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  Uproar Over Netflix's New Instant Viewer on Sunday March 01, @08:14PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @08:14PM
from the one-way-beta dept.
Movies
almechist writes "Many Netflix customers are up in arms over the new instant-watch player powered by Microsoft's Silverlight. The official Netflix blog is full of complaints from users who decry not only the new player's quality but also the way it's being distributed, with many claiming they were deceived into downloading it. Once you opt for the new player, the old Windows Media based player won't function, not on any computer associated with the account. The new player is supposedly still beta, but NF members are strongly encouraged (some say tricked) by NF into the so-called 'upgrade,' which is permanent — there is no way to opt out. The marked decrease in video quality seen by those who have switched is perhaps not surprising, since the old player could utilize bit streams up to twice as fast as the new one, but this information is nowhere given out by NF. So far NF has been answering all complaints with variations on 'tough luck pal, you're stuck with it,' but many customers are so disgusted they're ready to cancel their NF membership. This could be a public relations disaster in the making for Netflix."
tv movies moonlight netflix silverlight
movies
story
Read More... 182 comments
Comments: 182
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  Your Rights Online: Analyzing Microsoft's Linux Lawsuit on Sunday March 01, @06:05PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @06:05PM
from the does-this-suit-make-my-filesystem-look-fat dept.
Patents
jammag writes "Open source advocate Bruce Perens takes a close look at Microsoft's lawsuit against TomTom (discussed here last week), which involves an implementation of the Linux kernel, and calls it essentially a paper tiger. He notes: 'the technologies claimed in the 8 patents involved are so old and obvious that it's fair to say they have a high "Duh!" factor. There's an anti-trust angle to this suit that could blow up in Microsoft's face. And there's a high probability that some or all of the patents involved are invalid, due to recent court decisions.' Although the legal expense for TomTom to defend itself in court could be astronomical — meaning they may be forced to settle — in Perens' view Microsoft is aware its case is weak, yet hopes for a PR victory at limited cost." And reader nerdyH adds speculation from Open Innovation Network CEO Keith Bergelt that Redmond's action could be retaliation for TomTom's spurning a Microsoft acquisition bid in 2006.
court patents microsoft
yro patents
story
Read More... 122 comments
Comments: 122
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  Science: Small Asteroid To Buzz Earth on Sunday March 01, @04:55PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @04:55PM
from the just-a-flesh-wound dept.
Space
ddelmonte writes in to tell us about a small near-earth object, discovered just 2 days ago, that is expected to pass within 64,000 km of our planet on March 2, 13:44 UT. NEO 2009 DD45 will be well inside the Moon's orbit and just under twice the altitude of geosynchronous satellites. According to Sky and Telescope, 2009 DD45's closest approach will be over the Pacific west of Tahiti, so observers in Australia, Japan, and perhaps Hawaii will have the best chance of spotting it with, say, an 8-in. telescope. Here's where you can generate an ephemeris of the object for your location. At closest approach NEO 2009 DD45 will be moving half a degree per minute and peaking around magnitude 10.5. It will be brighter than 13th magnitude for only a few hours.
science space ephemeris hotfudgemonday nomoon
science space
story
Read More... 80 comments
Comments: 80
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  Volt Asks Temps To 'Vote" For Microsoft Pay Cut on Sunday March 01, @03:47PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @03:47PM
from the one-contractor-one-vote dept.
Microsoft
theodp writes "In an email sent Friday evening to its Microsoft temp workers, Volt Workforce Solutions asked the techies to 'vote' to agree to a 10% pay cut. From the email: 'We want to support you in continuing your assignment at Microsoft and respectfully ask that you respond by going to the upper left hand corner of this email under the "Vote" response option and select, "Accept'" by close of business Tuesday, March 3, 2009. By accepting you agree to the [-10%] pay adjustment in your pay rate.' Microsoft managed to keep the Feb. 20 email detailing plans to slash rates from leaking while it pitched its Elevate America initiative at the 2009 Winter Meeting of the National Governors Association, touting Microsoft skills as just the ticket to economic recovery."
microsoft business goodluckwiththat
microsoft
story
Read More... 223 comments
Comments: 223
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  Hardware: Solar Panels Reach $1 a Watt on Sunday March 01, @02:38PM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @02:38PM
from the seeking-parity dept.
Power
ZosX writes "An article over at Popular Mechanics announces that, for the first time, solar cells have been manufactured for the much sought-after figure of $1/Watt. They also talk about a new study of the cost of the particular raw materials used in different manufacturing processes. The conclusion is that the company that just achieved the $1/W milestone, using cadmium telluride technology, may not prove to be the long-term winner capable of meeting demand when it rises into the terawatt range."
money power terabuck bucket arbitrary
hardware power
story
Read More... 267 comments
Comments: 267
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  News: RIAA Sued For Fraud, Abuse, & "Sham Litigation" on Sunday March 01, @01:27PM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @01:27PM
from the chickens-coming-home-to-roost dept.
The Courts
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "It's been a rough week for the RIAA as massive layoffs are about to cost many employees their job. On top of that, the anti-piracy outfit is being sued in North Carolina for abusing the legal system in its war on piracy, particularly for civil conspiracy, deceptive trade practices, trespassing and computer fraud in SONY BMG Music Entertainment v. Moursy. Named along with the record companies as defendants on the counterclaims are Safenet (formerly known as MediaSentry) and the RIAA. This case first started out as 'LaFace Records v. Does 1-38' until the court required the RIAA to break it up into 38 separate cases, at which point it morphed into 'SONY BMG Music Entertainment v. Doe.' Only after the RIAA finally got its 'expedited' discovery did it become SONY v. Moursy. And from the looks of things, it has a long, long way to go. The RIAA hasn't even filed its answer to the counterclaims yet, but is making a motion to dismiss them on the grounds of legal insufficiency. Sound like a good investment of record company resources, anyone?"
court riaa awesome mafiaa abouttime
news court
story
Read More... 122 comments
Comments: 122
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  Games: Creating 3D Environments Without Polygons on Sunday March 01, @12:51PM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @12:51PM
from the too-cool-for-geometry dept.
Graphics
Igor Hardy writes "I've conducted an interesting interview concerning a new episodic indie adventure game series called Casebook. What's quite uncommon, especially for these kinds of independently developed and published productions, is that they include professionally created FMV — all of the footage is filmed in real locations. Yet what's even more interesting is that the games use an innovative photographic technology which recreates a fully explorable 3D environment through the use of millions of photos instead of building from polygons. The specifics of how it works are explained by Sam Clarkson, the creative director of the series."
graphics games myst
games graphics
story
Read More... 57 comments
Comments: 57
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  News: Hearst To Launch E-Reader For Newspapers on Sunday March 01, @12:21PM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @12:21PM
from the years-too-late dept.
The Media
thefickler writes "The credit crisis couldn't have come at a worse time for newspapers, which were already suffering at the hands of the Internet. Now it seems that the Hearst Corporation is planning to launch an e-reader later this year to try to save its dwindling newspaper readerships. Apparently the e-reader will have a bigger screen than the Kindle, helping it to accommodate ads. It's not clear whether Hearst will go it alone, or try to gather wider industry support for its venture. As one pundit observed, 'it seems a slender thread on which to hang the entire American newspaper industry.'"
media technology rosebud defectivebydesign !justletitdie
news media
story
Read More... 109 comments
Comments: 109
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  Games: Sony Makes It Hard To Develop For the PS3 On Purpose on Sunday March 01, @11:19AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @11:19AM
from the how's-that-working-out-for-you dept.
PlayStation (Games)
adeelarshad82 writes "CNet reports on a bizarre comment from Sony's Computer Entertainment CEO in response to complaints from developers on how hard it is to develop games for the Playstation 3. 'We don't provide the "easy to program for" console that (developers) want, because "easy to program for" means that anybody will be able to take advantage of pretty much what the hardware can do, so then the question is, what do you do for the rest of the nine-and-a-half years?' Given that games heavily drive console sales, and the fact that the PS3 is already 8 million units behind the Xbox 360, I think making a developer's job harder is the last thing Sony needs."
playstation games sony ps3
games playstation
story
Read More... 349 comments
Comments: 349
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  Apple: Japanese "Hate" For the iPhone All a Big Mistake on Sunday March 01, @10:16AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @10:16AM
from the downloading-the-ifud-app dept.
Cellphones
MBCook writes "AppleInsider has posted a great article explaining that Wired's story about Japanese iPhone hate was completely false and has been edited at least twice. The comments in the article were recycled and taken out of context, with those interviewed blogging about the mistakes. The piece then goes on to analyze the iPhone's standing in Japan, as well as some of the major factors working for and against it. At last it points out that the Wall Street Journal tried the same myth of failure just after the phone's launch in Japan, recycled from a myth the year before, pushed by a research company with a possible anti-Apple agenda."
media apple iphone ballmer cellphones
apple cellphones
story
Read More... 257 comments
Comments: 257
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  Technology: Obama Helicopter Security Breached By File Sharing on Sunday March 01, @09:14AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @09:14AM
from the we're-getting-lazy-without-a-cold-war dept.
The Military
Hugh Pickens writes "A company that monitors peer-to-peer file-sharing networks has discovered a potentially serious security breach involving President Barack Obama's helicopter. 'We found a file containing entire blueprints and avionics package for Marine One, which is the president's helicopter,' says Bob Boback, CEO of Tiversa, a security company that specializes in peer-to-peer technology. Tiversa was able to track the file, discovered at an IP address in Tehran, Iran, back to its original source. 'What appears to be a defense contractor in Bethesda, Md., had a file-sharing program on one of their systems that also contained highly sensitive blueprints for Marine One,' says Boback, adding that someone from the company most likely downloaded a file-sharing program, typically used to exchange music, without realizing the potential problems. 'I'm sure that person is embarrassed and may even lose their job, but we know where it came from and we know where it went.' Iran is not the only country that appears to be accessing this type of information through file-sharing programs. 'We've noticed it out of Pakistan, Yemen, Qatar and China. They are actively searching for information that is disclosed in this fashion because it is a great source of intelligence.'"
security military p2p internet government
tech military
story
Read More... 321 comments
Comments: 321
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  News: RIAA, Stop Suing Tech Investors! on Sunday March 01, @08:15AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @08:15AM
from the stifling-innovation-in-the-crib dept.
The Courts
The RIAA isn't just suing tens of thousands of music consumers; they've also begun filing lawsuits naming the directors of and investors in tech companies that they believe contribute to copyright infringement. NewYorkCountryLawyer writes: "ZDNet urges the big recording industries to stop suing tech investors, and cites the draft legislation that I posted, which would immunize from secondary copyright infringement liability any work done by a director in 'his or her capacity as a member of the board of directors or committee thereof,' and any conduct by an investor based solely upon his or her having 'invested in any such corporation, including any oversight, monitoring, or due diligence activities in connection therewith.'"
court riaa nycl killinginnovation mafiaa
news court
story
Read More... 86 comments
Comments: 86
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  Games: Economic Climate Spurring Independent Game Success on Sunday March 01, @06:50AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @06:50AM
from the all-about-the-benjamins dept.
The Almighty Buck
Eurogamer is running an opinion piece suggesting that innovation and creativity have been on the decline for years within the games industry. Now, with the threat of the economic crisis looming, game publishers are shying further from new projects and ideas, instead choosing to rehash popular IP in order to minimize the risk of failure. The upside is that their reluctance, along with technological improvements that make game distribution easier, is allowing independent developers to gain exposure like never before. "This revolution will give us a new wave of developers who see games through very different eyes to those of their studio-bound compatriots. Forced to consider the financial bottom line, the technological bleeding edge and the whims of Metacritic at each turn, big studio development is by no means uncreative, but certainly has to follow certain set patterns. ... The studio system couldn't have created a game like Flower, the utterly beautiful PSN title which came out earlier this month; but more than that, it couldn't have created a persona like Jenova Chen, the mind behind Flower, who happily talks in interviews about evoking emotions, moving past primal feelings and 'maturing' the industry in ways that don't involve sex, blood and swearing. He talks about making games that don't empower gamers, but instead make them experience other things, other emotions. It's spine-tingling stuff. It's also commercial suicide — or would be, to a studio working in the traditional development context."
money games indie
games money
story
Read More... 30 comments
Comments: 30
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  Hardware: A New Way To Produce Hydrogen on Sunday March 01, @05:20AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @05:20AM
from the doctor-clark-i-presume dept.
Power
Iddo Genuth writes "Scientists at Pennsylvania State University and Virginia Commonwealth University are producing hydrogen by exposing clusters of aluminum atoms to water. Rather than relying on the electronic properties of the aluminum, this new process depends on the geometric distribution of atoms within the clusters. It requires the presence of 'Lewis acids' and 'Lewis bases' in those atoms (water can act as either). Unlike most hydrogen production processes, this method can be used at room temperature and doesn't require the application of heat or electricity to work. The researchers experimented with a variety of different aluminum cluster patterns, discovering three that result in hydrogen production."
science power pullmyfinger hardware aluminium
hardware power
story
Read More... 162 comments
Comments: 162
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  Games: Making a Horror Game Scary on Sunday March 01, @03:45AM

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday March 01, @03:45AM
from the zombies-and-darkness dept.
Games
GameSetWatch has put up an article about the characteristics that give games in the survival-horror genre the ability to unnerve, startle, and scare players in ways that most games don't. The genre has seen a resurgence lately, with titles like Dead Space, F.E.A.R. 2, and Left 4 Dead posting strong sales numbers. What triggers your fight-or-flight impulses in games like these? From the article: "Being visual creatures, humans are most comforted by sight because of our ability to discern objects, action and consequences based on a picture. As a result, cutting visual stimuli and sticking purely to audio or speech is one of the best ways to keep a player on their toes. Even with weapons, it's very hard to find what you cannot see, and what you do not know. Even if visual stimuli is used, limiting or obfuscating the player's view can enhance the horror in a game, especially if the player sees it for an incredible short time. This can hint both at the difficulty of an upcoming encounter, or even allude to matters earlier in the narrative that the player will soon have to face."
games
games games
story
Read More... 95 comments
Comments: 95
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  Your Rights Online: French President Busted For Copyright Violation on Sunday March 01, @02:23AM

Posted by kdawson on Sunday March 01, @02:23AM
from the do-as-i-say dept.
Music
An anonymous reader writes "ZeroPaid has an interesting take on the story of Nicolas Sarkozy being accused of copyright infringement. The irony, of course, is Sarkozy's pushing of a 3-strikes law — disconnecting from the Internet those accused of file sharing — in France and across the EU. The French president had apparently offered to settle the copyright infringement accusation for one Euro, but the band rejected the offer, calling it an insult. The article notes that each year since 2006, a high-profile anti-piracy entity has been on the wrong end of a copyright infringement notice. In 2008, Sony BMG was sued for software piracy. In 2007, anti-piracy outfit BASCAP received a cease and desist order related to pirated software. And in 2006, the MPAA was accused of pirating 'This Film is Not Yet Rated'."
music
yro music
story
Read More... 235 comments
Comments: 235
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  News: Spectrum Fees May Preclude US Low-Cost Cellular on Saturday February 28, @11:29PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @11:29PM
from the no-free-lunch-or-breakfast-or-even-tea dept.
Cellphones
theodp writes "Not to apologize for an industry that charges $27,000 to catch a Chicago Bears game, but will the huge spectrum fees charged by the government block the emergence of low-cost cellular service? In the most recent FCC spectrum auction, carriers paid nearly $20 billion to grab a swath of the 700MHz spectrum. And now under President Obama's proposed budget, wireless carriers would be hit with huge annual fees — eventually reaching $550 million per carrier per year — for the right to hold a spectrum license. Critics say the carriers will simply pass these fees through to consumers."
money government usa cellphones obama
news cellphones
story
Read More... 232 comments
Comments: 232
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  Hardware: Testing Lenovo's ThinkPad W700ds Dual-Screen Notebook on Saturday February 28, @09:25PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @09:25PM
from the laptop-envy dept.
Portables
MojoKid writes "Lenovo's ThinkPad W700 is a unique product, targeted squarely at mobile professionals who require the power, features, and performance of workstation-class product in a notebook. The machine has a few stand-out integrated features, like a Wacom Digitizer Tablet and X-Rite Color Calibrator. In addition, the ThinkPad W700ds version and adds a secondary, slide-out 10.6" WXGA+ display, which increases monitor real-estate by 39% spanning across its two panels. HotHardware's video demonstrates the machine's arsenal of toys for the graphics pro, in a somewhat portable desktop replacement notebook."
portables supercomputing
hardware portables
story
Read More... 180 comments
Comments: 180
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  News: Is Climate Change Affecting Bushfires? on Saturday February 28, @07:22PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @07:22PM
from the burning-question dept.
Earth
TapeCutter writes "After the devastating firestorm in Australia, there has been a lot of speculation in the press about the role of climate change. For the 'pro' argument the BBC article points to research by the CSIRO. For the 'con' argument they quote David Packham of Monash university, who is not alone in thinking '...excluding prescribed burning and fuel management has led to the highest fuel concentrations we have ever had...' However, the DSE's 2008 annual report states; '[The DSE] achieved a planned burning program of more than 156,000 hectares, the best result for more than a decade. The planned burning of forest undergrowth is by far the most powerful management tool available...' I drove through Kilmore on the evening of the firestorm, and in my 50 years of living with fire I have never seen a smoke plume anything like it. It was reported to be 15 km high and creating its own lightning. There were also reports of car windscreens and engine blocks melting. So what was it that made such an unusual firestorm possible, and will it happen again?"
globalwarming
news earth
story
Read More... 327 comments
Comments: 327
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  Hardware: Contest For a Better Open-WRT Wireless Router GUI on Saturday February 28, @05:19PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @05:19PM
from the doing-well-by-doing-good dept.
Wireless Networking
Reader RoundSparrow sends word of a contest, with big cash prizes, being mounted by a commercial vender of open source Open-WRT routers. You have 10 months to come up with "the most impressive User Interface/Firmware for Ubiquiti's newly released open-source embedded wireless platform, the RouterStation." Entries are required to have open source licensing and will all be released. First prize is $160,000, with four runners-up receiving $10,000. RoundSparrow adds: "Could be built on top of existing X-WRT or LuCI OpenWRT web interfaces. OpenWRT Kamikaze 8.09 was just released. Now is perfect timing for OpenWRT to get some kick-ass interface and usability ideas. I'm not affiliated with the contest vendor."
linux money wireless
hardware wireless
story
Read More... 189 comments
Comments: 189
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  News: Scientists Build an Ark To Save Jungle Amphibians on Saturday February 28, @04:18PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @04:18PM
from the forty-cubits dept.
Earth
Peace Corps Online writes "In the 1980s a deadly fungus called chytrid appeared in Central America and began moving through mountain streams, killing as many as 8 out of 10 frogs and extinguishing some species entirely. (The fungus has little effect on any other vertebrates.) Now a returned Peace Corps volunteer and her husband have opened the El Valle Amphibian Conservation Center in western Panama to house more than 600 frogs as chytrid cuts a lethal path through the region. Experts agree that the only hope of saving some of the more endangered, restricted-range species is to collect animals from remaining wild populations, establish captive breeding programs, and be prepared to conduct reintroduction projects in the future. But before reintroduction can even begin, scientists must find some way to overcome the chytrid in native habitats using vaccines, breeding for resistance, or genetic engineering of the fungus. Conservationists are budgeting for 25 years of captive breeding, long enough, they believe, to allow some response to chytrid to be found. 'There are more species in need of rescue than there are resources to rescue them,' says Amphibian Ark's program director. 'When you're talking about insidious threats like disease or climate change, threats that can't be mitigated in the wild, there's simply no alternative.'"
science earth !boat
news earth
story
Read More... 124 comments
Comments: 124
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  Your Rights Online: The CDA Is Dead, But States Are Trying To Revive It on Saturday February 28, @03:18PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @03:18PM
from the free-speech-vs.-anonymity dept.
Privacy
oliphaunt writes "This week at The Legality, Tracy Frazier has an article discussing the damage that can be done by anonymous online comments. While regulars here are familiar with infamous bits of Net censorship like the Fishman Affidavit fiasco, and everyone has been an anonymous coward at least once or twice, some of you may not know about the conflict between Heide Iravani and AutoAdmit.com. Heide eventually filed a lawsuit because the first result for a Google search on her name brought up anonymous comments on AutoAdmit that accused her of carrying an STD and sleeping her way to the top of her class. The Communications Decency Act was supposed to prevent this kind of thing, but an injunction prevented it from ever being enforced and eventually the Supreme Court killed it. Should the law be changed?" The article links to a proposal from last summer in the New Jersey legislature that would institute a DMCA-like takedown regime for allegedly defamatory content posted on a Web site, and would allow aggrieved parties to demand the identity of anonymous posters without a subpoena. No indication of how that proposal fared. Also linked is a recent North Carolina proposal that would criminalize the act of defaming someone using an electronic medium. This proposal shields Web sites from liability and explicitly does not apply to anonymous speech.
usa internet privacy streisandeffect
yro privacy
story
Read More... 196 comments
Comments: 196
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  IT: Visa Says No New Processor Breach After All on Saturday February 28, @02:17PM

Posted by kdawson on Saturday February 28, @02:17PM
from the yeah-sure dept.
Security
Buzz has been building for the last week about what might be a new data breach at a credit-card processor. No, not Heartland, a different one. Now Computerworld is reporting that Visa claims there was no new breach. Whom to believe? "In actuality, Visa said in a statement issued today, alerts that it recently sent to banks and credit unions warning them about a compromise at a payment processor were related to the ongoing investigation of a previously known breach. However, Visa still didn't disclose the identity of the breached company, nor did it say why it is continuing to keep the name under wraps."
security business ibelieve !vista !cpu
it security
story
Read More... 38 comments
Comments: 38
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  Technology: Canadian ISPs Speak Out Against Net Neutrality on Saturday February 28, @01:16PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @01:16PM
from the you-can-trust-us,-eh dept.
The Internet
Ars Technica reports on a proceeding being held by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission regarding net neutrality. They requested comments from the public as part of the debate, and several Canadian ISPs took the opportunity to explain why they think it's a bad idea. Quoting: "One of the more interesting responses came from an ISP called Videotron, which told the CRTC that controlling access to content ... 'could be beneficial not only to users of Internet services but to society in general.' As examples of such benefits, Videotron mentioned the control of spam, viruses, and child pornography. It went on to suggest that graduated response rules — kicking users off the 'Net after several accusations of copyright infringement — could also be included as a benefit to society in general. ... Rogers, one of Canada's big ISPs, also chimed in and explained that new regulations might limit its ability to throttle P2P uploads, which it does at the moment. 'P2P file sharing is designed to cause network congestion,' says the company. 'It contributes significantly to latency, thereby making the network unreliable for certain users at periods of such congestion.'"
netneutrality internet canada networking blamecanada
tech internet
story
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Comments: 207
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  Technology: Windows Server 2008 One Year On — Hit Or Miss? on Saturday February 28, @12:19PM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @12:19PM
from the depends-what-you're-aiming-at dept.
Microsoft
magacious writes "Friday marked a year to the day since Microsoft launched Windows Server 2008, but did it have quite the impact the so-called software giant expected, or did it make more of a little squeak than a big bang? Before its arrival on 27 February 2008, it had been five long years since the release of the last major version of Windows Server. In a world that was moving on from simple client/server applications, and with server clouds on the horizon, Windows Server 2003 was looking long in the tooth. After a year of 'Vista' bashing, Microsoft needed its server project to be well received, just to relieve some pressure. After all, this time last year, the panacea of a well-received Windows 7 was still a long way off. So came the new approach: Windows Server 2008."
microsoft windows
tech microsoft
story
Read More... 350 comments
Comments: 350
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  News: RIAA Santangelo Case 'Settled In Principle' on Saturday February 28, @11:17AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @11:17AM
from the mum's-the-word dept.
The Courts
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The RIAA's long-running war against Patti Santangelo, her children, and even her children's schoolmates has been 'settled in principle,' with final settlement documents expected to be submitted by March 18th. Patti Santangelo is believed to be the first RIAA defendant to have made a motion to dismiss the RIAA's 'making available' complaint. The case first caught the attention of the Slashdot community back in 2005, when a transcript of Ms. Santangelo's first court appearance became available online. The case attracted national attention in December of 2005. According to the Associated Press report of the settlement, neither side was able to comment on the terms of the settlement."
court internet music riaa nycl
news court
story
Read More... 93 comments
Comments: 93
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  IT: Facebook Vs. Spammers, Round Two on Saturday February 28, @10:15AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @10:15AM
from the round-one-went-well-enough dept.
Spam
An anonymous reader writes "Three months after being awarded $873 million in a lawsuit against Atlantis Blue Capital for violating the CAN-SPAM Act of 2003, Facebook earlier this week filed a federal complaint against 'Spam King' Sanford Wallace in San Jose District Court. Las Vegas night club manager Adam Arzoomanian and Scott Shaw are also named as defendants in the suit." These filings do not mark the first time Wallace has faced legal action; last May, MySpace won a $230 million judgment against him.
spam social spamford evilvsevil !it
it spam
story
Read More... 55 comments
Comments: 55
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  Your Rights Online: Accessing Medical Files Over P2P Networks on Saturday February 28, @09:18AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @09:18AM
from the doctor-patient-entire-internet-confidentiality dept.
Privacy
Gov IT writes with this excerpt from NextGov: "Just days after President Obama signed a law giving billions of dollars to develop electronic health records, a university technology professor submitted a paper showing that he was able to uncover tens of thousands of medical files containing names, addresses and Social Security numbers for patients seeking treatment for conditions ranging from AIDS to mental health problems. ... The basic technology that runs peer-to-peer networks inadvertently exposed the files probably without the computer user's knowledge, Johnson said. A health care worker might have loaded patient files onto a laptop, for example, and taken it home where a son or daughter could have downloaded a peer-to-peer client onto the laptop to share music."
security internet government privacy fail
yro privacy
story
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Comments: 128
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  Your Rights Online: Amazon Caves On Kindle 2 Text-To-Speech on Saturday February 28, @08:16AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @08:16AM
from the unexpectedly-generous dept.
Books
On Wednesday we discussed news that the Authors Guild had objected to the text-to-speech function on Amazon's Kindle 2, claiming that it infringed on audio book copyright. Today, Amazon said that while the feature is legally sound, they would be willing to disable text-to-speech on a title-by-title basis at the rightsholder's request. "We have already begun to work on the technical changes required to give authors and publishers that choice. With this new level of control, publishers and authors will be able to decide for themselves whether it is in their commercial interests to leave text-to-speech enabled. We believe many will decide that it is."
technology books defectivebydesign yro !rights
yro books
story
Read More... 363 comments
Comments: 363
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  Science: Exoplanet Found In Old Hubble Image on Saturday February 28, @05:14AM

Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 28, @05:14AM
from the old-but-new dept.
NASA
Kristina at Science News writes "A new way to process images reveals an extrasolar planet that had been hiding in an 11-year-old Hubble picture. After ground-based telescopes found three planets orbiting the young star HR 8799, a team took that information and reprocessed some 11-year-old Hubble Space Telescope images. Voila. There was one of the three planets, captured by Hubble but not visible until new knowledge could see the picture in a fresh light. The technique could reveal hidden treasures in many archived telescope images." For reference, the first exoplanet to be (knowingly) directly imaged was 2M1207_b in late 2004.
space nasa science exoplanet hubble
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