Warner Bros. Flags Its Own Website as a Piracy Portal

Warner Bros. is vigorously trying to prevent pirated content from showing up in search results, but in doing so the movie studio has shot itself in the foot. Recently, Warner asked Google to take down several of its own pages, claiming that they are copyright-infringing.

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

warnerThe movie industry has gone head to head with Google in recent years, demanding tougher anti-piracy measures from the search engine.

According to Warner Bros. and other major studios, Google makes it too easy for its users to find pirated content. Instead, they would prefer Google to remove sites such as The Pirate Bay from search results entirely.

Warner itself is also taking action, by reporting pirated content to the search engine, asking it to be removed from the index. This year the movie studio intensified its efforts and thus far it has flagged over four million allegedly infringing URLs.

We use the term allegedly with good reason, as not all of the reports are accurate. In fact, this week we stumbled upon recent takedown requests that have some glaring errors.

With help from its anti-piracy partner Vobile, Warner asked Google to censor several of its own URLs from the search engine.

The screenshot below, taken from the following DMCA notice, lists the official Warner page of the 2008 Batman movie The Dark Knight among various reported pirate links.

Dark Knight

warnerbrosdarkknight

The same notice also lists another Warnerbros.com URL for the sci-fi classic The Matrix. Again, Vobile asks Google to remove this link from search results, acting on behalf of the Hollywood studio.

The Matrix

warnerbrosmatrix

The apparent ‘self-censorship’ is not a one-off mistake either. A few days earlier, a similar DMCA takedown notice targeted Warner’s website, claiming that the official page for The Lucky One is infringing Warner’s copyrights.

The Lucky One

warnerbrosluckyone

Of course, Warner only hurts itself with these erroneous takedown requests. Unfortunately, however, Warnerbros.com is not the only ‘legitimate’ domain that’s being targeted.

The same notices highlighted above also target a link to the Amazon store, where users can rent or buy a copy of The Dark Knight. In addition, it targets a link to Batman Begins in the Sky Cinema store, as well as the film’s official IMDb page.

In other words, Warner is inadvertently trying to make it harder for the public to find links to legitimate content, which runs counter to their intentions.

Luckily for the Hollywood studio, Google is there to save the day. The search engine spotted their mistakes and decided to take no action for the Amazon, Sky and IMDb links.

The Warnerbros.com URLs are still under investigation though, perhaps to make the studio sweat a little.

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

Everyone gets the future wrong: Lo and Behold movie review

Werner Herzog’s new documentary hits many of Ars’ sweet spots.

Enlarge / Dr. Leonard Kleinrock is a co-creator of ARPANET, the direct ancestor of the Internet. (credit: Magnolia Pictures)

Hackers? Check. Driverless cars? Check. SpaceX? Check. Robots? Check. Elon Musk? Check. ARPANET? Check. Video game addicts? Check. Brainscans? Check. Internet of Things? Check. All we’re missing is a Fitbit review. Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World is practically Ars Technica: The Movie, with Werner Herzog as our guide.

You know about filmmaker Werner Herzog, right? He’s famous not just for making movies but for being a lunatic. Starting in the ‘60s, our mad Bavarian genius crazied his way into our hearts by stealing equipment, forging permits, getting shot during an interview, regularly endangering his cast and crew, and dragging a 19th-century riverboat over a mountain. Even if you’ve never seen any of Herzog’s films, chances are you’ve heard someone parody him by calmly and precisely intoning how the universe is chaos, penguins go insane, and forests are full of misery. And Herzog’s not above making fun of his own image, as his appearances on The Simpsons, American Dad, Rick and Morty (NSFW), and The Boondocks (NSFW) can attest.

Herzog tends to make documentaries about weirdos that he views with equal parts admiration and bafflement. The title character of Grizzly Man thought he could live with bears, while My Best Fiend is about actor Klaus Kinski, who starred in five of Herzog’s most critically-acclaimed films, even though Herzog thought he was a “pestilence” who should have been murdered. Through interviews and archival footage, Lo and Behold sticks to this template, and it confronts the weirdest weirdo of them all: the Internet. Herzog never anthropomorphizes the Internet, but sees it instead as capable of one day becoming... well, something. I can’t seem to finish that sentence without trivializing the thing that is the Internet’s potential.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

[Updated] Magnitude 5.8 earthquake in Oklahoma is biggest area has seen

Likely example of recent earthquakes induced by disposal well injections.

Enlarge / USGS map showing the epicenter of Saturday's earthquake (star) and contours of estimated shaking intensity. (credit: USGS)

Update: Saturday's earthquake was initially estimated at a magnitude 5.6, tying it with a 2011 earthquake near Prague for the largest seen in Oklahoma in recent years. After further analysis to compare the two events, the USGS has upped the estimated magnitude for Saturday's earthquake from 5.6 to 5.8. They also ended up revising the estimate for the 2011 earthquake upward to 5.7. In a press release, USGS geophysicist Gavin Hayes explained, “While the difference in size between the two events is less than 0.1 magnitude units, rounding magnitudes to one decimal place means that the magnitude of the Prague earthquake is Mw 5.7, and the Pawnee earthquake is Mw 5.8.”

So by a slim margin, the Pawnee earthquake sets a new record for Oklahoma—although the limited data recorded during earthquakes in 1952 and 1882 prevents precise estimates of their magnitude, which are believed to have been between 4.8 and 5.7.

Original story: Oklahoma has suddenly become a seismic state over the last decade, as an abundance of small earthquakes has accompanied the expanded use of deep injection wells. The wells are used to dispose of wastewater that would be expensive and difficult to treat. Instead, it gets pumped into salty aquifers that are already unsuitable sources of drinking water. Most of the wastewater is separated from oil and gas produced from wells in the region—some of which involve fracking, but many of which are older, “conventional” wells.

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Gallery: the highlights of BMW’s museum in Munich

Got downtime in Munich? Then visit the BMW Museum.

Although we usually cover our own travel costs, in this case that was not an option; flights and accommodation on this trip to Munich was paid for by Audi.

MUNICH—During some downtime on a recent visit to Munich—the reasons for which you'll be able to read about shortly—we got a chance to check out BMW's excellent museum. Located next to the company's iconic "Four Cylinder" office building (which will be familiar to those of you who remember the original Rollerball movie), the museum is currently celebrating BMW's centenary.

Although the Vision Next 100 concept wasn't on display, the museum was full of significant production cars, concepts, and racing machines, along with plenty of motorbikes, engines, and other goodies. Space constraints preclude us from showing you everything on display, but the gallery above contains the highlights.

Read 1 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Glut of papers confirms: we really don’t understand Ceres

The dwarf planet has strange features, and we’re struggling to explain them all.

Enlarge

On Thursday, Science released a half-dozen papers that analyzed data the Dawn mission sent home from the largest body in the asteroid belt, a dwarf planet called Ceres. Headlines will focus on signs of water ice and a possible ice-powered volcano, but the reports themselves really end up emphasizing how much we still don't know about the strange world. Despite all of Dawn's imaging, many features don't add up to a coherent picture of the body as a whole.

Before Dawn got there, our impression of Ceres was dominated by what we'd measured of its density. Those measurements suggested the dwarf planet has a substantial amount of water and is large enough to have differentiated, allowing rocky material to sink to the core. So we expected Dawn to find an icy world where viscous ice has gradually wiped away many of the indications of the impacts every Solar System body has suffered.

That's not at all what Dawn found. Instead, only the largest impact craters on Ceres seem to show any sign of viscous changes. This lack of viscous change suggests that Ceres' crust is much more rigid than it would be if it were comprised of water ice.

Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Underground Airlines is one of the bleakest alternate histories ever

It’s 2016, but there was no Civil War, and slavery exists alongside the Internet.

Enlarge (credit: Detail from the cover of Underground Airlines)

Most alternate histories reverse just a few big historical events. They show us how bad things would be if the Nazis won World War II or the South won the Civil War. Though Ben H. Winters’ new novel Underground Airlines treads familiar territory in this respect, few alt histories are as complex and horrifying as it is.

Underground Airlines is set in a 2016 where slavery is still legal in part of the United States. In this reality, Abraham Lincoln was assassinated in 1861, and the Civil War never happened. Instead, a compromise was struck. To this day, four Southern states (the “Hard Four”) still keep human beings as property.

The book’s main character, who mostly goes by Victor, is an African-American who works as a “soul-stealer”—basically, he’s a bounty hunter who returns escaped slaves to the Hard Four. He works for the Federal Marshals, and he’s the kind of manipulative, coldly efficient monster that often populates films noir. But as he remembers his own experiences as a slave in the South, he starts to question what he does.

Read 9 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Ifa und Politik: Auf die Gigabit-Gesellschaft folgt die Gigabyte-Gesellschaft

Gigabit und Gigabyte sind mittlerweile Begriffe, die sich für hohle Phrasen eignen. Auf der Ifa gibt es dementsprechend seltsam anmutende Forderungen. EU-Kommissar Günther Oettinger fordert gar 1.000 Megabyte flächendeckend einzuführen – und zwar für ganz Europa. (Ifa 2016, Netzwerk)

Gigabit und Gigabyte sind mittlerweile Begriffe, die sich für hohle Phrasen eignen. Auf der Ifa gibt es dementsprechend seltsam anmutende Forderungen. EU-Kommissar Günther Oettinger fordert gar 1.000 Megabyte flächendeckend einzuführen - und zwar für ganz Europa. (Ifa 2016, Netzwerk)

New opioid douses pain without being addictive or deadly in primates

In monkeys, the drug is a highly effective pain reliever without downsides.

Enlarge (credit: Getty | John Moore)

While the opioid epidemic continues kill more than 40 American every day, researchers and health experts are frantically searching for ways to curtail use of the highly addictive, pain-quenching drugs. In March, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention even released new guidelines directing doctors to simply refrain from prescribing opioids. But if a new study holds up, the health agency may be able to reverse course.

According to a report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, an opioid drug referred to as BU08028 was able to alleviate pain in a dozen monkeys just as well as other opioid painkillers, such as morphine. Yet, unlike every other opioid drug, BU08028 showed no signs of being addictive. Even at high dose—at which other opioid drugs inhibit the respiratory and cardiovascular system, which can be fatal—BU08028 was harmless.

"Based on our research, this compound has almost zero abuse potential and provides safe and effective pain relief," Mei-Chuan Ko, a professor of physiology and pharmacology at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center and lead author of the study, said in a statement. "This is a breakthrough for opioid medicinal chemistry that we hope in the future will translate into new and safer, non-addictive pain medications."

Read 5 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Android-x86 releases early build of Nougat for desktop PCs

Android-x86 releases early build of Nougat for desktop PCs

Google and Intel may not be doing much work to make sure that Android can run on devices with Intel processors anymore… but the Android-x86 project continues to release new builds of Android for computers with Intel and AMD chips.

The latest release? A build of Android 7.0 for developers.

In other words, you can now run Android 7.0 Nougat on a PC.

The software is based on Google’s Android Open Source Project (AOSP) code, and it’s still a work in progress.

Continue reading Android-x86 releases early build of Nougat for desktop PCs at Liliputing.

Android-x86 releases early build of Nougat for desktop PCs

Google and Intel may not be doing much work to make sure that Android can run on devices with Intel processors anymore… but the Android-x86 project continues to release new builds of Android for computers with Intel and AMD chips.

The latest release? A build of Android 7.0 for developers.

In other words, you can now run Android 7.0 Nougat on a PC.

The software is based on Google’s Android Open Source Project (AOSP) code, and it’s still a work in progress.

Continue reading Android-x86 releases early build of Nougat for desktop PCs at Liliputing.

Brennende Akkus beim Note 7: Politik fordert Aufklärung von Samsung

Wie konnte es zu den brennenden Akkus beim Galaxy Note 7 kommen? Das will die Politik jetzt von Samsung wissen. Umweltministerin Hendricks sieht den Nutzen wechselbarer Akkus durch den Vorfall gleich doppelt bestätigt. (Politik/Recht, Samsung)

Wie konnte es zu den brennenden Akkus beim Galaxy Note 7 kommen? Das will die Politik jetzt von Samsung wissen. Umweltministerin Hendricks sieht den Nutzen wechselbarer Akkus durch den Vorfall gleich doppelt bestätigt. (Politik/Recht, Samsung)