Mar
14
2009
Defeat Globalism writes in with a Canadian court decision that has ordered a man suing over injuries from a car accident to answer questions about content on his private “friends only” Facebook page. “Lawyers for Janice Roman, the defendant in the lawsuit, believe information posted on John Leduc’s private Facebook site — normally accessible only to his approved ‘friends’ — may be relevant to his claim an accident in Lindsay in 2004 lessened his enjoyment of life. As a result of the ruling by Justice David Brown of Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice, Leduc must now submit to cross-examination by Roman’s lawyers about what his Facebook page contains. Brown’s Feb. 20 ruling also makes clear that lawyers must now explain to their clients ‘in appropriate cases’ that postings on Facebook or other networking sites — such as MySpace, LinkedIn and even blogs — may be relevant to allegations in a lawsuit, said Tariq Remtulla, a Toronto lawyer who has been following the issue.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Court Demands Private Facebook Data | tags: facebook, google, myspace, network, networking | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
NigelTheFrog writes “Researchers in England have used fMRI to map the activity in volunteers’ hippocampuses. From these scans, they could pinpoint exactly where they were in a virtual reality landscape. ‘Specific parts of each participant’s hippocampus were active after that person had navigated to particular places in the room. A few practice rounds provided fodder for creating algorithms for each participant that correlated different brain activity patterns with different virtual locations. The algorithms, the team found, could in turn “predict” new virtual locations, not those used during practice rounds, based on each person’s pattern of brain activity.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Scientists Use fMRI To (Sort of) Read Minds | tags: cap, google | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
NuclearCodeMonkey writes “Blockbuster Total Access has changed the terms of its user agreement without notice to users. Previously, users could return online (mailed) rentals in-store for free rentals. The next set of online rentals was immediately mailed out. Now, without notice, they have changed their policy so that the in-store free exchanges count against you, and no more online rentals are mailed out until the in-store rentals are returned. No wonder they are closing stores and losing to Netflix! Needless to say I am canceling my account in protest.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Blockbuster Total Access Unannounced Policy Change | tags: google, netflix | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Fred Trotter writes “CCHIT is the dominant Electronic Health Record certification body in the US. It is also decidedly anti-FOSS and has been for years. Certification of one kind or another will be required for EHR systems to qualify for funding under the Stimulus Act. If CCHIT is chosen as the certification body, and the current certification strategies continue, it will not be possible to have a funded EHR that is both certified and truly FOSS. Now, however, CCHIT has agreed to meet the FOSS Health IT community at HIMSS 09 to address this issue.” We discussed the shortcomings in the stimulus bill as it relates to FOSS a few days back.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Hope For FOSS In Electronic Health Records | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
nloop writes “The Pentagon is intending to develop a new spy ship — a dirigible. At 65,000 feet it would provide a 10 year, solar power based, unblinkingly intricate and continuous view of the surface via radar surveillance. Because of its altitude it would be safe from surface-to-air missiles and most aircraft. A 1/3-scale prototype, now being designed, is ‘known as ISIS, for Integrated Sensor Is the Structure, because the radar system will be built into the structure of the ship. … ‘If successful, the dirigible… could pave the way for a fleet of spy airships, military officials said.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on US Pentagon Plans For a Spy Blimp | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
JaikuEngine is a social microblogging platform that runs on AppEngine. JaikuEngine powers Jaiku.com
Comments Off on Google Releases Jaiku Code! | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Building software from source – that’s a bit old-school, isn’t it? Who wants to wrestle with the command line, hunting down dependencies and coaxing the GCC compiler into running properly? Well, it does sound like a strange thing to do in this world of binary packages and online repositories.
Comments Off on Linux :Compile Source Code – And Solve Problems. | tags: linux | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
coondoggie writes “The US Department of Homeland Security’s Science & Technology Directorate recently awarded almost 0,000 to a Kentucky company to further develop a contactless finger print/biometric system. The goal is a machine that can snap 10 fingerprints in high resolution in less than 10 seconds, without human intervention. This goal is beginning to lok feasible. FlashScan3D is working with the University of Kentucky’s Center for Visualization and Virtual Environments, and has developed a technique called ‘structured light illumination’ (WIPO patent description), where a pattern of dots or stripes is projected onto a curved or irregular surface.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on 3-D Light System May Revolutionize Fingerprinting | tags: google, Mac, security, technology | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Observer writes “Bugs in software are nothing new, but when they’re discussed in the open, how do open source projects adapt policy? A major regression in the Gnome project’s session manager has seen some major distributions choose to refuse to follow the update rather than drop a major feature. Between Gnome’s public bug tracker and similar trackers from distributions which released (and still distribute) the buggy version, months of debate provide an interesting case-study in the way front-line users and developers interact for better or for worse. What lessons can be learned here for release planning, bug triage, and marketing for a major open source project?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Public Bug Tracking and Open-Source Policy | tags: developer, google, open source | posted in technical news
Mar
14
2009
Defeat Globalism writes with this excerpt from Wired: “Federal prosecutors in Los Angeles are pursuing a 6-month prison term for a Los Angeles man who pleaded guilty in December to one misdemeanor count of uploading pre-release Guns N’ Roses tracks, according to court documents. Kevin Cogill was arrested last summer at gunpoint and charged with uploading nine tracks of the Chinese Democracy album to his music site — antiquiet.com. The album, which cost millions and took 17 years to complete, was released November 23 and reached No. 3 in the charts. The sentence being sought — including the calculation of damages based on the illegal activity of as many as 1,310 websites that disseminated the music after Cogill released it — underscores how serious the government is about punishing those for uploading pre-release material.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Feds Demand Prison For Guns N’ Roses Uploader | tags: chinese, google, web | posted in technical news