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      Google Removes Pirate IPTV Services From UK Search Results

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · 7 days ago - 08:53 · 2 minutes

    white noise The United Kingdom is no stranger to website blocking.

    The High Court granted permission for a blockade against Newzbin2 in 2011 ; The Pirate Bay and numerous other targets were blocked soon after.

    A rough inventory carried out by TorrentFreak recently revealed that blocked domains, including subdomains, now exceed 10,000 separate targets. That’s a conservative estimate.

    While people can still access pirate sites in the UK, it’s not as easy as it once was. The blocking efforts mainly make it harder for casual pirates to find content. To keep things this way, rightsholders have found an atypical ally in Google.

    Google-Amplified Site Blocking

    As covered previously, the search engine voluntarily removes pirate sites from its search results when rightsholders forward applicable site-blocking orders. As a result, domains such as ThePirateBay.org are no longer findable in the UK, France, and other countries .

    Google’s compliance initially came as a surprise . After all, the tech giant previously opposed whole-site removals arguing that these would be counterproductive and jeopardize the free flow of information on the Internet.

    Times have changed, however; Google has switched to a more cooperative policy which continues quietly today. New removal requests for torrent, download, and streaming piracy sites arrive regularly. Google has also removed thousands of YouTube-ripper domains after music group BPI alerted it to relevant court orders.

    IPTV: Not Found

    This week, we stumbled upon a new category to add to the list. After obtaining an IPTV-related blocking order last year, Sky asked Google to remove various domain names linked to IPTV providers.

    In a recent notice, dated April 23 , Sky reports geniptv.net, iptvmain.store, iptvmain.tv and iptvmain.uk as infringing domains. These are all linked to IPTV services subject to a High Court injunction issued in 2023.

    iptv main

    As far as we know, none of the mentioned domains host any content directly. Instead, these sites are used to sell IPTV subscriptions that provide access to unauthorized live broadcasts, including sports, plus on-demand films and series.

    The IPTVmain.store website notes that this is all above board. “IPTV Main operates within legal boundaries, providing legitimate streaming services to our users,” its FAQ reads. However, Sky believes otherwise and the High Court agrees.

    More IPTV Sites Removed

    The High Court injunction allows for dynamic and time-sensitive IP address annd URL blocking. In addition, it requires local ISPs to implement static domain name blockades for the IPTV sites in question. Google followed suit, removing the infringing domains.

    The latest notice isn’t the first of its kind. While thrawling through the Lumen database we spotted a few other notices where Sky urged the search engine to take action. These include other IPTVmain and GenIPTV domains, as well as CatIPTV, BunnyStream, EnigmaStreams and GoTVMix, all targets in the High Court injunction.

    iptv targets

    The effectiveness of these search engine removals is unknown, but it certainly won’t hurt Sky’s attempts to make IPTV services less accessible. Whether Google is open to follow-up actions, such as DNS blocking, or even more direct Chrome browser blocks, remains to be seen.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      Email Microsoft didn’t want seen reveals rushed decision to invest in OpenAI

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 1 May - 19:05

    Email Microsoft didn’t want seen reveals rushed decision to invest in OpenAI

    Enlarge (credit: HJBC | iStock Editorial / Getty Images Plus )

    In mid-June 2019, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and CEO Satya Nadella received a rude awakening in an email warning that Google had officially gotten too far ahead on AI and that Microsoft may never catch up without investing in OpenAi.

    With the subject line "Thoughts on OpenAI," the email came from Microsoft's chief technology officer, Kevin Scott, who is also the company’s executive vice president of AI. In it, Scott said that he was "very, very worried" that he had made "a mistake" by dismissing Google's initial AI efforts as a "game-playing stunt."

    It turned out, Scott suggested, that instead of goofing around, Google had been building critical AI infrastructure that was already paying off, according to a competitive analysis of Google's products that Scott said showed that Google was competing even more effectively in search. Scott realized that while Google was already moving on to production for "larger scale, more interesting" AI models, it might take Microsoft "multiple years" before it could even attempt to compete with Google.

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      Profitez d’une remise inédite sur le Google Pixel 7 Pro, du jamais vu (-50%) FACE SCREAMING IN FEAR

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 1 May - 13:45

    Google Pixel 7 Pro

    Craquez dès maintenant pour le Google Pixel 7 Pro avec un prix très intéressant pour les French Days chez Aliexpress.
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      Jamais le prix du Google Pixel 7a n’a été aussi bas !

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 1 May - 08:43

    Google Pixel 7a

    Profitez des French Days pour vous offrir un Google Pixel 7a à petit prix grâce à cette offre sur AliExpress.
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      Latest Google layoffs hit the Flutter and Python groups

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 30 April - 18:17 · 1 minute

    A large Google logo at a trade fair.

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Alexander Koerner)

    Another day, another round of Google layoffs. TechCrunch reports the company has axed people across development teams like the Flutter, Dart, and Python groups. Google confirmed the layoffs to TechCrunch, but didn't say how many people were affected.

    Flutter is Google's write-once, run-anywhere development kit. Flutter apps can work on Android, iOS, Windows, Linux, and Mac OS, and the Flutter UI and rendering engine, included with every app, translates everything to the OS layer. It's much like programming a game for Unity or Unreal but for app development. Flutter apps are written in the Dart programming language, which is also getting hit with layoffs. Google Smart Displays run a Flutter-native operating system called " Fuchsia ," which was hit with layoffs last year. Plans to do anything meaningful with that project seem to have cooled down.

    Any hits to the Flutter team ought to terrify a lot of people since many businesses are built on Flutter, and well, you all know Google's reputation for killing products. A product manager for Flutter said that the layoffs affected " a LOT of teams " but that " Flutter and Dart were not affected any more or less than others. "

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      Trop de pub sur YouTube ? Google n’est pas de cet avis et va en ajouter

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 30 April - 16:35

    youtube

    Google a un plan pour ajouter encore plus de pub sur YouTube : en ajouter lorsque vous mettez une vidéo en pause.

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      La nouvelle fonction de Google Chrome change tout pour les flemmards

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 30 April - 16:00

    En plus des URL et des recherches, la barre d'adresse de Chrome permet désormais de poser des questions à Gemini, le chatbot de Google. L'entreprise déploie aussi ses extensions en France.

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      Google se tire une balle dans le pied à force de fermer ses services

      news.movim.eu / Numerama · Tuesday, 30 April - 08:38

    revolver arme

    Google Podcasts sera donc arrêté dans le monde entier le 23 juin 2024. Une fin qui illustre un problème récurrent chez l'entreprise américaine : la fermeture régulière de produits et services. Cette incapacité à faire durer ses activités est nuisible pour son image de marque.

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      Critics question tech-heavy lineup of new Homeland Security AI safety board

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 29 April - 20:15 · 1 minute

    A modified photo of a 1956 scientist carefully bottling

    Enlarge (credit: Benj Edwards | Getty Images )

    On Friday, the US Department of Homeland Security announced the formation of an Artificial Intelligence Safety and Security Board that consists of 22 members pulled from the tech industry, government, academia, and civil rights organizations. But given the nebulous nature of the term "AI," which can apply to a broad spectrum of computer technology, it's unclear if this group will even be able to agree on what exactly they are safeguarding us from.

    President Biden directed DHS Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas to establish the board, which will meet for the first time in early May and subsequently on a quarterly basis.

    The fundamental assumption posed by the board's existence, and reflected in Biden's AI executive order from October , is that AI is an inherently risky technology and that American citizens and businesses need to be protected from its misuse. Along those lines, the goal of the group is to help guard against foreign adversaries using AI to disrupt US infrastructure; develop recommendations to ensure the safe adoption of AI tech into transportation, energy, and Internet services; foster cross-sector collaboration between government and businesses; and create a forum where AI leaders to share information on AI security risks with the DHS.

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