Visual Effects Artists Use MPAA’s Own Words Against It

Original source beltsbear sends a story about the struggles of visual effects artists against the Motion Picture Association of America. The VFX industry in the U.S. has been slowly dying because movie studios increasingly outsource the work to save money. The visual effects industry protested and fought where they could, but had little success — until the MPAA filed a seemingly innocuous legal document to the International Trade Commission two weeks ago. In it, the MPAA argues that international trade of intellectual property is just like international trade of manufactured goods, and should be afforded the same protections. This would naturally apply to visual effects work, as well. Thus: “[E]mboldened by the MPAA’s filing, the visual effects workers are now in a position to use the big studios’ own arguments to compel the government to slap trade tariffs on those studios’ own productions in high-subsidy countries. Those arguments will be especially powerful because the MPAA made them to the very same governmental agencies that will process the visual-effects workers’ case. Additionally, the workers can now take matters into their own hands. … If visual effects workers can show the Commerce Department and the U.S. International Trade Commission that an import is benefiting from foreign subsidies and therefore illegally undercutting a domestic industry, the federal government is obligated to automatically slap a punitive tax on that import. Such a tax would in practice erase the extra profit margins the studios are gleaning from the foreign subsidies, thereby leveling the competitive playing field for American workers and eliminating the purely economic incentive for the studios to engage in mass offshoring.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.









tomewing: douglaswolk: In response to the mini-meme going…

Original source















tomewing:

douglaswolk:
In response to the mini-meme going around: eight more covers I love from the past ten years of 2000 AD!
Also great! Wonder if anyone will do the awkward middle period…

I’m planning to get around to more covers once I’ve done some chores. But these are an excellent sample of recent greats.


Was the iOS SSL Flaw Deliberate?

Original source

Last October, I speculated on the best ways to go about designing and implementing a software backdoor. I suggested three characteristics of a good backdoor: low chance of discovery, high deniability if discovered, and minimal conspiracy to implement.

The critical iOS vulnerability that Apple patched last week is an excellent example. Look at the code. What caused the vulnerability is a single line of code: a second “goto fail;” statement. Since that statement isn’t a conditional, it causes the whole procedure to terminate.

The flaw is subtle, and hard to spot while scanning the code. It’s easy to imagine how this could have happened by error. And it would have been trivially easy for one person to add the vulnerability.

Was this done on purpose? I have no idea. But if I wanted to do something like this on purpose, this is exactly how I would do it.

EDITED TO ADD (2/27): If the Apple auditing system is any good, they would be able to trace this errant goto line not just to the source-code check-in details, but to the specific login that made the change. And they would quickly know whether this was just an error, or a deliberate change by a bad actor. Does anyone know what’s going on inside Apple?

EDITED TO ADD (2/27): Steve Bellovin has a pair of posts where he concludes that if this bug is enemy action, it’s fairly clumsy and unlikely to be the work of professionals.



Technical FAQ: Are helmet cams safe?

Original source

Giro makes both ski and bike helmets with integrated GoPro mounts. Photo: Giro

Action cameras are exploding as action sports athletes have widely adopted the technology over the last half-decade. Some folks are attaching these devices, made by brands including GoPro, Contour, and Sony, to their helmets. This phenomenon brought on a reader question this week regarding the safety of mounting an action camera to a helmet. He checked in with two camera makers. We asked for feedback from three helmet makers. Read on to see what they said.

Are helmet cams safe?

Dear Lennard,
Does attaching a GoPro or other camera to a helmet reduce the safety benefits in any way? Does it make a difference if it is glued on or strapped through the vents?

I got some comment from Contour:

All of our mounts for helmets are secured with double-sided adhesive tape. The mounts themselves are of plastic construction. Whilst both are strong enough to hold the cameras in place, during an impact directly on the mount, the mount will usually break. The adhesive has been selected as it is the least reactive when applied to various hard surfaces. Helmet manufacturers, understandably, will always turn down a claim if an unofficial accessory is fitted and causes injury to the wearer. This even includes visors that are not from the manufacturer. It’s a “belts and braces” way to avoid litigation. I hope that helps you a bit. As for specifics as to the testing carried out, I am unable to release these publically, but I can assure you that they are designed with safety in mind.

And from GoPro:

I am glad that you reached out to us regarding your helmet. We do not have any testing resources available regarding the effects of mounting a camera on your helmet and the impact on the helmet’s safety as a result. Our mounts are not designed to withstand significant impact, in the event that you do significantly impact your helmet the mounting parts and adhesive would likely not stay or adversely affect the performance of the helmet. We have not done widespread testing of different helmet brands, in most instances a camera will more likely dismount than damage the helmet. Our policy is that it is up to the customer to ensure their camera is mounted safely and securely, we can not accept any liability regarding the way that a mounted camera my impact the user’s safety in the event of a crash.

Thank you for looking into it; for now I am using a K-Edge handlebar mount.
— Phil

Dear Phil,
That is a great question, especially in light of what happened to Schumi in December. It’s a shock. Like Superman becoming a quad. When I lived in Ferrari-crazed Italy with my family a dozen years ago, at the peak of Michael Schumacher’s Formula One career with the iconic Italian carmaker, he was like Superman. And when I heard he was in a coma from a ski accident, I assumed he wasn’t wearing a helmet. But he was! With a helmet cam that conceivably caused the helmet to fail.

I was also recently reading an article about wearable cams causing a surge in accidents in the March 2015 issue of Outside Magazine (“The Danger Zone”, p. 28). Clearly, there are some very questionable helmet cam mounts out there that can really tweak the wearer’s neck or weaken his or her helmet (some, like Sumomoto’s aluminum GoPro arm mount require the user to drill two holes in the helmet to attach its foot-long rotatable curved beam). There seems to be no online link to the story. Sorry.

Here are responses to your question from Giro (which is part of the same parent company as Bell), Troy Lee, and Specialized.
― Lennard

From Giro:

We studied this issue thoroughly, including significant testing at our in-house DOME test lab with both Go-Pro and Contour units that are used on cycling, snow, and powersports helmets. We’ve also helped to initiate an ASTM standards subcommittee to collaborate with others scientists and our competitors on this topic. Our mounts cause no significant additional loads for the neck nor brain rotation due to well designed breakaway features. Due to the variety of alternative methods that someone might use to attach a camera or light to their helmet, and the fact that every crash is a unique event, we cannot offer any claim for mounts that we did not design for this purpose.
— Eric Richter
Sr. Brand Manager, Giro Cycling

From Specialized:

We have discussed this. We believe that a good GoPro mount should “break away” in an impact. We think this is the main thing. There is still risk that the camera could still cause injury, but not worse than rocks, eyewear, etc. There is always risk of injury in an accident, regardless. So, it’s always best to keep the rubber side down. From our experience, so far (I say so far, because it is still a relatively new area for helmet use/accident data), most of the adhesive mounts do break away fine. It seems a bigger problem that cameras get knocked off and lost. So, tethering the camera may also be wise, while still providing the breakaway feature. We think it’s a bad idea to have a camera “hard mounted or bolted” to the helmet, as this may increase risk by adding leverage to rotation in an impact. Standards often state that “protrusions over 5mm in height, off of the surface of the helmet, must break away in an impact”.
— Michael Grim
Helmet Manager, Specialized

From Troy Lee:

We have done some testing with our helmets in proto form, with integrated helmet mounts and we are not convinced to move forward with it. — Craig “Stikman” Glaspell
Bicycle Global Marketing Manager/Bicycle Athlete Manager, Troy Lee Designs

The post Technical FAQ: Are helmet cams safe? appeared first on VeloNews.com.



Episode 404 : Winter Games

Original source

BONJOUR

Alors pour commencer, juste une petite info rapide :
je serai en dédicace à la librairie Chapitre d’Orléans demain vendredi 21 février 2014
de 16 heures à 19 heures

(et dans la foulée je vais dîner chez une copine c’est cool)

Donc si vous êtes dans le coin (pas chez la copine, à la librairie) passez me voir,
nous rirons de concert et vous verrez je fais des dessins rigolos LOL

Ah et tenez, puisqu’il est question de dessin,
bah je vous mets votre petit Épisode inédit.

ep407 resBah oui, en ce moment il y a du sport.




ALEX GIBNEY’S THE ARMSTRONG LIE

Original source

Last month I discussed Alex Gibney’s documentary The Armstrong Lie on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row, and because I never did get to make my main point, I meant to write in more detail then. As is common with documentaries, the film doesn’t seem to have spent a lot of time on a lot of cinema screens, which is a shame, because its an entertaining and involving story, with a compelling protagonist who can bend the audience just as surely as he bent the truth.

The important thing about The Armstrong Lie is its title, which was borrowed from the French sports newspaper L’Equipe, long-time sponsors of the Tour De France. It is not The Armstrong Cheat, because the ‘lie’ isn’t the fact that Armstrong was cheating. The lie is rather the persona Lance Armstrong built up and sold to the world—the cancer survivor who won seven consecutive Tours, who used his success to fuel a huge enterprise centered on his Livestrong cancer charity. He was the ultimate underdog, an American dominating an event only one other American had ever won, racing for a team, US Postal Service, with minimal funding and facilities. It was a lie the world not only believed, but wanted to believe.

Gibney came to the story in 2009, given access to film a documentary about Armstrong’s ill-fated 2009 comeback. He seems to have thought of it, at least partially, in terms of sporting economics. Early on in the film he mentions that most racers come from modest, working class backgrounds, and later in the film he details the financial bonanza Armstong generated, and pointed shows him on a private jet reading the marketing section of the Wall Street Journal, wearing a silly hat the may remind you how you can’t ever totally lose your roots. But it’s an observation that doesn’t really go anywhere—echoes of the old Olympian amateur ideal are very faint indeed.


That’s because the history of cycling in general, and the Tour in particular, is impossible to tell without reference to performance-enhancing drugs. Going back to the early days, where cyclists took strychnine, nitroglycerine, and cocaine; drank wine or beer to help kill the pain. It’s an event that tests human endurance beyond its normal limits, and each time a ‘scandal’ arises, it is pushed under the carpet until the next bio-chemical advance comes along.

What’s fascinating about Armstrong, and his association with the notorious Italian Dr. Michele Ferrari is the way the cyclist’s cancer opened the door to his use of PEDs. Because his muscles had been broken down completely during his illness, Ferrari was able to bio-engineer a new Armstrong—and on a level playing field he might well have been just as unbeatable as he was anyway. This is not to justify his elaborate cheating, merely to point out that his feeling, which appears quite honest when he answers Oprah Winfrey’s question, that he didn’t ‘cheat’, in the sense of gain an ‘unfair advantage’ over his competitors, is true. Look at the men who stood on the podium with Armstrong in his seven tour wins and you’ll find one who hasn’t either been caught or confessed to cheating.

As Gibney details Armstrong’s history, and as he ruthlessly fights to protect his lie, you get a convincing picture of a sociopath, a bully, someone who is aware of his prowress and his appeal, and uses it against his critics. The pathos of his teammate George Hincapie, who can’t help but protect Armstrong even after he’s confessed, pointed fingers, and been cast into the metaphorical wilderness, is sad. Indeed, by the time of his comeback it appeared as if everyone on the tour, and everyone on his teams, had been cheating: except Armstrong

Which makes his decision to come back even more incomprehensible. And the wonder of Gibney’s film is that, as he tracks Armstrong on that comeback Tour, he, and as a result we, actually find ourselves rooting for him to succeed. Having seen everything, knowing in retrospect the lies are lies, understanding the unpalatable nature of his personality, we cannot resist hoping Armstrong reaches the podium—it’s as much against the odds as his first Tour win. Thus, when he’s found to have blood-doped (removed blood before the race, and transfused it back into his body before the final stage) and the elaborate facade of lie starts to fall apart, we find ourselves doubly disappointed.

As is Gibey. In one sense, the Armstrong Lie is the one he fed Gibney, the one an experienced documentary maker found himself believing, and it’s Gibney’s talent that passes that sense of disappointment on to us. That, in the end, is the enthralling point of this film. Armstrong’s attempt to come back, to win a Tour at nearly 40, and win it ‘clean’ is the most incredible act of hubris, one almost unmatched in sport, and hardly matched outside it. Armstrong alone among the major racers was still publicly clean. He could have stayed retired and kept his seven titles, and every time someone testified they’d helped him or seen him use drugs, he could have continued to beat them down.

It is the stuff of classic tragedy—whom the Gods would destroy they make stronger with Epo, or HGH, or steroids. And believing he could get away with it was the greatest Armstrong lie.