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      Dirty deeds in Denver: Ex-prosecutor faked texts, destroyed devices to frame colleague

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    When suspicion began to mount that the young prosecutor, Yujin Choi, might have faked her sexual misconduct allegations against a Denver District Attorney's Office colleague, investigators asked to examine Choi's laptop and cell phone. But just before Choi was to have turned them in, her devices suffered a series of unlikely accidents.

    First, she said, she managed to drop her phone into a filled bathtub. When she pulled the phone out of the water and found it was not working, Choi went to her laptop in order to make a video call. When the call ended, Choi then knocked over a bottle of water—whoops!—directly onto the computer, which was also taken out of commission. So, when the day came to hand in her devices, neither was working.

    "I’m devastated that I may have tanked the investigation on my own, but that I also lost all of my personal data that were very important to me," Choi wrote to investigators. She had even, she added, gone to the local Apple Store in an attempt to retrieve the data on the devices. No luck.

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Dirty deeds in Denver: Ex-prosecutor faked texts, destroyed devices to frame colleague

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    When suspicion began to mount that the young prosecutor, Yujin Choi, might have faked her sexual misconduct allegations against a Denver District Attorney's Office colleague, investigators asked to examine Choi's laptop and cell phone. But just before Choi was to have turned them in, her devices suffered a series of unlikely accidents.

    First, she said, she managed to drop her phone into a filled bathtub. When she pulled the phone out of the water and found it was not working, Choi went to her laptop in order to make a video call. When the call ended, Choi then knocked over a bottle of water—whoops!—directly onto the computer, which was also taken out of commission. So, when the day came to hand in her devices, neither was working.

    "I’m devastated that I may have tanked the investigation on my own, but that I also lost all of my personal data that were very important to me," Choi wrote to investigators. She had even, she added, gone to the local Apple Store in an attempt to retrieve the data on the devices. No luck.

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    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Dirty deeds in Denver: Ex-prosecutor faked texts, destroyed devices to frame colleague

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    When suspicion began to mount that the young prosecutor, Yujin Choi, might have faked her sexual misconduct allegations against a Denver District Attorney's Office colleague, investigators asked to examine Choi's laptop and cell phone. But just before Choi was to have turned them in, her devices suffered a series of unlikely accidents.

    First, she said, she managed to drop her phone into a filled bathtub. When she pulled the phone out of the water and found it was not working, Choi went to her laptop in order to make a video call. When the call ended, Choi then knocked over a bottle of water—whoops!—directly onto the computer, which was also taken out of commission. So, when the day came to hand in her devices, neither was working.

    "I’m devastated that I may have tanked the investigation on my own, but that I also lost all of my personal data that were very important to me," Choi wrote to investigators. She had even, she added, gone to the local Apple Store in an attempt to retrieve the data on the devices. No luck.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagcolorado tagcolorado tagcolorado tagframed tagframed tagframed taglegal taglegal taglegal

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    • Ar chevron_right

      New GeForce 50-series GPUs: There’s the $1,999 5090, and there’s everything else

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    Nvidia has good news and bad news for people building or buying gaming PCs.

    The good news is that three of its four new RTX 50-series GPUs are the same price as or slightly cheaper than the RTX 40-series GPUs they're replacing. The RTX 5080 is $999, the same price as the RTX 4080 Super; the 5070 Ti and 5070 are launching for $749 and $549, each $50 less than the 4070 Ti Super and 4070 Super.

    The bad news for people looking for the absolute fastest card they can get is that the company is charging $1,999 for its flagship RTX 5090 GPU, significantly more than the $1,599 MSRP of the RTX 4090. If you want Nvidia's biggest and best, it will cost at least as much as four high-end game consoles or a pair of decently specced midrange gaming PCs.

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    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090

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    • Ar chevron_right

      New GeForce 50-series GPUs: There’s the $1,999 5090, and there’s everything else

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    Nvidia has good news and bad news for people building or buying gaming PCs.

    The good news is that three of its four new RTX 50-series GPUs are the same price as or slightly cheaper than the RTX 40-series GPUs they're replacing. The RTX 5080 is $999, the same price as the RTX 4080 Super; the 5070 Ti and 5070 are launching for $749 and $549, each $50 less than the 4070 Ti Super and 4070 Super.

    The bad news for people looking for the absolute fastest card they can get is that the company is charging $1,999 for its flagship RTX 5090 GPU, significantly more than the $1,599 MSRP of the RTX 4090. If you want Nvidia's biggest and best, it will cost at least as much as four high-end game consoles or a pair of decently specced midrange gaming PCs.

    Read full article

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    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090

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    • Ar chevron_right

      New GeForce 50-series GPUs: There’s the $1,999 5090, and there’s everything else

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025

    Nvidia has good news and bad news for people building or buying gaming PCs.

    The good news is that three of its four new RTX 50-series GPUs are the same price as or slightly cheaper than the RTX 40-series GPUs they're replacing. The RTX 5080 is $999, the same price as the RTX 4080 Super; the 5070 Ti and 5070 are launching for $749 and $549, each $50 less than the 4070 Ti Super and 4070 Super.

    The bad news for people looking for the absolute fastest card they can get is that the company is charging $1,999 for its flagship RTX 5090 GPU, significantly more than the $1,599 MSRP of the RTX 4090. If you want Nvidia's biggest and best, it will cost at least as much as four high-end game consoles or a pair of decently specced midrange gaming PCs.

    Read full article

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    • taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 taggaming taggaming taggaming tagtech tagtech tagtech tagblackwell tagblackwell tagblackwell tagnvidia tagnvidia tagnvidia tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 50-series tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5070 ti tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5080 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090 tagrtx 5090

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      Science paper piracy site Sci-Hub shares lots of retracted papers

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Most scientific literature is published in for-profit journals that rely on subscriptions and paywalls to turn a profit. But that trend has been shifting as various governments and funding agencies are requiring that the science they fund be published in open-access journals . The transition is happening gradually, though, and a lot of the historical literature remains locked behind paywalls.

    These paywalls can pose a problem for researchers who aren't at well-funded universities, including many in the Global South, which may not be able to access the research they need to understand in order to pursue their own studies. One solution has been Sci-Hub, a site where people can upload PDFs of published papers so they can be shared with anyone who can access the site. Despite losses in publishing industry lawsuits and attempts to block access , Sci-Hub continues to serve up research papers that would otherwise be protected by paywalls.

    But what it's serving up may not always be the latest and greatest. Generally, when a paper is retracted for being invalid, publishers issue an updated version of its PDF with clear indications that the research it contains should no longer be considered valid. Unfortunately, it appears that once Sci-Hub has a copy of a paper, it doesn't necessarily have the ability to ensure it's kept up to date. Based on a scan of its content done by researchers from India, about 85 percent of the invalid papers they checked had no indication that the paper had been retracted.

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Science paper piracy site Sci-Hub shares lots of retracted papers

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Most scientific literature is published in for-profit journals that rely on subscriptions and paywalls to turn a profit. But that trend has been shifting as various governments and funding agencies are requiring that the science they fund be published in open-access journals . The transition is happening gradually, though, and a lot of the historical literature remains locked behind paywalls.

    These paywalls can pose a problem for researchers who aren't at well-funded universities, including many in the Global South, which may not be able to access the research they need to understand in order to pursue their own studies. One solution has been Sci-Hub, a site where people can upload PDFs of published papers so they can be shared with anyone who can access the site. Despite losses in publishing industry lawsuits and attempts to block access , Sci-Hub continues to serve up research papers that would otherwise be protected by paywalls.

    But what it's serving up may not always be the latest and greatest. Generally, when a paper is retracted for being invalid, publishers issue an updated version of its PDF with clear indications that the research it contains should no longer be considered valid. Unfortunately, it appears that once Sci-Hub has a copy of a paper, it doesn't necessarily have the ability to ensure it's kept up to date. Based on a scan of its content done by researchers from India, about 85 percent of the invalid papers they checked had no indication that the paper had been retracted.

    Read full article

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    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Science paper piracy site Sci-Hub shares lots of retracted papers

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 7 January 2025 • 1 minute

    Most scientific literature is published in for-profit journals that rely on subscriptions and paywalls to turn a profit. But that trend has been shifting as various governments and funding agencies are requiring that the science they fund be published in open-access journals . The transition is happening gradually, though, and a lot of the historical literature remains locked behind paywalls.

    These paywalls can pose a problem for researchers who aren't at well-funded universities, including many in the Global South, which may not be able to access the research they need to understand in order to pursue their own studies. One solution has been Sci-Hub, a site where people can upload PDFs of published papers so they can be shared with anyone who can access the site. Despite losses in publishing industry lawsuits and attempts to block access , Sci-Hub continues to serve up research papers that would otherwise be protected by paywalls.

    But what it's serving up may not always be the latest and greatest. Generally, when a paper is retracted for being invalid, publishers issue an updated version of its PDF with clear indications that the research it contains should no longer be considered valid. Unfortunately, it appears that once Sci-Hub has a copy of a paper, it doesn't necessarily have the ability to ensure it's kept up to date. Based on a scan of its content done by researchers from India, about 85 percent of the invalid papers they checked had no indication that the paper had been retracted.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions tagscience tagscience tagscience tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagacademic publishing tagretractions tagretractions tagretractions

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