31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Remember the doctor pushing to add internet addiction as an official mental disorder? In a recent journal article, he’s now saying that one sign of such a disorder would be people who send lots of text messages. Of course, as MobHappy puts it: “maybe they just like to chat to their friends?” Remember kids, too much communication = mental illness.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Techdirt
31
Mar
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Charting the human genome has opened the door for “a burst of discovery” by researchers, showing them the genetic basis for a number of common diseases.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
crazyeyes writes “This is breaking news. Microsoft has not only decided to support ray tracing in DirectX 11, but they will also be basing it on Intel’s x86 ray-tracing technology and get this … it will be out by the end of the year! In this article, we will examine what ray tracing is all about and why it would be superior to the current raster-based technology. As for performance, well, let Intel dazzle you with some numbers. Here’s a quote from the article: ‘You need not worry about your old raster-based DirectX 10 or older games or graphics cards. DirectX 11 will continue to support rasterization. It just includes support for ray-tracing as well. There will be two DirectX 11 modes, based on support by the application and the hardware.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
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Shine, a new site for women launched Monday, is mostly about giving the struggling internet company more clout in what it believes is an underserved demographic.


Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Already one of the world’s most detested airports, London’s Heathrow is no more popular following the opening of its lavish, high-tech Terminal 5, which so far is proving to be a complete mess.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
2muchcoffeeman writes “Adobe announced Monday that it is joining the Linux Foundation and alpha-released a Linux version of its new Adobe Internet Runtime environment, which allows Internet-enable applications to run on Windows and Mac OS desktops, for Linux. According to Adobe, the alpha version lacks some key features that will be available in the final product and only runs with Sun Java, not GNU Java. Adobe also released an alpha of Flex Builder for Linux Monday.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Ars talks to Mozilla Mobile director Jay Sullivan and Mozilla Labs manager Chris Beard about the Weave initiative and the future of Firefox on mobile devices.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Wouldn’t you know it? The organizations who scream the loudest about how unauthorized copies are “theft” and how “piracy” is destroying their industries are just as likely to get caught making unauthorized copies themselves. In the past, for example, we’ve pointed out that the MPAA was
Originally Syndicated via RSS from Techdirt
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
praps writes “Last summer a 75-year-old woman from central Sweden became the envy of the IT world with her scorching 40Gbps internet connection. 1,500 simultaneous HDTV channels or a whole high definition DVD downloaded in two seconds were hers for the taking. Now Sigbritt Löthberg could soon be treated to an incredible 100 Gbps link — but it may not be put to great use. According to the head of the ultra-fast fiber connection project, Sigbritt mostly used the gear ‘to dry her laundry.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
A few folks noted the rumor mill churning over 3G iPhones coming soon. Apparently they might be going into production as early as May, and announced somewhere in the 2nd quarter. Hopefully they manage to stick a GPS and another 16 gigs of memory in this one.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Timothy found a profile in The New Republic of Jonathan Schilling, a 53-year-old software developer from New Jersey who works to keep Hillary Clinton’s Wikipedia entry clean and fair throughout the election season. “After he started editing her page in June 2005, Schilling became consumed with trying to capture her uncomfortable place in American culture, researching and writing a whole section on how she polarizes the public… [T]he attacks on Hillary’s page mainly take the form of crude vandalism… It’s different on Obama’s page, where the fans — no surprise — are more enthusiastic, the haters are more intelligent, and the arguments reflect the fact that Obama himself is still a work under construction… The bitterness of the fights on Obama’s page could be taken as a bad sign for the candidate. But it may actually be Hillary’s page that contains the more troubling omens. Few, if any, Hillary defenders are standing watch besides Schilling. In recent days, the vaguely deserted air of a de-gentrifying neighborhood has settled over her page…”
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Over the last few years, with the growing recognition of the concept of “flash mobs” or “smart mobs” it’s no surprise that various tools have been created to help manage large crowds of diverse individuals who converge for a single purpose. One of those was a project called TXTmob, which was widely used in 2004 by people protesting the Republican National Convention in New York City. Lots of folks used the service to send out group messages to others participating, and to quickly organize and disperse as necessary. As you may recall, there were some confrontations between protesters and the police, resulting in a bunch of arrests. Many of those arrested claim that the arrests were unfair, and have sued the city. As part of its defense, lawyers for New York City have now sent a broad subpoena to the guy who created and ran TXTmob demanding, among other things, many of the text messages sent via the service, including the identities of the senders and recipients. Needless to say, this seems like an overly broad request — and Tad Hirsch, the MIT PhD. student who set up the service, claims that much of that information no longer exists. Even if it did exist, it seems to be overstepping privacy bounds to demand that Hirsch hand over such information, especially without any specifics included. The whole thing smacks of using subpoenas to intimidate people.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Techdirt
31
Mar
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Advertising online has seen its ups and downs over the years, but despite Google’s having emerged as the industry leader, Yahoo impresses with its graphics-intensive ads.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
This article from a Swiss newspaper recounts the appearance of Christopher Tarnovsky at the European Black Hat conference (link is to a Google translation of the French original). Next month Tarnovsky will testify in a lawsuit brought by a maker of satellite TV encryption systems (Kudeslki) against an Israeli company (NDS), for whom Tarnovsky worked until recently. (NDS is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.) While with NDS, Tarnovsky cracked Kudeslki’s crypto, but claims he didn’t post the result on the open Net. His responses to audience questions are amusing, in particular when someone from Microsoft asks him about breaking the Xbox 360 console. Tarnovsky replies (in the translation): “I have been offered 100,000 dollars for the break, but I replied that it was not enough.”
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
It appears that Creative Labs is the latest company to shoot itself in the foot over “intellectual property” issues. Apparently, many users have been upset that Creative has failed to support certain systems, and a user in the Creative Labs’ forums started releasing drivers to make things actually work or work better. Creative struck back and has removed the various threads in their forums discussing these drivers (thanks to Joe for sending in the link). Basically, this user, Daniel_K was making Creative products work better, and Creative has forced him to stop, claiming that it’s violating their intellectual property rights. From a legal standpoint, Creative is probably absolutely right. But from a business perspective, the move seems suicidal. Just read a few of the comments in the long thread following the announcement from Creative. Many people were buying Creative products because of Daniel’s mods, and will now look elsewhere. This seems like yet another case of IP laws being used to hold back innovation, rather than encourage it.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Techdirt
31
Mar
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wtansill recommends the saga of Jeff Price, who traveled from successful small record label owner to successful Internet-era music distributor. His piece describes clearly what the major record labels used to be good for and why they are now good for nothing but getting in the way. “Allowing all music creators ‘in’ is both exciting and frightening. Some argue that we need subjective gatekeepers as filters. No matter which way you feel about it, there are a few indisputable facts — control has been taken away from the ‘four major labels’ and the traditional media outlets. We, the ‘masses,’ now have access to create, distribute, discover, promote, share and listen to any music. Hopefully access to all of this new music will inspire us, make us think and open doors and minds to new experiences we choose, not what a corporation or media outlet decides we should want.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
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Ars reviews GNOME 2.22, the latest version of the open-source desktop environment. New features include architectural improvements like PolicyKit and GVFS, new programs like Anjuta and Cheese, and new features like the international clock applet.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
ribasushi writes “The last open day at the Large Hadron Collider is one week away. While I have a solid chance to go, I am dumbstruck by the insane amount of things to see during the 10 hours of the event. Since I do not know all that much about physics, I am turning to the knowledgeable crowd here at Slashdot — what do you think are the most awesome 5 must-see things on the agenda next Sunday?”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
The RIAA has yet to file a reply to former P2P defendant Tanya Andersen’s amended complaint in her malicious prosecution lawsuit against the record industry. The labels want an extension, or better yet, a dismissal of what they call Andersen’s “verbose, confused and redundant” complaint.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Cellphone makers will be touting their latest wares at this week’s CTIA Wireless show in Las Vegas. Topping the feature lists: Enhanced operating systems and software.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
31
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Toddlers and delicate HDTVs don’t often mix well, but they can peacefully coexist in the same living room. Follow Wired’s guide to child-proofing all of your home entertainment components.


Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
A trade group for the cellular industry is backing the white space wireless broadband initiative, but with a twist. They want to see the spectrum auctioned off, which would likely result in the likes of AT&T and Verizon owning even more spectrum.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Tokimasa notes a CNet blog predicting that OOXML will make the cut. Updegrove agrees, as does the OpenMalasia blog. Reports of irregularities continue to surface, such as this one from Norway — “The meeting: 27 people in the room, 4 of which were administrative staff from Standard Norge. The outcome: Of the 24 members attending, 19 disapproved, 5 approved. The result: The administrative staff decided that Norway wants to approve OOXML as an ISO standard.” Groklaw adds reportage of odd processes in Germany and Croatia.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
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Ars sat down with Mozilla user design expert Alex Faaborg and discussed the Firefox 3 visual refresh. Among other things, he told us how Mozilla is improving platform integration in theming while defining a universal visual identity for the Firefox browser.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
The introduction of this easily mass-produced engine, like Ford’s earlier Model T, transforms the automotive industry.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Doctors are stunned by the results of a study on Vytorin that show the cholesterol drug fails to improve heart disease even though it effectively reduces three key risk factors. Leading cardiologists are urging a return to older, tried-and-true treatments for cholesterol.


Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
The completion of the human genome map five years ago set the stage for research on genetic links to disease. Now scientists are working at a rapid pace using new DNA-scanning technology to find genes linked to cancer, arthritis, diabetes and other diseases.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
MojoKid writes “Though the Asus Eee PC Windows XP variant isn’t due out until sometime in April, HotHardware was able to get their hands on a full retail bundle before they hit store shelves in the US. The standard assortment of accoutrements is included in the bundle, along with a couple of notable upgrades. Asus took the initiative to provide an additional 4GB SD card from Adata, a healthy storage expansion for the system. In addition, an Asus-branded optical mouse was thrown in for good measure. Microsoft’s Windows Live messenger, photo gallery and email suite are pre-installed on the the machine for collaborative and social networking capability, in addition to Microsoft Works for word processing, spreadsheets, and calendar functionality.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
When we see people lament the fall of newspaper and the problems in traditional media, we point to the world of tech reporting. More than ever, it’s driven by deep niches, expertise, and the wisdom of crowds. This should be a welcome future for media.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Todd Spangler writes “Comcast, like every video distributor, compresses its digital video signals. But to fit in more HDTV channels, Comcast is squeezing some signals more than others. The cable operator claims it is using improved compression techniques, so that most subscribers won’t see any drop-off in picture quality. But A/V buff Ken Fowler claims the differences between some of Comcast’s more highly compressed channels and Verizon’s FiOS TV are indeed noticeable. He’s posted his comparative test results on AVSForum.com — and the results are not pretty.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Fleeting or not, if you emboss yourself onto an Eggo waffle during a children’s TV show, you’re going to get fined by the FCC.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Ars Technica
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Jamie found a NYTimes op-ed by a grad student and a professor from Cornell, outlining some research they did into alternate baseball universes. The goal was to find out how unlikely in fact was Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak, played out in the 1941 season. No one since has even come close to that record. The math guys ran simulations of the entire history of baseball from 1885 on — 10,000 of them. For each simulation they put each player up to the plate for each at-bat in each game in each year, just like it happened; and they rolled the dice on him, based on his actual hitting stats for that season. (Their algorithm sounds far simpler than whatever the Strat-O-Matic guys use.) The result: Joltin’ Joe’s record is not merely likely, it’s basically a sure thing. Every alternate universe produced a steak of 39 games or better; one reached 109 games. Joe DiMaggio was not the likeliest player in the history of the game to accomplish the record, not by a long shot.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
An anonymous reader sends us to ZeroPaid, which seems to be the only site in English to have picked up a story out of France involving Sony and piracy. Except this time the shoe is on the other foot. The small software company PointDev learned that Sony BMG was using a pirated license for one of its system administration tools. PointDev got bailiffs to raid a Sony property and they found pirated software on four servers. The source article (link is to a Google translation of French original) quotes PointDev’s spokesman claiming that the BSA believes 47% of software used in corporations to be illegal — whether he is referring to Sony in particular is not clear in the translation.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
The New Yorker is running a long and thoughtful piece by Eric Alterman on the death and life of the American newspaper. It’s not news that newspapers are dying, but the acceleration of the process in the last few years is startling: “Independent, publicly traded American newspapers have lost forty-two per cent of their market value in the past three years… The columnist Molly Ivins complained, shortly before her death, that the newspaper companies’ solution to their problem was to make ‘our product smaller and less helpful and less interesting.’” The article goes on to profile The Huffington Post as exemplar of what is replacing paper and ink. “The Huffington Post’s editorial processes are based on what Peretti has named the ‘mullet strategy.’ (‘Business up front, party in the back’ is how his trend-spotting site BuzzFeed glosses it.) ‘User-generated content is all the rage, but most of it totally sucks,’ Peretti says. The mullet strategy invites users to ‘argue and vent on the secondary pages, but professional editors keep the front page looking sharp.
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Earlier this week, we discussed Adobe’s beta launch of Photoshop Express, a free, online version of the popular image editing software. However, as a number of readers pointed out, the terms of use included language which granted Adobe a wide range of rights to any photos that were made available on the site. Now, after receiving a great deal of feedback from potential users, Adobe has stated their intent to rewrite the terms of use, as Ars Technica reports. David Morgenstern of ZDNet also notes the impending change, and briefly discusses the privacy and ownership concerns involved with content you post online.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
LuckyLefty01 writes “I’m 21, going to college, and working part time doing odd jobs like math tutoring. In the past nine months or so, I’ve discovered and taken to programming (so far mostly C/C++/Obj-C). I am now looking seriously at something in this area as an eventual full time job. Since I don’t have much scheduled this coming summer, it would be great to try to get a job of some sort at a tech-related company in order to get some practical experience in the field. Even if I don’t have the background to get a job involving actual programming, I think that the knowledge of how such a company works would be valuable. Fortunately, I live in the SF Bay Area, so there should be plenty of companies around. I’m flexible about what I’m going to be doing, and very willing to learn just about anything anybody cares to teach me. If there’s some (or even quite a bit of) boring grunt work involved, I can do that too. What type of job would benefit an aspiring but inexperienced programmer the most? What methods might I use to find such a job?”
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Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
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French filmmaker Freres-Hueon creates an homage to the light cycle sequence in Tron, the ’82 sci-fi cult classic that follows the adventures of a computer programmer who gets digitized by a laser.



Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
alphadogg points out a story about 11-year-old Jon Penn, who took over control of a 60-computer school network in Alabama after the old administrator suddenly left. Penn provides technical support, selects software, and teaches his classmates about computers. From NetworkWorld: “The first thing Jon found as he leapt into the role of network manager was that he had to map out the network to find out what was on it. He bought some tools for this at CompUSA and realized there was an ungodly amount of computer viruses and spam, so he pressed the school to invest in filtering and antivirus protection. ‘These computers are so old they don’t support all antivirus programs,’ Penn says. The school took advantage of a Microsoft effort called Fresh Start that offers free software upgrades for schools with donated computers, switching from Windows 98 to Windows 2000.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
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People everywhere turn off the lights and use candles for at least 60 minutes starting at 8 p.m. Saturday. From the Sydney Opera House to Rome’s Colosseum to the Sears Tower’s famous antennas in Chicago, floodlit icons of civilization go dark for Earth Hour, a worldwide campaign to highlight the threat of climate change.


Originally Syndicated via RSS from Wired: Top Stories
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
bibekpaudel brings news that researchers from Cornell University have developed a very small silicon microresonator that vibrates at the highest frequency ever recorded for such a device: 4.51 GHz. Typical quartz-crystal oscillators, commonly used in electronics as clock signals, are about a millimeter wide and operate in the KHz – MHz range. The newly developed microresonator measures 8.5 micrometers long and 40 micrometers wide, making it ideal for use in smaller circuits and microprocessing. Quoting: “One of the advantages of silicon microresonators is that they can be integrated directly into microchips using conventional manufacturing techniques, making them cheaper to produce and easier to fabricate small. Also, multiple resonators of different frequencies could be put on the same chip, says Ville Kaajakari, an assistant professor of electrical engineering at Louisiana Tech University. In a cell phone, for example, high-frequency resonators could filter out interference from other sources of radio signals.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
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simoniker writes “Over at Dr. Dobb’s, C++ creator Bjarne Stroustrup has given an in-depth interview dealing with, among other things, the upcoming C++0x programming standard, as well as his views on the past and future of C++. He comments in particular on some of the difficulties in educating people on C++: ‘In the early days of C++, I worried a lot about “not being able to teach teachers fast enough.” I had reason to worry because much of the obvious poor use of C++ can be traced to fundamental misunderstandings among educators. I obviously failed to articulate my ideals and principles sufficiently.’ Stroustrup also notes, ‘Given that the problems are not restricted to C++, I’m not alone in that. As far as I can see, every large programming community suffers, so the problem is one of scale.’ We’ve discussed Stroustrup’s views on C++ in the past.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
wattrlz points out a NYTimes piece on the clout China could soon wield on antitrust matters and the impact it could have on Microsoft’s Yahoo bid. A new Chinese anti-monopoly law takes effect in August that will extend the nation’s economic influence far beyond its borders. Nathan Bush, an antitrust law specialist in Beijing, said the law represents the ascendance of China “as another regulatory capital contending for influence with Brussels and Washington.” The article makes it clear that no one knows how China will play its burgeoning antitrust influence — conciliatory or nationalistic.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
seattle-pk writes “Males are apparently clueless when it comes to interpreting sexual intent from females, according to a recent study (PDF) from Indiana University’s Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences. Men were found commonly to perceive more sexual intent in women’s behavior than women were intending to convey. (A campus survey showed that 68% of college females had an experience where a male mistook signs of friendliness for affection.) However, the study also shows that men were quite likely to misperceive sexual interest as friendliness. ‘Rather than seeing the world through sex-colored glasses, men seemed just to have blurry vision of sorts, overall,’ according to the article. If you’re a male who ever mistook the meaning of a barista’s smile, looks like you’re not alone.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Stanislav_J writes “All you wealthy Slashdotters better start making alternate arrangements for stashing your millions. Switzerland’s storied role as discreet banker to the world’s tax-avoiding wealthy is under threat like never before, and this time the country ultimately may not be able to stop the rest of the world from prying into those legendary ‘secret’ accounts, said to contain between $1 trillion and $2 trillion. A massive German tax-evasion scandal is putting pressure on the Swiss to cooperate, and the rest of Europe is also hardening their resolve to force change upon them. Per the article, ‘The official Swiss reaction has been self-conscious detachment, which they hope will deflate the issue,’ but even their own citizens are not too concerned about those outside their borders: 80% of Swiss support the banking confidentiality law, but that number drops into the 40s when it is applied to foreigners. Pressure is also coming from US pols — not the ‘let’s pry into everyone’s business’ Republicans, but the ‘make the rich pay their fair share’ Democrats, including Illinois Senator (and presidential candidate) Barack Obama.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
30
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
call-me-kenneth writes “Business Week covers the soaring demand for power and cooling capacity in data centers. Electricity consumption for US data centerers more than doubled between 2000 and 2006. Among the other stats: for every dollar spent on computing equipment in data centers, an additional half dollar is spent each year to power and cool them; and half the electricity used goes for cooling. Iceland, with its cool climate and abundant cheap power, is courting big users like Google and Microsoft as a future data center location. (Can’t help thinking they’re gonna need a bigger cable first, though.)”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
29
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
Lawrence Person writes “According to a story up on Writer’s Weekly, Print on Demand publishers are being told to use Amazon’s own BookSurge POD printer or else Amazon will disable the ‘buy’ button for their books. After hemming and hawing, an Amazon/BookSurge rep ‘finally admitted that books not converted to BookSurge would have the “buy” button turned off on Amazon.com, just as we’d heard from several other POD publishers who had similar conversations with Amazon/BookSurge representatives… their eventual desire is to have no books from other POD publishers available on Amazon.com.’ So much for Amazon’s Vision Statement: ‘Our vision is to be earth’s most customer centric company; to build a place where people can come to find and discover anything they might want to buy online.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
29
Mar
Filed under Uncategorized
An anonymous reader sends word that, even as ISP interference with BitTorrent traffic is easing in the US, the issue is heating up in Canada. Major Canadian ISPs are limiting access to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s shows, made available online using BitTorrent. This issue has burst onto the scene due to smaller ISPs, such as Teksavvy, blowing the whistle on the fact that Bell was expanding its traffic-shaping policies to smaller ISPs that rent Bell’s network. These events have sparked a formal complaint by the National Union of Public and General Employees, which represents more than 340,000 workers across Canada, to the regulatory body, CRTC, and calls for change in Parliament.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
29
Mar
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Joe Mullin writes “We’ve discussed Troll Tracker here before — the anonymous blogger who was outed last month as Rick Frenkel, a Cisco lawyer. Since then, two lawyers from the notoriously patent-friendly Eastern District of Texas have filed defamation suits against Frenkel and Cisco, and Frenkel’s blog has been shuttered. One of the plaintiffs, a renowned patent judge’s son, may have been hunting the anonymous blogger for months. This week Cisco announced new blogging guidelines in response to the Troll Tracker fiasco. The company acknowledged that ‘a few Cisco employees used poor judgment’ during secret-blog-time, but they’re largely standing by their man. Cisco’s new rules will prohibit only anonymous blogging by employees about issues for which ‘they have responsibilities at Cisco.’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
29
Mar
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An anonymous reader tips us to a story up at Wired reporting on what may be the first computer attack to inflict physical harm on victims. Last Saturday, griefers posted hundreds of bogus messages on the support forums of the nonprofit Epilepsy Foundation that used JavaScript and strobing GIFs to trigger migraines and seizures in users. For about 3% of the 50 million epileptics worldwide, flashing lights and colors can trigger seizures. “‘I don’t fall over and convulse, but it hurts,’ says [an IT worker in Ohio]. ‘I was on the phone when it happened, and I couldn’t move and couldn’t speak.’ … Circumstantial evidence suggests the attack was the work of members of Anonymous, an informal collective of griefers best known for their recent war on the Church of Scientology. The first flurry of posts on the epilepsy forum referenced the site EBaumsWorld, which is much hated by Anonymous. And forum members claim they found a message board thread — since deleted — planning the attack at 7chan.org, a group stronghold.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot
29
Mar
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A number of readers let us know about the German Chaos Computer Club’s latest caper: they published the fingerprint of German Secretary of the Interior Wolfgang Schäuble (link is to a Google translation of the German original). The club has been active in opposition to Germany’s increasing push to use biometrics in, for example, e-passports. Someone friendly to the club’s aims captured Schäuble’s fingerprint from a glass he drank from at a panel discussion. The club published 4,000 copies of their magazine Die Datenschleuder including a plastic foil reproducing the minister’s fingerprint — ready to glue to someone else’s finger to provide a false biometric reading. The CCC has a page on their site detailing how to make such a fake fingerprint. The article says a ministry spokesman alluded to possible legal action against the club.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Originally Syndicated via RSS from Slashdot