POPULARITY
Ein Standpunkt von Uwe Froschauer.Am 11. Oktober 2024 äußerte der angehende Feldherr und Kanzlerkandidat, Friedrich Merz, im Bundestag unter anderem folgende Worte:„…ich muss sagen, dass wir nicht länger akzeptieren, dass er zivile Infrastruktur, Krankenhäuser, Kindergärten, alle zivile Infrastruktur dieses Landes wahllos bombardiert und wenn er das fortsetzt – in großer Übereinstimmung in Europa entschieden wird, dass die Reichweitenbegrenzung für die Waffen, die die Ukraine hat, jetzt aufgehoben wird. Herr Bundeskanzler, Sie sind auch persönlich mit dafür verantwortlich, Sie sind auch persönlich mit Ihrer Haltung dafür verantwortlich, dass Putin, dass die Ukraine gegen Putin mit einer Hand auf dem Rücken kämpfen muss. Das geht so nicht weiter. Und wenn Putin das nicht akzeptiert, wenn Putin das nicht akzeptiert, dann muss der nächste Schritt folgen und ihm gesagt werden: Wenn er nicht innerhalb von 24 Stunden aufhört, die Zivilbevölkerung in der Ukraine zu bombardieren, dann müssen aus der Bundesrepublik Deutschland auch Taurus Marschflugkörper geliefert werden um die Nachschubwege zu zerstören, die dieses Regime nutzt um die Zivilbevölkerung in der Ukraine zu beschädigen und zu bombardieren.“Erst einmal, Herr Merz, ich denke, Sie haben sich in der Person in Ihrer Rede geirrt. Sie meinten wahrscheinlich den Israeli Benjamin Netanjahu.Nachfolgend ein Auszug aus einem Uncut-News Beitrag vom 25. Oktober 2024:„Das Kamal Adwan Hospital in Beit Lahia ist eines von drei funktionierenden Krankenhäusern im nördlichen Gaza-Gouvernement. Das Krankenhaus ist das einzige voll funktionsfähige medizinische Zentrum im Norden mit einer spezialisierten Neugeborenenstation.Die beiden anderen Krankenhäuser in Gaza sind kaum funktionsfähig. Das Indonesian Hospital in der Stadt Sheikh Zayed stellte letzte Woche seinen Betrieb ein, nachdem israelische Truppen es belagert und in seine Umgebung eingedrungen waren. Das kleinere Al-Awda-Krankenhaus in Dschabalija hat den Großteil seiner Dienste eingestellt und ist nur noch eingeschränkt funktionsfähig. Am Dienstag, dem 22. Oktober, berichtete der Direktor des Al-Awda-Krankenhauses, Bakr Abu Safiyeh, dem Fernsehsender al-Ghad, dass israelische Quadrocopter-Drohnen direkt auf das Krankenhaus feuern.Dr. Bakr sagte, dass israelische Quadrocopter auch das Feuer auf alle Personen eröffneten, die sich auf der Straße bewegten, einschließlich Krankenwagen. Laut dem Krankenhausdirektor wurde ein israelischer Angriff auf einen Krankenwagen abgefeuert, in dem sich eine Mutter befand, die gerade entbunden hatte. Die Mutter wurde getötet, sagte Dr. Baker, und das Baby wurde später von Rettungsteams lebend gefunden und in die Neugeborenenstation des Kamal Adwan Krankenhauses gebracht.“Okay, das kann schon mal im Eifer des Gefechtes vorkommen, dass man Namen verwechselt, Herr Merz. Und ich gebe Ihnen absolut recht, dem Massenmörder Netanjahu gehört das Handwerk gelegt. Diesbezüglich sollten Sie und Ihre Partei auch die transatlantischen Beziehungen einmal überdenken. Nur weil die USA hinter den Genozid betreibenden Israelis stehen, müssen Sie und Ihre „wertegeleitete“ Partei und der Rest des stiefelleckenden Parteienkartells das doch nicht auch machen, oder? Es gibt doch noch so etwas wie Menschenrechte, oder irre ich mich diesbezüglich?...... hier weiterlesen: https://apolut.net/kriegsgeiler-blackrocker-auf-horrortrip-friedrich-merz-von-uwe-froschauer+++Dieser Beitrag erschien zuerst am 25. Oktober 2024 bei wassersaege.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Craig discusses a new home security device from Ring. The always-on home cam -- get this... it is a drone. Then he talks about Elon Musk and his 25,000 Completely Autonomous Tesla he will have in 3 years. Plus, you better think twice, or three times before paying that ransom to get your data back. For more tech tips, news, and updates, visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Right To Repair Or A Fight For Survival? Ring’s latest security camera is a drone that flies around inside your house Malware Attacks Declined But Became More Evasive in Q2 Elon Musk reveals plans to slash electric battery costs, build $25,000 Tesla Paying ransomware demands could land you in hot water with the feds Windows 10 machines running on ARM will be able to emulate x64 apps soon 'It Won't Happen to Me': Employee Apathy Prevails Despite Greater Cybersecurity Awareness Rise in Remote MacOS Workers Driving Cybersecurity 'Rethink' A Guide to the NIST Cybersecurity Framework --- Automated Machine-Generated Transcript: You've been looking for a home security system. We've talked about a few of them on the show before. Right now we're going to be talking about a completely different approach to home security and what Ring's latest camera is all about. Hi everybody. Craig Peterson here. Thanks for joining me. Okay. Ring has been around for a while. As I recall Ring was purchased, two, three years ago by our friends over at Amazon. They have some interesting security stuff and they've certainly had their fair share or share of computer problems, security problems here over the years who hasn't, right? This is what's being called a true ambitious new home security device. This thing is really cool. It sits there. It just, it says Ring on the front. it's just a little square almost. The device has got rounded corners, so looks very nice. And it's got a little light button on it. One of those little Rings, which is always cool, but it's called the always home cam. And this thing reminds me a little bit of a movie that I've enjoyed many times called Tron from way back when. You might even remember these flying T things, although they had two legs on them and they flew around, that's what this Ring looks like. It is an autonomous and manual little Quadrocopter, and it is designed where all of the blades are completely hidden if you will. So they're not going to run into anything. They're not going to hurt anything or anyone and hanging beneath these four enclosed blades is a thing like a pack of gum. You remember the old packs of gum, the long thin ones. That's it looks like underneath these four blades. So the idea is you pay them 250 bucks and you plug this thing in, you're going to have to configure it obviously, but it is this little, I guess a Quadrocopters, how I describe it that sits in its charging base. Now, when it's in the charging base, it's the tail, the long downward part of the T that sits completely immersed in the charging base. So this charging Base goes all the way up around the base of the Quadrocopter. And it's just the blades that are exposed on top. What it has on that is a camera. I imagine it probably also has a microphone. It doesn't say, but it has a little camera. So when it's in the dark it's charging and that camera is not active. Even if it was it wouldn't be able to see anything. But what's really cool about this thing is that it can provide you with viewpoints throughout your house. You don't need multiple cameras anymore. The Rings founder's name is Jamie Siminoff. And he's also the chief inventor said that Ring has spent the last two years called focused on the development of the device. And that it is an obvious product that is very hard to build. And thanks to advancements in drone technology. Ring pulled it off. They're not available yet. It's called the "always home cam." So I'm keeping an eye out for this thing. It is quite cool. It, you can program it what path to take, where it can go. When you first get it, you build a little map of your home for it to follow. And it asks you for specific viewpoints, such as the kitchen or the bedroom, and the drone can be commanded to fly on-demand or programmed to fly when a disturbance is detected. So you might have a Ring alarm system you in that might include a window opening sensor door, opening sensor. So this little drone can fly up in the air. When it detects someone trying to break in and off it goes, isn't that cool? The drum makes an audible noise when it's flying. Of course, it's small and it's got all these little blades for little blades. So it's obvious when footage is being recorded. I'm looking at a picture of her right now. It's very cool. Indoor only it's got high Def Ten-Eighty P video. It only records when it's in flight, the propellors are enclosed and integrates with the Ring alarm. So if you are a Ring fan, Check it out. If you're looking for home security, it is not a bad thing. If you are a business, do not buy Ring. Okay. Because there are real security problems with some of these devices. They are not certified for use in any business that has any federal contacts. In the near future, it's all being disallowed. So just keep that in mind as well. If you're looking to buy security stuff. Also the cheap security stuff we have found backdoors in. Chinese spies that they're just getting in and they are messing around. So be careful of the Panda out there that is the bottom line. Now we were talking about Teslas earlier, autonomous cars, electric cars. I got to add this. I was thinking about it as we were talking, but Elon Musk announced just about two weeks ago some amazingly aggressive plans. He has built a big battery plant. You probably know about that. I think that was in New Mexico or Nevada. I can't remember. Might be in Nevada. His whole goal behind all of this is to just slash the costs of producing batteries. And he says, Elon Musk, that is that within three years, he's going to have a fully autonomous electric vehicle for $25,000. Isn't that absolutely amazing? Now they were expecting that he would be announcing a million-mile battery, which would be, wow! If he had a million-mile battery and a $25,000 Tesla, I would buy it. I would sell some of the other cars and buy them. They also announced a car that has over a 500-mile range. You're going to have to use one of their supercharge to get that thing charged back up again. But it's absolutely amazing. Could you imagine that a $25,000 electric vehicle battery operated to the market within three years now, the other giveaway from this, because he said it would be autonomous that means, by the way, he has a goal of an autonomous vehicle within three years? So that's another thing to consider. So the model asks the three, my daughter just bought a Tesla Model three, and she's barely used it yet, but she's absolutely loved with it. It is cool. There's no doubt. It is very cool, technology here. I got to hit this before the hour runs out and that is that paying ransomware could land you in jail. This is a fascinating article, came out in about a week ago in ARS Technica, and Dan Golden wrote this thing, but I agree with him. I have many times had to advise people not to pay ransoms for their data and most of the time I have to admit they went and they paid the ransom. Even these companies that say that they can get your data back by scripting it, breaking the encryption, et cetera. Even those companies, well, a large percent of them, not all of them, the percentage of them are actually paying the ransom behind the scenes. So you pay them 50 grand and they pay the 20 grand 40 grand ransom and they make a cool 10 grand right off the bat. Right now. I've got to also mention that there are a couple of websites out there that are dedicated to helping you break the encryption on ransomware. If you do have your data ransomed, now I'm talking about its encrypted and they say, if you want to ever see it again, you pay us. That's different than having ransomware to actually extortion saying, we stole all of your data. Then we encrypted it. And unless you pay this extortion money, not only are you not going to get your data recovered on your computers, but we are going to release everything that we stole, which is your client lists, on and on. We're going to release that to the worldwide internet. Most companies say, Oh no, don't do that. we'll pay, we'll pay. I can understand that. Statistics I've seen right now, I think it's a little less than 50% of companies are paying the ransoms. Now, part of the reason when I say not to pay the ransoms is you, don't want to encourage these guys. They are stealing your data. You have your intellectual property that you have spent a lifetime building, right? Or a career building it's not something that really they should be having access to and you don't want to encourage them. One of the things that these bad guys have found. Is, if they can get you to pay a ransom today, they can get you to pay a ransom in a couple of weeks. So they'll try and hit you again because it takes most companies a while. And to bring in security managed security company like mine takes a while to get everything locked down. Usually what we'll do in that case, is we'll come in, just lock the heck down then try and restore them from backup. Hopefully, their backups are good. I got to say 80% of the time, the companies that think they have backups do not have good backups and it can't all be restored. Plus the time it takes to restore them, you got to factor all of this in. Treasury Department officials said in an official advisory published last Thursday that these bad guys are part of as designated sanctioned nexus, which means you are paying a ransom to an organized criminal or to a blocked person list. There prohibited lists, Cuba, Iran, North Korea, other countries that it is forbidden for you to do business with. So guess what ends up happening then if you pay ransoms law enforcement officials can now charge you. The treasury department, says they're going to. So keep an eye out for that. Make sure you stick around because we'll be back here after the top of the hour. Check out my website, Craig peterson.com. There's a whole lot of information there as well for you. And we're going to talk about the future of computers and it has nothing to do with Intel, nothing to do with AMD, at least the way it looks right now. So stick around and we'll tell you about upgrading your Windows machine or your Mac because it's all changing. You're listening to Craig Peterson. Stick around. --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553
Drohnen, bzw. Quadrocopter werden bei immer beliebter: Einfach Modelle sind bereits für rund 30 Euro zu haben; nach oben gibt es hingegen kaum Grenzen. Aber einfach kaufen, auspacken und ausprobieren - das sollte man sich gut überlegen. Nach zahlreichen Zwischenfällen in der letzten Zeit wurden die Regeln und Bestimmung zur Nutzung der unbemannten Flugobjekte verschärft... Zur Drohnenversicherung:https://www.policenschreck.de/spezielle-versicherungen/drohnen-versicherung/
We talk about major threats to security, mainly focussed on future threats and the reaction from security services. Some keywords are: Nuclear proliferation, robotic warfare, technology regulation, surveillance state, bioterrorism, and omniviolence. Subscribe Pocket Casts Spotify Stitcher Apple Podcasts Overcast Google Podcasts PlayerFM YouTube Show Notes Section I Future of Security Introduction: Emotional Reach, Classifying the Population, Keeping the Legitimacy 00:02:16 Crimes that really matter: How do security forces select the crimes they battle against, which ones are ignored. 00:02:33 Limitations of Crimefighting: War on drugs is ongoing, street robberies, etc. 00:03:30 State is focussing on crimes that risk itself, and on high public image. 00:04:30 Public percerption is high when public can identify and empathize with the victim (child abuse, burglary). 00:05:45 Germany: First case of predictive policing was burglary. 00:07:40 The victim matters / vulnerability: People do react less with assault of a 20-30 year old man, than with the elderly, women, or children. 00:09:13 Child porn is the universal crime where everybody gets behind the police, …and that is used for higher surveillance. Child pornography is the abdomination of the 21st century. 00:10:15 A lot of murder, a lot of kidnapping, a lot of burglaries etc, undermindes the belief in the state. Other crimes do not affect the trust so much, i.e. insurance fraud. Nobody’s sorry about big corporations being scammed. Systemic Risk Categories: Crimes That Matter First Example 00:11:34 First Example: Proliferation. Atomic weapon possession divide Good states from Bad States. 00:12:05 BND (Bundesnachrichtendienst) and Proliferation. 00:12:30 Enemy States cooperated at the fall of Soviet Block and UdSSR, because of Proliferation. 00:15:20 Blind field of Proliferation: Smuggling of Nuclear Material, Technology, Warheads. Sensor Networks to detect nuclear material (isotope scanners). 00:17:40 Rumors: Unofficial and missing warhead counts (former Soviet, US, Plane incidents over Mediterrean Sea). 00:20:04 Rumors: Cold War Soviet Union Sleeper Agents with Suitcase Bombs (not all recovered). 00:22:00 Small States profit from deterrent threat of Warheads, less likely to actually use them (cannot be retrieved). 00:22:50 Terrorist Organizations and Warheads: rely on secure territory (hollowed out state): Iran, Afghanistan, Mexico. 00:24:07 Example: Afghanistan tolerating Al-Qaeda and 9/11. 00:25:15 Just having the device doesn’t mean you’re able to trigger it: where is it from, maintenance, deploy (actors who follow through, reliable remote triggers), maybe a lot of the old warheads are not usable (physical trigger method is lost). Second Example 00:30:35 Second Example: Transnational Organized Crime (Narco Cartels, MS-13, Triads, etc). 00:32:00 Safe Havens (no-go-areas) by MS-13 and Al-Qaeda: low level of immunity and souvereignity. 00:35:35 Narco-Terrorism: Cooperations between terrorist organizations and pure criminal organizations. 00:36:50 Iran-Contra (Freedom Fighter VS Terrorist). 00:37:47 A scared population is more likely to use drugs. 00:38:25 Big criminal organizations undermine the state institutions: corruption, blackmail, threats. 00:39:35 Loyalty and Trust within Institutions is undermined, and thus the political head becomes just an illusion of power (Mexico, Miami in the 80s, etc). Third Example 00:37:47 Third Example: Bioterrorism. 00:43:12 CRISPR sequencing, “build your own smallpox”. 00:44:00 Non-state actors: Aum Shinrikyo (Aleph) and Tokyo Subway Attacks (Sarin Gas). 00:46:19 2001 Anthrax Attacks in the US. 00:47:16 Rumor: Wuhan might be a targeted virus attack, but it’s hard and too early to tell. 00:48:14 For states: bioweapons would also attack own citizens, unlimited transmission, contagion risks high (better: easy to contain, infectious chain are short and unstable). 00:49:30 Terrorists: cannot attach threats or demands, since viruses are non-attributable. Exceptions: doomsday sects, radical environmentalists. Wrap-Up Section I 00:50:47 Wrap-Up first Part: Crimes That Matter. All are technology supported crimes. 00:51:33 Transnational organized crime is a late development (cheap travels, cheap organization and management technologies, cheap communication), also a part of globalization. 00:52:49 Technological developments are supporting two classes of criminals: random criminals, child pornography. 00:53:05 Random Criminal: uses technology to amplyfy his effect. 00:53:25 Child Pornography: digital cameras and internet made it really problematic, because it became cheap and easy (all you need is a mobile phone). Section II Dystopian Side Cybercrime, Robotic Warfare, Omniviolence 00:56:38 Skimming: copying credit cards, via cheap tech from the darknet and Aliexpress. 00:58:35 Issue of non-attribution in Cybercrime: you don’t have to be very smart, you randomly target victims, plus degree of seperation (=every idiot can become a phisher). 00:59:34 High IQ cyber-criminals plus tech: bigger and much more efficient organizations are possible (Paul LeRoux). 01:01:10 Strategic thinking criminals: do no make random mistakes, access to cheap and easy components (Shenzhen), low morals, power-hungry individuals. 01:03:00 Omniviolence: Killer to killed persons ratio increases, systemic risks to countries, maybe entire planet (Example: nuclear and bio weapons). 01:04:22 Robotic warfare: Drones plus biometrics. 01:06:00 The State and Omniviolence: Intelligence services already working on it. Threat becomes increasingly realistic, while not being trivial to deal with, or understand. Thing that is most likely to shape the future. 01:07:19 Realistic scenario by now: Quadrocopter drones, single shot explosive inside, plus facial recognition (ESP32 development kit). 01:08:55 Ground based autonomous vehicles is in the future of next generation: DJi RoboMaster-s1, educational toy for children, available today. Already has face and object recognition, autonomy features. 01:10:21 Next 5-10 years: First autonomous robot school killing is realistic. 01:10:38 There happen to be people out there, who are relatively smart, and there happens to be a huge technological toolbox to select from. Given it enough intelligence, and enough energy, drive, and goals, you can be really dangerous these days. 01:11:10 Book: “Gefährliche Menschen (Dangerous Humans)” near-future dystopian world where the whole system is focussed on preventing omniviolence. 01:12:47 State tries to counteract omniviolence and others by regulating technology. Drugs and Butterflies 01:13:07 How can you control potentially dangerous people? 01:13:50 The tech industry and self-medicating with legal and illegal drugs, and an unrealistic dream. 01:15:38 Advertisement of drugs as “rebellious”. Drugs being marketed as rebellion,… (they) don’t help you to become an actual rebel, and actually being effective. 01:16:24 Academia: The clever people trap, researching butterflies (you are being seen and heard, aurelians and lepidopterists, and your work matters). Preventive detention 01:17:47 Preventive detention. “If I lock this person up, I can prevent crime in the future.” 01:19:05 Psychiatric detention, used to silence people and put them away (Gustl Mollath). 01:20:40 New preventive detention laws: limiting personal liberty to prevent crimes? Social and economic consequences. Surveillance, Cryptography, and Regulations 01:21:50 Surveillance is everywhere. 01:22:33 Growth of surveillance: Commercial interest, collecting data, nudging. 01:22:50 Using surveillance data for AI training, run through neural networks (health: predict illnesses), can also be used to predict behavior. 01:24:05 Nation-States surveil the shit out of everything to increase their security status (international trend). 01:24:17 New proposals for regulation, or ban, of face-recognition (EU, some US states). 01:25:00 Limitations of face-recognition: black people with dark skin. AI training sets are mostly light-skinned. 01:26:25 Why states might be open to proposals: Accusations of racial bias, easy thing to give up (it’s commercialized already, see ClearView AI). 01:27:17 Face Recognition Apps (Russia: FindFace App), Face Recognition Spiders (原谅宝官方 yuanliang bao guanfang, https://pornstarbyface.com/, https://deepmindy.com/) 01:28:13 Navigate the tech landscape through regulations: example drone sector. 01:31:00 Regulating cryptography: access to good cryptography for average joe is hard. 01:31:22 Even for relatively smart and motivated people, … implementing cryptographic systems by people who are not specialized in that, usually goes wrong. It’s really hard to build secure cryptographic software, even with libraries out there, etc. 01:33:20 Regulations of sales controls: example chemicals, pharmarcies. 01:34:00 State will increase security in the future by regulating technology (regulating both components and knowledge). 01:34:50 Dystopian Vision, “black ball events”: Omniviolence will be prevented by total surveillance combined with AI. (Bostrom: Vulnerable World Paper) 01:36:04 Anomaly detection: preventing anyone from building potentially threatening tech, without actually understanding or knowing what this tech is. 01:36:59 Securocrat’s decisions are based on body-count and not on life quality. 01:37:20 Some cattle farmer talk: Consume, pay taxes, and put your VR goggles on. 01:40:10 Preventing people who are too intelligent, too creative, from getting anywhere in life. 01:41:00 Cambridge Analytics for the Masses, Psychography: limit access, social scoring systems (today mostly reactive). 01:42:20 Predictive Technologies: sentencing rules in US. 01:43:20 Creativity problem: detect outliers, categorize in good or bad, adjust access to technology. (Ender’s Game pilots) 01:44:44 Already using licensing by personality: bank accounts, gun licenses. Where does the reliability score come from? Future might be more automated. 01:46:50 Future: Same thing, but advanced by modern technology. 01:47:08 Reactive scores, predicitive regulation: lawyers, MDs, pilot and weapon licenses. If you have a lot of points, they won’t give you the license. 01:47:32 e-Government: maybe no human judgement in the future needed. 01:49:00 Looking at the Chinese petri dish: since Wuhan epidemic, deploying surveillance is cranked up. 01:50:37 Data Analysis, Laboratory for Surveillance: Locking down neighborhoods, limit travel within city, using drones, using CCTV cameras to check masks and temperature, booking details, location tracking, etc. 01:55:00 Wuhan as a dystopian prison: at least as frightening as the pandemic. 01:56:03 Control ratio: the amount of people you need to control a huge population is going down. 01:56:20 Conflict Turkey-Syria, Idlib region: areal control by grenade launchers, automatically engaged. 01:58:48 South Korea Border Patrol Bots: automated targeting (Sentry SGR-A1, Hankook Mirae Method-2?) 01:59:33 UAV Drones: autonomous suicide drones, waiting for target or flying into target. 02:00:09 Germany declared AI a “critical defense technology” = weapon technology for killing people. Section III Less Dystopian Side 02:01:44 Donation Report 02:04:25 Forum/ BBS: Async.pre Frank and Smuggler answering your questions! 02:05:49 Question Section 02:05:57 Forum: How would the average aspiring second-realmer get their nym used in legal documents or at their work place? Is that a realistic goal? 02:14:00 Forum: I’d really like to see you guys cover the art of clandestine purchasing. For example, do 3D printers have hidden tracking codes like paper printers? Discussing details on aquiring something like this with a pre-paid credit card and how to ship it to a non-attributate address would be cool. 02:15:35 Forum: One Issue that I always find very hard is receiving shipments by mail. Not necessarily very illegal items, but maybe items you just don’t want to receive at an attributable adress and that are larger than what fits in a standard letterbox. How to receive things in another name and where with the least amount of trouble and risk? 02:20:25 Forum: How to beat facial recognition during drop-operations and otherwise? What methods are effective? How often worn outside the TAZ? 02:23:25 Twitter: How to go into darknet? Virtual box and TOR? Which OS? 02:25:27 Twitter: In terms of cyber-warfare, which state (or state proxy) has the most tactical technical capacity for attacks and defense? 02:33:55 Thoughts on accelerationism? 02:37:14 Mail: I find howtovanish.com very helpful, even though it is outdated and US-centric. Are there more current and EU-centric versions of the topic, how can I make my life as anonymous as possible? Minimum Wage Report 02:45:58 Minimum Wage Report Reading Recommendations “The Future of Violence” by Benjamin Wittes & Gabriella Blum. ISBN 978-0-465-05670-5 Vulnerable World Hypothesis Slaughterbots Superintelligence and the Future of Governance: On Prioritizing the Control Problem at the End of History DJI Robomaster S1 Gefaehrliche Menschen The Gustl Mollath Case Project about facial recognition + porn + social media: done in May 2019 by 将记忆深埋 interview, partially translated article in Chinese Ender’s Game Discuss We’re on bbs.anarplex.net with our own board to discuss! Hosts Smuggler (Twitter) Frank Braun (Twitter) Contact Email: bitstream@taz0.org PGP fingerprint: 1C4A EFDB 8783 6614 C54D E230 2500 7933 D85F 2119 (key) Snail mail Bitstream Scanbox #06965 Ehrenbergstr. 16a 10245 Berlin Germany Please send us feedback letters, postcards, and interesting books. You can also send us your dirty fiat by cash in the mail! We take all currencies. Support Please support Cypherpunk Bitstream by donating to: Bitcoin: 38mzCtXHjgq6RusYQsFy2TQiLvLK7vN5JF Bitcoin Cash: qrpwhtsag0u4rnuam9a5vwmqnly96znas5f5txjc35 Decred: Dsi9j7SdwZrHtCfUmxTNgpVGx2YAboZc7ve Monero: 87UPx5sBS6g6wTvyRqqSMfFM6DzfHCPtFE25VC62vfohZVv4RRNcwif1XAPWTF27U1BKZEsrEXzDr6bMnGoTcThATvamE73 Zcash: t1ewcXqQ9Uog5gMYjeeV46WiWB5j2SwD9Sv
Drony stają się kolejnym znakiem czasów, ale wbrew pozorom nie są tak odległą rzeczą, jak się może wydawać. Kto skonstruował pierwszy bezzałogowy statek powietrzny? I komu zawdzięczamy pojazdy sterowane radiem?
Der neue Podcast „Wie nötig ist eigentlich…?“ beschäftigt sich alle zwei Wochen mit den wichtigen Themen unserer Zeit; wie nötig ist eine Smart-Watch, öffentlich-rechtliches Fernsehen, Weihnachten oder Alexa? Sei gespannt und freue dich auf einen Tipp der Woche! Heute geht es um das Drohnen, respektive Quadrocopter. Die DJI Phantom 4 ist seit drei Jahren die meine. Warum es immer noch genial ist, eine Drohne zu besitzen und warum vielleicht die Zukunft der Quadrocopter anders aussieht, verrate ich dir heute! Anchor: bit.ly/NickfriedAnchor Spotify: bit.ly/NickfriedSpotify Google Podcast: bit.ly/NickfriedGoogle Soundcloud: bit.ly/NickfriedSoundcloud ITunes: bit.ly/NickfriedItunes Google: bit.ly/NickfriedGoogle Shownotes: ❗️15:25 Tipp der Woche: Hier gibt es beeindruckende Aufnahmen aus aller Welt: https://instagram.com/droneofficial?utm_source=ig_profile_share&igshid=qaw92rwdooil Wahnsinnige Bilder aus Deutschland, vielleicht auch als Inspiration:: https://instagram.com/germandrones?utm_source=ig_profile_share&igshid=wwku9g5lrs0j ❓Besitzt du selbst eine Drohne, oder gehen dir die Aufnahmen schon auf die Nerven? Abonnier gerne die Playlist, um nichts mehr zu verpassen! Wenn es Dir gefallen hat, zeige es doch mit einem Daumen. Social-Media: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Nickfri3d/ Instagram: https://instagram.com/nickfri3d/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/NICKFRI3D Danke für Deine Aufmerksamkeit.
Wahl, Lothringen und ein Chinagadget
After a long day at NAB, Tabb and Evan sat down with Jeff Scholl (who is sometimes known at the Dronefather) to talk about the days before multirotors. Tabb and Jeff go way back to the early days of attaching cameras to flying robots. Jeff and Adele, Jeff's wife, operate Gravity Shots, their freelance aerial images operation. Jeff is also the chief engineer, full-scale pilot, sUAV pilot & specialist for Quadrocopter. For those with any level of interest in drones and aerial photography and video, Jeff's insight will add a valuable context into the changes and innovations that have come to this world in recent years. See videos and photos that add to our conversation at EveryAxis.com. Music provided by MusicBed.com.
Perspektiven aus der Höhe: 3DR Solo Quadrocopter Rezension
Der gamescom Donnerstag in der Zusammenfassung von René, Kon, Zäpp und Tim! Pixelburg ist auch dieses Jahr wieder auf der gamescom und berichtet von Mittwoch bis Freitag direkt aus Köln! Schaut für die volle Packung auch auf www.pixelburg.tv vorbei, begleitet uns bei Snapchat durch den Messealltag und abonniert uns bei YouTube!
Ben and James discuss the problems with drones, how they could be used for terrorism, and how you balance upside and downside. Links Felix Salmon: Whither Nanopublishing? – Medium James Allworth: Thinking Twice About Drones – Stratechery (Members-only) FBI: Man plotted to fly drone-like toy planes with bombs into school – CBS News Warthox with Warpquad the fastest Quadrocopter in the Universe – YouTube Mark Manson: Five Lessons from Five Years of Traveling the World – MarkManson.net Hosts Ben Thompson, @monkbent, Stratechery James Allworth, @jamesallworth, Harvard Business Review Podcast Information Feed iTunes SoundCloud Twitter Feedback
Ben and James discuss the problems with drones, how they could be used for terrorism, and how you balance upside and downside. Links Felix Salmon: Whither Nanopublishing? – Medium James Allworth: Thinking Twice About Drones – Stratechery (Members-only) FBI: Man plotted to fly drone-like toy planes with bombs into school – CBS News Warthox with Warpquad the fastest Quadrocopter in the Universe – YouTube Mark Manson: Five Lessons from Five Years of Traveling the World – MarkManson.net Hosts Ben Thompson, @monkbent, Stratechery James Allworth, @jamesallworth, Harvard Business Review Podcast Information Feed iTunes SoundCloud Twitter Feedback
Rudolphs Technik Ratgeber - Videocast (www.pearl.de/podcast/)
Direkter Link zum Produkt
iPhone-Stift Mumbi, Kindle Touch, Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 - Quadrocopter, Apple-Glaskugel, Kickstarter-projekte, toucharcade.com, Luxor Evolved HD, Ready Steady Bang, Retro Racing, XLR8, Faker$ : die Foto Trick fun App
Paparazzi ist ein offenes Projekt zur Entwicklung von Steuersoftware für Modellflugzeuge und Quadrocoptersysteme. In nur kurzer Zeit wurden hier bemerkenswert stabile Ergebnisse erzielt und die darüberhinaus über den Hobbybetrieb hinaus viele neue Anwendungen für Forschung und Wissenschaft erschlossen. Die Software ist unter eine freien Lizenz verfügbar und wird in zahlreichen Subprojekten eingesetzt. Im Gespräch mit Tim Pritlove erläutert Mitentwickler Martin Müller die Geschichte des Projektes, die Herausforderungen bei der Steuerung von Flugzeugen und seine Erfahrungen beim Betrieb von Modellflugzeugen unter den unterschiedlichsten Bedingungen. Themen: Modellflug; Modellflugzeuge Funkvideo; autonomer Flug; der Terrorist im roten T-Shirt; Quadrocopter; Quadshot; Vor- und Nachteile von Flächenflugzeugen gegenüber Quadcoptern; wie man ein Modellflugzeug steuert; Stabilisierung des Flugzeugs durch Erfassung des Horizonts; Halbautomatische Fernsteuerung; Halbautonome Fernsteuerung; Eigenstabilisierung unter extremen Bedingungen; Programmierung der Flugstrecke; das Flugzeug als Meßgerät; Einsatz in metereologischen Anwendungen; maximale Flughöhe; Reglementierungen für UAVs; Kältefestigkeit des Flugzeugmodells; Stabilisierung des Flugzeugs mit Beschleunigungssensoren und Gyroskopen; Höhenmessung und Landevorgang; Kollisionsvermeidung; Meßserien; automatisierter Parabelflug; Erdbeobachtung; Windmessungen für Windradstandorte; Einsatz bei Naturkatastrophen; Beobachtung von Waldbränden; Meterologische Anwendungen; Verbreitung der Paparazzi-Software; Integration der Software in größere Modellflugzeuge; Modellflugzeuge für die Bild-Kalibration von Satelliten; Flugstabilität mit zerstörten Flügeln; Autonomer Segelflug.
if(typeof(jQuery)=="function"){(function($){$.fn.fitVids=function(){}})(jQuery)};jwplayer('jwplayer-141').setup({"aspectratio":"16:9","width":"100%","primary":"html5","image":"https://cdn.onemorething.nl/uploads//image_selector/204.png","file":"https://www.youtube.com/v/Y4sgI6w3UgE"}); Abonneer je gratis op OMT Specials in iTunes De AR.Drone van Parrot. Wat is het? Een quadrocopter vol technische snufjes die via je iPhone of iPod touch te besturen is. In OMT Podcast 203 voelden we hem al stevig aan de tand. Deze week was de officiële perslancering. One More Thing sprak met de baas van Parrot, de Fransman Henri Seydoux. Hij richtte het bedrijf op en leidt het nog steeds. meer… The post De vader van de AR.Drone quadrocopter appeared first on One More Thing.