May
8
2009
DaveKleiman writes “Will bloggers change the world of Supreme Court litigation by inspecting published opinions? Rachel C. Lee has an interesting take on the question in the Stanford Law Review, Ex Parte Blogging: the Legal Ethics of Supreme Court Advocacy In the Internet Era (PDF). She begins the review with: ‘Lawyers have been arguing their cases before the Supreme Court for over two centuries, while the phenomenon of legal blogs is perhaps a decade old. Yet legal blogs cannot be dismissed as merely a sideshow novelty — they are already capable of having a substantial impact on Supreme Court litigation.’ The review hits on many key points both for and against the use of blogging, but ultimately concludes that members of the Court and their staff will have to refrain from reading any blog post relating to a pending case, no matter who it is written by. It’s even possible we’ll get carefully drafted rules preventing blogging by attorneys.” It’s going to be tough to make any such prohibition work. After all, Groklaw’s PJ is not an attorney.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Bloggers Impacting the World of Litigation | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
ruphus13 sends in an OStatic article outlining the plans of the state of South Carolina, inspired by the One Laptop Per Child project, to provide laptops to local elementary school children. “The South Carolina Department of Education and the non-profit Palmetto Project have teamed up to get a laptop in the hands of every elementary school student in South Carolina… The OLPC/SC hopes to distribute as many as 50,000 laptops this spring to eligible students. The effort is underwritten and managed by the Palmetto Project, whose mission is to ‘put new and creative ideas to work in South Carolina.’ While low-performing school districts with limited resources are a special focus for the OLPC/SC, the group is adamant on one point: There are no free laptops. In order to receive a laptop, children need to give a small monetary donation — the project coordinators say a dollar or two is sufficient.”It’s not obvious from browsing around the OLPC/SC site what software the XO laptops will be running; but by following links one gets the impression that they will be powered by Linux, not XP.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on South Carolina To Give 1 Laptop Per School Child | tags: laptop, linux, news, OLPC | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Comments Off on 'Pakistan need hearts and minds to defeat Taliban' – AFP | tags: google, news, obama, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Comments Off on Balsillie's attempts to cherry-pick US franchise popular in Canada – Canada.com | tags: google, Mac, news | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Comments Off on Dhalla worker paid under table – Toronto Star | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Illegal movie and TV show downloaders, rejoice. Soon, you will no longer have to wait and hour or two to start watching your favorite obscure dramedy series. Streaming torrent site Bitlet.org is preparing for instant gratification beyond your wildest dreams: Streaming video from torrent files.



Comments Off on Streaming Video From Torrent Files? Check Out Bitlet | tags: tv | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Sending an email across the Atlantic Ocean does not burn any jet fuel, but the internet is not without its own, huge carbon footprint. One estimate suggests it takes a whopping 152 billion kilowatt-hours a year just to power the data centres that keep the net running. responsible for 2% of all human-made CO2 emissions, same as the aviation industry



Comments Off on Is the net hurting the environment? | tags: email | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
In September 2008 police began arresting alleged members of Dark Market, an underground Internet forum for buying and selling credit card data used for identity fraud. The sting wouldn’t have been possible without the work of FBI agent J. Keith Mularski who spent two years infiltrating the group. Mularski became hacker “Master Splynter.”



Comments Off on Q&A: FBI agent looks back on time posing as a cybercriminal | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
gyrogeerloose writes “According to MacRumors, NIN’s iPhone application has been approved. Trent Reznor has reported via his Twitter account that the now-approved app was resubmitted without modification, which suggests that Apple reconsidered their initial rejection. This should really come as no surprise to anyone who follows Apple news since it follows the company’s typical pattern of handing potentially controversial iPhone apps, especially when it concerns high-profile rejections.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Apple Reconsiders, Approves NIN iPhone App | tags: Apple, iphone, Mac, news, Phone, twitter | posted in technical news
May
8
2009
Dreen writes with this snippet from TorrentFreak: “Just a few days before their court appearance, Mininova, the largest BitTorrent site on the Internet, has started to filter content. The site is using a third-party content recognition system that will detect and remove torrent files that link to copyright-infringing files.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.



Comments Off on Mininova Starts Filtering Torrents | tags: news | posted in technical news