Apr
23
2009
maglo writes “The judge who handed down the harsh sentence to the four accused in the The Pirate Bay trial was biased, writes Sveriges Radio (Sweden Public Radio): sr.se (swedish). Google translation. The judge is member of two copyright lobby organizations, something he shares with several of the prosecutor attorneys (Monique Wadsted, Henrik Pontén and Peter Danowsky). The organizations in question are Svenska Föreningen för Upphovsrätt (SFU) and Svenska föreningen för industriellt rättsskydd (SFIR).”

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Comments Off on Judge In Pirate Bay Trial Biased | tags: google, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
blackbearnh writes “One of the biggest problem that a platoon on the ground in Iraq or Afghanistan faces is that when a new unit cycles in, all the street-sense and experience of the old unit is lost. Knowing where insurgents like to plant IEDs, or even which families have a lot of domestic disputes, can spell the difference between living and dying. In response to this, DARPA created TIGR, the Tactical Ground Reporting System. Developed as much on the ground in active warzones as in a lab, TIGR lets platoons access the latest satellite and drone imagery in an easy-to-use map based interface, as well as recording their experiences in the field and accessing the reports of other troops. In this O’Reilly Radar interview, two of the people responsible for the development of TIGR talk about the intel issues that troops face in hostile territory,the challenges of deploying new technology meant for combat areas, the specific tricks that they had to employ to make TIGR work over less-than-robust military networking, and how TIGR is impacting platoons in their day to day operations”

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Comments Off on DARPA’s Map-Based Wiki Keeps Platoons Alive | tags: google, Intel, network, networking, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
Comments Off on Al Qaeda 'abused' Canadians – Toronto Star | tags: cap, google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
Comments Off on Analysis: Sri Lanka's war aftermath – Aljazeera.net | tags: cap, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
Comments Off on South Africa's ANC Ahead in Early Election Results – Voice of America | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
The one thing that Iraq really, really needs, according to the US State Department… is Twitter. Finally, thanks to what I’m already calling “Operation Fail Whale”, ordinary Iraqis will get access to the clean video streams, flamewars and Lolcats that we in the west take for granted. Here are predictions of what the future might hold for Iraq 2.0
Comments Off on How Twitter, Digg and Social Media Are Going to Save Iraq | tags: 3G, twitter | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
Apple Inc. yanked a disturbing iPhone application called “Baby Shaker” – which allowed users to silence a screaming infant by shaking their phone – from its online store today.
Comments Off on Apple pulls ‘Baby Shaker’ iPhone app after protests | tags: Apple, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
In Wilson, NC, residents, upset with their choices in regards to internet and cable decided create their own network and charge only enough to cover the costs. Now, TWC is lobbying against the service claiming they can’t compete. Need any more evidence to support Time Warner’s suckiness?
Comments Off on Another Reason why Time Warner Sucks | tags: network | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
An anonymous reader writes “TTVK, a Finnish national copyright lobby, is threatening a book renal service called Bookabooka for allegedly running the ‘Pirate Bay for Books’. Bookabooka however does not offer a torrent tracker service, nor does it enable a user in any way to download eBooks; it simply provides a place for book owners to rent textbooks to each other via the traditional mail service. It is mandatory that all textbooks must be originals. The service is used by a lot of School and University students, and it does not handle the shipping or returns of the textbooks. Nevertheless, the Finnish book publishers’ association (Suomen Kustannusyhdistys) is convinced the service is breaching the copyright laws and threatening their business. TTVK has given Bookabooka until Friday to cease operations or face a lawsuit. Bookabooka’s founders have vowed to keep the service online and ignore the threat.”

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Comments Off on Copyright Lobby Targets ‘Pirate Bay For Books’ | tags: google, IBM, pirate bay, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
23
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Germany’s government has passed a draft law for censorship of domains hosting content related to child pornography. A secret list of IPs will be created by the BKA, Germany’s federal police; any attempted access to addresses on this list is blocked, logged (the draft seems to contradict press reports on this point) and redirected to a government page featuring a large stop sign. The law has not yet passed the assembly, however five of the largest ISPs have already agreed to voluntarily submit to the process even without a law in place. Critics argue that with the censorship infrastructure in place, the barrier for blocking access for various other reasons is very low. The fact that the current block can easily be circumvented may lead to more effective technologies to be used in the future. There are general elections as well as elections in several of the states later this year.”

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Comments Off on Germany Institutes Censorship Infrastructure | tags: google | posted in technical news