Microsoft Wins $480 Million Military Contract To Bring HoloLens To Battlefield Slashdotby BeauHD on microsoft at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 11:34 pm)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Microsoft has won a $480 million contract to develop an augmented reality system for use in combat and military training for the U.S. Army. Called Integrated Visual Augmentation System (IVAS), formerly Heads Up Display (HUD) 3.0, the goal of the project is to develop a headset that gives soldiers -- both in training and in combat -- an increase in "Lethality, Mobility, and Situational Awareness." The ambitions for the project are high. Authorities want to develop a system with a goggle or visor form factor -- nothing mounted on a helmet -- with an integrated 3D display, digital cameras, ballistic laser, and hearing protection. The system should provide remote viewing of weapon sights to enable low risk, rapid target acquisition, perform automated or assisted target acquisition, integrate both thermal and night vision cameras, track soldier vitals such as heart and breathing rates, and detect concussions. Over the course of IVAS's development, the military will order an initial run of 2,550 prototypes, with follow-on production possibly in excess of 100,000 devices.

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When the Internet Archive Forgets Slashdotby msmash on internet at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 11:05 pm)

A reminder that Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, which many people assume keeps a permanent trail and origin of web-content, has little feasible choice but to comply with DMCA takedown notices. As a result of which, a portion of the archive of things people submit to the website continues to quietly fade away. Gizmodo: Over the last few years, there has been a change in how the Wayback Machine is viewed, one inspired by the general political mood. What had long been a useful tool when you came across broken links online is now, more than ever before, seen as an arbiter of the truth and a bulwark against erasing history. That archive sites are trusted to show the digital trail and origin of content is not just a must-use tool for journalists, but effective for just about anyone trying to track down vanishing web pages. With that in mind, that the Internet Archive doesn't really fight takedown requests becomes a problem. That's not the only recourse: When a site admin elects to block the Wayback crawler using a robots.txt file, the crawling doesn't just stop. Instead, the Wayback Machine's entire history of a given site is removed from public view. In other words, if you deal in a certain bottom-dwelling brand of controversial content and want to avoid accountability, there are at least two different, standardized ways of erasing it from the most reliable third-party web archive on the public internet. For the Internet Archive, like with quickly complying with takedown notices challenging their seemingly fair use archive copies of old websites, the robots.txt strategy, in practice, does little more than mitigating their risk while going against the spirit of the protocol. And if someone were to sue over non-compliance with a DMCA takedown request, even with a ready-made, valid defense in the Archive's pocket, copyright litigation is still incredibly expensive. It doesn't matter that the use is not really a violation by any metric. If a rightsholder makes the effort, you still have to defend the lawsuit.

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[no title] Scripting News(cached at November 29, 2018, 11:03 pm)

If you have comments or questions about Likes, here's a place to post them. I'm interested in knowing what you think.
US serial killer Samuel Little confessed to 90 murders, FBI says AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 11:00 pm)

FBI investigators have confirmed 34 killings described by Little so far, with many more cases pending.
May, Corbyn haggle over broadcaster of their Brexit debate AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 11:00 pm)

Theresa May and Labour's Jeremy Corbyn to debate Brexit on December 9, but will it be BBC or ITV?
Mothers of Argentina's disappeared march against G20 AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 11:00 pm)

Mothers of Plaza de Mayo hold 2120th march, demand return of those forcibly disappeared during Argentina's dictatorship.
US iOS Users Targeted by Massive Malvertising Campaign Slashdotby msmash on ios at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 10:35 pm)

A cyber-criminal group known as ScamClub has hijacked over 300 million browser sessions over 48 hours to redirect users to adult and gift card scams, a cyber-security firm revealed this week. From a report: The traffic hijacking has taken place via a tactic known as malvertising, which consists of placing malicious code inside online ads. In this particular case, the code used by the ScamClub group hijacked a user's browsing session from a legitimate site, where the ad was showing, and redirected victims through a long chain of temporary websites, a redirection chain that eventually ended up on a website pushing an adult-themed site or a gift card scam. These types of malvertising campaigns have been going on for years, but this particular campaign stood out due to its massive scale, experts from cyber-security firm Confiant told ZDNet today. "On November 12 we've seen a huge spike in our telemetry," Jerome Dang, Confiant co-founder and CTO, told ZDNet in an email. Dangu says his company worked to investigate the huge malvertising spike and discovered ScamClub activity going back to August this year.

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More than $175,000 raised for Syrian teen attacked at UK school AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 10:00 pm)

Widely-shared video shows refugee teen being physically assaulted and verbally abused on Huddersfield school playground.
Microsoft's Surface Roadmap Reportedly Includes Ambient Computing and a Modular All- Slashdotby msmash on microsoft at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 9:35 pm)

Journalist Brad Sams is releasing a book chronicling the company's Surface brand: Beneath a Surface. VentureBeat writes: While you'll want to read all 26 chapters to get the juicy details, the last one includes Microsoft's hardware roadmap for 2019, and even a part of 2020 -- spanning various Surface products and even a little Xbox. Here's a quick rundown of Microsoft's current Surface lineup plans: Spring 2019: A new type of Surface-branded ambient computing device designed to address "some of the common frustrations of using a smartphone," but that isn't itself a smartphone. Q4 2019: Surface Pro refresh with USB-C (finally), smaller bezels, rounded corners, and new color options. Q4 2019: AMD-based Surface Laptop -- Microsoft is exploring using the Picasso architecture. Late 2019: Microsoft's foldable tablet Andromeda could be larger than earlier small form factor prototypes for a pocketable device with dual screens and LTE connectivity. Q1 2020: Surface Book update that might include new hinge designs (high-end performance parts may delay availability). 2020: A Surface monitor, and the modular design debuted for Surface Hub 2 could make its way to Surface Studio. The idea is to bring simple upgrades to all-in-one PCs, rather than having to replace the whole computer. GeekWire adds: A pair of new lower-cost devices Xbox One S devices could come next year. Sams reports that one of the models may be all digital, without a disc drive.

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At an All-Hands Meeting, Uber CEO Said The Company Deserves Some Fault After Its Sel Slashdotby msmash on news at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 9:05 pm)

During an all-hands meeting at Uber earlier this week, CEO Dara Khosrowshahi and the head of the self-driving car unit, Eric Meyhofer, were questioned by employees over the culture at the self-driving unit. An anonymous reader writes: They asked about allegations of infighting and dysfunction in the unit prior to a tragic accident that killed a pedestrian, based on Business Insider's newly published investigation. (The investigation found that engineers were pressured to "tune" the self-driving car for a smoother ride in preparation of a big year-end demonstration of their progress, but that meant not allowing the car to respond to everything it saw, real or not.) What followed was a strange couple of minutes in which the executives told odd stories and quoted wrong statistics leading up to Khosrowshahi admitting, several times, "we have screwed up." [...] Khosrowshahi showed his support of his senior leader by saying some negative things about Business Insider. And then he said, "we did screw up" and that "we are radically changing how we develop, how we test, etcetera. So we've gone through changes. We have screwed up." Sources tell Business Insider that Khosrowshahi had not been paying much attention to the self-driving car unit in his first year because he was so busy fighting fires with Uber's main business, but that this is changing now. On Tuesday, Khosrowshahi indicated as much saying, "A year forward from all the controversy that we saw last year, we are better, stronger. And I think ATG is going through that same journey," he said.

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Thousands protest over Zimbabwe's economic crisis AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Zimbabweans are back on streets after police assurance that they will be safe if their march was peaceful.
General Motors job cuts: A harbinger of the next crash AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 9:00 pm)

The job cuts announced by GM and the shrinking of the industrial base are the bells tolling for the next crash.
Israel releases Palestinian boy jailed for 'plotting attack' AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Imprisonment of Shadi Farrah highlights concerns about mistreatment of Palestinian children arrested by Israeli forces.
Saudi TV report, Houthi chief raise hopes for Yemen peace talks AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at November 29, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Prospects for UN-brokered summit in Sweden appear bolstered by a Saudi TV report and Houthi chief's remarks.
Mass Router Hack Exposes Millions of Devices To Potent NSA Exploit Slashdotby msmash on security at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at November 29, 2018, 8:35 pm)

More than 45,000 Internet routers have been compromised by a newly discovered campaign that's designed to open networks to attacks by EternalBlue, the potent exploit that was developed by, and then stolen from, the National Security Agency and leaked to the Internet at large, researchers say. From a report: The new attack exploits routers with vulnerable implementations of Universal Plug and Play to force connected devices to open ports 139 and 445, content delivery network Akamai said in a blog post. As a result, almost 2 million computers, phones, and other network devices connected to the routers are reachable to the Internet on those ports. While Internet scans don't reveal precisely what happens to the connected devices once they're exposed, Akamai said the ports --which are instrumental for the spread of EternalBlue and its Linux cousin EternalRed -- provide a strong hint of the attackers' intentions. The attacks are a new instance of a mass exploit the same researchers documented in April. They called it UPnProxy because it exploits Universal Plug and Play -- often abbreviated as UPnP -- to turn vulnerable routers into proxies that disguise the origins of spam, DDoSes, and botnets.

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