Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-10-19 14:00:36| Engadget

DJI has filed a lawsuit against the US Department of Defense over its addition to the Pentagon list that designates it as a "Chinese military company." In its filing, shared by The Verge, the company said it's challenging the designation because it's "neither owned nor controlled by the Chinese military." It described itself as the "largest privately owned seller of consumer and commercial drones," mostly used by first responders, fire and police departments, businesses and hobbyists.  The company claimed that because the Pentagon has officially proclaimed it as a national security threat, it has suffered "ongoing financial and reputational harm." It also said that it has lost business from both US and internal customers, which terminated contracts and refused to enter new ones, and it has been banned from signing contracts with multiple federal government agencies.  DJI explained that it tried to engage with the Department of Defense for over 16 months and submitted a "comprehensive delisting petition" on July 27, 2023 to get the agency to remove its designation. However, the agency allegedly refused to engage in a meaningful way and to explain its reasoning behind adding the company to the list. On January 31, 2024, the DoD redesignated the company without notice, DJI wrote in its complaint. DJI alleged that the DoD only shared its full rationale for its designation after it informed the agency that it was going to "seek judicial relief." The company claimed that the DoD's reasoning wasn't adequate to support its designation, that the agency confused people with common Chinese names and that it relied on "stale alleged facts and attenuated connections." DJI is now asking the court to declare the DoD's actions as unconstitutional, describing the Pentagon's designation and failure to remove it from the "Chinese military company" list a violation of the law and of its due-process rights.  DJI has long been at the crosshairs of various US government agencies. The Department of Commerce added it to its entity list in 2020, which prevented US companies from supplying it with parts without a license. A year later, it was added to the Treasury department's "Chinese military-industrial complex companies" list for its alleged involvement in the surveillance of Uyghur Muslim people in China. And just a few days ago, DJI confirmed that its latest consumer drones are being held at the border by US customs, which cited the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. The drone-maker denied that it has manufacturing facilities in Xinjiang, the region associated with forced Uyghur labor. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/dji-challenges-its-chinese-military-company-pentagon-designation-in-court-120036412.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

LATEST NEWS

2024-10-19 00:31:43| Engadget

Its been over a year since Peter Parker and Miles Morales joined forces for their epic crossover adventure game on the Sony PlayStation 5. Now they are swinging their way to PCs early next year. Sony announced at New York Comic Con today that Marvels Spider-Man 2 is getting a PC release on January 30, 2025 on Steam and the Epic Games Store. The fans who got to hear the news first also witnessed the new trailer for the games PC remake. The new release of Marvels Spider-Man 2 will come in two different versions and both have plenty of extra features and perks for those very patient PC players. The Standard Edition comes with the full game and all the PS5 updates such as 14 new suits, Ultimate Levels, new styles of symbiote suits and an action figure mode in photo mode. The Digital Deluxe Edition also comes with five exclusive new suits for Peter and Miles each, early unlocks for Peters Arachknight suit, Miles, Shadow-Spirit suit and the web grabber gadget and additional items for photo mode. Marvels Spider-Man 2 features the two most famous names from the Spider-Verse (not counting Stan Lee) in an expanded version of the Big Apple taking on one of the longest lists of villains in just about any comic book based game. The two take on bad guys like Kraven, Black Cat and Scorpion without giving away too many appearances. Of course, the one most of the fans looked forward to seeing is that deep voiced, slimy symbiote Venom.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/spider-man-2-will-crawl-onto-pcs-in-january-223143137.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

2024-10-18 23:04:36| Engadget

Artificial intelligence makers have faced a mountain of criticism for borrowing from the work of others to train its models. Now the worlds largest publishing house is taking steps to ensure its authors dont have their work plagiarized in the name of progress. The Bookseller reports that Penguin Random House Publishing changed the copyright page at the front of its books to address using any of its titles as a source for AI training. Now the wording states: No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner for the purpose of training artificial intelligence technologies or systems. The new wording also protects against data absorption by noting the publisher expressly reserves [the titles] from the text and data mining exception. This part of the amended text comes from a recent European Parliament directive regarding text and data mining exceptions and ownership. Penguin Random House is the latest publishing company to take action against encroaching AI models. Earlier this week, The New York Times issued a cease and desist letter to the AI startup Perplexity to spot using its articles and stories to help its AI model create answers for users.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/penguin-random-house-amends-its-copyright-rules-to-protect-authors-from-ai-210436839.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

19.10DJI challenges its 'Chinese military company' Pentagon designation in court
19.10Spider-Man 2 will crawl onto PCs in January
18.10Penguin Random House amends its copyright rules to protect authors from AI
18.10On October 16th, bananas unlocked gym doors across Australia
18.10Turns out Redbox's derelict kiosks are a big red security risk
18.10Nightdive Studios revives a cult classic 3DO game from 1996
18.10Google NotebookLM adds improved audio overviews and background listening feature
18.10Samsung and LG OLED TVs are close to all-time lows, plus the rest of the week's best tech deals
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

19.10Shapoorji Pallonji Group's Afcons Infra to float Rs 5,430-cr IPO on October 25
19.10All weather investing: Protecting your portfolio from market downturns
19.10DJI challenges its 'Chinese military company' Pentagon designation in court
19.10Kamala Harris, Donald Trump court early voters; Usher, Lizzo on the campaign trail
19.10NSE increases lot sizes for all 5 index derivative contracts after Sebi order
19.10More than 100 customers contact BBC about scams, saying Revolut failed them
19.1042 smallcap stocks offer double-digit returns in wobbly market week
19.10Tax threshold freeze not a pledge-breaker - Labour sources
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .