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Microsoft makes room-based game tech

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 Oktober 2014 | 23.58

7 October 2014 Last updated at 12:12
Roomalive

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Microsoft's prototype RoomAlive gaming system

Microsoft researchers have shown off a prototype gaming system that turns any room into an interactive, augmented reality display.

Called RoomAlive it uses projectors and depth cameras to work out the dimensions of a room so any surface within it can be used as a display on which to show images.

The ceiling-mounted cameras keep an eye on people moving round in the space to work out how they interact with projected objects.

Demonstrations created by the research team show players shooting and hitting creatures appearing on walls or dodging virtual projectiles fired across the room.

One demo shows a player controlling a small projected robot that shoots foes appearing from behind furniture.

Another shows virtual creatures scurrying over surfaces in the room and projects video that appears to turn a carpet into a fast flowing river.

Microsoft said the video was made to demonstrate the possibilities of augmented gaming and, so far, it had no plans to turn the system into a commercial product.


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Yahoo set to cut '400 jobs' in India

8 October 2014 Last updated at 04:49

Tech giant Yahoo plans to cut jobs in Bangalore, India, which is considered one of its largest engineering hubs.

A Yahoo spokesperson said the company was "making some changes to the way we operate in Bangalore leading to consolidation of certain teams into fewer offices".

About 400 employees will be affected by the cuts, according to reports.

But Yahoo told the BBC that the majority of the more than 1,000 workers in Bangalore will not be "impacted".

"Bangalore will certainly continue to remain an important centre for Yahoo," the spokesperson said.

It also added that relocation packages will be offered to some employees, suggesting that some jobs may be moved to its US headquarters in Sunnyvale, California.

Yahoo 'growth'

News of the redundancies comes after reports this week that the California-based company was close to investing millions of dollars in mobile messaging service Snapchat.

Yahoo has been making headlines for acquisitions under chief executive Marissa Mayer, who has been trying to boost its stalling revenue growth since joining in 2012.

The company sold about $8bn (£4.9bn) worth of shares in Chinese firm Alibaba's public listing last month, prompting the shopping spree talks.

The company did say it was on a path of "sustainable growth".

"We're looking at ways to achieve greater efficiency, collaboration and innovation across our business," it said in a statement.


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EE launches home TV service in UK

8 October 2014 Last updated at 10:33
EE TV on tablet

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The BBC's Rory Cellan-Jones caught up with EE's chief executive Olaf Swantee at the launch

Mobile network EE has announced a TV service that lets up to three phones or tablets be used to watch different live programmes in the home simultaneously, while a television screens a fourth.

The facility is powered by a set-top box, which also lets content broadcast over the past 24 hours be replayed, even if recordings were not scheduled.

The service is included in the price of EE's broadband and landline packages.

One expert called the move "hugely significant".

EE TV includes more than 70 Freeview channels, including BBC One, ITV, Channels 4 and 5, Sky News and Al Jazeera.

In addition, it offers apps for YouTube, Daily Motion and Rakuten's subscription TV and movie service Wuaki.tv, among others

The set-top box contains a one terabyte (TB) hard disk, which the firm said could store up to 25 days worth of standard definition content and five days worth of high-definition shows.

Mobile customers of the UK network who did not previously subscribe to another service from the firm but who want EE TV will need to sign up for a broadband package.

The cheapest one on offer is £9.95 a month plus a further £15.75 a month for a required telephone line, all for a minimum of a one-and-a-half year duration.

The company hopes this will provide them an incentive to switch to its service.

"With EE TV, not only can you watch different streams of live and recorded content, on multiple screens simultaneously, but your mobile becomes the remote," said EE's chief executive Olaf Swantee.

"This gives each viewer the chance to watch, queue and view what they want, when they want."

Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, technology correspondent

When I ask EE's chief executive Mr Swantee what potential customers are getting if there isn't any unique content, his answer is "a user interface that stands out."

Somehow I doubt that viewers across the land are going to be wowed by that promise.

Technology firms, from Microsoft to Google to Apple, have all been trying to change the way we use television for a decade or more.

But the viewers have been stubbornly resistant to change.

Read more of Rory's thoughts on the EE TV launch on his blog.

One industry watcher said he expected the firm's competitors to respond in kind.

"It's a logical move from EE and one that's in direct response to BT launching its mobile service next year," said Paolo Pescatore from the consultancy CCS Insight.

"With EE's broadband business posting good quarterly subscriber growth it has a strong subscriber base to cross-sell to, and puts it in a far stronger position than other quad-play providers - Virgin Media and TalkTalk.

"Today's announcement [also] puts the pressure on others to accelerate their own quad-play plans."

However, he added that he believed EE TV needed to offer a better range of content if it wanted to succeed.

"EE has taken a sensible approach with its TV service as it doesn't want to be embroiled in bidding wars for premium content," Mr Pescatore said.

"However given the exclusion of Netflix, EE must strongly consider forging agreements with other key rights owners including BSkyB for its Now TV service.

"The company must also strengthen the range of on-demand services as this is becoming increasingly important to consumers as underlined by Netflix's growth."

EE said its platform would "include an ever growing range of content applications" over time.


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Nobel Prize for blue LED invention

7 October 2014 Last updated at 10:51 By Jonathan Webb Science reporter, BBC News

The 2014 Nobel Prize for physics has been awarded to a trio of scientists in Japan and the US for the invention of blue light emitting diodes (LEDs).

Professors Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura made the first blue LEDs in the early 1990s.

This enabled a new generation of bright, energy-efficient white lamps, as well as colour LED screens.

The winners will share prize money of eight million kronor (£0.7m).

They were named at a press conference in Sweden, and join a prestigious list of 196 other Physics laureates recognised since 1901.

The portraits of researchers (L-R) Isamu Akasaki, Hiroshi Amano and Shuji Nakamura are displayed on a screen

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Staffan Normark, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, announces the physics prize

Prof Nakamura, who was woken up in Japan to receive the news, told the press conference, "It's unbelievable."

Making the announcement, the Nobel jury emphasised the usefulness of the invention, adding that the Nobel Prizes were established to recognise developments that delivered "the greatest benefit to mankind".

"These uses are what would make Alfred Nobel very happy," said Prof Olle Inganas, a member of the prize committee from Linkoping University.

The committee chair, Prof Per Delsing, from Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, emphasised the winners' dedication.

"What's fascinating is that a lot of big companies really tried to do this and they failed," he said. "But these guys persisted and they tried and tried again - and eventually they actually succeeded."

Although red and green LEDs had been around for many years, blue LEDs were a long-standing challenge for scientists in both academia and industry.

Without them, the three colours could not be mixed to produce the white light we now see in LED-based computer and TV screens. Furthermore, the high-energy blue light could be used to excite phosphorus and directly produce white light - the basis of the next generation of light bulb.

Continue reading the main story

With 20% of the world's electricity used for lighting, it's been calculated that optimal use of LED lighting could reduce this to 4%"

End Quote Dr Frances Saunders President, Institute of Physics

Today, blue LEDs are found in people's pockets around the world, inside the lights and screens of smartphones.

White LED lamps, meanwhile, deliver light to many offices and households. They use much less energy than both incandescent and fluorescent lamps.

That improvement arises because LEDs convert electricity directly into photons of light, instead of the wasteful mixture of heat and light generated inside traditional, incandescent bulbs. Those bulbs use current to heat a wire filament until it glows, while the gas discharge inside fluorescent lamps also produces both heat and light.

Inside an LED, current is applied to a sandwich of semiconductor materials, which emit a particular wavelength of light depending on the chemical make-up of those materials.

Gallium nitride was the key ingredient used by the Nobel laureates in their ground-breaking blue LEDs. Growing big enough crystals of this compound was the stumbling block that stopped many other researchers - but Profs Akasaki and Amano, working at Nagoya University in Japan, managed to grow them in 1986 on a specially-designed scaffold made partly from sapphire.

Four years later Prof Nakamura made a similar breakthrough, while he was working at the chemical company Nichia. Instead of a special substrate, he used a clever manipulation of temperature to boost the growth of the all-important crystals.

Previous winners of the Nobel Prize in Physics

2013 - Francois Englert and Peter Higgs shared the prize for formulating the theory of the Higgs boson particle.

2012 - Serge Haroche and David J Wineland were awarded the prize for their work with light and matter.

2011 - The discovery that the expansion of the Universe was accelerating earned Saul Perlmutter, Brian P Schmidt and Adam Riess the physics prize.

2010 - Andre Geim and Konstantin Novoselov were awarded the prize for their discovery of the "wonder material" graphene.

2009 - Charles Kuen Kao won the physics Nobel for helping to develop fibre optic cables.

In its award citation, the Nobel committee declared: "Incandescent light bulbs lit the 20th Century; the 21st Century will be lit by LED lamps."

Commenting on the news, the president of the Institute of Physics, Dr Frances Saunders, emphasised that energy-efficient lamps form an important part of the effort to help slow carbon dioxide emissions worldwide.

"With 20% of the world's electricity used for lighting, it's been calculated that optimal use of LED lighting could reduce this to 4%," she said.

"Akasaki, Amano and Nakamura's research has made this possible. This is physics research that is having a direct impact on the grandest of scales, helping protect our environment, as well as turning up in our everyday electronic gadgets."

LED lamps have the potential to help more than 1.5 billion people around the world who do not have access to electricity grids - because they are efficient enough to run on cheap, local solar power.

At the University of Cambridge in the UK, Professor Sir Colin Humphreys also works on gallium nitride technology, including efforts to produce the crystals more cheaply and reduce the cost of LED lamps. He told BBC News he was thrilled by the Nobel announcement.

"It pleases me greatly, because this is good science but it's also useful science. It's making a huge difference to energy savings. And I think some of the Nobel Prizes we have had recently - it will be years, if ever, before that science is usefully applied."

Professor Ian Walmsley, a physicist at Oxford University, said the jury had made a "fantastic choice".

"The ideas derive from some very important underpinning science developed over many years," he said, adding that the technology "makes new devices possible that are having, and will have, a huge impact on society, especially in displays and imaging".

Follow Jonathan on Twitter


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'Instagram for doctors' takes off

7 October 2014 Last updated at 16:19 By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

An app which enables healthcare professionals to share photos is to be rolled out across western Europe by the end of the year.

The app was designed to enable doctors to share pictures of their patients, both with each other and with medical students.

So far, more than 150,000 doctors have uploaded case photos with the patient's identity obscured.

However, some experts have expressed concern about patient confidentiality.

Patients' faces are automatically obscured by the app but users must manually block identifying marks like tattoos.

Each photo is reviewed by moderators before it is added to the database.

No secrets

Founder Dr Josh Landy told the BBC that the Figure 1 service did not access any patient records.

"We do not possess any personal medical data at all. The best way to keep a secret is not to have it. We are not an organisation that delivers healthcare," he told the BBC.

But doctors must provide identifying credentials and are also advised to notify their employees and patients to find out about consent policies.

"Legally, we found that identifying the doctor does not identify the patient," said Dr Landy.

"However some [medical] conditions are so rare that they can't be posted. One user wanted to post something but there are only seven cases of it in the US and they had all been reportable because they are rare, so the patient could have been identified."

Anybody can download the app for free, but only verified healthcare professionals can upload photos or comment on them, he added.

'Colourful'

"We reject sensationalistic images," said Dr Landy.

"Everything is there for educational purposes. That said, there are very colourful images - things medics see every day. It's a transparent view into a world you rarely get to see."

The app is already available in North America, the UK and Ireland.

While digital services such as UpToDate and DynaMed - both requiring a subscription - are already widely used within the healthcare community as clinical knowledge databases, they are not rivals to Figure 1, said Dr Landy.

"UpToDate is an app I love, and have used for years. However, they have a highly curated repository of articles written and edited by experts in the field.

"What our app does is provide the opportunity to contribute any case no matter how classic or unusual. Ours is all image-based and totally crowdsourced."

The app has received $6m (£3.75m) in investment in the last year.

British GP and author Dr Ellie Cannon gave it a cautious welcome.

"I think it's potentially really useful to share photos with medical students and other doctors," she said.

"Obviously the potential pitfall is the confidentiality. Of course, they are anonymised but even uploading from a certain doctor may go some way to identify a patient," she added.

"And can a patient later opt out? We've seen with other sites the downsides of sharing too much."


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Twitter sues US government on spying

7 October 2014 Last updated at 20:10

Twitter has sued the US government over surveillance laws.

Under current regulations, Twitter cannot reveal certain information about government requests for users' data relating to national security.

Twitter argues that this violates the right to free speech, as defined by the First Amendment to the US Constitution.

The firm said it brought the case in an effort to force the government to be more transparent about personal data requests.

"It's our belief that we are entitled under the First Amendment to respond to our users' concerns and to the statements of US government officials by providing information about the scope of US government surveillance," Twitter's lawyer, Ben Lee, wrote in a blog post.

Twitter brought the action against the US Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in a northern California court on Tuesday.

In April, Twitter submitted a Transparency Report to the US government for publication; however, so far officials have denied the firm's request to share the full report with the public.

That report includes specific information about the nature and number of requests for Twitter user information relating to national security.

"The US government engages in extensive but incomplete speech about the scope of its national security surveillance activities as they pertain to US communications providers, while at the same time prohibiting service providers such as Twitter from providing their own informed perspective as potential recipients of various national security-related requests," wrote Twitter.

'Obligation to protect'

Although Twitter receives significantly fewer government requests than rival technology firms such as Google, the American Civil Liberties Union said the suit might spur others to act.

"We hope that other technology companies will now follow Twitter's lead," said Jameel Jaffer, American Civil Liberties Union deputy legal director, in a statement.

"Technology companies have an obligation to protect their customers' sensitive information against overbroad government surveillance, and to be candid with their customers about how their information is being used and shared."

Several of the largest US tech firms have been fighting government requests for their users' private data, including Microsoft, Google, Facebook and Dropbox.

Others, such as Apple, have taken steps to circumvent US government requests by encrypting user data in a manner that puts it beyond the reach of law enforcement.


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Tech giants debate extremism action

8 October 2014 Last updated at 00:19 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

A "private" dinner between tech firms and government officials from across the EU is to take place on Wednesday.

The purpose of the meeting is to discuss ways to tackle online extremism, including better cooperation between the EU and key sites.

Twitter, Google, Microsoft and Facebook will all be attending in Luxembourg.

Governments are becoming increasingly concerned over how social media is being used as a recruitment tool by radical Islamist groups.

Further details about the meeting could be shared by the EU later on Wednesday ahead of the dinner taking place.

It will be attended by ministers from the 28 EU member states, members of the European Commission and representatives from the technology companies.

The European Commission said: "There is strong interest from the European union and the ministers of interior to enhance the dialogue with major companies from the internet industry on issues of mutual concerns related to online radicalisation."

In particular, it said the meeting would focus on:

  • "the challenges posed by terrorists' use of the internet and possible responses: tools and techniques to respond to terrorist online activities, with particular regard to the development of specific counter-narrative initiatives"
  • "internet-related security challenges in the context of wider relations with major companies from the internet industry, taking account due process requirements and fundamental rights"
  • "ways of building trust and more transparency"

The BBC understands this is the second time since July that the firms have been called in to discuss possible measures.

However a notable absence at the meeting will be Ask.fm, a social network believed to have been extensively used as a recruitment tool for radical Islamist groups.

The firm was owned by Latvian brothers Ilja and Mark Terebin, but in August was bought by the American company behind Ask.com.

The site's new owners told the BBC: "Ask.fm has not been invited.

"If we had known about it, we would have attended for sure."

Running battles

Representing the UK government at the meeting will be security minister James Brokenshire.

"We do not tolerate the existence of online terrorist and extremist propaganda, which directly influences people who are vulnerable to radicalisation," he told the BBC.

"We already work with the internet industry to remove terrorist material hosted in the UK or overseas and continue to work with civil society groups to help them challenge those who promote extremist ideologies online. We have also made it easier for the public to report terrorist and extremist content via the gov.uk website."

The government's Counter Terrorism Internet Referral Unit (CTIRU), set up in 2010, has removed more than 49,000 - pieces of content that "encourages or glorifies acts of terrorism" - 30,000 of which were removed since December 2013.

Details on the EU dinner are sparse.

But there is increasing concern over the role social media plays in disseminating extremist propaganda, as well as being used as a direct recruitment tool.

However, there is also a significant worry that placing strict controls on social networks could actually hinder counter-terrorism efforts.

"The further underground they go, the harder it is to gleam information and intelligence," said Jim Gamble, a security consultant, and former head of the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (Ceop).

"Often it is the low level intelligence that you collect that you can then aggregate which gives you an analysis of what's happening."

Mr Gamble was formerly head of counter-terrorism in Northern Ireland. There were, he said, parallels to be drawn.

"There's always a risk of becoming too radical and too fundamentalist in your approach when you're trying to suppress the views of others that you disagree with.

"In Northern Ireland, huge mistakes were made when the government tried to starve a political party of the oxygen of publicity. I would say that that radically backfired."

Recruitment

Current estimates put the number of British citizens recruited to fight for radical Islamist groups in Syria and Iraq at more than 500.

Mr Gamble said the recruitment process focused on singling out those who looked most susceptible.

"They identify the isolated, the lonely, those people who have perhaps low self-esteem, and are looking for something, or someone."

Ask.fm's site hosted several discussions regarding the practicalities of getting to Syria or Iraq.

Many of these discussions remained online for a considerable amount of time - some for several weeks.

However, in an interview with the BBC, Ask.fm said it had had few requests from governments to take such material down.

"In the past 18 months we've only received about a dozen requests from law enforcement," it said.

"Sometimes these issues are really hard to discover when you've not got the full concept of what's going on outside the social network that you run.

"We really do want to forge partnerships with law enforcement to be able to take meaningful action on this."

In a statement, a spokeswoman for the Met Police said 1,100 pieces of content that breached the Terrorism are removed each week from various online platforms - approximately 800 of these are Syria/Iraq related.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Woman sues over fake Facebook page

8 October 2014 Last updated at 13:16

A woman is suing the US government after it created a fake Facebook page containing photos of her, including one that showed her half-clothed.

The Department of Justice acknowledged that one of its agents had created the page without telling Sondra Arquiett.

But it initially suggested that Ms Arquiett had "implicitly consented" to the action because she had granted officers access to her mobile phone.

The DoJ said it was now reviewing if the bogus page had been a step too far.

A trial is scheduled for next week in New York, with the US government and the Drugs Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent, Timothy Sinnigen, both named as defendants.

The case dates back four years, but was first reported by the news site Buzzfeed.

Pictures of children

The fake Facebook page was created after restaurant waitress Ms Arquiett was arrested in July 2010, and accused of being involved in a drugs ring.

She pleaded guilty to conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute cocaine, and was later sentenced to six months of weekend incarceration.

At the time of her arrest, Ms Arquiett surrendered her mobile phone and consented to officers accessing its data to help them with related criminal investigations.

This included an investigation into her boyfriend, Jermaine Branford, who was suspected of co-ordinating drug sales. He later pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute cocaine.

Ms Arquiett said she was not, however, notified that this operation would involve the creation of a "publicly available" Facebook page in the name of Sondra Prince, an alias she used.

It included photographs of her as well as images of her son and niece.

One photograph, her lawyers said, featured "the plaintiff in her bra and panties".

"When plaintiff learned of Sinnigen's actions, she suffered fear and great emotional distress because, by posing as her on Facebook, Sinnigen had created the appearance that plaintiff was wilfully co-operating in his investigation of the narcotics trafficking ring, thereby placing her in danger," they added.

Ms Arquiett said the action had breached her rights to privacy, equal protection under the law and due process, and has demanded more than $250,000 (£155,560) in damages.

The US government acknowledged that Mr Sinnigen had created the page and had used it to send a "friend" request to a wanted fugitive as well as accepting requests from others, but denied it had been made "publicly available" in a wider sense.

However, Buzzfeed and the Associated Press news agency were both able to access the page before it was taken offline.

The US government also recognised that one of the photos included showed Ms Arquiett "wearing either a two-piece bathing suit or a bra and underwear," but denied that the photograph should be characterised as being "suggestive".

'Laughable'

Regarding the wider allegation, the US government stated that Ms Arquiett had "relinquished any expectation of privacy she may have had to photographs on her cell phone" when she agreed to let officers search and use information on the device.

However, it acknowledged that she "did not give express permission for the use of photographs contained on her phone on an undercover Facebook page".

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), a US-based online privacy campaign group, has described the government's rationale as being "laughable".

But legal experts have said that the case might hang on exactly what Ms Arquiett had consented to.

Facebook's terms and conditions state that users cannot create accounts for others without permission, but a spokeswoman for the firm declined to comment on this specific instance.


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ATM hack 'gives out wads of cash'

8 October 2014 Last updated at 14:28 By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News
Hack

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WATCH: Kaspersky Lab published this clip showing the hack. Each attack requires a unique code on a pre-infected machine. Repeating the steps here will not produce the same result.

A flaw in cash machines that allows criminals to quickly steal wads of cash has been discovered.

Interpol has alerted countries in Europe, Latin America and Asia known to have been targeted - and is carrying out a widespread investigation.

Security firm Kaspersky Labs discovered the hack, which is enabled by entering a series of digits on the keypad.

Infected cash machines can be instructed to dispense 40 notes at once, without a credit or debit card.

Kaspersky Labs produced a video showing how the hack was carried out. More details were provided in a blog post.

Prior to trying to obtain the cash, targeted machines are infected with malicious software via a boot CD.

To do this, criminals need physical access to the workings of the machine.

Once the malware - known as Tyupkin - has been installed, the "mule" sent to collect the cash must enter a code on the machine's key pad.

But Tyupkin then requires a second unique code - randomly generated by an algorithm at a remote location - to unlock the machine and dispense the cash.

It is this part of the process that ensures the criminal who has this algorithm retains control over when and how often these illegal withdrawals occur.

'Known security weaknesses'

"Over the last few years, we have observed a major upswing in ATM attacks using skimming devices and malicious software," said Vicente Diaz, principal security researcher at Kaspersky.

"Now we are seeing the natural evolution of this threat with cybercriminals moving up the chain and targeting financial institutions directly."

Kaspersky carried out its initial investigation at the "request of a financial institution" - although it would not say which.

The attack does not affect individual customers, instead simply instructing the machine to dispense notes, with no link to bank accounts.

The weaknesses of cash machines is routinely under the spotlight in the security industry. Many machines run outdated software, which is hard to update for logistical and financial reasons - there are lots of cash machines, and money needs to be spent upgrading their hardware.

"The fact that many ATMs run on operating systems with known security weaknesses and the absence of security solutions is another problem that needs to be addressed urgently," Kaspersky wrote.

Earlier this year another malware strain, known as Ploutus, allowed hackers to command machines to dispense cash by sending a text message to them.

In 2010, hacker Barnaby Jack discovered a technique he dubbed "Jackpotting" - in which a cash machine could be made to spew out money.

His demonstration on stage at security conference Black Hat provoked a standing ovation.

Mr Jack died of a suspected accidental drugs overdose in 2013, just days before he was due to give a presentation on the weaknesses in medical devices.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC


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Driveclub hit by last minute setback

8 October 2014 Last updated at 16:34 By Leo Kelion Technology desk editor

Computer server problems have marred the launch of Sony's high profile racing game Driveclub.

Buyers of the game have had problems logging in, while subscribers to the PlayStation Plus service have been told that the release of a promised cut-down version has been put on hold for the time being.

Sony said it had to "ease the load and traffic" being sent to its systems.

It is the latest in a series of launches affected by such a problem.

Grand Theft Auto Online, Sim City, Battlefield 4 and Diablo 3 are among other titles that have suffered server issues at launch, which sometimes persisted for weeks.

Part of the problem is that developers are increasingly making co-operative play, part of the core experience.

In Driveclub, six players can form a "club" and then race rival teams to boost their status and unlock further content.

The issue is that when lots of new players sign up at once, there is not enough capacity to deal with all their demands.

Some titles, such as Activision's Destiny, have sought to solve this problem by hosting large-scale public beta tests in advance, when lots of people can play an unfinished title for free for a limited amount of time, on the understanding that glitches might occur.

This allows a developer to measure both how their servers cope, and get an indication of the amount of interest in their title.

While Evolution Studios, the England-based, Sony-owned studio behind Driveclub, did hold beta tests, they were "private" - meaning only a select limited number of people were invited to join in.

The title was originally supposed to have been a launch game for the PlayStation 4 last November, but has suffered multiple delays to give Evolution more time to tackle an unspecified "huge technical issue".

Exceeded expectations

In a statement published on Facebook, Sony said it had decided to prioritise players who have paid for the full version of the title.

"We are seeing a lot of activity and new social behaviours right now, but unfortunately this is pushing the servers to their absolute limits.

"We are sorry if you are having a hard time getting online as we know many of you are.

"To our PS Plus fans, we're sorry you're having to wait longer to play, but we want to ensure that when you come on board, you get the best experience possible."

PS Plus is a subscription service that provides its members with "free" PlayStation games and discounts, and is required by PS4 owners if they wish to use the multiplayer sections of titles.

The taster edition - which offered access to a restricted number of cars and tracks - had been due to launch on PS Plus alongside the full version.

When questioned by the BBC, a company spokesman provided more detail.

"The problem is with the Driveclub servers, it isn't related to the PSN [PlayStation Network]," said Hugo Bustillos.

"We did a significant amount of testing pre-launch with a closed beta and while we were confident with the way it ran, we are currently experiencing high levels of engagement which exceeded what we were able to test prior to launch.

"There's no further information at this time on when a free PS Plus version will be released. PS Plus members who have bought the upgrade to the full game are still able to download the full game in the meantime."

One expert warned that the problem was likely to happen again with future launches on all types of console.

"Even though overloaded server capacity is a disaster, an even bigger disaster would be building server capacity that is too vast for how popular a game is," explained Rob Crossley, UK news editor at Gamespot.

"If only 100,000 people are playing a game and you've built capacity for one million people, you will be losing money on infrastructure.

"So, the reason companies do this is because they are trying to play it as safe as humanly possible, and it's going to be even more of an issue in the future because games evermore are going online."

Earlier this week a rival multiplayer racing game, Ubisoft's The Crew, also had its launch date postponed in order to hold a second "closed console beta".

It is now due to go on sale on 2 December.


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