These Coronavirus-Fighting Smart Glasses Can ‘See’ Your Temperature

https://gizmodo.com/these-coronavirus-fighting-smart-glasses-can-see-your-t-1843216846

Chinese startup Rokid has found a unique and somewhat terrifying market foothold for its AI and augmented-reality tech amid the coronavirus pandemic: smart glasses that clock the temperature of those around you.

The Hangzhou-based company has already sold roughly 1,000 pairs to governments, businesses, and schools, according to a Reuters report. While its products are typically tailored to manufacturing and video game markets, Rokid recently pivoted to creating a better way to streamline screening for covid-19 symptoms in response to the outbreak. In about two weeks, the company developed what it’s calling its T1 glasses, a device that can “see” people’s temperatures up to 3 meters (roughly 10 feet) away.

Here’s how it works: The glasses come equipped with an infrared sensor that measures nearby temperatures with the help of a camera, and communicates that information in real-time to the display. It carries a Qualcomm CPU, 12-megapixel camera, Rokid’s U.S. Director Liang Guan told TechCrunch last month, and can also deploy augmented reality features to record photos and videos hands-free.  

Given the prevalence of fixed thermometer checkpoints in industrial parks and public spaces across China amid the outbreak, Rokid Vice President Xiang Wenjie told Reuters that demand for its T1 glasses has been ramping up rapidly.

“Apart from fixed temperature measurement, T1 can provide portable, distant and prompt temperature checking, which would be a great help,” Xiang said.

As of early April, Rokid reported it was also negotiating deals to supply its T1 smart glasses to American hospitals and local governments, per TechCrunch.

In 2018, Rokid completed a round of “billion-dollar” financing, per the company’s website, led by investors Swiss bank Credit Suisse, Singaporean holding company Temasek, and others. The company is currently working on an upgraded model capable of measuring multiple temperature readings at the same time to quickly scan crowded spaces such as malls and airports, Reuters reported.

Chinese authorities have been deploying increasingly Orwellian technological measures to track the spread of coronavirus as far back as February, with a few big names in American tech following suit soon afterward. Amazon, for instance, has begun using thermal cameras to quickly scan workers at its warehouse and delivery facilities for fevers. 

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

May 2, 2020 at 03:00PM

Plex adds Crackle movies and TV shows to its free streaming service

https://www.engadget.com/plex-crackle-movies-tv-shows-free-streaming-130014856.html

Plex started as a way to organize and stream your personal media collection. That’s still the main draw, though the company has also been experimenting with a free, ad-supported streaming service that doesn’t require you to download or rip a single file. Today, Plex announced that “thousands” of Crackle movies and TV shows have been added to its library in the US. The deal covers a smattering of blockbuster films including Captain Phillips and The Illusionist, as well as series such as Hell’s Kitchen, Snatch and Roseanne. It’s not the most captivating selection, but that’s because Crackle itself has always been a free service, with few originals to rival Netflix and other streaming heavyweights.

Crackle
Plex

Plex launched its ad-supported streaming service last December. Warner Bros. was the first distributor to jump on board, bringing content from major studios such as Metro Goldwyn Mayer (MGM), Lionsgate and Legendary. In a blog post, Plex teased that it’s "working on new partnerships" that will add even more freebies to its streaming catalog. It’s an intriguing play from the company, which has otherwise relied on Plex Pass for revenue. While the rest of the industry moves upmarket — commissioning massive shows to justify monthly subscription fees — Plex seems to content to strike deals with the players at the bottom of the pile.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

May 1, 2020 at 08:06AM

Virgin Galactic’s spaceship flies from its new home base for the first time

https://www.engadget.com/virgin-galactic-spaceshiptwo-spaceport-america-flight-195528427.html

The pieces are finally starting to come together for Virgin Galactic’s space tourism — the company has flown SpaceShipTwo from Spaceport America for the first time. It was just a glide test from 50,000 feet up, but the flight let the spaceport fulfill its intended purpose and gave pilots familiarity with the New Mexico airspace. This will also help Virgin compare performance against similar maneuvers from earlier tests.

And before you ask: yes, Virgin took steps to keep crews safe during the COVID-19 pandemic. It reworked operational elements to keep people apart, and required “universal” mask usage.

There are still more test flights in the pipeline. Even so, this nudges Virgin considerably closer to its goal of taking paying passengers into space. The company is certainly under pressure to get things up and running quickly. Its financial situation has been rough for a while, and it won’t turn around until customers get what they’re paying for.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

May 1, 2020 at 03:00PM

Is Streaming Movies To Friends Through Discord And Zoom Legal?

https://www.gamespot.com/articles/is-streaming-movies-to-friends-through-discord-and/1100-6476735/?ftag=CAD-01-10abi2f

In these exceptionally strange times, people everywhere are finding new ways to socialize while maintaining physical isolation from friends, family, and everyone else on the planet. That isolation means no more gathering to watch movies together on the couch, but users on conferencing platforms like Zoom and Discord are engaging in a smart workaround: watching movies digitally together using these platforms’ streaming and screen-sharing capabilities.

Streaming movies and other media through platforms like Zoom and Discord is easy and fun, and it provides a small modicum of normality in this abnormal era of social distancing. But there’s one question that might be lingering in the back of your mind: Is streaming movies to friends and family this way legal?

To find out, we contacted James Grimmelmann, a professor of law at Cornell Tech and Cornell Law School who specializes in internet and intellectual property law. We weren’t expecting a simple answer, and unsurprisingly, he said, in short, “it’s complicated.”

In a “narrow analysis” of copyright law, Grimmelmann said, any “transmission” of copyrighted material is designated a “public performance,” and is subject to specific laws. However, the drafters of the “Transmit Clause” added to US copyright law in a massive 1976 revision failed to consider “the possibility of what you might call ‘private transmitted performances,'” which is how streaming movies to small groups of friends might reasonably be categorized, according to Grimmelmann.

The professor brought up the 2014 saga of Aereo, a company that was effectively capturing cable TV broadcasts and transmitting them to its own subscribers online. Aereo argued that it wasn’t engaged in “public performance” of broadcast material, in part because it used separate antennae to stream to individual users at those users’ direction, as opposed to one large stream that multiple users tapped into. The courts shut that argument down, ruling that Aereo was engaged in public performance, which means Zoom and Discord users streaming movies today (not to mention the companies themselves) might find themselves similarly subject to the Copyright Act.

However, Grimmelman explored some possible defenses, the most effective of which he thinks is simple fair use doctrine.

“Fair use comes in a couple of flavors,” the professor said. “There is–let’s call it the ‘small uses,’ the quotations and quotes and clips; there is ‘satire, parody, transformation;’ and there is one thing I think of as ‘reasonable, normal consumer uses,’ which can include all media, provided it’s very personal and appropriately limited to things you already had some kind of access to. And I think that the best case for streaming [to friends and family] comes in that last category, where somebody who legally has access to it is sharing it with a small group so they can watch together.”

He said the fair use defense for most people doing this is “pretty good,” though it depends largely on the circumstances. “We’ll start with the simplest case: If you’ve got two people on the call, and one of them plays music for the other, that’s a pretty good argument there for fair use. The case gets worse as you get to larger and longer media like watching an entire movie; the case gets worse as you raise the quality of the streaming, so as you switch to streaming it through the software itself rather than just picking it up with the microphone; the case gets worse as you include more people and as people are less related to each other–as you get beyond the immediate nuclear family into a larger group of friends.”

Grimmelman noted, however, that nothing about the current situation is normal, a fact that might affect how laws are interpreted and enforced. “The bigger issue is that there are very serious questions about this being an exceptional time, and people both being much more dependent upon media to keep them entertained and mentally healthy, and people not having the money that they would have had at previous times,” Grimmelman said.

Indeed, normal rules and laws everywhere are being relaxed or ignored; in Los Angeles, for example, parking enforcement is temporarily on hold, while restaurants are being allowed to sell takeout cocktails. Grimmelman provided some more relevant examples, such as the HathiTrust Digital Library’s new practice of “lending” digitized books to individuals who would normally have physical access to the libraries from which those books originated.

“I’m at Cornell, Cornell is in the HathiTrust, which means any book that HathiTrust has a digital copy of, that is in the Cornell library system, I can now check out digitally, since the Cornell libraries are closed,” the professor explained. Book publishers and writers’ unions might object, but examples like these are potential court cases for another day–though Grimmelman noted that it remains important for artists and creators to be compensated if we want to continue having new media and art to entertain us in the future.

For their parts, the platforms themselves may be liable in different ways from the users employing them for private media watch parties. “The issues facing Discord and other client platforms are very different from the issues facing people,” Grimmelman said. “I think people should generally make the uses that are appropriate for them and their settings, and platforms’ liability is something for platforms to think about. They’ll set their own policies, and users deal with it at that level.”

We contacted both Discord and Zoom for comment on this practice. Zoom, which has traditionally been focused on business functionality like video conference meetings, declined to comment, while Discord, generally a platform for gamers to organize and chat while they play online together, provided a statement through a spokesperson indicating that “streaming copyrighted content on Discord, without the proper rights, is expressly forbidden” and that they “comply with the DMCA [Digital Millennium Copyright Act] and respond promptly to any notices issued to us.”

We don’t know of any movie studios or streaming platforms taking action against private streamers at this time, but that’s not to say they won’t. For a potential worst case scenario, just take a look at the music industry’s practice of suing tens of thousands of individual users in the early 2000s over file sharing. Whether something similar happens in today’s climate depends on countless factors ranging from how widespread private streaming watch parties become, to how significant an impact these companies perceive the practice to be having on their bottom lines.

In the end, “it’s complicated,” Grimmelman reiterated. “I think for a temporary two-month deal, we shouldn’t stress too much about it. I think if we wind up switching to this and this becomes the new normal, then you really need to think about how copyright is re-negotiated to make sense in this kind of a world.”

For now, do what you need to in order to stay healthy–both physically, and mentally.

(Image credit: Andrew Brookes/Getty)

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May 1, 2020 at 11:59AM