SaskTel announces launch of Cloud PVR service on maxTV Stream

SaskTel announced the launch of Cloud PVR service on maxTV Stream. Cloud PVR is on maxTV Stream Basic Plus and Premium packages.

“This announcement further demonstrates SaskTel’s dedication to the people of Saskatchewan and their strong commitment to deliver some of the best communication and entertainment services available today,” said Don Morgan, the minister responsible for SaskTel.

maxTV Stream is in over 400 communities and has features like Restart TV, Bluetooth and voice command technology, as well as apps like Netflix and YouTube. Viewers can also look to find new programs, movies and HD content to watch more than 160 channels available.

“Whether you’re cozying up on the couch or have time before the next game at the rink, now is the perfect time to catch up with the latest TV series or throwbacks,” said Doug Burnett, SaskTel President and CEO in the press release. “And because we’ve seamlessly integrated Cloud PVR into the maxTV Stream platform, all customers need to do is pick up their remote or smartphone to start watching their shows, movies, and the latest Live Local events.”

Cloud PVR, maxTV Stream subscribers can record up to 300 hours of content and is stored securely on SaskTel cloud-based storage. This content can be accessed at home using the media box or with your smartphone or tablet on the go in the SaskTel maxTV app.

Source: SaskTel

Public Mobile is offering 5GB bonus data per month for eight months

Public Mobile is currently running a Lunar New Year promotion with bonus data available on certain plans, as shared by RedFlagDeals user ‘ahoo99.’

The Telus-owned flanker brand is offering 5GB of bonus data per month for eight months on its 4G plans.

At the time of writing, Public Mobile’s website is offering bonus data on its $40 and higher plans. Check out the plans below:

5GB plan for $40 — Promo code: BONUS5FOR8
8GB plan for $50 — Promo code: BONUS5FOR8
10GB plan for $55 — Promo code: BONUS5FOR8
15GB plan for $60 — Promo code: BONUS5FOR8

All of the above plans offer unlimited Canada-wide minutes, alongside unlimited International Text and Picture Messaging.

Public Mobile says the offer is available to new customers who activate online. It’s worth noting that the bonus data will expire if the account becomes inactive or the rate plan is changed.

Check out the promotion here.

Image credit: Public Mobile

Via: RedFlagDeals user ‘ahoo99

YouTube Music’s Library redesign is rolling out now

YouTube Music is now widely rolling out a significant redesign for the ‘Library’ tab, after it appeared temporarily for some users back in August, first reported by 9to5Google.

Users have been waiting for a major redesign of the Library page since the platform’s relaunch in 2018. Users will first notice that the Library tab now offers more options for accessing and organizing content. The “View my” option at the top of the tab allows users to switch between the ‘Library,’ ‘Downloads,’ ‘Uploads,’ and ‘Device’ files.

The change is a welcome one that will make it much easier to navigate through the different sections of the Library and locate the content you’re looking for. Further, the ‘History’ clock icon has been moved to the top right, next to the cast button, allowing you to see a list of recently-heard tracks without having to go to your account menu. Note, the ‘History’ icon only appears in the library, and not on the app’s Home Screen.

Users can also filter their Library by Playlists, Songs, Albums, and Artists using chips at the top of the screen. Selecting any of the first three options also provides a new Downloaded filter, while a filter accompanies the Artists filter for Subscriptions. Furthermore, a dropdown menu lets users sort their Library by Recently added, Recently played and other options, making it easier to find and play specific songs on the go.

The change is currently rolling out widely. Ensure you’re running the latest YouTube Music application to check out the redesign.

Source: 9to5Google

Ubisoft delays Skull and Bones for the sixth time, cancels three more games

Skull and Bones has been delayed for a staggering sixth time, Ubisoft has confirmed.

The open-world pirate game was most recently set to release on March 9th, 2023, but Ubisoft says it’s now simply slated to come sometime between now and early 2024.

The move comes amid a turbulent period for the French publishing giant. In a press release, Ubisoft acknowledged that it’s facing “major challenges,” including the cancellation of three unannounced games on top of the four it had axed last year.

The company also noted that its 2022 games — an unusually soft lineup that lacked new releases from such big franchises as Assassin’s Creed or Far Cry — “have not performed as well as expected.” Specifically, it points to the commercial underperformance of last fall’s otherwise well-received Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope and Just Dance 2023, the latter of which being the latest entry in a historically popular annualized franchise.

As a result, the company is projecting a $537 million USD (about $721 million CAD) loss for the fiscal year ending in March 2023. This has led it to cut around $215 million USD (about $289 million CAD) in costs. According to Kotaku, these cost-cutting efforts include layoffs and renewing fewer contracts at some of the company’s U.S. locations. It’s unclear how this might affect any of the publisher’s many Canadian studios, including Ubisoft Montreal and Ubisoft Toronto.

Ubisoft’s rough patch, in part, stems from its ever-evolving production pipeline. Over the past few years, the company has been pivoting towards live service titles that continue to bring in players over long periods. One of its older games, 2015’s Rainbow Six: Siege, has been one of the most popular multiplayer games on the market, with over 70 million registered players.

While the company has still released some big-budget single-player games in the form of 2018’s Assassin’s Creed Odyssey, 2020’s Watch Dogs: Legion and Assassin’s Creed Valhalla and 2021’s Far Cry 6, it’s been putting more of an emphasis on live service titles. This includes Assassin’s Creed Infinity, a future live service platform for multiple Assassin’s Creed games. Ubisoft even says it will be “the single entry point for fans into the Assassin’s Creed franchise in the future.”

Other Ubisoft live service games in the works include the arena shooter XDefiant and The Division Heartland. Meanwhile, it’s cancelled other online titles like Hyperscape and Ghost Recon Frontline. 

For now, though, the company said in an emergency investor call, via Kotaku, that its release plans for the fiscal year beginning in April 2023 include Skull and BonesAvatar: Frontiers of PandoraAssassin’s Creed Mirage and at least one more big unannounced title.

Source: Ubisoft

iPhone 15 Pro lineup reported to ditch clicky power and volume buttons

In October 2022, we reported that the upcoming iPhone 15 Pro lineup would ditch the physical click-touch and power buttons in favour of new solid-state buttons. Back then, the information was shared by reliable Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, and now he’s doubling down on his prediction.

According to Kuo, if the change in buttons is received well by iPhone users, Apple will implement it in its other high-end devices.

“My latest survey indicates that high-end iPhone 15 models will feature solid-state buttons and will equip with additional Taptic Engines to simulate the feel of physical buttons’ force feedback,” wrote Kuo. “As the exclusive supplier of Taptic Engine’s controller IC for solid-state buttons, Cirrus Logic stands to benefit markedly from this new design. If users respond well to this new design, I think it may be adopted in other high-end models of product lines in the future.”

If the Taptic Engine technology on the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max is similar to what Apple implemented on the iPhone 7’s Touch ID button, removing physical volume and power buttons wouldn’t likely be a significant issue for most users.

From what we know, the iPhone 15 line-up will measure as follows: 6.1-inch iPhone 15, 6.7-inch iPhone 15 Plus, 6.1-inch iPhone 15 Pro, and 6.7-inch iPhone 15 Pro Max. Further, the iPhone 15 Pro series will feature a new 3nm A17 Bionic chip, while the iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Plus will include the same A16 chip as the iPhone 14 Pro series.

Rumours also suggest that the iPhone 15 series Pro devices will cost more than the 14 Pro variants did at launch. Read more about it here.

Source: @mingchikuo

Privacy by Design to become an ISO standard next month

Fourteen years after being introduced by a Canadian privacy commissioner, Privacy by Design (PbD) is about to become an international privacy standard for the protection of consumer products and services.

On Feb. 8, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) will adopt PbD as ISO 31700.

The ISO is a network of 167 national standards bodies. It sets over 24,000 standards,  including ISO 27001 for information security management systems, some of which organizations can be certified for compliance with after passing a review by auditing firms like Deloitte, KPMG, and PwC.

Initially, however, ISO 31700 will not be a conformance standard.

“It’s amazing that ISO is doing this,” said PbD creator Ann Cavoukian, now executive director of the Toronto-based Global Privacy and Security by Design Centre. “It’s huge.”

“We think it will be a major milestone in privacy.”

Unveiled in 2009, Privacy by Design is a set of principles that calls for privacy to be taken into account throughout an organization’s data management process.

Since then it has been adopted by the International Assembly of Privacy Commissioners and Data Protection Authorities, and incorporated in the European General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). However, only organizations that hold data of European residents are obliged to follow the GDPR. In 2018, the ISO formed a group to start planning for the inclusion of PbD in its standards.

Adoption by the ISO “gives life to operationalizing the concept of Privacy by Design,” said Cavoukian, “helping organizations figure out how to do it. The standard is designed to be utilized by a whole range of companies — startups, multinational enterprises, organizations of all sizes. With any product, you can make this standard work because it’s easy to adopt. We’re hoping privacy will be pro-actively embedded in the design of [an organization’s] operations and it will complement data protection laws.”

As a guideline, Privacy by Design applies to IT systems, accountable business practices, and physical design and networked infrastructure.

As originally written, PbD has seven principles, including those stating that privacy should be an organization’s default setting (no action is required by an individual to protect their privacy), it is embedded into the design of IT systems and business practices, and it is part of the entire data lifecycle.

The final ISO 31700 standard is more detailed, with 30 requirements. A draft of the standard shows it will be 32 pages long. It includes general guidance on designing capabilities to enable consumers to enforce their privacy rights, assigning relevant roles and authorities, providing privacy information to consumers, conducting privacy risk assessments, establishing and documenting requirements for privacy controls, how to design privacy controls, lifecycle data management, and preparing for and managing a data breach.

The proposed introduction notes that Privacy by Design refers to several methodologies for product, process, system, software, and service development. The proposed bibliography that comes with the document refers to other standards with more detailed requirements on identifying personal information, access controls, consumer consent, corporate governance, and other topics.

Along with the standard, a separate document will outline possible use cases.

The launch will be marked by a one-hour webinar giving an overview of the standard for business managers, company owners, consumer privacy advocates, and technology practitioners.

Cavoukian repeated the argument she has made for years: Privacy can be a competitive advantage for businesses that adopt it. “Get rid of the dated either-or model of privacy and business,” she said. “This can be a win-win. It’s privacy and business interests. You can do both.”

The post Privacy by Design to become an ISO standard next month first appeared on IT World Canada.

Acclaimed Canadian game TMNT: Shredder’s Revenge comes to mobile via Netflix

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge is now available on Android and iOS exclusively through Netflix.

Developed by Montreal’s Tribute Games, the arcade-inspired beat ’em up released last year on consoles and PC to critical acclaim.

The game follows Leonardo, Donatello, Michelangelo, Raphael and April O’Neil as they fight the Shredder, the Foot Clan, Krang, Bebop and Rocksteady.

Netflix Games is included at no additional cost with a Netflix subscription. Other notable games in the catalogue include Kentucky Route ZeroImmortality and Montreal-based Thunder Lotus’ Spiritfarer.

Image credit: Dotemu

OpenAI explores monetization options for ChatGPT

OpenAI’s ChatGPT AI chat bot is a free-to-use tool, which means that the cost to keep the viral chatbot up and running is being paid by OpenAI.

It has been reported that the estimated cost of running ChatGPT is $100,000 USD (about $134,000 CAD) per day, or roughly $3 million USD (about 4 million CAD) per month. In light of this, and as OpenAI seeks funding from Microsoft, the company is also exploring ways to monetize the chatbot.

In OpenAI’s official Discord account, the company has shared a waitlist for an “experimental” paid version of ChatGPT, called “ChatGPT Professional,” which would offer a more reliable service, with faster response times, no throttling and “at least” twice the daily number of answers compared to the free version, as reported by TechCrunch.

Image credit: OpenAI, Via: TechCrunch

The company said in its Discord server that it is “starting to think about how to monetize ChatGPT…to ensure long-term viability.”

Anyone can fill up the ‘Professional ChatGPT access’ form, which contains questions regarding how you would use ChatGPT and what price you’d pay for the paid service.

Regardless, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has acknowledged the limitations of the current version of ChatGPT and has warned against relying on it for important tasks.

The model’s popularity has led some companies to experiment with incorporating ChatGPT into their workflows, with Microsoft reportedly be using it to improve its Bing search engine, as reported by The Verge.

As per The Verge, OpenAI is also seeking $10 billion in funding from Microsoft and, in return, would give 75 percent of OpenAI’s profit until Microsoft makes back its initial investment. It’s worth noting that OpenAI already offers paid access to software such as DALL-E for image generation, so monetizing ChatGPT would likely be the next step it takes.

Elsewhere, nefarious actors have swarmed both the App Store and the Play Store with unaffiliated ‘copycat’ applications using icons and names similar to that of ChatGPT, and are churning up a profit. Read more about it here.

Image credit: Shutterstock

Via: TechCrunch, The Verge

OVHcloud launches pay-as-you-go bare metal servers, compatible with public cloud

Yesterday, French cloud computing company OVHcloud launched Metal Instances, a pay-as-you-go physical server providing users with compute, storage, and network resources for their workloads. It is run on dedicated single tenant physical servers, and allocated resources are billed by the hour or month.

Metal Instances is also compatible with the public cloud ecosystem, allowing users to industrialise their use of bare metal instances, and enhance their deployments with the entire public cloud catalogue. They are deployed via APIs (application programming interface) and Infrastructure-as-Code tools.

Users can choose the best hardware for their processing workloads through Metal Instances’ on-demand availability and rapid deployment times, made possible by OpenStack and Terraform native support.

“From the creation of our own dedicated bare metal servers, where we have full control of the design thanks to our unique integrated model, to the availability of Metal Instances, bare metal is going full circle to address every cloud compute need one might think of,” said Thierry Souche, chief technical officer of OVHcloud. 

Customers can choose from the following three instances, based on their needs:

bm-s1-categorized small, powered by an Intel Xeon-E 2274G, 2x 960 GB (gigabyte) SSD (solid state drive), 32GB memory and with hourly pricing of 0,5 euros (C$0.70)
bm-m1– categorized medium, powered by an Intel Xeon-E 2288G, 2x 960 GB SSD, 64GB memory, with hourly pricing of 0,85 euros (C$1.20)
bm-l1– categorized large, powered by an AMD EPYC 7371, 2x 960 GB SSD, 128GB memory, with hourly pricing of 1,45 euros (C$2)

All instances have now been rolled out in Canada.

The post OVHcloud launches pay-as-you-go bare metal servers, compatible with public cloud first appeared on IT World Canada.

University of Waterloo to lead consortium to advance Canada’s security and defence

Today, the University of Waterloo announced a 5G and beyond mobile network technology consortium to help develop 5G mobile networks and improve Canada’s security and defence. 

A team of computer scientists at Waterloo will lead the C$1.5 million multi-partner consortium. The group is funded by the Department of National Defence (DND) through its Innovation for Defence Excellence and Security (IDEaS) program. 

The project will span three years, and will involve collaboration with academic and industry partners from École de technologie supérieure in Montréal, University of Regina, BlackBerry, NoviFlow, and Rockport Networks, with support from Rogers Communications Canada.

The consortium will develop artificial intelligence (AI) systems to detect cyberattacks on the 5G network as they happen. This will allow quick response and automatic countermeasures to keep the network secure. 

Other security requirements will be included into the 5G network slices themselves, using end-to-end network slice orchestration that responds dynamically to an application’s security requirements and the severity of threats, the announcement revealed. 5G network slices, or network slicing, is a network configuration that allows multiple networks to be created on top of a common physical infrastructure.

“Our mobile communications networks can be sliced using software into fit-for-purpose networks that operate virtually, each with a different degree of isolation and level of quality-of-service to meet security and performance requirements,” said Dr. Raouf Boutaba, the project’s principal investigator and director of Waterloo’s Cheriton School of Computer Science. “However, network softwarization also introduces vulnerabilities that can compromise services, including slices. The goal of the consortium is to deploy 5G network slices that not only have high performance, flexibility and reliability but also have increased security levels required for critical applications.”

The various solutions will be integrated with the consortium’s partner and collaborator technologies to create a proof-of-concept on the University of Waterloo–Rogers 5G testbed.

The post University of Waterloo to lead consortium to advance Canada’s security and defence first appeared on IT World Canada.