Mar
25
2009
An anonymous reader writes “A Canadian court has ordered the owners of the FreeDominion.ca to disclose all personal information on eight anonymous posters to the chat site. The required information includes email and IP addresses. The court ruled that anonymous posters have no reasonable expectation of privacy, a major blow to online free speech in Canada.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Canadian Court Orders Site To ID Anonymous Posters | tags: email, google, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
In the overview below we present some of the most useful and most popular MySQL Admin and Development Tools for Mac, Windows and Linux, for beginners and for professionals. Among other tools we feature phpMyAdmin, MySQL Workbench, HeidiSQL and SequelPro.
Comments Off on MySQL Admin and Development Tools Round Up | tags: linux, Mac, mysql, sql | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
Notice that title tag for my Twitter profile page? It reads Robin Wauters (robinwauters) on Twitter where it used to say Twitter / …
Comments Off on Twitter Tweaks Its Title Tags For Better Google Juice | tags: google, twitter | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
I love gadget blogs. But there are five things many gadget bloggers do that they shouldn’t: 1) fail to follow-up; 2) cover concepts as products; 3) ignore IP theft; 4) write me-too reviews on products everyone has already reviewed; and 5) list too many items in software or site roundups.
Comments Off on 5 ways gadget blogs fail readers | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
Last year seven Hollywood studios teamed up to sue iiNet, Australia’s third largest ISP. iiNet is accused of authorizing its customers to infringe copyright, but in court today it refused to accept that was the case. iiNet has yet to decide if it will admit that its customers engaged in copyright infringement using BitTorrent.
Comments Off on ISP Refuses to Admit Customers Are BitTorrent Pirates | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes “After receiving a Rule 11 Sanctions Motion (PDF) in a Houston, Texas, case, UMG Recordings v. Lanzoni, the RIAA lawyers thought better of proceeding with the case, and agreed to voluntarily dismiss the case ‘with prejudice’, which means it is over and cannot be brought again. The defendant’s motion papers detailed some of the RIAA’s litigation history against innocent individuals, such as Capitol Records v. Foster and Atlantic Recording v. Andersen, and argued that the awarding of attorneys fees in those cases has not sufficiently deterred repetition of the misconduct, so that a stronger remedy — Rule 11 sanctions — is now called for.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on RIAA Backs Down In Texas Case | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
ISoldat53 sends this quote from McClatchy DC: “The CIA, which has been monitoring foreign countries’ use of electronic voting systems, has reported apparent vote-rigging schemes in Venezuela, Macedonia and Ukraine and a raft of concerns about the machines’ vulnerability to tampering. Appearing last month before a US Election Assistance Commission field hearing in Orlando, Fla., a CIA cybersecurity expert suggested that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and his allies fixed a 2004 election recount, an assertion that could further roil US relations with the Latin leader. … Stigall said that most Web-based ballot systems had proved to be insecure. The commission has been criticized for giving states more than billion to buy electronic equipment without first setting performance standards. Numerous computer-security experts have concluded that US systems can be hacked, and allegations of tampering in Ohio, Florida and other swing states have triggered a campaign to require all voting machines to produce paper audit trails.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on CIA Expert Decries E-Voting Security | tags: google, Mac, security, web, web-based | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
snydeq writes “Red Hat CEO Jim Whitehurst questioned the relevance of Linux on the desktop, citing several financial and interoperability hurdles to business adoption at a panel on end-users and Linux last night at the OSBC. ‘First of all, I don’t know how to make money on it,’ Whitehurst said, adding that he was uncertain how relevant the desktop itself will be in five years given advances in cloud-based and smartphone computing, as well as VDI. ‘The concept of a desktop is kind of ridiculous in this day and age. I’d rather think about skating to where the puck is going to be than where it is now.’ Despite increasing awareness that desktop Linux is ready for widespread mainstream adoption, fellow panelists questioned the practicality of switching to Linux, noting that even some Linux developers prefer Macs to Linux. ‘There’s a desire [to use desktop Linux],’ one panelist said, ‘but practicality sets in. There are significant barriers to switching.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Red Hat CEO Questions Relevance of Desktop Linux | tags: desktop, developer, google, linux, Mac, Phone | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
Al writes “European researchers have taken a step towards replicating the functioning of the brain in silicon, creating new custom chip with the equivalent of 200,000 neurons linked up by 50 million synaptic connections. The aim of the Fast Analog Computing with Emergent Transient States (FACETS) project is to better understand how to construct massively parallel computer systems modeled on a biological brain. Unlike IBM’s Blue Brain project, which involves modeling a brain in software, this approach makes it much easier to create a truly parallel computing system. The set-up also features a distributed algorithm that introduces an element of plasticity, allowing the circuit to learn and adapt. The researchers plan to connect thousands of chips to create a circuit with a billion neurons and 10^13 synapses (about a tenth of the complexity of the human brain).”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Microchip Mimics a Brain With 200,000 Neurons | tags: google, IBM | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
cryfreedomlove brings news that YouTube has once again been blocked in China. The Google-owned video site was censored in China last year because of videos about the protests in Tibet, and that may be the impetus behind this latest restriction. According to a New York Times report, “‘The instant speculation is that YouTube is being blocked because the Tibetan government in exile released a particular video,’ said Xiao Qiang, adjunct professor of journalism at the University of California, Berkeley… Mr. Xiao said that the blocking of YouTube fit with what appeared to be an effort by China to step up its censorship of the Internet in recent months. Mr. Xiao said he was not surprised that YouTube was a target. It also hosts videos about the Tiananmen Square protests and many other subjects that Chinese authorities find objectionable.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on China Blocks YouTube, Again | tags: china, chinese, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news