stream (from a different creator) that lets users collaborate on the mobile-gaming hit. Players vote on what area of the screen to tap using an alphanumeric grid system, with a new command entered every few seconds. The stream can even virtually walk around the map using some GPS spoofing (sorry, no Segway-powered robots here... yet).

The stream creators over at HackNY say they realize that this method of playing is technically against the game's terms of service. "If Niantic or Nintendo wish to ban the account that we're playing with we would understand, but we assume they know this is all in good fun," they write in the stream's description.

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Videochat: Neues Skype für Linux nutzt WebRTC

Mehr als zwei Jahre nach dem letzten Update steht eine neue Version von Skype für Linux bereit. Die Anwendung läuft mit WebRTC und dem Chrome-Browser, hat aber noch Alpha-Status. (Skype, Microsoft)

Mehr als zwei Jahre nach dem letzten Update steht eine neue Version von Skype für Linux bereit. Die Anwendung läuft mit WebRTC und dem Chrome-Browser, hat aber noch Alpha-Status. (Skype, Microsoft)

Google: Punishing Pirate Sites in Search Results Works

Google released an updated overview of its anti-piracy efforts today. The company notes that many pirate sites have lost the vast majority of their search traffic due to its downranking efforts. However, Google stresses that it won’t remove entire domain names from its search results, as this could lead to overbroad censorship.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

googlefightspiracyOver the past few years the entertainment industries have repeatedly asked Google to step up its game when it comes to its anti-piracy efforts.

These calls haven’t fallen on deaf ears and Google has slowly implemented various new anti-piracy measures in response.

Today, Google released an updated version of its “How Google Fights Piracy” report. The company provides an overview of all the efforts it makes to combat piracy while countering some of the entertainment industry complaints.

One of the steps Google has taken in recent years aims to downrank the most egregious “pirate” sites.

To accomplish this, Google made changes to its core algorithms which punish clear offenders. Using the number of accurate DMCA requests as an indicator, these sites are now demoted in search results for certain key phrases.

Despite continuing critique from rightsholders, Google notes that this change has been very effective.

“This process has proven extremely effective. Immediately upon launching improvements to our demotion signal in 2014, one major torrent site acknowledged traffic from search engines had dropped by 50% within the first week,” Google writes, citing one of our articles.

More recently, Google’s own findings confirmed this trend. As a result of the demotion policy, pirate sites lose the vast majority of their Google Search traffic.

“In May 2016, we found that demoted sites lost an average of 89% of their traffic from Google Search. These successes spur us to continue improving and refining the DMCA demotion signal.”

Despite this success, entertainment industry groups have recently called for a more rigorous response. Ideally, they would like Google to remove the results from pirate sites entirely, and make sure that infringing links don’t reappear under a different URL.

However, Google doesn’t want to go this far. The company warns that removing entire sites is dangerous as it may lead to censorship of content that’s perfectly legal.

“Whole-site removal is ineffective and can easily result in the censorship of lawful material,” Google writes.

“Blogging sites, for example, contain millions of pages from hundreds of thousands of users, as do social networking sites, e-commerce sites, and cloud computing services. All can inadvertently contain material that is infringing.”

Similarly, Google doesn’t believe in a “takedown and staydown” approach, where the company would proactively filter search results for pirated content. This would be unfeasible and unnecessary, the company states.

“One problem is that there is no way to know whether something identified as infringing in one place and at one time is also unlawful when it appears at a different place and at a different time,” Google notes.

Instead, the company says that copyright holders should use the existing takedown procedure, and target new sites when they appear so these can be downranked as well.

Finally, Google stresses that search is not a major driver of traffic to pirate sites to begin with. Only a small fraction of users reach these sites through search engines.

While the company is willing to help alleviate the problem, search engines are not the only way to eradicate piracy.

“Search engines do not control what content is on the Web. There are more than 60 trillion web addresses on the internet, and there will always be new sites dedicated to making copyrighted works available as long as there is money to be made doing so.”

Instead of focusing on search, copyright holders should take a “follow the money” approach and make sure that pirate sites are cut off from their revenue sources, Google argues.

In addition, they shouldn’t forget to offer consumers plenty of legal alternatives to piracy.

Convincing the entertainment industries of its good intentions is easier said than done though. “This report looks a lot like “greenwash”,” says Geoff Taylor, Chief Executive of the music industry group BPI.

“Although we welcome the measures Google has taken so far, it is still one of the key enablers of piracy on the planet. Google has the resources and the tech expertise to do much more to get rid of the illegal content on its services,” he adds.

Source: TF, for the latest info on copyright, file-sharing, torrent sites and ANONYMOUS VPN services.

ZTE Axon 7 up for pre-order for $400

ZTE Axon 7 up for pre-order for $400

ZTE’s Axon 7 smartphone has the kind of specs you’d expect from a $600 smartphone, but it has a much lower price. First announced in May, the ZTE Axon 7 is available for pre-order today for $400.

I won’t go so far as to say that it’s a top-tier phone with a mid-range price. But that certainly seems like a very good price for a phone with a Snapdragon 820 processor, at least 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage, and a a 2560 x 1440 pixel display.

Continue reading ZTE Axon 7 up for pre-order for $400 at Liliputing.

ZTE Axon 7 up for pre-order for $400

ZTE’s Axon 7 smartphone has the kind of specs you’d expect from a $600 smartphone, but it has a much lower price. First announced in May, the ZTE Axon 7 is available for pre-order today for $400.

I won’t go so far as to say that it’s a top-tier phone with a mid-range price. But that certainly seems like a very good price for a phone with a Snapdragon 820 processor, at least 4GB of RAM and 64GB of storage, and a a 2560 x 1440 pixel display.

Continue reading ZTE Axon 7 up for pre-order for $400 at Liliputing.