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Updated: 37 min 40 sec ago

Too much Google Glass lands one man treatment for Internet addiction

Wed, 2014-10-15 15:55
Google Glass integrated into a pair of cool shades.

A man who used Google Glass for 18 hours a day was admitted to a substance abuse and recovery program for Internet addiction disorder, according to a report from The Guardian Tuesday and a scientific paper published about the patient. The man reported that he became "irritable and argumentative" when he could not wear his Glass, and he started viewing dreams as if they were projected through Glass's tiny display.

The 31-year-old man was serving the US Navy at the time he was admitted to the program, where he was using Google Glass in his job making inventories of convoy vehicles, according to Newsweek. He had a history of substance abuse, anxiety, depression, and obsessive compulsive disorder. He only removed the device to sleep and take showers.

Internet addiction disorder is not officially recognized by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but it's listed as an area for further study. When the man entered the Navy's treatment center in September 2013, doctors observed he would tap his fingers at his temple, as if he were using the Google Glass touchpad. On completing treatment at the center, the tapping behaviors had stopped and the man reported less irritability over not having the device on his face constantly. He was then sent to a 12-step program for alcohol abuse.

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Time zones, fiberglass, and frozen peas: PBS answers How We Got To Now

Wed, 2014-10-15 14:00
Host Steven Johnson and his homie Galileo relax in Pisa. Jack Chapman

Welcome to the fuzzy, friendly era of modern mainstream science. Radiolab, Mythbusters, and varied radio and TV shows hosted by Neil DeGrasse Tyson and Bill Nye have injected humor, bombast, and likeability into the medium’s weirdest stories (not to mention a zillion science-friendly GIFs into an average day of web browsing).

That trend goes some way in explaining the latest co-production from the BBC and PBS, which has decided on a host-first approach for their latest six-part series, How We Got To Now. But with longtime technology and science historian Steven Johnson at the helm, the perspective is a little different—not about otherworldly sights and jaw-dropping discoveries, but about finding the extraordinary in the ordinary.

As a result, the episode titles sound pretty boring, with themes like “cold,” “sound,” and “glass” dominating each hour-long dive into history. But while the series probably won’t make Johnson a Tyson-esque giant of popular science, the stories of How We Got To Now aren’t just a surprising look at how innovations beget innovations. They’re also an infinitely watchable greatest-hits look at Johnson’s impressive tech-history career.

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Parents face defamation trial over fake Facebook page their kid made

Wed, 2014-10-15 12:15

Two parents whose teenager set up a fake Facebook page to ridicule a classmate will face a defamation trial, a Georgia appeals court ruled yesterday. Even though they didn't create the page, the parents could be liable because they allowed it to remain up for more than a year, the court said.

In 2011, Alexandria (Alex) Boston, a middle school student in Cobb County, Georgia, shared a homeroom class with Dustin Athearn and Melissa Snodgrass. Athearn and Snodgrass created a fake Facebook page under Boston's name. They posted pictures of her taken using a "fat face" app and wrote posts that suggested she had racist views and was a lesbian, according to a report published today in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

"Some of these postings were graphically sexual, racist, or otherwise offensive and some falsely stated that Alex was on a medication regimen for mental health disorders and that she took illegal drugs," wrote the three-judge appeals panel in their opinion (PDF).

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Verizon Wireless to charge more for early phone upgrades

Wed, 2014-10-15 11:45
Verizon Wireless

Verizon Wireless’s Edge financing program will reportedly start making customers pay off a higher percentage of the cost of a phone before they can upgrade to a new device.

Edge lets customers “upgrade every year, or more often,” its website says. But that’s going to change from a year to 18 months (less if customers pay up early) under new payment plans being unveiled tomorrow, according to reports in Droid Life and FierceWireless.

Droid Life attributed the information to “multiple sources,” while FierceWireless said it confirmed the changes with Verizon. A Verizon spokesperson told Ars that the articles are accurate.

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All current Nexuses, including Nexus 4 and 2012 Nexus 7, will get Lollipop

Wed, 2014-10-15 11:42
Even older Nexuses will be getting Android 5.0. Andrew Cunningham

Google's official Android Lollipop announcement this morning originally didn't mention some older Nexus devices—namely, the Nexus 4 and the 2012 Nexus 7. However, Google has confirmed to us that those older devices will indeed be getting Android 5.0, as will the Nexus 5, 2013 Nexus 7, Nexus 10, and the Google Play Edition devices.

Last year when it released KitKat, Google dropped support for the aging Galaxy Nexus phone. Though the official line at the time was that the device was outside its 18-month support window, it was later confirmed that the phone was actually dropped because Texas Instruments had left the SoC market. TI wasn't around to provide newer drivers and support for Google, so the phone was left by the wayside.

We still don't know exactly when older Nexuses will be getting the update; Google has only said it's happening "in the coming weeks." We'll report on Lollipop's performance on older phones and tablets once the update begins rolling out.

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Second Texas health worker has Ebola, flew day before symptoms [Updated]

Wed, 2014-10-15 11:18

Earlier today, the Texas Department of State Health Services announced that a second healthcare worker had tested positive for Ebola virus infection. The individual had also worked at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital and cared for the first person diagnosed within the US, Thomas Eric Duncan. The fact that two caregivers were infected gives credence to suggestions that the hospital lacked either sufficient procedures to prevent contamination or sufficient training in them.

The newly diagnosed individual began experiencing a fever on Tuesday and was immediately brought to the hospital and placed in isolation. Health officials have already identified people that the infected person has been in contact with and will be monitoring them for the next several weeks. Reuters' report on the news indicates that the individual is a nurse, and it quotes Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings as saying the person lived alone, which should limit additional routes of infection. Dallas authorities are already cleaning areas frequented by the patient.

The first US-based nurse who was infected has since been identified as Nina Pham. She is listed in good condition by the hospital that's caring for her—the same one she worked in.

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Apple accidentally outs “iPad Mini 3” and “iPad Air 2” in user guide

Wed, 2014-10-15 11:05
Apple's iBooks listing has accidentally revealed information about its new tablets. Apple

Well, there's that much less mystery about Apple's event tomorrow. An iBooks listing for an iPad user guide included some preview of both an "iPad Mini 3" and an "iPad Air 2," and given that the source is Apple itself, it seems safe to assume that these are the tablets Apple will announce.

The main addition revealed by this rare official leak is the presence of a TouchID fingerprint sensor on both models. As expected, neither tablet body appears to have changed much; this is going to be more of an internal refresh than an external one.

A close-up of the screenshot in question. Note the TouchID button. Apple via 9to5Mac

Other rumors indicate that the new iPads could come with 2GB of RAM and a more powerful Apple A8X chip. The tablets will also supposedly come in gold and may have LCD screens that are fused with the front glass to eliminate the air gap that exists in current models. We'll be liveblogging Apple's event tomorrow morning to get all the details.

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Motorola confirms Android 5.0 for all Moto X, Moto G, and Moto E models

Wed, 2014-10-15 10:01
The 2014 Moto G (left) and Moto X (right) will get Android 5.0, along with many other Motorola phones. Andrew Cunningham

Android OEMs are slowly getting better at updates. Not every company is communicative about or prompt with those updates, but our data mostly shows improvement across the board. Some OEMs are actually getting pretty good; HTC has promised updates to Android 5.0 for some flagship phones within 90 days of release. However, the best non-Nexus phones to buy if you want updates are still the Moto phones from Motorola.

Today the company confirmed which of its devices are guaranteed an update to Lollipop. That list includes both the 2013 and 2014 Moto X, the 2013 and 2014 Moto G, the Moto E, and the Droid Ultra, Maxx, and Mini. The company didn't announce specific timing for any of these releases, but the new OS version will probably hit unlocked devices first and then roll out to carrier-specific phones from there.

That the Moto X, G, and E are all getting Lollipop is probably a good sign—the three of them represent the highest and lowest-end processors that are shipping in most Android phones today, and it means that any decent Android phone you buy now should be capable of running Android 5.0 if your OEM chooses to update it. We'll be keeping an eye out for other Lollipop announcements, and we'll revisit some older hardware once the software is released to see how it runs.

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2015 will be the year you can buy HBO content without a TV subscription

Wed, 2014-10-15 10:00
HBO says 2015 will be the year it goes "beyond the Wall." Ars Technica lives on the Internet, so we guess that makes us the Wildlings. Hina Ichigo

HBO CEO Richard Plepler told investors attending a Time Warner meeting today that the company will begin offering an online-only subscription for its content in 2015. Unlike the HBO Go service that the company currently offers, a TV subscription wouldn’t be required to access shows under the new plan.

The statement was first reported by Re/Code, which said that Plepler told the audience that "the company will go 'beyond the wall' and launch a 'stand alone, over the top' version of HBO in the US next year, and would work with 'current partners,' and may work with others as well.”

That's pretty vague, and Plepler wouldn’t offer more detail. But the statement is significant given that the company has flirted with the idea of selling Web-only subscriptions for years but has always stopped short of saying that going Web-only was the plan.

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Google announces Nexus 6, Nexus 9, Nexus Player, and Android 5.0 Lollipop

Wed, 2014-10-15 09:54
Google

Google has just announced every major mobile product we were expecting from it this year: the Nexus 6, Nexus 9, and Android 5.0 "Lollipop." There's also something we weren't expecting—an Asus-made set-top-box called the "Nexus Player."

Nexus 6

First up is the Motorola-build Nexus 6. With its latest Nexus phone, Google is tackling phablets. Even for a phablet, though, the Nexus 6 is huge: it has a 5.96-inch, 2560×1440 display (493 PPI). (Compare that to the pocket-busting Note 4, which is "only" 5.7 inches.) The base Nexus 6 has a 2.7GHz Snapdragon 805 quad-core SoC, 32GB or 64GB of internal storage, 13MP and 2MP cameras, and a 3200 mAh battery. The Motorola-built device has a design heavily based on the 2014 Moto X.

The phone can be pre-oredered in "late October" and will be in stores "in November." Unlike previous Nexus phones, Google says the Nexus 6 will be widely available from various retail outlets and carriers, including Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, US Cellular, Best Buy, and the Google Play store.

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Ghost in the (Bourne Again) Shell: Fallout of Shellshock far from over

Wed, 2014-10-15 09:00

The long, painful rollout of patches to a security flaw in the Bourne Again Shell (bash) has left thousands of systems still vulnerable, and malware based on the vulnerability continues to spread, according to a number of security experts. But even for organizations that have already applied the patch for what has been dubbed the “Shellshock” vulnerability, the cleanup may not be over—and it could be long and expensive.

Soon after the Shellshock bug was publicly disclosed and its initial patch was distributed, weaknesses in the patch itself and additional security vulnerabilities were uncovered by developers dealing with the issue. And within a day of the disclosure, attacks exploiting the vulnerability were found in the wild. Some of those attacks are still trying to spread—and in some cases, they’re using Google searches to help them find potential targets. Successful attacks may have made changes to the targeted systems that would not have been corrected by the application of the patch.

The problem with Shellshock is similar to problems that emerged after the Heartbleed bug and numerous other vulnerabilities—while organizations struggle to understand the disclosures, how they affect their systems, and how to successfully implement patches, others—including security researchers—race to build proof-of-concept attacks based on them to demonstrate exactly how dire they are. And those proofs of concept often get picked up by cybercriminals and others with bad intent before organizations can effectively patch them—using them to exploit systems in ways that are much longer-lasting than the vulnerability du jour.

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Lockheed Martin claims “technological breakthrough” in compact fusion

Wed, 2014-10-15 08:42
Lockheed Martin's promo video for its fusion project.

Reuters is reporting that defense contractor Lockheed Martin claims it has made a technological breakthrough that places us on the doorstep of affordable fusion energy. Supposedly, the breakthrough will result in compact fusion reactors before a decade is out.

But the Lockheed Martin press release that coincides with the coverage says little of the sort. There, the company simply states that after initial work in the area, it expects to be able to build a prototype in five years. If everything goes well, the design could "be developed and deployed in as little as ten years." The "if" in the last sentence, however, is a big one.

The hype also seems to have been designed to leverage a technical article in Aviation Week that goes into some of the details about how Lockheed Martin is structuring its design. The general concept is similar to a Tokamak, in that it involves magnetic confinement of a plasma rather than hitting a small target with massive amounts of laser power. But the shape of the container is different and, according to the company's researchers, more efficient. However, the Aviation Week report also notes, "The team acknowledges that the project is in its earliest stages, and many key challenges remain before a viable prototype can be built."

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“It’s a terrible company”: Comcast not welcome in city, council says

Wed, 2014-10-15 07:10

The City Council in Worcester, MA does not want Comcast coming anywhere near its residents. The cable company is seeking a license transfer from Charter as part of a customer swap that's tied to its purchase of Time Warner Cable, but the council is trying to block it.

"It's a terrible company," City Councilor Gary Rosen said after a vote last night, pointing to Comcast's "deplorable and substandard" customer service in other municipalities. "In my opinion, they should not be welcome in this city. Comcast is a wolf in wolf's clothing; it's that bad. They are awful, no doubt about it. Maybe we can't stop it, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't speak out."

The Telegram & Gazette in Worcester reported today:

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Samsung Galaxy Note 4 review: small tweaks to a big device

Wed, 2014-10-15 06:00
The Galaxy Note 4. Ron Amadeo Specs at a glance: Samsung Galaxy S5 Screen 2560×1440 5.7"(515 ppi) AMOLED OS Android KitKat 4.4.4 with TouchWiz CPU 2.7GHz quad-core Snapdragon 805 RAM 3GB GPU Adreno 420 Storage 32GB plus MicroSD slot Networking 802.11b/g/n/ac, Bluetooth 4.1 Cellular Bands GSM: 850/900/1800/1900MHz
HSDPA: 850/900/1900/2100MHz
LTE: Cat.4 or Cat.6, May differ by country and carrier Ports Micro USB 2.0, headphones Camera 16MP rear camera OIS, 3.7MP front camera, Size 153.5mm x 78.6mm x 8.5mm Weight 176g Battery 3220 mAh Starting price $299 with two-year contract, $849 unlocked Other perks RBG notification LED, IrLED, NFC, S-Pen stylus, removable battery

Coming up with a new smartphone model on a yearly cycle must be tough. You're expected to come to market with something substantial and give existing customers a reason to upgrade within 12 months. Things get especially difficult when companies you rely on, like Qualcomm, don't provide massive component updates in time for your product cycle. That's precisely the predicament Samsung finds itself in with the Note 4, the company's fourth-generation phablet.

"Phablets" used to be pretty much a single device—whatever the newest Note was. But with Apple following Samsung's lead and releasing a big-screened device of its own, phablets are now a fully fledged competitive product category. As Samsung's main differentiator (screen size) evaporated, the company attempted to come up with something new to again separate itself from the pack. During the Note 4 launch event, it also showed off the Note Edge, a phablet with a screen that wrapped around the side of the device. The two-year-old concept wasn't very compelling, and we later heard that the device would just be a "limited concept."

So far in 2014, we've only got the Galaxy Note 4. Samsung may be the originator of the phablet, but with this new model, it isn't doing much to push the product category forward. In fact, Samsung might even agree with that assessment. It's easy to view the Note Edge as the company's admission that it isn't doing enough with the Note 4.

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New iPads? Retina iMac? What to expect at Apple’s event tomorrow

Wed, 2014-10-15 05:00

When it rains, it pours—Apple introduced no truly new products for the first eight months of 2014, but tomorrow we'll be attending its second media event in as many months. In September we got two new iPhones, a new version of iOS, and a preview of the Apple Watch, but all of those products represent just a sliver of Apple's complete hardware lineup. For tomorrow's event, Apple will reportedly be turning its attention to its tablets and computers. Here's all of the most credible information about what we'll be seeing.

New iPads Look for the iPad Air to get some (mostly internal) tweaks. Andrew Cunningham

iPad sales have leveled off a bit lately, but in terms of both revenue and units sold, the tablet is still Apple's second-largest product line. For the third October running, Apple is set to introduce new tablets. The interesting thing is that we've seen plenty of part leaks for a new iPad Air, but much less solid information about a new iPad Mini—we're assuming both will be updated in some way, but the bigger tablet may end up receiving the bigger boost.

We wouldn't expect the physical appearance of last year's iPad Air and Retina iPad Mini to change a whole lot, but some part leaks are already showing us what to expect on the inside. Apple's TouchID fingerprint sensor is reportedly set to migrate from the iPhone to the iPad. The aforementioned part leaks and other rumors suggest that at least the larger of the two iPads will use a more powerful A8X processor and 2GB of RAM, the latter of which would be a first for any iOS device.

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The secure smartphone that won’t get you beaten with rubber hoses

Wed, 2014-10-15 01:00

Interest in secure communications is at an all time high, with many concerned about spying by both governments and corporations. This concern has stimulated developments such as the Blackphone, a custom-designed handset running a forked version of Android that's built with security in mind.

But the Blackphone has a problem. The mere fact of holding one in your hand advertises to the world that you're using a Blackphone. That might not be a big problem for people who can safely be assumed to have access to sensitive information—politicians, security contractors, say—but if you're a journalist investigating your own corrupt government or a dissident fearful of arrest, the Blackphone is a really bad idea. Using such a phone is advertising that you have sensitive material that you're trying to keep secret and is an invitation to break out the rubber hoses.

That's what led a team of security researchers to develop DarkMatter, unveiled today at the Hack In The Box security conference in Kuala Lumpur. DarkMatter is a secure Android fork, but unlike Blackphone and its custom hardware, DarkMatter is a secure Android that runs on regular Android phones (including the Galaxy S4 and Nexus 5) and which, at first glance, looks just like it's stock Android. The special sauce of DarkMatter is secure encrypted storage that selected apps can transparently access. If the firmware believes it's under attack, the secure storage will be silently dismounted, and the phone will appear, to all intents and purposes, to be a regular non-secure device.

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SSL broken, again, in POODLE attack

Tue, 2014-10-14 21:15
Poodle Gothic Redux by Amanda Wray

From the researchers that brought you BEAST and CRIME comes another attack against Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), one of the protocols that's used to secure Internet traffic from eavesdroppers both government and criminal.

Calling the new attack POODLE—that's "Padding Oracle On Downgraded Legacy Encryption"—the attack allows a man-in-the-middle, such as a malicious Wi-Fi hotspot or a compromised ISP, to extract data from secure HTTP connections. This in turn could let that attacker do things such as access online banking or e-mail systems. The flaw was documented by Bodo Möller, Thai Duong, and Krzysztof Kotowicz, all of whom work at Google. Thai Duong, working with Juliano Rizzo, described the similar BEAST attack in 2011 and the CRIME attack in 2012.

The attack depends on the fact that most Web servers and Web browsers allow the use of the ancient SSL version 3 protocol to secure their communications. Although SSL has been superseded by Transport Layer Security, it's still widely supported on both servers and clients alike and is still required for compatibility with Internet Explorer 6. SSLv3, unlike TLS 1.0 or newer, omits validation of certain pieces of data that accompany each message. Attackers can use this weakness to decipher an individual byte and time of the encrypted data, and in so doing, extract the plain text of the message byte by byte.

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Apple asks court to let it privately object to sapphire partner’s bankruptcy

Tue, 2014-10-14 20:55

On Tuesday, Apple's lawyers filed a motion asking the court to let it secretly object [PDF] to the Chapter 11 Bankruptcy proceedings of GT Advanced Technologies (GTAT), a company that had partnered with Apple to manufacture sapphire components like camera lenses and TouchID buttons. Apple told the court that it had numerous confidentiality agreements with GTAT and that it needed its objection to be sealed to protect those agreements.

“Apple seeks to file under seal the Objection in order to protect the confidential commercial information contained therein and to comply with the terms of its confidentiality agreements with GTAT,” Apple's lawyers wrote.

The company only vaguely hinted at what it would take issue with in GTAT's bankruptcy filing. “The bases for the Objection involve confidential research, development, or commercial information regarding Apple’s business processes,” the motion read.

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Death threat forces cancellation of Sarkeesian university speech

Tue, 2014-10-14 20:35
USU's ad for Sarkeesian's appearance is still up at their site as of publication. They should probably change the "Don't Miss!" tagline.

On Tuesday, games critic and Feminist Frequency host Anita Sarkeesian canceled a planned speech at Utah State University after receiving a lengthy death threat.

The threat, which Sarkeesian and other USU officials received early on Tuesday via e-mail, was later published by Ogden, Utah, newspaper the Standard Examiner, and it warned officials to expect "a Montreal Massacre-style attack," referring to the 1989 shooting spree at a Montreal university involving a killer who railed against feminism. Similarly, Tuesday's threat used anti-woman slurs and repeatedly mentioned feminism, including such claims as, "Women like Sarkeesian want to punish us for even fantasizing about being men."

USU officials initially responded to the Standard Examiner's report by claiming the speech would go on as planned by the school's Center For Women And Gender, complete with security precautions like not allowing backpacks into the venue. However, that changed with USU's announcement later that day claiming that Sarkeesian herself canceled her appearance after learning that "if a person has a valid concealed firearm permit and is carrying a weapon, they are permitted to have it at the venue."

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Rogue Albanian drone flies over Serbian soccer stadium, cancelling match

Tue, 2014-10-14 15:00
Deadspin

An already tense soccer match in Belgrade between the national teams of Albania and Serbia has been suspended after a drone flew over the field waving a Greater Albania flag. Based on online footage, the drone appears to be a DJI Phantom or a Phantom 2, which retails for roughly $500 to $800 depending on the model.

The Tuesday game, which was to be a Euro 2016 qualifier match between the two sides, was the first time they had met in the Serbian capital since 1967. According to The Guardian, away fans were not allowed in the stadiums in either Belgrade or in the upcoming rematch in Tirana, the capital of the Republic of Albania.

The two sides’ enthusiasm for soccer has been overshadowed by a larger political issue: Kosovo, a republic that broke away from Serbia in 2008. Kosovo, which has a majority ethnic Albanian population, is not formally recognized by Serbia but is recognized by the United States, Canada, Australia, France, the United Kingdom, and many other states.

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