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Submission + - Apple pushing music labels to kill free Spotify streaming before Beats relaunch (theverge.com)

mpicpp writes: Aggressive tactics from the music giant have garnered scrutiny from the Department of Justice.

The Department of Justice is looking closely into Apple’s business practices in relation to its upcoming music streaming service, according to multiple sources. The Verge has learned that Apple has been pushing major music labels to force streaming services like Spotify to abandon their free tiers, which will dramatically reduce the competition for Apple’s upcoming offering. DOJ officials have already interviewed high-ranking music industry executives about Apple’s business habits.

Apple has been using its considerable power in the music industry to stop the music labels from renewing Spotify’s license to stream music through its free tier. Spotify currently has 60 million listeners, but only 15 million of them are paid users. Getting the music labels to kill the freemium tiers from Spotify and others could put Apple in prime position to grab a large swath of new users when it launches its own streaming service, which is widely expected to feature a considerable amount of exclusive content. "All the way up to Tim Cook, these guys are cutthroat," one music industry source said.

Comment Nothing new (Score 5, Insightful) 74

We should know by now what are the costs of "free". That is why I use a hosts file for ad and tracking block.

I only wonder why they only tested android apps, and left out IOS apps. Without this comparison, the first paragraphs of the article, blaming the tracking and ads on the openness of Android, is little more than wistful thinking.

Submission + - Tiny Capsules Tailor Light (acs.org)

ckwu writes: Dyes that can convert low-energy and ambient light to higher energy green or blue light could help boost the efficiency of solar cells and enable new kinds of medical imaging and light-based therapies. In a step that could help make these so-called upconverters more practical, researchers have demonstrated a way to encapsulate the dyes within particles. They make the particles with a microfluidic system that traps a droplet of a solution of upconversion dyes within three protective layers: a surfactant to help stabilize the droplet, a thin layer of water, and a polymer shell. These triple-layer coatings protect the sensitive dyes from oxygen without dimming their light.

Submission + - Montana man arrested after 'liking' his most wanted poster on Facebook (foxnews.com)

mpicpp writes: A Montana man was arrested last month after he apparently "liked" his most wanted poster on a Crimestoppers Facebook page.

Levi Charles Reardon was arrested April 24 after he liked his photo on the Cascade County Crimestoppers Facebook page, according to the Great Falls Tribune. The newspaper reportedly captured a screenshot of it before Reardon revoked the like.

Reardon, 23, who is accused of felony forgery after he allegedly stole a wallet and cashed forged checks, was then apprehended by police without incident, the newspaper reported.

He made his initial court appearance last week. His arraignment is scheduled for Thursday.

Submission + - Google, VMware, RedHat Embrace CoreOS' App Container Spec- What now Docker? (eweek.com)

darthcamaro writes: Big news today in container land as Google, VMware, Red Hat and Appcera are now supporters of the CoreOS led App Container spec (appc), which aims to define a broader spectrum of app containers beyond just Docker.

"The compatibility that we are aiming for is someone who packages up an image to run on top, or rkt should run another compatible runtime such as Kurma," Alex Polvi CEO of CoreOS explained. "This promise of having portability was something that the industry didn't quite achieve with virtual machines and cloud."

The big outstanding question though is with the new appc support — where does that leave Docker?

Submission + - Maritime cybersecurity firm: 37% of Microsoft servers vulnerable to hacking

colinneagle writes: A report from maritime cybersecurity firm CyberKeel claims that spot spot checks at 50 different maritime sites revealed that 37% of the servers running Microsoft were still vulnerable because they had not been patched.

But what's most interesting is what happens when hackers can breach security in shipping environments, including one case in which "drug gangs were able to smuggle entire container loads of cocaine through Antwerp, one of Belgium's largest ports, after its hackers breached the port's IT network," said Rear Adm. Marshall Lytle, assistant commandant responsible for USCG Cyber Command.

Ubuntu

Ubuntu 15.04 Received Well By Linux Community 300

jones_supa writes: Canonical released Ubuntu 15.04 a couple of weeks ago, and it seems that this release has been a success. The community is mostly reporting a nice experience, which is important since this is the first Ubuntu release that uses systemd instead of upstart. At Slashdot, people have been very nervous about systemd, and last year it was even asked to say something nice about it. To be fair, Ubuntu 15.04 hasn't changed all that much. Some minor visual changes have been implemented, along with a couple of new features, but the operating system has remained pretty much the same. Most importantly it is stable, fast, and it lacks the usual problems accompanied by new releases.

Submission + - Aspiring Israeli Singer Indicted for Hacking Madonna Since 2012 (wired.com)

An anonymous reader writes: An Israeli man arrested last month for allegedly hacking Madonnas private accounts and stealing demos of her unreleased album first began targeting the singer way back in 2012, according to authorities. He apparently hacked not only cloud s...

Submission + - Security Experts Hack Teleoperated Surgical Robot (blogspot.com)

Lin4 writes: Today, Tamara Bonaci and pals at the University of Washington in Seattle examine the special pitfalls associated with the communications technology involved in telesurgery. In particular, they show how a malicious attacker can disrupt the behavior of a telerobot during surgery and even take over such a robot, the first time a medical robot has been hacked in this way

Submission + - Everest avalanche kills privacy-focused Google engineer Dan Fredinburg (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Dan Fredinburg, an engineer who worked on many of Google's most exciting projects during his 8 years with the company, died over the weekend in an avalanche on Mount Everest triggered by Nepal's devastating earthquake. The 33-year-old worked on projects such as Google Loon, the company's balloon-based Internet access effort and self-driving car. He also was involved in Google Street View Everest, leading expeditions to gather imagery of the Khumbu region around Mt. Everest. Fredinburg's career began in a much less glamorous fashion as a "dock rat" and as a farm hand in Arkansas.

Submission + - Woman behind Pakistan's first hackathon, Sabeen Mahmud, shot dead by unknown gun

An anonymous reader writes: The progressive activist and organizer who ran Pakistan's first-ever hackathon and led a human rights and a peace-focused nonprofit known as The Second Floor (T2F) was shot dead by unidentified gunmen in Karachi. Sabeen Mahmud was leaving the T2F offices with her mother some time after 9pm on Friday evening, reports the Pakistani newspaper Dawn. She was on her way home when she was shot, the paper reports. Her mother also sustained bullet wounds and is currently being treated at a hospital; she is said to be in critical condition.

Submission + - Love hurts - according to a study. (yanglish.ru)

Yanglish writes: MRIs were used on 40 people who recently went through a breakup. The National Academy of Sciences found the regions of the brain responding to physical pain overlap those reacting to emotional pain as well. So love really does hurt."

A doctor from University Hospitals Case Medical Center explains, the results could possibly change the way the medical and psychological communities view heartbreak.

In previous studies, it's been thought that rejection would have influenced or been processed by the affective centers in the brain — the emotional centers — where, in this study, what they showed was, it was actually the very pain centers that would be associated with a painful stimulus that responded, or lit up, really.

The team analyzed 150 brain-scan experiments on negative emotions — fear, anxiety, anger, sadness — and found that none of these emotionally painful experiences activate the brain's physical sensory areas in the same way as an undesired breakup.

Submission + - Every Guys Dream Job: Bunny Ranch Hiring "Product Testers" (technogog.com)

An anonymous reader writes: This has to be every guys dream, geeks, nerds, jocks, everybody included here I think. The Bunny Ranch is hiring what they're calling official "Testers" To ensure "quality" control. I have to wonder what the qualifications might be, and then I have to wonder just how many applications they've gotten already?!

Submission + - Project Spartan: fat, chunky, and devoid of style and features (betanews.com)

Mark Wilson writes: After all of the talk, some action. Microsoft has been gentling building the hype about Spartan for some time now, but it's only with the release of Windows 10 Technical Preview Build 10049 that we get to, officially, go hands on. This is the web browser that's replacing Internet Explorer, the default web browser in Windows 10, so it has quite a role to perform.

It's a browser that's "built for the modern web" — whatever that means — and it sees Microsoft trying to shed the shackles of IE and move forward. Microsoft has been talking the talking for months, but does Spartan walk the walk? No. Spartan, at the moment, appears to be a joke. Let me elaborate.

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