AT&T’s common carrier status helps it defeat data throttling lawsuit

Enlarge (credit: Mike Mozart)

AT&T today won a major victory over the Federal Trade Commission, which was trying to punish AT&T for throttling the Internet connections of customers with unlimited data plans.

The FTC sued AT&T in October 2014, seeking refunds for customers who paid for unlimited data. The FTC said AT&T deceived customers by offering unlimited data plans and then throttling speeds once customers hit certain usage thresholds, such as 3GB or 5GB in a month. In response, AT&T claimed that the FTC had no jurisdiction over AT&T because of the company’s status as a common carrier.

This argument was complicated. At the time, AT&T was a common carrier for landline phone and mobile voice service, but not for mobile Internet access. The Federal Communications Commission later reclassified mobile Internet as a common carrier service, which put it under a stricter FCC regime but exempted AT&T from FTC oversight.

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Source: Ars Technica – AT&T’s common carrier status helps it defeat data throttling lawsuit

Instagram Stories fights Snapchat by recommending users to follow

Instagram Stories’ feature updates are no longer quite in lockstep with Snapchat’s. It’s gradually rolling out an update to the Explore section that displays a bar of Stories from people Instagram thinks you want to follow based on both your existin…

Source: Engadget – Instagram Stories fights Snapchat by recommending users to follow

This Is What it Must Feel Like to See the Invisible

This Is What it Must Feel Like to See the Invisible

It’s called the Schlieren effect and it means that you can see stuff that’s invisible to the human eye, like changes in air density. So when you turn on a hair dryer, you can see the blast of air it shoots out. When you open a can of Coke, you can see what’s escaping into the air. When you rub your hands, you can see the heat surrounding them.

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Source: Gizmodo – This Is What it Must Feel Like to See the Invisible

FAA Expects 600,000 Commercial Drones In The Air Within A Year

The drone industry is expected to expand dramatically in the coming months and years with the passing of a new rule (PDF) that makes it easier to become a commercial drone operator. The Federal Aviation Administration predicts there to be roughly 600,000 drones to be used commercially within the next year. NPR reports: “For context, the FAA says that 20,000 drones are currently registered for commercial use. What’s expected to produce a 30-fold increase in a matter of months is a new rule that went into effect today and makes it easier to become a commercial drone operator. Broadly, the new rules change the process of becoming a commercial drone pilot: Instead of having to acquire a traditional pilot’s license and getting a special case-by-case permission from the regulators, drone operators now need to pass a new certification test and abide by various flying restrictions (and, well, be older than 16). The rest of the drone safety rules still apply: No flights beyond line-of-sight, over people, at night, above 400 feet in the air or faster than 100 miles an hour. Drones also can’t be heavier than 55 pounds, and all unmanned aircraft have to be registered. Businesses, however, may get special wavers to skip some of the restrictions if they can prove they can do so safely. The drone association expects the industry will create more than 100,000 jobs and generate more than $82 billion for the economy in the first 10 years of being integrated into the national airspace. The FAA is also working on new rules that eventually will allow drone flights over people and beyond line of sight.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – FAA Expects 600,000 Commercial Drones In The Air Within A Year

These Customizable DIY Partitions Keep Your Drawers Organized

It’s easy to throw everything in your kitchen or desk drawers drawers to get them out of sight, but that doesn’t take care of the clutter. These DIY organizers will fix the clutter, keep everything easy to reach, and they’re easy to build to fit any desk or drawer you have.

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Source: LifeHacker – These Customizable DIY Partitions Keep Your Drawers Organized

The Size Of Pluto Compared To Australia

pluto-and-australia-sitting-in-a-tree.jpg

This is a composite comparing the size of everyone’s favorite ex-planet Pluto to the size of Australia. As you can see, Pluto is pretty small. Or Australia is pretty big. Or they’re the perfect size for each other and should start dating and have country-planet babies. Whatever the case, I say if Pluto can’t be a planet, then Australia shouldn’t be a continent. Is that what this graphic was trying to teach us? Because that’s what I’m taking away. “You’re an idiot.” I blame the nasal spray I’ve been taking for my allergies. “That’s because it’s model airplane glue.” Gimme gimme!

Thanks to Lizzy, who tried to tell me Antarctica and Neptune have been exchanging love letters for thousands of millennia and things have gotten so steamy that’s what causes global warming. My my!

Source: Geekologie – The Size Of Pluto Compared To Australia

Running Caffe AlexNet/GoogleNet On Some CPUs Compared To NVIDIA CUDA

With working on some Broadwell-EP Linux comparison benchmarks this weekend, as part of that onslaught of benchmarks I decided to run the CPU-only Caffe build on a few different Intel CPUs. For fun, afterwards I checked to see how the performance compares to Caffe with CUDA+cuDNN on a few Maxwell/Pascal GPUs…

Source: Phoronix – Running Caffe AlexNet/GoogleNet On Some CPUs Compared To NVIDIA CUDA

US Appeals Court Dismisses AT&T Data Throttling Lawsuit

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: A federal appeals court in California on Monday dismissed a U.S. government lawsuit that accused ATT Inc of deception for reducing internet speeds for customers with unlimited mobile data plans once their use exceeded certain levels. The company, however, could still face a fine from the Federal Communications Commission regarding the slowdowns, also called “data throttling.” The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit said it ordered a lower court to dismiss the data-throttling lawsuit, which was filed in 2014 by the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC sued ATT on the grounds that the No. 2 U.S. wireless carrier failed to inform consumers it would slow the speeds of heavy data users on unlimited plans. In some cases, data speeds were slowed by nearly 90 percent, the lawsuit said. The FTC said the practice was deceptive and, as a result, barred under the Federal Trade Commission Act. ATT argued that there was an exception for common carriers, and the appeals court agreed.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – US Appeals Court Dismisses AT&T Data Throttling Lawsuit

Terminator 2 Will Get a 3D Re-Release in 2017, Check Out the Poster

August 29th is a big day in the Terminator mythology. It’s Judgment Day—the day Skynet became self-aware and blew the world to hell. To celebrate this year’s anniversary, the franchise announced that Terminator 2: Judgment Day will get a 3D theatrical release in 2017.

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Source: io9 – Terminator 2 Will Get a 3D Re-Release in 2017, Check Out the Poster

The New Yorker's Social Media Editor Rages Against Working at Facebook in Twitter Rant

The New Yorker’s social media editor Saira Khan went ballistic in a lengthy Twitter rant about her experience as a Facebook curator. Her tirade comes just three days after Facebook fired all human curators
from its trending news operation.

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Source: Gizmodo – The New Yorker’s Social Media Editor Rages Against Working at Facebook in Twitter Rant

Grumpy Cat Wants $600k From 'Pirating' Coffee Maker

Sure this is a pretty blatant rip-off but, given the fact that the coffee company didn’t even bother to respond to the initial lawsuit, I doubt they are going to pay a $600,000 judgment. Anyone think Grumpy Cat is going to see a penny of that money?

Grumpy Cat is not pleased, yet. Her owners have asked a California federal court to issue a $600,000 judgment against a coffee maker which allegedly exploited their copyrights. In addition, they want damages for trademark and contract breach, and a ban on the company in question from selling any associated Grumpy Cat merchandise.

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Source: [H]ardOCP – Grumpy Cat Wants 0k From ‘Pirating’ Coffee Maker

Microsoft’s fancy new outlook.com, planned for this year, now delayed until next

Enlarge / The updated Outlook.com experience that many of us don’t have yet. (credit: Microsoft)

In May 2015, Microsoft announced a big overhaul was coming to its Outlook.com free mail service. The new look Outlook.com looked a lot closer to the Outlook Web Access component in Exchange. It had Exchange features like the Clutter folder for handling all those e-mails that aren’t quite spam but aren’t quite important, pinned and flagged mail, new calendar views, and a better mobile interface that supports swipe-based gestures. In February 2016, this new experience was announced as being out of beta, and Microsoft rolled it out immediately to new users in North America. Everyone else was scheduled to be upgraded by the end of summer.

It looks like that’s not the plan any more. The upgrade has been partially performed, and some users have been upgraded while others have not. A new error message (spotted by Twitter user gwydionjhr) suggests that those who don’t have the update by now won’t get it for quite a while. While attempting to share calendars, users have noticed that sharing between non-upgraded and upgraded users isn’t possible, and this situation apparently won’t be remedied until the first half of 2017.

It’s not clear what the hold-up is or why the roll-out is taking longer than expected. The rollout is a big one behind the scenes, with Microsoft saying that the new system uses “Office 365-based infrastructure” and that there are hundreds of millions of accounts to migrate. Certainly the scale of what Microsoft is doing is certainly significant, but the delays are also frustrating, especially for anyone wanting to share calendars.

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Source: Ars Technica – Microsoft’s fancy new outlook.com, planned for this year, now delayed until next