Mar 3 2009

The Finns Who Invented the Graphical Browser

waderoush writes “If you thought Mosaic was the first graphical Web browser, think again. In their first major interview, three of the four Finnish software engineers behind Erwise — a point-and-click graphical Web browser for the X Window system — describe the creation of their program in 1991-1992, a full year before Marc Andreessen’s Mosaic (which, of course, evolved into Netscape). Kim Nyberg, Kari Sydänmaanlakka, and Teemu Rantanen, with their fellow Helsinki University of Technology student Kati Borgers (nee Suominen), gave Erwise features such as text searching and the ability to load multiple Web pages that wouldn’t be seen in other browsers until much later. The three engineers, who today work for the architectural software firm Tekla, say they never commercialized the project because there was no financing — Finland was in a deep recession at the time and lacked a strong venture capital or angel investing market. Otherwise, the Web revolution might have begun a year earlier.”

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Mar 3 2009

Diebold Election Audit Logs Defective

mtrachtenberg writes “Premier Election Solutions’ (formerly Diebold) GEMS 1.18.19 election software audit logs don’t record the deletion of ballots, don’t always record correct dates, and can be deleted by the operator, either accidentally or intentionally. The California Secretary of State’s office has just released a report about the situation (PDF) in the November 2008 election in Humboldt County, California (which we discussed at the time). Here’s the California Secretary of State’s links page on Diebold. The conclusion of the 13-page report reads: ‘GEMS version 1.18.19 contains a serious software error that caused the omission of 197 ballots from the official results (which was subsequently corrected) in the November 4, 2008, General Election in Humboldt County. The potential for this error to corrupt election results is confined to jurisdictions that tally ballots using the GEMS Central Count Server. Key audit trail logs in GEMS version 1.18.19 do not record important operator interventions such as deletion of decks of ballots, assign inaccurate date and time stamps to events that are recorded, and can be deleted by the operator. The number of votes erroneously deleted from the election results reported by GEMS in this case greatly exceeds the maximum allowable error rate established by HAVA. In addition, each of the foregoing defects appears to violate the 1990 Voting System Standards to an extent that would have warranted failure of the GEMS version 1.18.19 system had they been detected and reported by the Independent Testing Authority that tested the system.'”

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Mar 3 2009

First Touch-Screen, Bendable E-Paper Developed

Al writes “The first touch-screen flexible e-paper has been developed by a team from Arizona State University and E-Ink (the company that makes the technology for Amazon’s Kindle and Sony’s Reader). Jann Kaminski and colleagues at ASU’s Flexible Display Center say the main challenge is that most touch-screen technologies do not respond well to being flexed. So they used an inductive screen, which relies on a magnetized styluses to induce a field in a sensing layer at the back of the display. The first adopters for the technology are likely to be the US Army. Watch a video of the device being tested.”

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Mar 3 2009

"Authors Guild" Skims Half of Google Book-Rights Settlement

Miracle Jones writes “A recent memo from the ‘Author’s Guild’ to the writers and publishers that it supposedly represents shows that only million of the 5 million dollar settlement with Google will be paid to writers, and that the most a writer can receive for a book is 0. Many people speculate that Google’s monopoly over all of out-of-copyright works will result in a brutal monopoly that will hurt both writers and readers, and that the ‘Author’s Guild’ had no right to make the deal in the first place. How will it all shake down? Should writers be paid at all for their work? Will Google be any good at the publishing racket?”

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Mar 3 2009

3-Man Team Begins Ice-Survey Trek To the North Pole

Hugh Pickens writes “Satellites have shown how the Arctic sea-ice has been shrinking in recent years, but a three-man scientific team making an expedition to the North Pole should give scientists a better idea of how thin the ice is becoming. ‘We’re making the surface journey because that’s the only way we have of gathering these direct observations of how thick the snow and the ice is,’ said team leader Pen Hadow, who in 2003 became the first person to trek solo and without support from Canada to the North Pole. ‘That’s what the scientists really need to know.’ There is more at stake for the British team than achieving some invented personal goal: ‘The journey’s going to be about 700 miles in distance, taking about three months,’ said Hadow. ‘In the earlier phases, the temperatures are about minus 50 degrees … And we’re towing sledges with our camping equipment and our survey equipment — almost twice our body weights — for most of the distance.'”

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Mar 3 2009

The Final Day of The Pirate Bay Trial | TorrentFreak

Today, The Pirate Bay trial will probably come to an end, but not before the defendants’ lawyers have their final say.

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Mar 3 2009

Null References, the Billion Dollar Mistake

jonr writes “‘I call it my billion-dollar mistake. It was the invention of the null reference in 1965. At that time, I was designing the first comprehensive type system for references in an object oriented language (ALGOL W). My goal was to ensure that all use of references should be absolutely safe, with checking performed automatically by the compiler. But I couldn’t resist the temptation to put in a null reference, simply because it was so easy to implement. This has led to innumerable errors, vulnerabilities, and system crashes, which have probably caused a billion dollars of pain and damage in the last forty years. In recent years, a number of program analysers like PREfix and PREfast in Microsoft have been used to check references, and give warnings if there is a risk they may be non-null. More recent programming languages like Spec# have introduced declarations for non-null references. This is the solution, which I rejected in 1965.’ This is an abstract from Tony Hoare Presentation on QCon. I’m raised on C-style programming languages, and have always used null pointers/references, but I am having trouble of grokking null-reference free language. Is there a good reading out there that explains this?”

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Mar 3 2009

George Riddick — the One-Man RIAA of Clip Art

An anonymous reader writes “Pages at ireport.com and extortionletterinfo.com have been documenting and researching the activities of George P. Riddick III, previously known for his lawsuits against IMSI and Xoom at the turn of the century. In 2007 he issued a largely-ignored press release claiming the majority of clip art online infringes a copyright and has ranted about how Microsoft and Google are stealing from him. In recent months, he’s apparently made a business model of going after web site operators who were using clip art they believed to be legally licensed or public domain, telling them they’re infringing clip art collections he hasn’t offered commercially in years and making outrageous settlement demands. He seems to have tested the waters on this some years back, but emboldened by the passage of the PRO-IP act, he’s gone aggro with it. A few dodgy anonyblogs had popped up to ‘out’ him as a copyright abuser, but these recent ireport.com and extortionletterinfo.com reports go much deeper in documenting and researching Riddick’s recent one-man campaign to be the RIAA of clip art.”

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Mar 3 2009

German Court Bans E-Voting As Currently Employed

Kleiba writes “The highest German Court (Bundesverfassungsgericht, Federal Constitutional Court) ruled that electronic voting machines like Nedap ESD1 and ESD2 are not permissible in Germany. Der Spiegel, a well-known German newspaper, is featuring article on today’s decision (in German; Babelfish translation here) which was the result of a lawsuit by physicist Ulrich Wiesner and his father Joachim Wiesner, a professor emeritus of political science. The main argument against the voting machines in the eyes of the Court is that they conflict with the principle of transparency. 2009 is a major election year for Germany, with parliamentary elections in the fall.” Reader Dr. Hok writes “Voting machines are not illegal per se, but with these machines it wasn’t possible to verify the results after the votes were cast. The verification procedure by the German authorities was flawed, too: only specimens were tested, not the machines actually used in the elections, and the detailed results (including the source code) were not made public. The results of the election remain legally valid, though.”

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Mar 3 2009

The Formula That Killed Wall Street

We recently discussed the perspective that the harrowing of Wall Street was caused by over-reliance on computer models that produced a single number to characterize risk. Wired has a piece profiling David X. Li, the quant behind the formula that enabled the creation of such simple risk models. “For five years, Li’s formula, known as a Gaussian copula function, looked like an unambiguously positive breakthrough, a piece of financial technology that allowed hugely complex risks to be modeled with more ease and accuracy than ever before. With his brilliant spark of mathematical legerdemain, Li made it possible for traders to sell vast quantities of new securities, expanding financial markets to unimaginable levels. His method was adopted by everybody from bond investors and Wall Street banks to ratings agencies and regulators. … [T]he real danger was created not because any given trader adopted it but because every trader did. In financial markets, everybody doing the same thing is the classic recipe for a bubble and inevitable bust.”

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