2
Prime Video cuts Dolby Vision, Atmos support from ad tier—and didn’t tell subs To get them back, you must pay an extra $2.99/month for the ad-free tier.     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.3 years ago (+3/-1)
0 comments...
13
Deepfake scammer walks off with $25 million in AI heist     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by shitface9000 to AI 1.4 years ago (+14/-1)
9 comments last comment...
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Inventor of NTP protocol, Dave Mills, that keeps time on billions of devices dies at age 85, NTP is the protocol that holds the temporal Internet together.     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by carnold03 to RIP 1.4 years ago (+11/-3)
2 comments last comment...
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Cable firms to FTC: We shouldn’t have to let users cancel service with a click     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.4 years ago (+12/-0)
3 comments last comment...
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Amazon plans to charge for Alexa in June—unless internal conflict delays revamp     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.4 years ago (+16/-0)
15 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/01/alexa-is-in-trouble-paid-for-alexa-gives-inaccurate-answers-in-early-demos/?comments=1&comments-page=1

lol these people with their nickel and diming. so much greed!

no wonder amazon is going downhill as of late as a company with their chinese crap
23
Pornhub pulls out of Montana due to age verification     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Universal 1.5 years ago (+27/-4)
22 comments last comment...
1
Oy vey, the moon needs more diversity! ("US commits to landing an international astronaut on the Moon")     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by PoundOfFlesh to news 1.5 years ago (+1/-0)
2 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/space/2023/12/us-commits-to-landing-an-international-astronaut-on-the-moon/

Among the international partners contributing to Artemis, it seems most likely a European astronaut would get the first slot for a landing with NASA... A Japanese astronaut might also have a shot at getting a seat on an Artemis landing

"European"

It'll definitely be some nog from France instead of a Jap.
-2
chromium users are going to suffer and they deserve every bad thing that happens to them     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by iThinkiShitYourself to technology 1.5 years ago (+1/-3)
0 comments...
-3
Microsoft changes AI image generator over fake Disney posters     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 1.6 years ago (+4/-7)
0 comments...
-1
Chrome will limit ad blockers starting June 2024     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to technology 1.6 years ago (+2/-3)
2 comments last comment...
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Kike Fight! Sam Altman Fired as CEO from OpenAI and 4 of his minions resign right after     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by v0atmage to technology 1.6 years ago (+22/-0)
22 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2023/11/report-sutskever-led-board-coup-at-openai-that-ousted-altman-over-ai-safety-concerns/

https://archive.is/ACGho

On the surface it appears to be money making jews vs the what about muh children jews, with the latter pushing out the former.
4
Soda additive linked to thyroid toxicity     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 1.6 years ago (+7/-3)
2 comments last comment...
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Chinese hackers have unleashed a never-before-seen Linux backdoor SprySOCKS borrows from open source Windows malware and adds new tricks.     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.7 years ago (+14/-1)
3 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/security/2023/09/never-before-seen-linux-backdoor-is-a-windows-malware-knockoff/

Researchers have discovered a never-before-seen backdoor for Linux that’s being used by a threat actor linked to the Chinese government.

The new backdoor originates from a Windows backdoor named Trochilus, which was first seen in 2015 by researchers from Arbor Networks, now known as Netscout. They said that Trochilus executed and ran only in memory, and the final payload never appeared on disks in most cases. That made the malware difficult to detect. Researchers from NHS Digital in the UK have said Trochilus was developed by APT10, an advanced persistent threat group linked to the Chinese government that also goes by the names Stone Panda and MenuPass.

Other groups eventually used it, and its source code has been available on GitHub for more than six years. Trochilus has been seen being used in campaigns that used a separate piece of malware known as RedLeaves.

In June, researchers from security firm Trend Micro found an encrypted binary file on a server known to be used by a group they had been tracking since 2021. By searching VirusTotal for the file name, ​​libmonitor.so.2, the researchers located an executable Linux file named “mkmon.” This executable contained credentials that could be used to decrypt the libmonitor.so.2 file and recover its original payload, leading the researchers to conclude that “mkmon” is an installation file that delivered and decrypted libmonitor.so.2.
6
Biden's Bolsheviks weaponize the FAA against Elon's Musk - Forces Space-X to cease all launches.     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by KosherHiveKicker to OccidentalEnclave 1.8 years ago (+7/-1)
9 comments last comment...
2
Looks like using the regime and the leftwings methods against them works.     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by prototype to random 1.9 years ago (+2/-0)
3 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/08/illinois-just-made-it-possible-to-sue-people-for-doxxing-attacks/

Funny that.

Can't recommend doing it, but its nice to see them getting as good as they give.
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Amazon begins large-scale rollout of palm print-based payments (for the clueless in the other post, it's not a chip)     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Sector7 to whatever 1.9 years ago (+22/-0)
9 comments last comment...
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Google’s nightmare “Web Integrity API” wants a DRM gatekeeper for the web     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to technology 1.9 years ago (+14/-0)
11 comments last comment...
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/07/googles-web-integrity-api-sounds-like-drm-for-the-web/

Google's newest proposed web standard is... DRM? Over the weekend the Internet got wind of this proposal for a "Web Environment Integrity API. " The explainer is authored by four Googlers, including at least one person on Chrome's "Privacy Sandbox" team, which is responding to the death of tracking cookies by building a user-tracking ad platform right into the browser.
-2
Diet sodas are not good for diet     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 years ago (+5/-7)
1 comments last comment...
21
Reddit Implosion in 3. 2. 1...      (arstechnica.com)
submitted by CamelsMiller to MeanwhileOnReddit 2.2 years ago (+21/-0)
13 comments last comment...
17
Parler shuts down as new owner says conservative platform ‘not viable’     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Spaceman84 to SocialMedia 2.2 years ago (+18/-1)
18 comments last comment...
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There’s a new form of keyless car theft that works in under 2 minutes     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by gardella to news 2.2 years ago (+10/-1)
10 comments last comment...
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Tesla workers shared images from car cameras, including “scenes of intimacy”     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Privacy 2.2 years ago (+3/-0)
2 comments last comment...
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Nvidia quietly boosts the video encoding capabilities of GeForce GPUs     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to technology 2.2 years ago (+4/-0)
0 comments...
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/03/nvidia-quietly-boosts-the-video-encoding-capabilities-of-geforce-gpus/?comments=1

The video encoding hardware built into GeForce GPUs is getting a small boost, according to a quietly updated Nvidia support page (as spotted by Tom's Hardware). Previously, the NVENC encoder built into GeForce GPUs could encode up to three video streams simultaneously. Now, most GPUs supported by Nvidia's current drivers can encode up to five streams of video simultaneously, unlocking capabilities that had always been present in the hardware but that were software-limited in consumer GPUs.

It's unclear exactly when Nvidia made this change, but archival snapshots on the Internet Wayback Machine show the old three-stream limit as recently as March 18, so you may need to install the most recent drivers to unlock the additional encoding capabilities. Your video quality settings may also limit the number of video streams you can encode simultaneously.
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CORRUPTION: FCC officials owned stock in Comcast, Charter, AT&T, and Verizon, watchdog says (US law prohibits FCC employees from owning stock in firms regulated by the agency)     (arstechnica.com)
submitted by knightwarrior41 to whatever 2.3 years ago (+27/-0)
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3
Black Lotus      (arstechnica.com)
submitted by Cantaloupe to whatever 2.3 years ago (+3/-0)
0 comments...