Results for "Internet"
Comcast Fined $2.3M for Overcharging Customers


The Federal Communications Commission today fined Comcast $2.3 million over allegations that the cable company charged its customers for services that they never authorized.
The settlement is the largest civil penalty the FCC has ever imposed on a cable operator. It stems from numerous complaints from consumers that Comcast was adding charges to their bills for premium channels, set-top boxes, DVRs, and other add-ons that they never ordered.
In addition to paying a fine, Comcast will also change its procedures for handling add-ons. It will send order confirmations for new services separate from the monthly bill, and it will offer the option to block new services or equipment from being added.
"It is basic that a cable bill should include charges only for services and equipment ordered by the customer—nothing more and nothing less," FCC enforcement Chief Travis LeBlanc said in a statement. "We expect all cable and phone companies to take responsibility for the accuracy of their bills and to ensure their customers have authorized any charges."
Comcast acknowledged issues with its past billing practices, but noted that the FCC settlement does not accuse it of intentional wrongdoing.
"We acknowledge that, in the past, our customer service should have been better and our bills clearer, and that customers have at times been unnecessarily frustrated or confused," the company said in a statement to PCMag. "That's why we had already put in place many improvements to do better for our customers even before the FCC's Enforcement Bureau started this investigation almost two years ago. The changes the Bureau asked us to make were in most cases changes we had already committed to make, and many were already well underway or in our work plan to implement in the near future.

"We do not agree with the Bureau's legal theory here," the statement continued, "and in our view, after two years, it is telling that it found no problematic policy or intentional wrongdoing, but just isolated errors or customer confusion."

Unknown 12 October 2016
Cloud Services Blocked in Turkey After Government Email Hack


Turkey has reportedly responded to a hack of the government official by banning cloud-based services in the country.
As The Next Web notes, Dropbox and Microsoft OneDrive are inaccessible in Turkey, while Google Drive was "partially restricted," according to Turkey Blocks, a site that monitors censorship in the region.
"Google Drive is still accessible to existing users—possibly because Google shares its business cloud hosting infrastructure and servers between Drive and it's primary services including search," Turkey Blocks said on Saturday. The next day it tweeted that Google Drive had been unblocked after Google complied with a removal request.

The blockade came after hacktivist group Redhack posted online private emails allegedly belonging to Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Berat Albayrak (who is also the son-in-law of President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan). Unidentified hackers leaked more than 17GB of data, including 57,000 emails dating back to 2000.
Turkey, which has a long history censoring content and services, immediately moved to block all cloud services as it investigated, as well as GitHub, where hackers often publish hacked data.
"The move to block the world's most popular cloud services comes amidst growing calls in Turkey to build local versions of popular social media services – in July, far-right Turks called for the creation of a nationalized Turkish Twitter alternative to replace the US-based company's services," Turkey Blocks notes.
Last month, the site reported a full Internet shutdown in Turkey's Southeast regions amidst the state's removal of elected officials from office. A month earlier, Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube were also blocked.

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Yahoo 'Temporarily' Disables Auto Email Forwarding


Thinking of ditching Yahoo for another email provider? Think again. According to the Associated Press, Yahoo disabled automatic email forwarding at the beginning of the month.
Like postal mail forwarding, the electronic version automatically sends a copy of incoming messages from one account (Yahoo) to another (Gmail). Users who previously set up the function are unaffected. Those folks, however, trying to cut ties after Yahoo's massive data breach are having a tough time.
"The feature was [temporarily] disabled as part of previously planned maintenance to improve its functionality between a user's various accounts,", "Users can expect an update to the auto-forward functionality soon.
"We're working to get auto-forward back up and running as soon as possible because we know how useful it can be to our users," she continued.

But the timing of these renovations, as the AP points out, is "extremely suspicious."
Yahoo in September confirmed that data associated with at least 500 million users accounts was stolen in a 2014 breach of its network by a "state-sponsored actor." Names, email addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, hashed passwords, and possibly encrypted or unencrypted security questions and answers were stolen.
A report last week, meanwhile, claimed that Yahoo has scanned customers' incoming emails at the request of US intelligence officials. According to Reuters, the company built a custom software program to search users' messages for specific information. Yahoo pushed back, saying the story "is misleading" and that "the mail scanning described in the article does not exist on our systems."

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Intel launches Stratix 10: Altera FPGA combined with ARM CPU, 14nm manufacturing



When Intel bought Altera last year, there was speculation on how we’d see future FPGA products fit within Intel’s existing product lines. Intel has previously stated it intends to offer a Xeon processor with an integrated FPGA, but we’ve yet to hear any concrete talk about what that product will look like. The new Stratix 10 family does contain a microprocessor — but it’s an ARM-based design, not an Intel chip.
That doesn’t mean Intel DNA isn’t baked into the new FPGA, however. According to Intel’s PR, Stratix 10 offers double the core performance, up to 70% lower power, up to 1TBps of memory bandwidth provided courtesy of HBM2 (that’s 128GB/s) and up to 10TFLOPS of single-precision floating point performance. ARM capabilities are provided by a quad-core Cortex-A53.
According to Intel, Stratix 10 has been fundamentally re-architected to deliver performance that’s dramatically better than any competitive solution on the market. The new chip uses “hyper-registers” to reduce routing congestion and to allow for performance tuning without requiring additional adaptive logic modules (ALMs). The chip allows for localized programmable clock trees to reduce skew and timing uncertainty. This improvement was apparently “a key feature that allows the HyperFlex architecture to reach 2X performance.”


Intel also points to new design tools and options that it claims allow the Stratix 10 to scale more effectively to deal with a variety of problems than other FPGAs. The chip is built on Intel’s 14nm Tri-Gate process. Altera isn’t Intel’s only foundry customer; Achronix has also built FPGAs with the Santa Clara company, but Achronix used Intel’s older 22nm process.
FPGAs are a branch of computing we don’t typically discuss at ET. But they’ve been used extensively in data centers, software-defined networking, and device prototyping. The slide below broadly captures the difference between the three types of integrated circuits, and while it focuses on power efficiency, we can also take this as a broad stand-in for overall performance as well.


At the far left-hand side of the graph, you have microprocessors like the general-purpose CPUs from AMD, Intel, and ARM. These chips all offer a great deal of flexibility — there’s a robust compiler ecosystem and a wide variety of tools for programming CPUs, and CPUs can any workload (albeit not necessarily very well). FPGAs are more energy efficient than CPUs, but not as flexible — they can be programmed to duplicate the functions and timings of other processors, which is why many of the replica consoles you can buy rely on FPGAs instead of relying on aging, original NES hardware.
At the far end of the scale you have ASICs, which are built to do one particular task quite well and offer maximum performance, but limited reprogrammability. Modern GPUs are sometimes considered ASICs, though they have enough general-purpose compute functionality to argue the point (ASICs eventually took over cryptocurrency mining precisely because they could outperform GPUs).
Intel’s new FPGA efforts will be watched closely. The company invested significant resources in buying Altera, and its ability to fab hardware for designs that didn’t originate in-house will be a key factor in whether its foundry business can get off the ground.


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Will Zuckerberg’s third-world internet come to North America?


The crux of the problem many people have with Mark Zuckerberg’s Free Basics is the effect it could have on the poor. The plan provides people in many developing countries free access to a curated list of websites, allowing limited use of things like online weather, reference, and (cough) social networking services. It’s a sort of charity-turned-scheme for world domination, seen as a bid to control the internet in developing economies by getting certain brands in early, and exploiting the lack of options in largely destitute populations. Sure, it seems nice to create limited Internet access where none existed before. But the potential for stagnation in the growing market and for exploitation of third-world populations is too much for some to bear.
In an era (and US election cycle) largely dominated by talk of a growing economic underclass here in the West, the idea of bringing this mentality home seems almost guaranteed to stir passions. Not only does Free Basics have the capacity to cause many of the same problems foreseen in India and around the world, but it opens the door to accusations the service sees North America as a similarly vulnerable market. There’s already one candidate for President who talks about the US becoming a “third-world country” — and these sorts of moves by the luminaries of Silicon Valley gives plenty of ammunition to people sympathetic to such rhetoric.


The rumor, which comes from the Washington Post, says a Western Free Basics would focus on rural and low-income Americans who can’t afford decent internet service — either because the service is not inherently affordable, or because their income in low enough that they can’t afford even a reasonably priced connection. It would allow access to things like health, news, and job postings for free by creating partnerships between content providers and rural ISPs. The process of offering services for “free” in this way has come to be called “zero rating.” Its detractors are trying to lump it in with monopolies and other signs of an anti-competitive market.
Now, one of the steps Free Basics took in the wake of the enormous public backlash against its Eastern roll-out was to “open up” the program to third parties. This sort of fixes one of the problems, allowing entrants frozen out of the program to opt in so they too can compete for mindshare in this population. But it’s still the case only the most wealthy and established of players would be able to shoulder the financial burden posed by such a plan. Giving your product away for free is, after all, a luxury not everyone can afford.



Another issue is, in the West, even the poorest neighborhoods have at least some access to communications infrastructure you can’t necessarily rely upon in rural India. It’s less of a human rights issue to not own a computer when you can go apply for jobs on the computer at the library. Farmers have always been a sort of unofficial mascot for Free Basics, but here in North America farmers are generally quite sophisticated operators; they certainly don’t need Mark Zuckerberg to get the weather report.
So even as Western governments start to redefine internet access as a human right, we still find Free Basics has a less compelling raison d’être here than it does in some other parts of the world.

That is, the service seems to have a less coherent reason to exist for the public; for its partners, the advantage is still clear. The program does require an active data connection after all, and simply doesn’t count data from certain services against data caps — meaning even “free” customers are, in principle, customers still. Not only do you get to ensure your services stay at the top of these markets, reaching a portion of your potential users with far less competition, you also get to track the activity of a users who might not otherwise have been the focus of any comprehensive life-tracking at all.
The generational aspect to this issue is intriguing. Older people have dramatically slowed their internet adoption, in part because they find its insane proliferation of choice, often irrelevant choice, to be distracting and off-putting. Free Basics, then, serves to cut away the bother of a free, open market full of competitors in favor of a simple, curated toolbox. It’s a bit like the old America Online or CompuServe approach, but the simplicity is born of removing options rather than organizing them. Oddly, people seem to like that more: They know what they’re getting, and why. Even if the upshot is the same overly directed experience as an AOL, Free Basics feels more like you’ve made a choice to be restricted in that way. The idea is people feel not as though they’re being manipulated, but instead being empowered. 


The Obama Administration is apparently in talks with Free Basics, and the White House could be looking at this as a way to deliver on its promise to prioritize online issues — a fact that makes this plan seem politically impossible. The majority of the ideological resistance to the idea is coming from the left, traditionally Democratic-leaning voters, and Obama will only be able to sway a portion of that group. Meanwhile, public and congressional opposition to any White House initiative should see to it that Republicans, who have historically been less concerned about internet freedom, will oppose it as well.
If Free Basics gets branded as both cyber-imperialism by the left and cyber-socialism by the right, it will have nowhere to go, and simply die in obscurity. The reverse, positive narrative — that Free Basics will be both a cyber-social safety net to the left and an example of the cyber-free market to the right — seems far less likely to materialize in the modern political climate.
The FCC is now facing calls to regulate against the zero rating. Large ISPs have been lobbying the regulatory body for years, as they look at the practice as a way to expand their dominance and increase revenue while getting to claim to be pursuing high-minded values and human rights.
Whether that’s a sincere motivation is almost beside the point, now.

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Star Citizen single-player delayed indefinitely


Cloud Imperium Games, makers of the sprawling, controversial, and long-delayed space simulator/FPS shooter/single-player space combat title known as Star Citizen, announced the game’s single-player campaign, Squadron 42, will be delayed indefinitely. The reason is simple: With so much left undone, there are huge chunks of the single-player campaign yet unfinished. CIG had originally promised Squadron 42 would ship in 2016, but it’s now clear there’s no way that could happen. The fact that the company has yet to announce a new shipping date isn’t particularly promising, either.


This slide is courtesy of Kotaku UK, which recently did a huge write-up on what happened to Star Marine, the FPS segment of Star Citizen, as well as an overview of Star Citizen as a whole. That story does much to explain what happened, and paints its delays and troubles as being born of both technical difficulties — CryEngine was never designed to deliver the kind of title Chris Roberts, the CEO of CIG and the creator of game franchises like Wing Commander, wanted to create. Overhauling the engine has, according to some CIG developers, been more work than actually writing a new engine from scratch would have been.
Keeping so many different teams of workers building separate components of the game on the same page led to other problems. Kotaku writes that the entire Star Marine assets had to be continually rewritten because the design targets were changing at CIG HQ. At one point, after months of work, CIG discovered that one of its contractors had created all of their content to the wrong scale — meaning none of it could be integrated into the game. Tearing up and redoing all that work was an agonizing process, and there’s apparently been a lot of work that needed to be redone at one point or another.


Rigbht now, Star Citizen’s plan is to bring one chapter of the campaign to a final polish, and then showcase that chapter as both an illustration that something is being done on the title and to demonstrate the art and style choices that have been shown in some screenshots and videos. Kotaku UK’s extensive reporting (which you really ought to read) notes that there is no sign of the fraud or rampant abuse of funds that some corners of the internet have insisted must exist. It also notes CIG has brought a great deal of development that used to be spun off to contractors in-house. The company has realigned itself to better execute its own vision. But that vision remains utterly unprecedented in terms of scope, and that alone could be enough to doom the project.
What people often don’t realize is that building a game as complex as Star Citizen requires an equally unprecedented level of backend management and system integration. You need a game engine that can tie all these various components together, a physics engine that can handle interactions between human beings, small starships, or giant capital ships. There was no way to jimmy the CryEngine into providing these capabilities without fundamentally rewriting it, because no other modern game has tried to do these things (Battlecruiser 3000 AD took a stab at it, but that game was stuck in its own development hell for years).
It’ll be surprising if we see Squadron 42 in 2017 at all, and Kotaku writes they still don’t expect Star Citizen to launch as a whole within the next year or two. When we’ll finally see the shipping title is anyone’s guess.
 

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Oculus disables Gear VR on the Galaxy Note 7 as Samsung kills the phone permanently

It’s not clear how many Note 7 devices actually have a safety problem, but Samsung’s various partners are treating the situation extremely seriously. Oculus, the manufacturer for the Oculus Rift VR headset and Samsung’s partner on the Gear VR, has pushed a software update out that disables all support for the Note 7 in the Gear VR headset.
It’s not hard to see why Oculus would take this step. Lithium-ion battery fires can be extremely energetic, and the risk of having a device strapped to your face explode in flames isn’t a chance any sane person would want to take. Reports from users suggest that the GearVR can get pretty toasty as it is, and while higher temperatures haven’t been directly linked to the Note 7 fiasco, higher operating temperatures can still be implicated in cases of thermal runaway. The phrase refers to a positive feedback condition in which a sufficiently high amount of heat triggers an exothermic (energy-releasing) reaction. The exothermic reaction releases additional heat, accelerating the reaction rate.


As of now, the devices listed as compatible with the Samsung Gear VR are the Galaxy S7, S7 Edge, the Galaxy S6, S6 Edge, S6 Edge+, and the Galaxy Note 5. Oculus’ statement reads:
Customer safety is our top priority. Oculus is removing support for all Note7 devices on the Oculus platform. Until further notice, Note7 devices will not be compatible with the Gear VR. For more information regarding the Note7, please visit Samsung’s information page or contact Samsung directly.
Samsung has also announced that it has asked all retailers and partners to stop selling the device or swapping it out for different hardware.
We remain committed to working diligently with appropriate regulatory authorities to take all necessary steps to resolve the situation. Consumers with either an original Galaxy Note7 or replacement Galaxy Note7 device should power down and stop using the device and take advantage of the remedies available.
This is being treated across the internet as the effective death of the Note 7. There’s no real way Samsung can recover the product after having to do two recalls, and the fact that the company had to take this step suggests that some of our earlier praise for the company was somewhat misplaced. I still think Samsung acted properly in trying to get ahead of the news cycle, but that commendation assumed the company also knew exactly what the problem was and how to fix it.


Right now, there are several possibilities to explain the second recall. Samsung may have properly identified the problem (compression of the battery that leads to short-circuiting) but mistakenly put the blame on a single battery manufacturer when the issue was actually more widespread. It may have misidentified the problem and blamed a short-circuit based on battery compression when the issue is actually some other aspect of the battery’s design, chemistry, or management software. Either way, the fact that the issue wasn’t solved speaks to problems in how Samsung diagnosed it.
That’s problematic for reasons that go beyond the Note 7 itself. The mobile phone market is a cutthroat industry and consumers have come to expect that new devices will arrive on a yearly cadence, even though most people don’t upgrade every single year. But think about what that means. We’ve talked before about the long lead time between when engineers get started working on a product and when that product actually ships. It takes 3-4 years to design a new CPU or GPU architecture from scratch and smartphones have to go through extensive carrier testing before they come to market. The team working on the Galaxy Note 8 is almost certainly well underway already, even though the Note 7 just launched.
Introducing devices on a yearly cadence requires a highly streamlined and fast-moving product pace, even though the companies in question are simultaneously fighting to introduce new technologies with each and every product cycle. It’s not surprising to see some issues crop up here, and they aren’t unique to Samsung — we’ve criticized Apple for its refusal to acknowledge the iPhone 6 Plus’s touch disease or offer meaningful support to the customers that bought that device.
Between the iPhone 6’s problems and Samsung’s Note 7 disaster, it’s not clear this accelerated product cycle is actually improving anything for anyone. Samsung’s problem is more serious. But when the two leading manufacturers in the smartphone industry are both fielding defective hardware, it’s worth considering whether pushing new devices every single year is such a smart idea.



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Xiaomi CEO Claims Mi Note 2 Will "Have a Surprise"



Xiaomi, after unveiling the Mi 5s and Mi 5s Plus smartphones, may be gearing to launch another Mi-series smartphone, the Mi Note 2. Additionally, new details have emerged on multiple Xiaomi smartphones including the next flagship Mi 6, Mi 5c, and a mysterious new Xiaomi phone.
There have been several leaks on the Mi Note 2 smartphone already making it to the Internet in recent weeks. If Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun is to be believed, the Mi Note 2 will "have a surprise." The news was first reported by a Chinese publication. Some of the purported specifications tipped for the Mi Note 2 include Qualcomm Snapdragon 835; 6GB of RAM; 128GB of inbuilt storage, and a 21-megapixel dual rear camera.
In other news, Xiaomi's alleged next flagship smartphone, the Mi 6, has been leaked in purported images claiming to show the phone ahead of any launch. The leaked images were first picked up by Priceraja and show the front as well as rear of the alleged Mi 6 smartphone. In the leaked images, the front seems to be inspired by the Mi 5 while the rear seems plain compared to the current flagship. The alleged Mi 6 was leaked in a Black colour variant. Another mysterious smartphone from Xiaomi has also hit the rumour mills and is claimed to sport an E-Ink notification display on the rear panel, which will be the highlight of the handset. Apart from the E-Ink display (via Weibo tipster KJuma), the handset is said to launch this year. Unfortunately, no other details are available on the mysterious Xiaomi phone as of now.


Unknown 11 October 2016
Google's Tax Deals Not Being Investigated, Says EU's Vestager









EU regulators who are investigating whether Alphabet unit Google is abusing its market power have has not extended their scrutiny to its tax deals with national authorities across Europe, the EU's antitrust chief said on Monday.
Margrethe Vestager, who in recent months ordered Apple to pay up to EUR 13 billion ($15 billion or roughly Rs. 96,493 crores) in back taxes to Ireland and Starbucks up to 30 million euros to the Dutch tax office, said Google was not on her radar for now.
"So far, no, we have nothing formal on that one," Vestager told reporters.
She said she had not received any formal complaint from the Scottish National Party which in January sent a letter to the European Commission concerning Google's 130 million pounds ($160 million or roughly Rs. 1,314 crores) back tax deal with British tax authorities which some British politicians criticised as a derisory amount.
 
Vestager also defended the slow pace of the Commission's antitrust cases against Google, saying she wanted the shopping case to be water-tight. This first case has dragged on since 2010 when her predecessor kicked off the investigation.
"I am as sorry as you and everyone else that antitrust work is taking a lot of time," she told European lawmakers earlier on Monday.


"But it is also a sign that this is a case that is building in its strength as well as a case which is of course strictly following our procedures to make sure that also here we build up the rule of law."
Vestager said she did not know when she would issue a decision but the case was a very high priority for her.
In the shopping case, Google has been accused of favouring its shopping service over those of rivals in internet search results. It has also been charged with blocking rivals in online search advertising and doing the same with dominant Android mobile operating system.

The Commission has warned the company of hefty fines in both the shopping and Android cases and changes in its business practices if it is eventually found guilty of wrongdoing.



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Vodafone mulls selling Rs 12 crore data centre


Vodafone India has sought bids for its data centre facility in Navi Mumbai, a suburb of India's financial capital, said two people familiar with details. Currently, two strategic companies are interested in buying it out but at cost for Vodafone, said one of them. The data centre has been built at a cost of Rs1,200 crore and was commissioned under ex-chief executive Marten Pieters.

"The data centre is now seen as a cost centre which won't increase (Vodafone's) appeal, but in partnership with a bigger strategic could mean stick enterprise business," the second person said.

It was part of the company's strategic plan to get enterprise customers, especially the booming medium segment and startups, the first person said. It was meant to compete with the service offering Tata Teleservices and Tata Communications - that controlled cabled lease line business and had data centres - offered. "We intend to launch the data centre shortly and are currently in the process of gaining the requisite approvals," said Vodafone's spokesman in an email. He did not comment on the company's intent to sell.

The second person said the value of the asset after the launch may increase and could command a premium from buyers who are at the moment only offering to buy it at cost. "Even if there is a little revenue to show on it, data centres in Asia can be very valuable for strategics," the person said.


In 2011, Vodafone had announced a foray into the fixed line business along with instituting a business solutions unit that showcased global connections and offerings such as RFID tracking. The business was expected to treble by the year ended March from about 8-10% of revenue in 2011. However, as the telecom major gears up towards its initial public offer, bankers said it had too much debt on its books and was set to add more in the just ended spectrum auction, in which Vodafone spent Rs 20,280 crore for 4G airwaves. To lighten the balance sheet, the British parent of the company converted debt worth Rs 47,700 crore and decided that the Indian arm would divest all non-core assets, the data centre included.

Tata Communications, the main competitor that Vodafone had set to take out with the data centre, sold its own to a Singapore firm earlier this year. For 74% stake in 14 data centres across Asia, the company raised around Rs 4,300 crore. Vodafone's data centre is larger in capacity with better technology because it has no legacy and been geared for cloud services too, said one of the two people quoted earlier. The operator also has committed clients ready to start using the data centre from the day it is commissioned, he added.


Vodafone India, along with its parent has been expanding in the fixed line business, which is the way to the future broadband demand. However, storage and data centre require separate technology teams.

Unknown 10 October 2016
Apple Wins Appeal Reinstating $119.6 Million Samsung Verdict Over Slide-to-Unlock Patent



Apple Inc. won an appeals court ruling that reinstates a patent-infringement verdict it won against Samsung Electronics Co., including for its slide-to-unlock feature for smartphones and tablets.
In an 8-3 ruling, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit said a three-judge panel was wrong to throw out the $119.6 million (roughly Rs. 795 crores) verdict in February. Instead, it ordered the trial judge to consider whether the judgment should be increased based on any intentional infringement by Samsung.
The decision Friday comes less than a week before the US Supreme Court considers another case Apple had filed against Samsung. That case, to be argued Tuesday in Washington, focuses on how much Samsung should pay for copying patented designs for Apple's iPhone.
Together, the two cases are the remnants of a global legal battle between the world's biggest makers of smartphones that began in April 2011 and at one point spanned four continents.
In this case, Apple claimed that Samsung infringed patents for the slide-to-unlock feature, autocorrect and a way to detect phone numbers so they can be tapped to make phone calls. The bulk of the award, $98.7 million, was for the detection patent that the earlier panel said wasn't infringed. The February decision also said the other two patents were invalid.
'Substantial Evidence'
That was a wrong decision, the court ruled Friday, because it relied on issues that were never raised on appeal or on information that was beyond the trial record.
"The jury verdict on each issue is supported by substantial evidence in the record," Circuit Judge Kimberly Moore wrote for the majority.
The opinion was a surprise - the court never announced that it would consider the case before all active judges prior to issuing the opinion. In a dissent, Circuit Judge Timothy Dyk objected to the full court opting to take on the case without allowing additional legal arguments, saying the majority opinion results in "profound changes" in the analysis of whether patents cover obvious variations of earlier ideas.
The three judges who objected to the majority opinion were the same ones who had thrown out the verdict in February.
Dyk said the panel "has continuingly expressed willingness, and indeed desire" to remove the information that the majority objected to, saying it wasn't necessary to the original decision.
The Federal Circuit handles all patent appeals in the US, so its decisions have broad ramifications for how cases are handled in the courts and before the US Patent and Trademark Office.
The case is Apple Inc. v. Samsung Electronics Co, 15-1171, US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (Washington).

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Reliance Jio iPhone Users to Get Additional 12 Months of Free Service



Reliance Jio today announced a partnership with Apple to offer iPhone customers in India a number of offers, including a year of complimentary Jio service worth Rs. 18,000 for retail customers and a 25 percent discount for enterprise customers.
Those who buy a new iPhone 7 or iPhone 7 Plus as well as the existing iPhone 6s, iPhone 6s Plus, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus and iPhone SE from a Reliance retail store or Apple authorized store will be eligible for the offer. All Jio users currently benefit from free service under the Reliance Jio Welcome Offer, so the one year of free service kicks in as soon as that offer expires, on December 31 2016. That means those who buy now will get almost 15 months of free service.
In particular, users will get the benefits of Jio's Rs. 1499 monthly plan: unlimited local, STD and national roaming voice calls, 20GB of 4G data, unlimited 4G data usage at night, 40GB of Wi-Fi data at Jio hotspots, unlimited SMS, and subscription to Jio's apps. Reliance pegs the value of all this at Rs. 18,000.
Enterprise customers will be eligible for a 25 percent discount and a special tariff plan, but further details of this offer are not available yet. The discount will be upfront rather than implemented as a cashback offer, sources told Gadgets 360. Details will be made available on Jio's website in a few days' time.
Sources also indicated that iPhones will not be locked to the Jio network in any way, and that customers are free to use other service providers if they do not want to take advantage of the free service. However, stocks of the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus are running low, and those who haven't pre-booked might not find their preferred colour and capacity available.

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BitTorrent Fires CEOs; Shuts Down Los Angeles Studio and BitTorrent Now


Sources told Variety that the company's spending was "out of control," with millions of dollars being spent into BitTorrent Now.
BitTorrent, the company behind the peer-to-peer file sharing technology that has become synonymous with piracy, fired two of its CEOs and is reportedly shutting down BitTorrent Now. An unknown number of staff members have also been laid off.
According to a report by Variety, BitTorrent CFO Dipak Joshi has also stepped down as interim CEO. The company is also closing its Los Angeles-based production studio.
BitTorrent has been trying to steer away from the 'piracy' tag and has been focusing more legitimate forms of entertainment. To that effect, the company in June launched BitTorrent Now, an ad-supported streaming app that offers music and movies from independent artists. The app was available on Android and iOS devices as well as Apple TV.
The app was launched under the leadership of CEOs Jeremy Johnson and Robert Delamar, who have now been removed from the company's board of directors, according to an email statement sent by BitTorrent founder Bram Cohen to Variety.


Johnson and Delamar were appointed in April in a bid to focus on media production and distribution. The new direction resulted in BitTorrent Now. Sources told Variety that the company's spending was "out of control," with millions of dollars being spent on BitTorrent Now.
This is not the first time the company has pulled the plug on an ambitious project. BitTorrent in 2008 closed its Torrent Entertainment Network store after receiving poor response from customers. Since then, the company has tried its hand on a number of projects that include BitTorrent Live, a news network and original shows.
It is still not known how the latest move from the company will affect other projects or BitTorrent as a whole. Shutting down BitTorrent Now will push the company a few steps back in media production. The company is yet to make an official statement on the same.


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Blueair releases new lineup of air purifiers


Blueair launched a new lineup of air purifier ranges including the Blue and Classic. The Blue series has more of a simple and good looking design to make it effortless, while the Classic series is directed towards more of a connected approach. Both the series further have more models divided according to room sizes, where the Blue series starts at Rs. 22,990 and the Classic series sells from Rs. 55,000.
The Blue has a sleek design so that it blends well with your living room rather than looking like an ugly rectangular box. It’s also super easy to use with the single button at the middle. There are two variants under the Blue line – Pure 211 and Pure 121. The Pure 211 was on display at the event which is capable of covering a room size of 540 sq. ft. It has replaceable fabric filters on the front that not only make the purifier look good but also act as a pre-filter. These filters are washable and available in five different colours – blue, yellow, pink, light gray and dark gray. The only difference between the 211 and the 121 is its room capacity where the Pure 121 can cover a room of about 620 sq. ft.

The Classic series is a more interesting lineup due to its connectivity option and remote access. Using the Blueair Aware monitor, the purifier can be intergrated to get more data about the indoor air quality.With the app (available on both the App Store and Play Store), you can control the purifier from anywhere in the world and also monitor the pollution levels indoors and even outdoors. The Classic range consists of the 280i (279 sq. ft.), 480i (434 sq. ft.) and 680i (775 sq. ft.) which includes HEPASilent Filters. There are several controls for the purifier on the top and to hide the bright LED lights it comes with a lid.
“Both the Blue and the Classic reflect Blueair’s industry leading design ethos to deliver simplicity together with inclusiveness in products innovated to deliver 100% air purification satisfaction, regardless of the pollution inside or out on the street,” said Girish Bapat.

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Pokemon Go update makes catching rare Pokemon easier


There's an update coming to Pokemon Go that will take some of the frustration out of trying to catch rare Pokemon.
Called the "capture bonus", the update (coming soon) will give you extra power to catch certain types of Pokemon, based on your achievements in the game so far.
The catching bonus revolves around the medals system that Trainers are awarded for capturing certain types of Pokemon. If you catch a lot of water type Pokemon, you earn the Swimmer medal, for example, in various stages.
This currently has no function, it basically just gives you a sense of achievement, but the catch bonus means that you'll have extra power to catch Pokemon of that type.
That means that if you come across a powerful Pokemon with a high CP, you'll have a greater chance of catching it, as your previous catches give you a boost.
If the Pokemon you're after is multiple types, then your catching bonus will be the average of your medal status for both those types.
It hasn't been revealed exactly when the update will land, but it should be hitting your Android and iOS devices soon.

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Win a Probox2 Android Home Entertainment system


Pocket-lint has teamed up with Probox2 to give one lucky reader the chance to win a Probox2 Air Android TV box.
The PROBOX2 Air is perfect for home entertainment. It is a revolutionary new way to enjoy all of your favourite movies, music, TV series and Live TV.
All packed into one device, with everything controlled with your fingertips. Loaded with Android 6.0 + PROBOX2 APEX UI User Interface & the built in "1-click swap" user interface function that you won't find in any other TV box in the market. Empowered by Kodi 16.0 , you can watch live sporting events not broadcast on terrestrial or satellite TV, enjoy the latest episodes of your favorite shows long before they have aired on US / UK TV.
The Probox2 comes with an enhanced decoding performance which it is capable of hardware decoding for UHD 4K 60fps and supports multiple formats including H.265 10-bit, H.264 and VP. It also supports FHD 1080p 60fps for Hardware encoding with supports on H.264 and is also capable of supporting Dolby / DTS (by Kodi) and S/SPDIF (5.1CH, 7.1CH).
The real star of the package is the "Remote+", which bears more resemblance to a primitive gaming controller, requires that you plug in a separate Bluetooth dongle to one of the USB ports (which then automatically pairs the device), and is significantly more responsive and easier to use.The game changer is the "Remote+" that comes packaged with the Probox2 Air, a Bluetooth remote that really enhances the experience. It has three modes of operation: a standard remote; an air mouse with motion controls; and as a game controller. It also has an auxiliary function as a microphone.
Probox2 Air is one of the best “Android TV” box yet - perfect for media center and retro gaming.
Product page for Probox2 Air - http://probox2.com/probox2-air/
 

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Google Cast App Will Now Be Called Google Home


With the introduction of the Google Home speaker, the Google Cast application will now undergo a change in logo and design, as informed to users individually, and be controlled via the new Google Home app. This will make the Google Home speaker and the Chrome cast dongle functionality being controlled via a single app.
Google is pushing in the new Google Home app and speaker to make stronger in-roads into the home automation market, as Amazon Echo has already gotten a stronghold in the market with millions of units already being sold, and more to come the way.
The market for home automation, especially VPA (Virtual Personal Assistant) seems like a competitive one, in the times to come. A Strategy Analytics study has already revealed that by 2017 itself, more than 3 million VPA will have been shipped from the likes of Google and Amazon.

Google, especially is looking aggressively at this market, trying to push up consumption of its speakers to 15 million units annually, from the current figure of 1.8 million units. But in order to bring it to daylight, it is now unifying its products and services under the Google Home umbrella, which is similar in terms of functionality to the Amazon Echo product already existing. This is also the reason why the Google Home speaker has been priced aggressively at $129, which won’t perhaps give much of margins to Google, but will make it easier to adopt for customers, who are familiar with their products.
In terms of the change taking place, Google Home changes will come into effect over the next few weeks, and wont immediately.
According to details available, Google Cast is still open for download from Google Playstore, but will change under a single brand name of Google Home, in the weeks to come. Though with pricing and features of the product being attractive, the timeline for the product to launch in India is not known as yet, because of the lack of any official word. This would make the fans wait a while longer to get their hands on Google Home VPA assisted speaker, which helps answer queries, books hotels, flights, dinner reservations, and also plays music on request. People in the UK can however expect this to come to them sooner, as word has it that the launch is not much further for them.

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Chrome And Firefox Block Pirate Bay Again


One of the last standing torrent website ‘ThePirateBay’ is facing the heat again. Two of the most popular browsers in the industry Firefox and Chrome are actively blocking the torrent website. Even the search-giant Google’s ‘safe browsing’ database has labeled the site as ‘partially dangerous’ and also a ‘phishing website’. This has resulted in users logging on to the site, but not being able to cruise through smoothly. Moreover, every time a user clicks on the download button, he is greeted with the following message: "Deceptive site ahead: Attackers on Thepiratebay.org may trick you into doing something dangerous like installing software or revealing your personal information,".

Google claims that they detected phishing on piratebay.org that are making people share their information to operate on the site. ThePirateBay has replied to the media queries, saying that they are aware of the problem and hope to solve it soon. TorrentFreak, however, mentioned that it could be due to a malicious advertisement on the website. If the routine is anything to go by, then there have been instances like these before. Such issues mostly get solved within a few days.

For those not familiar with the Google ‘Safe Browsing’ database, it is essentially what Chrome, Safari, and Firefox use a reference point against all malicious websites on the internet. The purpose is to help block websites that spread malware, and conducting ‘phishing’ operations from users. The database came into existence in 2007, and after the initial desktop edition launch, there is an edition for Android Chrome users has been launched as well.

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An old Nokia phone stopped a bullet and saved a man's life




Old Nokia phones will take a bullet for you. That's a well documented fact, we are not kidding because that has happened in the past. Proving the long-standing urban myth that Nokia phones are sturdy enough to stop a bullet, a man's life in Afganistan was saved when a bullet got lodged in his Nokia phone.

A general manager at Microsoft, Peter Skillman tweeted, "A Nokia phone I worked on a few years ago saved the life of a man in Afganistan last week." Skillman was earlier a design executive at Nokia, which Microsoft acquired in 2014.




However, details of who was saved and under what circumstances is sketchy. According to the The Telegraph, the phone that took the bullet is a Nokia 301, which came out in 2013.

Also, this isn't the first time that a phone stopped a bullet. A Lumia 520 had achieved the feat by stopping a bullet from a policeman from hitting a Brazilian in 2014. An HTC Evo 3D also saved a gas station clerk in Florida in 2013.

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Amazon's Prime Video possibly launching in India this November


After Amazon announced that its video streaming service, Amazon Prime Video is launching in India, a lot of speculation has anticipation had built up on when the subscription based service will launch.

While it was earlier thought the video-streaming service was going to go live on Diwali, Huffington Post India claims, it will be sometime later.

Instead, Amazon will be hosting an extravagant ceremony at an up-scale hotel in Mumbai on November 9 to launch the service.

HuffPost India claims Amazon has roped in Karan Johar for the official launch, whose movie Ae Dil Hai Mushkil releases on Diwali Weekend. Because of logistical reasons, the launch had to be pushed back to November 9, a week after Diwali.

Amazon has also come into a deal with Karan Johar's Dharma Productions to own exclusive rights to stream all upcoming and past movies under the Dharma banner.

In addition, Amazon will make announce more details about Bahubali: The Lost Legends, the first Amazon original animated series for Amazon Prime Video users in India. The director of the original Bahubali movie, SS Rajamouli will also be present at the event.

Amazon has also announced an original show with Farhan Akhtar's Excel Entertainment for a cricket show, Power Play. Although it is not confirmed yet.

Amazon is also trying to acquire sports rights from around the world, although it has so far been an expensive affair for them, because Hotstar backed by Star and Sony will also be in the running to acquire the right the English Premier League and the Indian Premier League.

Amazon's Prime Video service is viewed as a viable rival to Netflix. It has some interesting originals like the Man on the High a castle and also soon the Grand Tour will debut on is service which features former Top Gear hosts Jeremy Clarkson, Richard Hammond and James May.

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