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A US Judge Ruled That Google Is an Illegal Monopolist. Here’s What Might Come Next

Judge Amit Mehta’s ruling has triggered a potentially yearslong process to decide how to punish the company. For users, it could mean a future in which Google isn’t front and center everywhere.

Cyberattack Knocks Mobile Guardian MDM Offline, Wipes Thousands of Student Devices

Zack Whittaker reports via TechCrunch: A cyberattack on Mobile Guardian, a U.K.-based provider of educational device management software, has sparked outages at schools across the world and has left thousands of students unable to access their files. Mobile Guardian acknowledged the cyberattack in a statement on its website, saying it identified “unauthorized access to the iOS and ChromeOS devices enrolled to the Mobile Guardian platform.” The company said the cyberattack “affected users globally,” including in North America, Europe and Singapore, and that the incident resulted in an unspecified portion of its userbase having their devices unenrolled from the platform and “wiped remotely.” “Users are not currently able to log in to the Mobile Guardian Platform and students will experience restricted access on their devices,” the company said.

Mobile device management (MDM) software allows businesses and schools to remotely monitor and manage entire fleets of devices used by employees or students. Singapore’s Ministry of Education, touted as a significant customer of Mobile Guardian on the company’s website since 2020, said in a statement overnight that thousands of its students had devices remotely wiped during the cyberattack. “Based on preliminary checks, about 13,000 students in Singapore from 26 secondary schools had their devices wiped remotely by the perpetrator,” the Singaporean education ministry said in a statement. The ministry said it was removing the Mobile Guardian software from its fleet of student devices, including affected iPads and Chromebooks.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

NVMe 2.1 Specifications Published With New Capabilities

At the Flash Memory Summit 2024 this week, NVM Express published the NVMe 2.1 specifications, which hope to enhance storage unification across AI, cloud, client, and enterprise. Phoronix’s Michael Larabel writes: New NVMe capabilities with the revised specifications include:

– Enabling live migration of PCIe NVMe controllers between NVM subsystems.
– New host-directed data placement for SSDs that simplifies ecosystem integration and is backwards compatible with previous NVMe specifications.
– Support for offloading some host processing to NVMe storage devices.
– A network boot mechanism for NVMe over Fabrics (NVMe-oF).
– Support for NVMe over Fabrics zoning.
– Ability to provide host management of encryption keys and highly granular encryption with Key Per I/O.
– Security enhancements such as support for TLS 1.3, a centralized authentication verification entity for DH-HMAC-CHAP, and post sanitization media verification.
– Management enhancements including support for high availability out-of-band management, management over I3C, out-of-band management asynchronous events and dynamic creation of exported NVM subsystems from underlying NVM subsystem physical resources. You can learn more about these updates at NVMExpress.org.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Techdirt’s Mike Masnick Joins the Bluesky Board To Support a ‘More Open, Decentralized Internet’

Mike Masnick, a semi-regular Slashdot contributor and founder of the tech blog Techdirt, is joining the board of Bluesky, where he “will be providing advice and guidance to the company to help it achieve its vision of a more open, more competitive, more decentralized online world.” Masnick writes: In the nearly three decades that I’ve been writing Techdirt I’ve been writing about what is happening in the world of the internet, but also about how much better the internet can be. That won’t change. I will still be writing about what is happening and where I believe we should be going. But given that there are now people trying to turn some of that better vision into a reality, I cannot resist this opportunity to help them achieve that goal. The early internet had tremendous promise as a decentralized system that enabled anyone to build what they wanted on a global open network, opening up all sorts of possibilities for human empowerment and creativity. But over the last couple of decades, the internet has moved away from that democratizing promise. Instead, it has been effectively taken over by a small number of giant companies with centralized, proprietary, closed systems that have supplanted the more open network we were promised.

There are, of course, understandable reasons why those centralized systems have been successful, such as by providing a more user-friendly experience on the front-end. But there was a price to pay: losing user autonomy, privacy and the benefits of decentralization (not to mention losing a highly dynamic, competitive internet). The internet need not be so limited, and over the years I’ve tried to encourage people and companies to make different choices to return to the original promise and benefits of openness. With Bluesky, we now have one company who is trying. “Mike’s work has been an inspiration to us from the start,” says Jay Graber, CEO of Bluesky. “Having him join our board feels like a natural progression of our shared vision for a more open internet. His perspective will help ensure we’re building something that truly serves users as we continue to evolve Bluesky and the AT Protocol.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

The 30 Best Movies on Max (aka HBO Max) Right Now (August 2024)

Love Lies Bleeding, Dune: Part Two, and Beetlejuice are just a few of the movies you should be watching on Max this month.

Pack Your Bags With 8 Great Deals from Patagonia’s Past-Season Sale

You still need a duffel bag and warm hoody on that last Labor Day trip. Pick one up for 40 percent off.

iPhone Driver’s License Support Coming Soon To California

iPhone and Apple Watch users in California will soon be able to add their digital ID and driver’s license to the Wallet app, as revealed by new landing pages on the state DMV website. This feature follows a slow rollout since its announcement, with only five states currently supporting it. MacRumors reports: “Now you can add your California driver’s license or state ID to Apple Wallet on iPhone and Apple Watch so you can present it easily and securely in person and in app,” reads the landing page, which contains broken links and placeholder images, and is still missing a proper website security certificate. The webpages were discovered on Sunday by Jimmy Obomsawin, after someone added a link to the landing pages in an Apple Wallet Wikipedia entry last Wednesday.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Netflix To Hike Price Again By December, Jefferies Says

In a note to clients, seen by Slashdot, brokerage house Jefferies writes: Netflix’s last price hike on the standard plan was in Jan 2022, its ad- supported plan remains the cheapest (among major players) in the industry, and its move into live sports increases pricing power – for these 3 reasons we suspect a price hike in Q4 or December of this year could be coming on the standard plan.

As stated in the Q4 2023 letter (following the announcement of WWE Raw coming in 2025): “As we invest in and improve Netflix, we’ll occasionally ask our members to pay a little extra to reflect those improvements, which in turn helps drive the positive flywheel of additional investment.” We believe Netflix has been positioning itself throughout this year for a year-end price hike. December / 2025 will have major content releases supporting a pricing increase including the Christmas NFL game, Squid Game 2 on Dec. 26th (season 1 – the #1 watched NFLX show of all time), WWE Raw starting Jan 2025, and Stranger Things 5 coming in 2025 (season 3 / 4 in top 10 of all-time).

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

People Are Big Mad About the ‘House of the Dragon’ Season 2 Finale

“Did I just watch a 70 minute trailer for Season 3?” is just one of the reactions fans have posted online about the season’s “disappointing and poorly executed” closer.

Google Search Is an Illegal Monopoly, US Judge Rules

Nearly a year after the US government took Google to trial, a judge has found that the tech giant violated antitrust laws. A new trial will determine how Google should be penalized.