Category: iT news

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 8 image leaks ahead of August launch event

    Samsung is slated to unveil the next iteration in its Galaxy Note line on August 23rd, but a crisp image of the handset was just leaked to VentureBeat’s Evan Blass and posted to Twitter. The Galaxy Note 8, which Samsung hinted at in its New York City launch event invite with the phrase “do bigger things,” looks in the product image like a monstrous smartphone, thanks largely to the edge-to-edge Infinity Display technology of the Galaxy S8. Stretched to fit the Note’s larger frame, the screen looks even bigger and the bezels almost nonexistent.

    We don’t know too much else about the Note 8, other than that it will come with a dual-camera system and a hopefully non-exploding battery. Given last year’s horrendous Note 7 recall, and the damage it did to the Galaxy brand, Samsung is under serious pressure to deliver a flawless premium phone that can win back consumers and reestablish the Note name in the high-end phablet market. The Verge will be there live next month, so tune in then for all the news from Samsung’s next big phone launch.

  • Amazon suspends sales of Blu phones for including preloaded spyware, again

    Blu, a Miami-based budget Android phone company, has been suspended from selling on Amazon after cybersecurity experts detailed how software preloaded onto its devices collects sensitive user data and sends it overseas, according to CNET. Kryptowire, a Virginia-based security firm, said last week during the BlackHat security conference in Las Vegas that spying software from Chinese company Shanghai Adups Technology was still present on certain Blu handsets. The software leaves users vulnerable to remote takeovers and having their text messages and call logs recorded, as well as other forms of discrete data collection.

    “Because security and privacy of our customers is of the utmost importance, all Blu phone models have been made unavailable for purchase on Amazon.com until the issue is resolved,” Amazon said in a statement to CNET. Last week, Blu denied any wrongdoing and said in a statement of its own that it “has several policies in place which take customer privacy and security seriously.” The matter is particularly sensitive for Amazon because Blu was an early partner for the retailer’s Prime Exclusive Phones program. That program promotes Amazon and third-party products and services via lockscreen advertisements in exchange for Prime member discounts on budget devices. Blu no longer shows up on the list of supported devices.

    This is not the first time Blu has gotten into trouble for skirting both US privacy regulations and Amazon’s marketplace rules. Blu was suspended back in October after Kryptowire first discovered Adups’ spyware on the the Blu R1 HD, the best-selling phone on Amazon and the company’s most popular model. Adups called the implementation of tracking software a “mistake” at the time and removed it from the R1 HD and the Life One X2 models. However, this time around, Kryptowire discovered similar software, which was collecting device identification data and even location data from cell tower IDs, loaded onto slightly more expensive Blu phones.

  • HomePod Devs Stumble Upon Next iPhone Design Clues | Tech Buzz

    By John P. Mello Jr.

    Jul 31, 2017 4:11 PM PT

    Developers combing through the code for the Apple HomePod have found clues to what appear to be features in the next generation of iPhones, and they tweeted their discoveries on Sunday.

    The firmware for HomePod, Apple’s US$349 smart speaker expected in December, apparently contains much of the codebase for future iPhones. One of the goodies in the HomePod’s code is a new biometric method for unlocking an iPhone.

    The use of facial recognition to unlock a phone has been around in the Android world for more than a year, and reactions have been mixed.

    “Recent reviews of the face lock feature on Samsung’s Galaxy S8 remarked on the slowness of the process, its ineffectiveness in full daylight, and that early iterations were easily fooled with simple photographs,” noted Charles King, principal analyst at Pund-IT.

    “Interestingly, face lock can’t be used to authenticate Samsung Pay purchases.,” he told TechNewsWorld.

    Tough to Fool Camera

    “Facial recognition really hasn’t taken off with Android,” said Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research.

    Users appear content to use the fingerprint sensors found in most phones, but that may change, he explained.

    “With display aspect ratios changing, and room disappearing for front-mounted fingerprint sensors, some sensors have been moved to the back of the phone, which can make things trickier for users,” Rubin told TechNewsWorld.

    Because an infrared camera creates a 3D image of a face, it has advantages over face recognition performed with light-dependent cameras. For example, recognition can be achieved regardless of lighting conditions.

    What’s more, the technology is more difficult to game than a conventional camera.

    “Things like a picture or mask of a face won’t unlock a phone if the infrared is done right,” observed Kevin Krewell, principal analyst at Tirias Research.

    Facial recognition also can be faster than other unlock methods, he told TechNewsWorld.

    “If face unlock works, you don’t have to use a pin or thumb reader to gain access,” said Tim Bajarin, president of Creative Strategies.

    “In theory, it is even more secure,” he told TechNewsWorld, “since it scans more data points from a face to make sure it is you that is accessing the iPhone.”

    Edge-to-Edge Evidence

    The next iPhone may feature facial recognition for technical reasons, suggested Krewell.

    “Apple wanted to put the fingerprint sensor under the display, but they haven’t been able to get it to work yet,” he pointed out.

    Developers scrutinizing HomePod’s code found information about that display. An image in the firmware of the front of the phone appears to show an almost edge-to-edge display that extends around the speakers and sensors at the top of the device.

    Rumors of an edge-to-edge OLED display in a special anniversary edition iPhone have been circulating for months, and these latest observations by developers are more evidence that those rumors have been on target.

    Near edge-to-edge screens have become common fare in the Android market.

    “I’ve used a phone with an edge-to-edge screen, and they’re pretty nice,” said Bob O’Donnell, chief analyst at Technalysis Research.

    “Once you get used to that complete sheet of glass with nothing around it, it’s hard to go back to screens with bezels around them,” he told TechNewsWorld.

    Buzz Reaching Crescendo

    The “iPhone 8” — or whatever it is named — will be a premium product selling in the $1,000 to $1,400 price range, by all accounts. If that’s the case, it would makes sense for it to have an edge-to-edge display.

    “Edge-to-edge is the path that premium phones are taking,” Reticle’s Rubin noted. “If you’re not taking that approach now, it’s perceived that you’re not at the leading edge of design, where Apple wants to be.”

    As the announcement window for the new iPhones shrinks and the rumors about them get stronger, the buzz is getting louder.

    “Apple’s launch strategy for the iPhone 8 is right on the money,” said Andreas Scherer, managing partner with Salto Partners.

    “The expectations associated with its release are rising to a crescendo,” he noted.

    “The buzz around the new iPhone 8 might take away some of the punch from the standard iPhone 7s models,” Scherer told TechNewsWorld. “Ultimately, though, as Steve Jobs correctly stated, if you don’t cannibalize your own business someone else will.”


    John P. Mello Jr. has been an ECT News Network reporter
    since 2003. His areas of focus include cybersecurity, IT issues, privacy, e-commerce, social media, artificial intelligence, big data and consumer electronics. He has written and edited for numerous publications, including the Boston Business Journal, the
    Boston Phoenix, Megapixel.Net and Government
    Security News
    . Email John.

  • Arcade Fire claims to have put their album on a $109 fidget spinner

    Earlier today, Arcade Fire fans went through a roller coaster of emotions as the Canadian band announced their new album, Everything Now, was available on a limited-edition fidget spinner, and then announced it was promptly sold out.

    The listing, showing a black-and-white fidget spinner with a USB connection, was supposedly on sale for $109 and included an additional booklet. A few weeks back, Pitchfork reported that the band had denounced unofficial Arcade Fire fidget spinners that were being sold on Amazon, with the band saying that “official, ‘infinite content’ spinners are coming.” (For reference, Infinite Content is the name of Arcade Fire’s upcoming tour and also happens to be a hilarious name for a limited-edition fidget spinner.)

    On June 23rd, the band tweeted the fidget spinners were available for pre-order, and then today, announced they were available. Sadly, and coincidentally, people also found it was immediately sold-out.

    Aside from the fact that the weird ergonomics of the spinner’s USB connection likely make it un-spinnable, would it even balance correctly with the tech ingloriously hanging out of one side? Also, let’s not forget Arcade Fire has a history of pranking their stans in ways that leave people confused or slightly bummed out. They brought out a fake Daft Punk at Coachella. They made a fake Stereogum website called Stereoyum, which featured a review before the review before the review of the new album. Once, at a show, the band played under pseudonym the Reflektors and faked out the crowd by opening with white noise. That night, even band member Win Butler said of Arcade Fire’s humor, “It won’t be the last time we think something is funny that someone else doesn’t think is funny.”

    Point being, it’s likely the fidget spinner is a joke. Arcade Fire probably thought the idea of a fidget spinner / USB combo was funny because of something about chindogu, or millennials, or whatever oddness goes on in the meta minds of Arcade Fire.

  • Watch a giant robot spider and dragon fight in the streets of Canada

    Rarely is the appearance of Godzilla-like beasts accompanied by applause instead of screams of terror, but over the past weekend, 750,000 people cheered on towering robotic monsters duking it out in downtown Ottawa.

    French street theatre company La Machine created the two mechanical marvels and designed the four-day public performance called “The Spirit of the Dragon-Horse, With Stolen Wings.” La Machine derives all its inspiration from machination and movement, saying it chose public space because “when we make big things, we inspire larger emotions from the public, and you can see more movement in a larger machine.”

    Long Ma, the half-dragon / half-horse creature, stands at 36 feet high, weighs 45 tons, breathes smoke and fire, and can trot, gallop, rear up, and lie down. Kumo, the spider, weighs 40 tons, sprays water, and takes 16 people to control all its intricate movements. The Ottawa performance was La Machine’s debut in North America.

    Over the course of four days, an elaborate story unfolded, with Long Ma and Kumo “awakening” and performing three battles, with the final one occurring at the Canadian War Museum (a decidedly apropos move). The beasts don’t just roam streets, the team storyboarded the events so they would interact with and around things like traffic lights, bridges, and art pieces to make it feel like “they are in a different universe.” Check out Kumo and Long Ma battling, below. To see more, visit CBC News’ full recap with videos from each day.

  • Everything coming to Netflix, Amazon Prime, and HBO Now in August

    When Netflix announced four years ago that it was partnering with Marvel Studios for a series of television shows, the ultimate end game was going to be a team-up series called The Defenders. And on August 18th it is finally coming to the streaming service. The show is just one of several pieces of splashy original programming that Netflix is touting for the end-of-summer movie season.

    On August 25th, Adam Wingard’s adaptation of the manga Death Note will make its debut, fresh off a Hall H appearance at San Diego Comic-Con, and on August 4th the service will release the first season of Wet Hot American Summer: 10 Years Later. On the surprise release front, the service will also premiere the Orphan Black-esque What Happened to Monday?, featuring Noomi Rapace playing seven different sisters who have to hide each other’s identities in a dystopian sci-fi future.

    Amazon Studios is also delivering on another show it hyped at Comic-Con with the August 25th release of the first season of The Tick, starring Peter Serafinowicz as the titular superhero. The service will also be adding a number of titles appealing to genre fans (the entire Saw franchise), Johnny Depp fans (Benny & Joon), stoner time-travel fans (both Bill & Ted movies), and werewolves surfing on top of vans fans (the original Teen Wolf and Teen Wolf Too).

    HBO Now is adding several films as well, including Oscar nominees like Nocturnal Animals and Jackie, as well as the Harry Potter prequel Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. But mostly, the crown jewel for the service is going to be the same as it was last month: Game of Thrones, which will have its seventh season finale on August 27th.

    Coming to Netflix

    August 1st

    • A Cinderella Story
    • Bad Santa
    • Cloud Atlas
    • Crematorium, season 1
    • Everyone’s Hero
    • Funny Games (US)
    • Innerspace
    • Jackie Brown
    • Lord of War
    • Maz Jobrani: Immigrant
    • Nola Circus
    • Opening Night
    • Practical Magic
    • Sleepy Hollow
    • Small Soldiers
    • Surviving Escobar – Alias JJ, season 1
    • The Addams Family
    • The Astronaut’s Wife
    • The Bomb
    • The Hollywood Masters, season 1
    • The Last Mimzy
    • The Matrix
    • The Matrix Reloaded
    • The Matrix Revolutions
    • The Number 23
    • The Royal House of Windsor, season 1
    • The Truth About Alcohol
    • The Wedding Party
    • Tie The Knot
    • Who Gets the Dog?
    • Wild Wild West

    August 2nd14th

    • Jab We Met
    • The Founder
    • Sing
    • The Invisible Guardian
    • Icarus
    • Voltron: Legendary Defender, season 3
    • Wet Hot American Summer: Ten Years Later, season 1
    • Holes
    • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic, season 7 (episodes 1–13)
    • Black Site Delta
    • Diary of an Exorcist – Zero
    • Atypical, season 1
    • Home: Adventures with Tip & Oh, season 3
    • Naked
    • True and The Rainbow Kingdom, season 1
    • White Gold
    • Arthur and the Invisibles
    • Hot Property
    • Mission Control: The Unsung Heroes of Apollo
    • The Outcasts
    • Urban Hymn

    August 15th

    • Barbeque
    • Brad Paisley’s Comedy Rodeo
    • 21
    • A New Economy
    • All These Sleepless Nights
    • Donald Cried
    • Murderous Affair, season 1
    • My Ex-Ex
    • The Sweet Life

    August 16th23rd

    • Gold
    • Dinotrux, season 5
    • Glitter Force Doki Doki, season 1
    • I Am Sam
    • Marvel’s The Defenders, season 1
    • What Happened to Monday
    • Hide and Seek
    • Camera Store
    • AWOL
    • Bad Rap
    • Beautiful Creatures
    • Gomorrah, season 1
    • Unacknowledged
    • Lynne Koplitz: Hormonal Beast
    • Sadie’s Last Days on Earth
    • Feel Rich

    August 25th31st

    • Disjointed: Part 1
    • Death Note
    • DreamWorks Dragons: Race to the Edge, season 5
    • Once Upon a Time, season 6
    • Bring It On: Worldwide #Cheersmack
    • Ryan Hamilton: Happy Face
    • The Good Place, season 1
    • Be Afraid

    Leaving Netflix

    August 1st

    • 10 Things I Hate About You
    • Justice League Unlimited, seasons 1–2
    • Justice League, seasons 1–2
    • Babe
    • Babe Winkelman’s Outdoor Secrets 2014: Quarter 4
    • Babe: Pig in the City
    • Beneath the Helmet
    • Black Widow
    • Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry
    • Electric Slide
    • Elizabethtown
    • From the Terrace
    • From Time to Time
    • Goodbye World
    • Horsemen
    • Hunter X Hunter, seasons 1–5
    • Josef Fritzl: Story of a Monster
    • Malibu’s Most Wanted
    • Prefontaine
    • Russell Brand: End the Drugs War
    • Russell Brand: From Addiction to Recovery
    • Teacher’s Pet
    • The Delivery Man, season 1
    • The Diabolical
    • The Heavy Water War, season 1
    • The Hunt, season 1
    • The Little Engine That Could
    • The Lizzie McGuire Movie
    • The Verdict
    • Young Justice, seasons 1–2
    • Young@Heart
    • Zack and Miri Make a Porno

    August 4th14th

    • Superbad
    • Pelican Dreams
    • Personal Gold: An Underdog Story
    • Human Capital
    • The Spoils of Babylon, season 1
    • The Five Venoms
    • Dope
    • Four Blood Moons
    • Jesus People: The Movie
    • Patch Town
    • Two Days, One Night
    • Drones
    • Food Matters

    August 15th31st

    • American Dad!, seasons 1–4
    • To Kill a Mockingbird
    • Changing Seas, seasons 3–6
    • Close Quarter Battle, season 1
    • The New Frontier, season 1
    • Top 10 Secrets and Mysteries, season 1
    • The Summer of Sangaile
    • Gun Woman
    • October Gale
    • Paratodos
    • The Kidnapping of Michel Houellebecq
    • Revenge, seasons 1–4
    • The League, seasons 1–7
    • Space Warriors

    Coming to Amazon Prime Video

    August 1st

    • All Dogs Go to Heaven
    • Among Friends
    • Bad Boys (1983)
    • Bad Company (1972)
    • Benny & Joon
    • Bill & Ted’s Bogus Journey
    • Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure
    • Box of Moonlight
    • Breakdown (1997)
    • Charley One-Eye
    • Criminal Law
    • The Dead Zone
    • Eve’s Bayou
    • Far from Home (1989)
    • Friends and Lovers
    • The General’s Daughter
    • Ghost
    • Hannie Caulder
    • Harsh Times
    • High Noon
    • The Mod Squad
    • New in Town (2009)
    • Nulee’s Gold
    • Once Bitten
    • The Pursuit of D.B Cooper
    • Save the Last Dance
    • Saw
    • Saw II
    • Saw III
    • Saw IV
    • Saw V
    • Teen Wolf
    • Teen Wolf Too
    • Terry Fator: Live in Concert
    • Wayne’s World 2

    August 2nd15th

    • Valkyrie
    • Comrade Detective, season 1
    • Lost in Oz, season 1
    • Superbad (Unrated)
    • The Ticket
    • Tumble Leaf, season 3

    August 17th29th

    • Nick Offerman & Megan Mullally: Summer of 69: No Apostrophe
    • Undercover, season 1
    • My Bloody Valentine
    • In Secret
    • The Tick, season 1
    • Florence Foster Jenkins
    • Gimme Shelter (2013)
    • Victoria, season 1

    Coming to HBO Now

    August 1st

    • Adaptation
    • Changing Lanes
    • Corrina, Corrina
    • Down with Love
    • Emelie
    • Enough
    • Frost / Nixon
    • Garfield
    • Girl with a Pearl Earring
    • Happy Tears
    • Love Liza
    • Martian Child
    • Max Payne (Extended Version)
    • RocknRolla
    • Sunshine State
    • Tango & Cash
    • The Incredible Hulk
    • The Ring
    • The Rocker
    • The Strangers
    • Thirteen Conversations About One Thing
    • Tin Cup
    • Verde (aka Green)
    • Vigilante Diaries

    August 4th14th

    • Juegos de Familia
    • Collateral Beauty
    • George Lopez: The Wall  — Live from Washington, D.C.
    • Brillo Box (3¢ Off)
    • Pedro Capo: En Letras de Otro
    • Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
    • Rules Don’t Apply

    August 18th26th

    • El Jardin de Bronce, season finale
    • Presos (aka Imprisoned)
    • Nocturnal Animals
    • Jackie

    August 27th

    • Game of Thrones, season 7 finale

    Leaving HBO Now

    August 31st

    • Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie
    • Airheads
    • Batman Forever
    • The Boss
    • Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason
    • Broadcast News
    • Bullet to the Head
    • Cape Fear
    • The Cider House Rules
    • The English Patient
    • Friday
    • Interview with the Vampire
    • Journey to the Center of the Earth (1959)
    • Journey to the Center of the Earth (2008)
    • Just Married
    • The Last Watch Hunter
    • Little Nicky
    • Marley & Me
    • Miami Rhapsody
    • Mystic River
    • Next Friday
    • The Nice Guys
    • Nights in Rodanthe
    • Now You See Me 2
    • Rain Man
    • Rushmore
    • The Secret Life of Bees
    • Sleepers
    • The Tuxedo
    • The Visit
    • The World According to Garp
    • They Live
    • Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins
  • The next iPhone could make Apple’s Retina display even better

    The next iPhone — the one with the bezel-less screen that leaked out in the HomePod code over the weekend — might be getting a massive jump in screen resolution in addition to the revamped design, according to a tweet from developer Steve Troughton-Smith. According to Troughton-Smith, there are references in the code for an upcoming iPhone with a functional resolution of 1125 x 2436, a number that gels with an existing rumor back in February from typically reliable KGI analyst Ming-Chi Kuo.

    As the mockup from 9to5Mac shows below, Kuo’s number assumes that a portion of the rumored 5.8-inch display will be portioned off as a virtual home button / function area, leaving a 5.15-inch chunk of the display as a functional screen.


    9to5Mac

    Assuming all this is true, then the iPhone 8 will offer a display that’s an order of magnitude better than current iOS devices. An iPhone 7, with a 1334 × 750 resolution on a 4.7-inch display offers what Apple calls a “Retina display” at 326 ppi. An effectively 5.15-inch screen with the rumored 2436 x 1125 resolution would offer roughly 521 ppi. For comparison, the original iPhone ran at 480 x 320, which was doubled to 960 x 640 for the original Retina display on the iPhone 4, which has since grown to scale with the larger screen sizes that Apple has used in subsequent devices to maintain that 2x scaling on current devices. The rumored resolution here implies that iOS would be running at another order of magnitude of pixel destiny with 3x Retina assets.

    In other words, the iPhone 8 could be as much of a visual leap forward from current-generation iPhones as the iPhone 4’s Retina display was from the original iPhone. It would also put Apple on par with more recent high-end Android phones like the Galaxy S8 (2960 x 1440) or the Google Pixel (1080 x 1920), which tend to offer more pixel-dense displays to help with functions like VR.

    For now, this is a lot of speculation off a small grain of evidence. It’s still unknown whether that number is accurate, what size the iPhone 8’s screen will be, and whether or not any of the estimates regarding the effective screen size and function area are even true.

  • Tesla’s Model 3 isn’t a luxury car, but it’s priced like one

    The big number surrounding Tesla’s Model 3 has been $35,000, which is the base price for the electric car. But there’s one big problem: barely anyone will pay that price, if they want a Model 3 with autopilot (which, let’s face it you do), or even a color other than black, according to screenshots of the Model 3 configurator posted in the Model 3 Owners Club.

    The truth is the Model 3 costs $40,000 if you want a standard version with autopilot (an extra $5,000) in black with no other options. If you want a different color, add $1,000. And if you want a longer range ($9,000) to get over 300 miles per charge instead of 220, well now we’re at $50,000.

    $50,000 for a midrange car.

    If you’re new to cars, that isn’t exactly midrange car pricing, having clearly pushed into luxury sedan territory, with the likes of the Volvo S90 ($46,950) and Lexus GS ($46,310) and the Audi A6 ($47,600). Even the Model 3’s direct competition, the BMW 320i, maxes out at $47,175. And again, this is before adding the usual slate of premium options like leather seats, power adjustable seats and side mirrors, and rear USB ports (another $5,000).


    Photo: Tesla Model 3 Owner’s Club

    So if you’re about to drop at least $50,000 on a Model 3, does it qualify as a luxury car? For most people, no. Not unless you’re willing to spend closer to $60,000 (and at these prices, you’ve reached BMW 5 Series and Mercedes E-Class territory). If you’re willing to spend that much, then there is no issue for you. But if you thought spending the $35,000 would net you a car comparable to a BMW 3 Series, well, it really won’t.

    If you purchase a standard Tesla Model 3, the seats must be manually adjusted, as will the steering column. The side mirrors aren’t powered or heated, and there’s no auto dimming. There are no LED fog lamps, and if you want a covered storage area in the center console, you must pay extra. Unless you spend $5,000 for the Premium Upgrade, you’re essentially getting the interior of a base model Toyota Camry. (To be fair, the Camry comes standard with a covered center console.)

    If you’re looking for what you’ve seen in the Model S — a premium interior, autopilot, and around 300 miles of range in a color of your choosing — in a smaller form factor, we’ll you’re not getting out without paying at least $55,000. That will be fine for some people, but I doubt the 500,000 people who put down $1,000 to reserve a Model 3 expected the price to increase by $20,000 to reach that mark.


    Photo: Tesla

    This may be a product of uncontrolled hype, Tesla not doing enough to clarify what the Model 3 would be, or the company going too far to meet that $35,000 benchmark, but it wouldn’t surprise me if regular people get sticker shock once Tesla publicly releases the Model 3 configurator online.

    The Tesla Model 3 isn’t a luxury car, it’s a midsized car masquerading as one. If you’re in the market for just another car in your price range, the Model 3 may not be for you. But if you’re looking for a smaller Model S, or the electric car of the future, you’ve found it. Just know it’ll cost a lot more than $35,000.

  • HBO responds to #NoConfederate controversy: ‘We hope that people will reserve judgment’

    Two weeks ago, Game of Thrones showrunners David Benioff and D.B. Weiss announced they were making an alternative history drama called Confederate, about an America where slavery still exists. Also working on the show are producers Nichelle Tramble Spellman (The Good Wife) and Malcolm Spellman (Empire). The internet immediately deemed this a terrible idea, with a wave of negative comments, followed by a Twitter campaign built around the hashtag #NoConfederate. Benioff and Weiss’ defense has been that the show isn’t out yet, so the verdict shouldn’t be either.

    They acknowledged in an interview with Vulture that they’re dealing with weapons-grade controversial material here. And there’s a reason viewers don’t trust the idea: Benioff and Weiss are both white, and they don’t have the best track record of depicting race on Game of Thrones. On that show, most people of color are slaves or slavers. The show’s history of graphically depicted sexual assault has also been controversial. As critics have pointed out, sexual attacks on slaves were frequent and institutional, which raises concerns about Confederate sexualizing slavery and power in the same way Game of Thrones does. Both the race problem and the sex problem are built into George R.R. Martin’s source novels, but Benioff and Weiss’ show has fetishized violence and coercion, even past the books’ level.


    A problematic scene from Game of Thrones where Daenerys is presented as the savior of some of the only people of color on the show.

    After Twitter’s #NoConfederate rally on Sunday night during Game of Thrones, HBO released a statement, saying, “We have great respect for the dialogue and concern being expressed around Confederate. We have faith that [writers] Nichelle, Dan, David and Malcolm will approach the subject with care and sensitivity. The project is currently in its infancy so we hope that people will reserve judgment until there is something to see.”

    That’s the same argument made by defenders of the show, who believe the idea just sounds worse than it will actually look upon airing. In the original press release announcing the show, Benioff and Weiss said they’d been sitting on the idea for years: “There won’t be dragons or White Walkers in this series, but we are creating a world, and we couldn’t imagine better partners in world-building than Nichelle and Malcolm, who have impressed us for a long time with their wit, their imagination and their Scrabble-playing skills.”

    #NoConfederate has been trending since 9PM on Sunday, to coincide with Game of Thrones’ air time, when Twitter is usually blowing up with Game of Thrones hashtags. The campaign was orchestrated Rebecca Theodore, Shanelle Little, Lauren Warren, and Jamie Broadnax, along with April Reign, a social media activist who also started the conversation-changing #OscarsSoWhite tag.

  • Russia bans anonymous web surfing tools

    President Vladimir Putin has signed a law that prohibits forms of technology that grant access to banned websites in Russia, effective November 1st. The ban covers services that allow people to use the internet anonymously, such as virtual private networks and proxies, and internet providers will have to block websites that host these services.

    Leonid Levin, Russia’s chairman of a parliamentary committee on information policy and communications, told news agency RIA Novosti earlier in the month that the law “only included the restriction of access to information that is already forbidden by law or a court decision.”

    Russia’s Federal website blacklist, introduced in 2012, was originally meant to apply to sites that had content on illegal drugs, child pornography, and suicide, but a 2013 amendment expanded to any content “suspected of extremism.” The amendment allows for flexible interpretation, letting Russia ban any material that criticizes its views or appears to weaken the government’s power. In 2015, for example, Russia briefly banned both Reddit and Wikipedia over single pages that contained content on drug use. At the time, Nikolay Kononov, editor-in-chief of the digital business magazine SecretMag.ru said the moves were less about the content and more about “show[ing] they can ban whatever they want, whenever they want. It’s a show of intimidation, like two boxers circling each other in a ring.”

    Russia is not the only country to ban VPNs — earlier this month China said it would place restrictions on unauthorized VPNs, and recently, all VPN apps were removed from China’s version of Apple’s App Store.