Dallas Air Traffic Rerouted As FAA Probes Faulty GPS Signals

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: Flights into the Dallas area are being forced to take older, cumbersome routes and a runway at Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport was temporarily closed after aviation authorities said GPS signals there aren’t reliable. The Federal Aviation Administration said in an emailed statement Tuesday it’s investigating the possible jamming of the global-positioning system that aircraft increasingly use to guide them on more efficient routes and to runways. So far, the agency has found “no evidence of intentional interference,” it said. American Airlines, the primary carrier at DFW, said the GPS issue is not affecting its operations. Southwest Airlines, which flies from nearby Love Field, said it also isn’t experiencing any disruptions. The FAA reopened the closed runway earlier on Tuesday.

The GPS problem — despite the lack of impact — highlights the risk of widespread reliance on the weak GPS radio signals from space used for everything from timing stock trades to guiding jetliners. The FAA occasionally warns pilots in advance of military testing that may degrade the GPS signals and pilots sometimes report short-lived problems, but the interference in Dallas is atypical, said Dan Streufert, founder of the flight-tracking website ADSBexchange.com. “In the US, it’s very unusual to see this without a prior notice,” Streufert said in an interview. ADSBExchange.com monitors aircraft data streams that indicate the accuracy of the GPS signals they are receiving and the website began seeing problems around Dallas on Monday, he said. The military has told the FAA it isn’t conducting any operations that would interfere with GPS in that area, said a person familiar with the situation who wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about it. The primary way FAA’s air-traffic system tracks planes is based on GPS, but older radars and radio-direction beacons have remained in place as backups.

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Source: Slashdot – Dallas Air Traffic Rerouted As FAA Probes Faulty GPS Signals

USB-C can hit 120Gbps with newly published USB4 Version 2.0 spec

Green USB-C cable

Enlarge / The USB-IF published the USB4 Version 2.0 specification today. (credit: Getty)

We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: USB-C is confusing. A USB-C port or cable can support a range of speeds, power capabilities, and other features, depending on the specification used. Today, USB-C can support various data transfer rates, from 0.48Gbps (USB 2.0) all the way to 40Gbps (USB4, Thunderbolt 3, and Thunderbolt 4). Things are only about to intensify as today the USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF) published the USB4 Version 2.0 spec. It adds optional support for 80Gbps bidirectional bandwidth as well the optional ability to send or receive data at up to 120Gbps.

The USB-IF first gave us word of USB4 Version 2.0 in September, saying it would support a data transfer rate of up to 80Gbps in either direction (40Gbps per lane, four lanes total), thanks to a new physical layer architecture (PHY) based on PAM-3 signal encoding. For what it’s worth, Intel also demoed Thunderbolt at 80Gbps but hasn’t released an official spec yet.

USB4 Version 2.0 offers a nice, potential bump over the original USB4 spec, which introduced optional support for 40Gbps operation. You just have to be sure to check the spec sheets to know what sort of performance you’re getting.

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Source: Ars Technica – USB-C can hit 120Gbps with newly published USB4 Version 2.0 spec

Sims 4 Update Will Make Babies Actual People, Not Objects

During today’s Sims Summit EA showed a glimpse of an upcoming update that seems to give infants far more autonomy. During the event’s “one more thing” moment, a few brief seconds were dedicated to showing off a crawling infant who’s quickly picked up by their mother. Family life just got a little more hectic.

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Source: Kotaku – Sims 4 Update Will Make Babies Actual People, Not Objects

AMD Develops New "GI-1.0" Open-Source Global Illumination Tech

AMD under their GPUOpen umbrella has published a paper on their new technology dubbed “GI-1.0” that is a fast, scalable two-level radiance caching scheme for real-time global illumination. This means of real-time global illumination says it can deliver comparable quality to other GI implementations while said to be much faster. GI-1.0 will be open-source, AMD says, but the code isn’t yet published…

Source: Phoronix – AMD Develops New “GI-1.0” Open-Source Global Illumination Tech

Netflix will begin charging 'extra user' fees early next year

We all knew it was coming. The next phase of Netflix’s months-long crackdown on password sharing — which itself follows the company’s first quarterly subscriber loss in a decade — is soon upon us. The company announced during its quarterly earnings call on Tuesday that it will charge customers an added monthly fee to people who share their login credentials beginning in early 2023.

This move is an expansion of a pilot program currently running in Latin America which charges extra fees for “extra user” subaccounts, users outside of your immediate household who use your login to access the service. Basically, every listing on the “Who’s Watching?” screen is going to cost you extra money if they don’t also live with you. 

Netflix has not yet announced pricing for the punitive charges though if they follow the pilot program’s “one quarter of the basic rate” scheme, it should work out to around US$3-4. For folks wanting to avoid those fees, Netflix unveiled on Monday an account migration tool that will transfer a user’s subaccount data (viewing history, recommendations and the like) to their new, independent subscription. 

In addition, the company recently announced a less expensive, ad-supported tier that will cost $7 a month when it launches on November 3rd. The new tier will be available in a dozen countries, including the UK, Canada, and Mexico, by November 10th.



Source: Engadget – Netflix will begin charging ‘extra user’ fees early next year

Reform Section 230, punish users spreading online hate: New York AG

Reform Section 230, punish users spreading online hate: New York AG

Enlarge (credit: YUKI IWAMURA / Contributor | AFP)

On a mission to stop young men from being increasingly radicalized online, New York Attorney General Letitia James suggested today a new strategy to stop online hate from spreading: Punish anyone who reposts content created by those who commit homicide.

Her potentially First Amendment-infringing policy reform recommendation comes after the Bureau of Internet and Technology and the Hate Crimes Unit of the Civil Rights Bureau conducted an investigation into how online platforms—including Reddit, Discord, 4chan, 8chan, Twitch, and YouTube—helped a white gunman prepare and then murder 10 Black people in Buffalo, New York, during a mass shooting in May.

According to the Office of the Attorney General, the gunman’s content, including snippets of his manifesto, was shared across mainstream platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and TikTok. Among other solutions proposed, James and New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced that they want lawmakers to establish a civil liability so that no one shares extremist content, which can potentially inspire copycats.

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Source: Ars Technica – Reform Section 230, punish users spreading online hate: New York AG

WHO Warns of Surge in Chronic Disease by 2030 If People Don't Start Exercising

A new report from the World Health Organization finds that our collective lack of exercise will exact a heavy toll in the years to come if nothing changes. The report estimates that there will be nearly a half-billion new cases of noncommunicable disorders like heart disease and diabetes due to physical inactivity by…

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Source: Gizmodo – WHO Warns of Surge in Chronic Disease by 2030 If People Don’t Start Exercising

Netflix Password-Sharing Crackdown Will Roll Out Globally In 'Early 2023'

As part of Netflix’s earning results today, which says the company reversed customer losses, Netflix plans to crack down on password sharing beginning in 2023. The Verge reports: After giving users the ability to transfer their profiles to new accounts last week, the streamer says it will start letting subscribers create sub-accounts starting next year in line with its plans to “monetize account sharing” more widely. […] Earlier this year, Netflix reported losing subscribers for the first time in over 10 years, with the company’s subscriber count dipping by another 1.3 million in the US and Canada and 1 million worldwide last quarter. To remedy this, Netflix has also been slowly nudging subscribers away from password sharing. The company conducted tests that prompted users in Chile, Costa Rica, and Peru to pay extra for a sub-account if Netflix detected someone was using the owner’s subscription outside of their household.

It also tried out a way for users in Argentina, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and the Dominican Republic to buy additional “homes” for accounts located outside of the subscriber’s primary household. More recently, Netflix widely introduced a Profile Transfer tool that lets users easily transfer their personalized recommendations, viewing history, My List, saved games, and other settings to a new account after testing it in other countries. Last month, a report from Rest of World revealed frustration from users subject to the tests in Latin America. The earnings report (PDF) projects that the company’s new ad-supported streaming service, which starts at $6.99 per month and launches in November, will help attract 4.5 million subscribers by year’s end. This quarter it added 2.4 million subscribers and grew by 104,000 paid subscribers in the U.S. and Canada over the last three months, up from 73,000 in the same period last year.

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Source: Slashdot – Netflix Password-Sharing Crackdown Will Roll Out Globally In ‘Early 2023’

Red Dead Redemption’s PS Plus Delisting Is Another Bad Omen For Digital Libraries

If you’ve held off on building up a digital library of games, the original Red Dead Redemption is here to remind you that you might not be missing out after all. Rockstar’s 2010 open world Western was just removed from PS Now/Plus after six years. And as the industry moves to include more subscription and streaming…

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Source: Kotaku – Red Dead Redemption’s PS Plus Delisting Is Another Bad Omen For Digital Libraries

Researchers Say 'Suspicious Edits' on Wikipedia Reek of Pro-Russian Propaganda

Wikipedia—the online encyclopedia that helps you learn stuff, waste time, and seem more knowledgable than you really are—is not immune to foreign propaganda, according to new research. A study published Monday exposed a network of shadowy editors, the likes of which have been attempting to sway the narrative about…

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Source: Gizmodo – Researchers Say ‘Suspicious Edits’ on Wikipedia Reek of Pro-Russian Propaganda

Lost something? Search through 91.7 million files from the 80s, 90s, and 2000s

Vintage floppy disks go under the microscope.

Enlarge / Search through millions of vintage files with Discmaster. (credit: Aurich Lawson | Getty Images)

Today, tech archivist Jason Scott announced a new website called Discmaster that lets anyone search through 91.7 million vintage computer files pulled from CD-ROM releases and floppy disks. The files include images, text documents, music, games, shareware, videos, and much more.

Discmaster opens a window into digital media culture around the turn of the millennium, turning anyone into a would-be digital archeologist. It’s a rare look into a slice of cultural history that is often obscured by the challenges of obsolete media and file format incompatibilities.

The files on Discmaster come from the Internet Archive, uploaded by thousands of people over the years. The new site pulls them together behind a search engine with the ability to perform detailed searches by file type, format, source, file size, file date, and many other options.

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Source: Ars Technica – Lost something? Search through 91.7 million files from the 80s, 90s, and 2000s

Black Adam Isn't the DC Game Changer It Wants to Be

The best thing about Black Adam is also the worst thing about it. DC’s latest mega superhero film has a surprisingly compact story that takes place over just a few short days. Everything unfolds almost like it’s in real time, keeping the action and story so propulsive that, at moments, you can barely catch your breath

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Source: Gizmodo – Black Adam Isn’t the DC Game Changer It Wants to Be

The Best Ways to Support the Runner in Your Life, According to Reddit

Running is a fulfilling hobby, but it can be a tough one. If you don’t run, you may not realize your partner or close friend is facing a whole rollercoaster of emotions every time they go out (from elation to mind-numbing boredom), or that their pastime really does a number on their body—bruised toenails, anyone?

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Source: LifeHacker – The Best Ways to Support the Runner in Your Life, According to Reddit

Google 'Doubles Down' on Pixel Hardware, Cuts Google Assistant Support

A new report from The Information details more changes Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s budget cuts are having across the company, with some divisions surviving and others getting ominous resource cuts. From a report: First, we have news that the hardware division, other than losing laptops, seems mostly safe. Google’s biggest Android partner, Samsung, is in decline in many established markets, and Apple is hitting an all-time high in US market share last quarter. The report says Google views Apple as more of a problem than it has in the past, thanks to worries that regulators might shut down the usual multi-billion-dollar Google/Apple agreement to put Google Search on iPhones. If iPhones stop showing Google ads, the rise of Apple and fall of Samsung is one of the few things that could actually be a major problem for Google’s revenue.

According to the report, Google views itself as the solution to this problem. As a hedge against what the report calls the “further decline” of Samsung, Google is “doubling down” on its investment in Pixel hardware. Google is apparently doing this by “moving product development and software engineering staff working on features for non-Google hardware to work on Google-branded devices.” The goal here is to not spend more money, so Google is apparently sacrificing partner devices to focus on the Pixel division. So what projects are seeing cuts? Google TV is one, with the report saying: “Executives also have discussed moving some product managers working on Google TV software for television sets” to Wear OS and the Pixel Tablet. This is the only OS called out as specifically receiving less OS development. A lot of this report seems to focus on cuts to Google Assistant’s support for specific form factors, which is strange since Google Assistant is more or less the same on every platform. The whole point of the Assistant is one reliable, predictable voice assistant that lives everywhere, and it’s not clear what platform-specific support needs to be done other than whipping up an app that can receive audio and read back results.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Source: Slashdot – Google ‘Doubles Down’ on Pixel Hardware, Cuts Google Assistant Support

Privacy online just got easier with today's Firefox release

October is one of our favorite months of the year with Autumn and Cybersecurity Awareness Month. We’re supporting Cybersecurity Awareness with Private Browsing mode upgrades. Additionally, we’re rolling out new features to help you pick up where you last left off with Firefox View and new Colorways and wallpapers to refresh your look…

Source: LXer – Privacy online just got easier with today’s Firefox release

NVIDIA May Not Release A Titan GPU With Ada Lovelace But A Faster Card Could Still Emerge

NVIDIA May Not Release A Titan GPU With Ada Lovelace But A Faster Card Could Still Emerge
The GeForce RTX 4090 is fast. Real fast. Fast enough that, even without DLSS upscaling—to say nothing of frame generation—you can play everything in 4K with the settings turned up to the ceiling. Despite that, it’s not as fast as Ada could be, and there have been persistent rumors of a faster card waiting in the wings to swoop down on any

Source: Hot Hardware – NVIDIA May Not Release A Titan GPU With Ada Lovelace But A Faster Card Could Still Emerge

Google is reportedly shifting its focus to hardware at Assistant's expense

Google’s flurry of hardware launches may be part of a larger defensive strategy. Sources speaking to The Information claim CEO Sundar Pichai sees hardware as the best way to be “protected” against the pitfalls of a changing mobile market. According to Google Assistant VP Sissie Hsiao, Pichai is concerned Apple is taking share from Android partners like Samsung, and that antitrust regulators might nix Google’s long-standing deal to make its search engine the default on iPhones.

This may be coming at the expense of support for non-Google products. While Android support apparently remains intact, the company is said to be investing less in Assistant for cars and third-party hardware in general. Hsiao and other execs have reportedly explored moving employees away from Assistant and Google TV.

Google declined to comment, The Information said. However, the company may have reason to take risks with its hardware business. While Android isn’t about to lose its dominance, any continued shortfalls could eat into Google’s all-important mobile ad revenue even if its iPhone search deal continues unchallenged. In contrast, Hsiao supposedly noted that the Android Automotive platform in use at BMW, Volvo and other companies is only now approaching $1 billion in revenue — a tiny fraction of the $257.6 billion Google made in 2021.

The main question is whether or not Google can grow its hardware efforts enough to serve as a hedge against any problems. While Google revitalized its phone lineup with last year’s Pixel 6 and the just-launched Pixel 7, it’s not yet clear this has translated to improved sales. Google moved just 4.5 million phones in 2021 where Apple and Google shipped well over 200 million each. And while Google-powered smart speakers have done well (they’re second only to Amazon in lifetime sales), the company is only just making its first in-house smartwatch. It’s also reentering the tablet space after a years-long hiatus.

There’s also a worry Google might play favorites. The Information maintains that Google is concentrating on providing the best services to “premium” Android partners like Samsung, OnePlus and Xiaomi. That could hurt other brands that might not get equal access to Assistant and other key features. If you’re concerned about the long-term health of the Android ecosystem, the reported focus shift might not be very reassuring.



Source: Engadget – Google is reportedly shifting its focus to hardware at Assistant’s expense

MyDeal's Data Breach Exposing 2.2M Customers Just Went From Bad To Worse

MyDeal's Data Breach Exposing 2.2M Customers Just Went From Bad To Worse
On October 10, less than a month after Australia was hit by its largest ever data breach, the Australian online retail store MyDeal was struck by a data breach. According to Woolworths Group, which recently acquired the online retailer, an unknown actor used a set of compromised employee credentials to access MyDeal’s Customer Relationship

Source: Hot Hardware – MyDeal’s Data Breach Exposing 2.2M Customers Just Went From Bad To Worse