Apr
24
2009
Ian Lamont writes “An advertising company that runs a ‘targeting marketplace’ and partner AT&T are playing down the telecommunications giant’s use of its services after AT&T’s chief privacy officer told a House subcommittee yesterday that the company does not engage in behavioral advertising. The AT&T executive testified (PDF) to the House of Representatives Subcommittee on Communications, Technology and the Internet that AT&T would not use behavioral advertising methods without informed customer consent. However, AudienceScience, a company that records ‘billions of behavioral events daily’ has apparently worked for AT&T since 2005. After the hearing, AudienceScience removed a client testimonial relating to AT&T from its website, so ‘all the appropriate parties [have] consistent messaging,’ its CEO said. An AT&T spokesman also said that the testimony was talking about AT&T’s role as an ISP, not an advertiser.”
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Comments Off on AT&T Sends Mixed Message On Behavioral Advertising | tags: google, privacy, technology, telecommunications, web | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on Mexico shuts down schools, museums in capital after flu deaths – Canoe.ca | tags: cap, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on Cannon targets Khadr over explosives – Canada.com | tags: google, Mac, news | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Comments Off on Gov't admits beach blunder – Calgary Herald | tags: google, network, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
Gary Lightbody from Snow Patrol has criticized the sentences received by the crew of The Pirate Bay, branding them as “way over the top”. The band’s frontman also says if you’re a file-sharer and you know how to get music for free, “f**king go for it.” Meet you at The Pirate Bay then?
Comments Off on Snow Patrol: Pirate Bay Sentences “Way Over the Top | tags: pirate bay | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
In a recent report, a team of scientists from Spain claims to have isolated and treated the parasite causing honey bee depopulation syndrome. Their hope is to prevent the continued decline of honey bee populations in Europe and the US. “The loss of honey bees could have an enormous horticultural and economic impact worldwide. Honeybees are important pollinators of crops, fruit and wild flowers and are indispensable for a sustainable and profitable agriculture as well as for the maintenance of the non-agricultural ecosystem. Honeybees are attacked by numerous pathogens including viruses, bacteria, fungi and parasites.”
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Comments Off on Scientists Isolate and Treat Parasite Causing Decline in Honey Bee Population | tags: google, virus | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
nandemoari writes “With only a few weeks until Microsoft’s Windows 7 Release Candidate 1 (RC1) is released, Microsoft is already looking for people to help with Windows 8. An April 14th job ad posted by Microsoft says the upcoming version of Windows will have new features like cluster support and support for one way replication. Apparently the Windows 8 kernel is being reworked to provide dramatic performance improvements. Windows 8 will also include innovative features that, according to Microsoft, will revolutionize file access in branch offices.” Relatedly, several users tell us that both 32 and 64-bit versions of the Windows 7 release candidate have been leaked into the wild via p2p networks. The current leaked version shows little change beyond bug fixes, so it would seem what you see is what you get. This all comes as Microsoft posts quarterly sales that have fallen for the first time in the company’s 23-year history. Seeing a 6% drop in revenue and a 32% drop in earnings, some within the Redmond giant expect the downward trend to continue.
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Comments Off on Microsoft Suffers Leaks, Lagging Sales Numbers as They Look Forward to Window 8 | tags: google, microsoft, network, redmond, windows 7 | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
The Register writes “Sun invited Oracle president Charles Phillips and chief corporate architect Edward Screven to an employee-only town hall this Wednesday, where they took questions on what’s coming. They said they’d be ‘crazy’ to close Java, that Oracle ‘needs’ MySQL, and all Sun’s processors look appealing. They hedged on OpenOffice — Phillips said he couldn’t comment on any product line — and on Sun’s work in high-performance computing. Screven made it pretty clear the Sun vision of cloud computing does not fit with Oracle’s; Oracle sees itself as a provider of infrastructure like virtualization to make clouds, not a provider of hosted services. As for who’s staying and who’s getting cut at Sun: Phillips said Oracle needs Sun, but warned ‘tough decisions’ will be coming. Don’t forget, this is the company that couriered pink slips to the PeopleSoft staff it cut following that acquisition.”
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Comments Off on Oracle Top Execs Answer Sun Employee Questions | tags: developer, google, mysql, sql | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Dell is apparently suing popular online retailer Tiger Direct, claiming that Tiger violated the resale contract it had with Dell, which included false advertising, misleading representation and unfair competition. Dell has accused Tiger Direct of selling old and out-dated Dell computers that Tiger Direct purchased from other resellers and then saying they were brand new directly from Dell. They also passed the computers off as still having a full warranty, but the warranties had expired long ago.”
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Comments Off on Dell Sues Tiger Direct For Misleading Customers | tags: computers, google | posted in technical news
Apr
24
2009
An anonymous reader optimistically writes that new legislation has been introduced in the Senate that would call for a nationwide adoption of electronic health records built on open source. The bill does not seek to supplant proprietary alternatives, but instead to either augment or offer a cost effective alternative. “‘We need advancements in health information technology across the board to improve the quality of care Americans receive,’ said Senator Rockefeller, Chairman of the Senate Finance Subcommittee on Health Care. ‘To make this happen, we need universal access to affordable and interoperable health information technology – from small, rural health clinics to large, urban hospitals.'”
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Comments Off on Senate Bill Calls For Open Source Electronic Health Records | tags: google, open source, technology | posted in technical news