Feb 28 2009

Visa Says No New Processor Breach After All

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.”

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Feb 28 2009

Canadian ISPs Speak Out Against Net Neutrality

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.'”

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Feb 28 2009

Could DoubleTwist Be the Best Mac Media Player?

DoubleTwist is a new, open source, universal media manager in beta for the Mac. It gathers music, videos and photos, supports tons of devices and has a P2P/social networking component. Will it be great?

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Feb 28 2009

Innovation: How social networking might change the world

Can the Web 2. 0 community come up with applications that change people’s lives for the better? Yes, it can, experts say.

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Feb 28 2009

Old School Yakuza Feeling the Heat from Gangster-Nerds

The Yakuza—Japan’s organised-crime groups that date from the 17th century—are getting squeezed. The floundering economy has eaten into revenue from traditional activities that required muscle, such as gambling, prostitution & loan-sharking. To compensate the groups have ploughed into cybercrime giving rise to a new generation of gangster-nerds.

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Feb 28 2009

Windows Server 2008 One Year On — Hit Or Miss?

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.”

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Feb 28 2009

RIAA Santangelo Case ‘Settled In Principle’

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.”

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Feb 28 2009

Facebook Vs. Spammers, Round Two

An anonymous reader writes “Three months after being awarded 3 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 0 million judgment against him.

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Feb 28 2009

Accessing Medical Files Over P2P Networks

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.”

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Feb 28 2009

MacBook Air hinge defect not covered by Apple’s warranty?

They suggest you just buy a new one instead!

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