Feds recover emails from Hillary Clinton’s private server

The FBI has recovered emails from the private server Hillary Clinton surrendered to the Justice Department back in August, according to Bloomberg . If you recall, Clinton admitted to deleting all her personal correspondences long ago but turned over copies of her work emails (around 30, 000 in number) to the government. You can even read thousands of them — mostly schedules, press clippings, speech notes and the like — on the State Department’s website. However, she decided to hand over her server anyway after the Intelligence Community Inspector General told Congress that some of the work emails she turned in could be classified as “top secret.” Now, the feds have managed to salvage those deleted digital missives, though it’s unclear if they were able to restore them all or just a few. Bloomberg says the FBI is now hard at work segregating the pile, separating truly personal ones ( e.g. Chelsea Clinton’s wedding details and yoga routines) from those that can still fall under the “work” category. The authorities’ investigation is expected to last a few more months, though, so it could take a while before we find out whether other top secret emails were among the deleted ones. [Image credit: Shutterstock / Frontpage] Source: Bloomberg

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Feds recover emails from Hillary Clinton’s private server

H2L Launches Their Next-Gen UnlimitedHand VR Haptic Controller

 It’s often said that seeing is believing, but with virtual reality, touch is a critical part of an immersive visual experience. But the current generation of VR input controls are stuck in the previous generation of gaming tech. Today at Disrupt’s Startup Battlefield, H2L is launching its UnlimitedHand controller that actually lets you feel what’s happening in the game.… Read More

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H2L Launches Their Next-Gen UnlimitedHand VR Haptic Controller

BT promises 300Mbps broadband for 10 million homes by 2020

BT’s chief executive Gavin Patterson has emerged today with a laundry list of promises designed to improve broadband speeds, coverage and public confidence in the UK. First up is a commitment to a new, minimum broadband speed of 5-10Mbps, which the company claims will be enough for people to “enjoy popular internet services like high definition video.” The idea to push for a minimum standard was actually introduced by the UK government earlier this year . BT’s involvement is a crucial statement of support, although at the moment there’s no timeframe as to when it’ll be introduced or even feasible. There’s also the matter of the speeds themselves — 5Mbps, most would argue, isn’t enough to support a family or a group of flatmates that regularly use the internet simultaneously. To introduce such a proposal, Britain needs stable, extensive broadband coverage. The government’s current target is to offer 2Mbps to everyone in the UK and at least 24Mbps to 95 percent of the population by 2017. Patterson claims that BT will go “further and faster” in relation to these targets, however, through a funding mechanism called “success dividend” clauses. In short, some broadband infrastructure is currently funded by a mixture of BT, central government and local government money. If more customers than expected end up using this capacity, BT has to reinvest or return some of the funding — £130 million has already been released this way. Patterson says it’s now “potentially available” to increase the UK’s coverage target to 96 percent, although we’ll have to wait and see if that materialises. BT already has a plan to make it happen though — Patterson hinted at a new satellite broadband service that will launch this year and connect remote parts of the UK. All of this should create a broad base of usable, if not blazingly fast internet. At the other end of the spectrum, BT is trialling Fibre To The Distribution Point (FTTdp), commonly referred to as ” G.fast , ” which could jack up the slower speeds experienced by some existing customers. The company is aiming for “a few hundred megabits per second” initially, with plans to raise the speeds to 500Mbps over time. In January, it said this ultrafast broadband would be available to “most of the UK” within a decade . Now, Patterson is improving that target — he says the technology, along with some superior Fibre To The Premises (FTTP) provision, will connect 10 million homes and small businesses by 2020, before supplying “the majority” of UK premises by the end of the decade. These announcements come at a pivotal time for BT. The UK communications regulator Ofcom is in the middle of its ” Strategic Review of Digital Communications , ” the last of which forced BT to create Openreach, its broadband infrastructure division. The current review is looking at the two again, and whether they should be separated entirely — something BT, unsurprisingly, is keen to avoid. Sky, Vodafone, TalkTalk and others banded together only yesterday to argue that the review should be bumped up to the Competition and Markets Authority. It’s no secret that they want the pair split up , so BT is doing everything in its power to show that the current arrangement is still the best option for the UK. A heap of new promises to improve broadband provision is likely just the start of its fightback. [Image Credit: PjrTravel / Alamy] Source: BT

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BT promises 300Mbps broadband for 10 million homes by 2020

DoJ shells out $23 million for the President’s body camera pilot program

The Department of Justice announced last May that it would fund a national pilot program for law enforcement body cameras, a plan first put forth by President Obama. On Monday, the DoJ made good on that promise by awarding $23 million in grants to 32 states for the purchase of these devices. Of that total, $19.3 million will go towards actually purchasing the necessary 50, 000 cameras, another $2 million is earmarked for training and the remaining $1.9 million will be used to conduct impact studies in Miami, Milwaukee and Phoenix. “This vital pilot program is designed to assist local jurisdictions that are interested in exploring and expanding the use of body-worn cameras in order to enhance transparency, accountability and credibility, ” US Attorney General Loretta Lynch said in a statement. “The impact of body-worn cameras touches on a range of outcomes that build upon efforts to mend the fabric of trust, respect and common purpose that all communities need to thrive.” Source: Department of Justice

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DoJ shells out $23 million for the President’s body camera pilot program

Apple’s iOS 9 Breaks VPNs

An anonymous reader writes with a report from The Stack that researchers have discovered a crucial security problem in the latest version of iOS 9: it breaks VPN connections to corporate servers. According to the linked piece, “The flaw was first detected in the iOS 9 beta, and has not been fixed in the released version. Neither has the bug been removed in the current iOS 9.1 beta.” The workaround might not be what you want to hear, either, if you’ve happily upgraded to the latest version: it’s to downgrade to iOS 8.4.1. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apple’s iOS 9 Breaks VPNs

Dropbox Teams will offer a host of business features to free users

Dropbox for Business is an increasingly important part of the company’s revenue stream — there are more than 130, 000 businesses using the service — but there are many more people out there using the company’s more consumer-focused free service and its $9.99 monthly subscription plan. Millions of those users are in fact using their personal Dropbox accounts to get work done, as well — so now Dropbox is going to offer a set of tools to make it a lot easier for individuals and smaller businesses to use Dropbox with a team of co-workers. In fact, that’s the name of the new service that launches tomorrow: Dropbox Teams. Anyone using Dropbox will now have the opportunity to create a team. When you start the process, Dropbox will even suggest users it thinks you should invite based on what documents you share with what people or whether you’re all using the same email address domain. Once your team is set up, everyone will have access to the same shared folder, which Dropbox expects teams will use to share documents that the whole group will need access to. Fortunately, you can also set up sub-groups (like a marketing team, or the specific people involved with a specific project) — that’ll keep everyone on the team from having files they don’t need taking up space in their Dropbox. Dropbox Teams will also give administrators granular control over what different users will have access to — you can limit what files and folders they can see, and you can also decide whether files can be shared or not. Another sharing option is the ability to determine whether folders and files can be shared with people who aren’t on your team. If files are confidential, you can keep them only within your team, but other files will be able to be freely shared with anyone using Dropbox. (Of course, that won’t stop anyone from downloading the file and sharing it via email, but there’s only so much you can expect from a free offering.) The last major feature here is pulled directly from Dropbox for Business. If you happen to have created Dropbox accounts for separate work and personal accounts, Dropbox will let you link them together so you can see them both while logged in, rather than have to log in and out to jump between them. All in all, it’s a pretty generous set of free features: it lets the many people out there already using the popular Dropbox Basic and Pro services for work have more control over how they do that. And it just might help the company sell more Dropbox for Business subscriptions as those small companies start growing up. Source: Dropbox

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Dropbox Teams will offer a host of business features to free users

How Wind and Politics Pushed the Price of Texas Electricity Below Zero

Slate dissects the strange circumstances that led the price of electricity in Texas to briefly dip not just to zero, but into negative territory, reaching at one point negative $8.52 per megawatt hour. Why? A combination of being an “electricity island” with only weak ties to the surrounding state’s grids; strong wind in a state that’s sprouted thousands of windmills; and infrastructure design that means the only real buyer for most electricity producers’ output is ERCOT, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas. (One of the comments attached to the story notes that Texas is not completely isolated from the national grid, but it’s still markedly isolated.) A slice: Demand fell—at 4 a.m., the amount of electricity needed in the state was about 45 percent lower than the evening peak. The wind was blowing consistently—much later in the day Texas would establish a new instantaneous wind generation record. At 3 a.m., wind was supplying about 30 percent of the state’s electricity, as this daily wind integration report shows. And because the state is an electricity island, all the power produced by the state’s wind farms could only be sold to ERCOT, not grids elsewhere in the country. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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How Wind and Politics Pushed the Price of Texas Electricity Below Zero

Volkswagen Could Face $18 Billion Fine Over Emission-Cheating Software

After getting caught cheating on emissions testing by means of software, Volkswagen could face up to $18 billion in fines, reports USA Today. That number is based on the company being assessed the maximum penalty of $37, 500 per affected vehicle. That’s not the only bad news for Volkswagen, which has halted sales of its 4-cylinder diesel cars; the linked article reports that the violations “could also invite charges of false marketing by regulators, a vehicle recall and payment to car owners, either voluntarily or through lawsuits. Volkswagen advertised the cars under the ‘Clean Diesel’ moniker. The state of California is also investigating the emissions violations.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Volkswagen Could Face $18 Billion Fine Over Emission-Cheating Software

Volkswagen Ordered To Recall 500K Vehicles Over Its Own Malicious Programming

Etherwalk writes: The Obama Administration today ordered Volkswagen to recall 500, 000 4-cylinder Volkswagen and Audi vehicles from model years 2009-15. The vehicles were programmed to turn on more thorough emissions control and generate cleaner readings when tested for emissions than they did when in ordinary operation. In effect, the software made everything operate normally when you looked at it, just like any good malware. Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Volkswagen Ordered To Recall 500K Vehicles Over Its Own Malicious Programming