Apr 29 2009

Warner Music Forces Lessig Presentation Offline

An anonymous reader writes “Larry Lessig, known (hopefully) to everyone around here as a defender of all things having to do with consumer rights and fair use rights when it comes to copyright, is now on the receiving end of a DMCA takedown notice from Warner Music, who apparently claimed that one of Lessig’s famous presentations violated on their copyright. Lessig has said that he’s absolutely planning on fighting this, and has asked someone to send Warner Music a copy of US copyright law that deals with ‘fair use.'” Reader daemonburrito notes that the (rehosted) “video remains available at the time of this submission.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

Microsoft To Disable Autorun

jchrisos writes “Microsoft is planning to disable autorun in the next Release Candidate of Windows 7 and future updates to Windows XP and Vista. In order to maintain a ‘balance between security and usability’, non-writable media will maintain its current behavior however. In any case, if it means no more autorun on flash drives, removable hard drives and network shares, that is definitely a step in the right direction. Will be interesting to see what malware creators do to get around this …”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

Viability of Mobile Broadband For Home Use?

mighty7sd writes “I am about to be released from my contract with Time Warner for my home internet service, and I am evaluating alternatives to my current cable modem setup. I would love to use AT&T U-Verse or Verizon Fios, but they are not available in my area. I have a good idea of what the costs and limitations of Cable and DSL service, so I am considering using mobile broadband for my home internet connection. Most providers seems to cap the connection at 5 GB of data transfer per month. I am a relatively heavy internet user using streaming video and a web server, so I need decent down/upload speeds and a large data transfer cap. Has anyone in the /. community had a good experience using mobile broadband cards at their home, specifically with lots of streaming video or a home server? What has happened if you have gone over your data transfer limit? Cricket Wireless is available in my area for per month with ‘unlimited’ service, but I am skeptical that it is truly reliable and unlimited. I also found products that act as a WiFi router for mobile broadband services, but it seems that this is against most carriers TOS. Can they really detect these, and are they comparable to a wired broadband router?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

Scientists Build World’s Fastest Camera

Hugh Pickens writes “Researchers have developed a camera that snaps images less than a half a billionth of a second long and can capture over six million images in a second continuously. Dubbed Serial Time-Encoded Amplified imaging, or Steam, the technique depends on carefully manipulating so-called ‘supercontinuum’ laser pulses. While other cameras used in scientific research can capture shorter-lived images, they can only capture about eight images, and have to be triggered to do so for a given event. The Steam camera, by contrast, can capture images continuously, making it ideal for random events that cannot be triggered. Keisuke Gode, lead author of the study, and his colleagues used their camera to image minute spheres flowing along a thin tube of water in a microfluidic device.” (More below.)

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

Adobe Confirms PDF Zero-Day, Says Kill JavaScript

CWmike writes “Adobe Systems has acknowledged that all versions of its Adobe Reader, including editions for Windows, the Mac and Linux, contain at least one, and possibly two, critical vulnerabilities. ‘All currently supported shipping versions of Adobe Reader and Acrobat, [Versions] 9.1, 8.1.4 and 7.1.1 and earlier, are vulnerable to this issue,’ said Adobe’s David Lenoe said in a blog entry yesterday. He was referring to a bug in Adobe’s implementation of JavaScript that went public early Tuesday. A “Bugtraq ID,” or BID number has been assigned to a second JavaScript vulnerability in Adobe’s Reader. Proof-of-concept attack code for both bugs has already been published on the Web. Adobe said it will patch Reader and Acrobat, but Lenoe offered no timetable for the fixes. In lieu of a patch, Lenoe recommended that users disable JavaScript in the apps. Andrew Storms, director of security operations at nCircle Network Security, said of the suggestion in lieu of patches, ‘Unfortunately, for Adobe, disabling JavaScript is a broken record, [and] similar to what we’ve seen in the past with Microsoft on ActiveX bugs.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

New Food-Growth Product a Bit Hairy

MeatBag PussRocket writes “An article from Marketplace.org reports, ‘A Florida company has developed an all-natural product that it says could revolutionize how food is grown in the US. It’s called Smart Grow, but it might be a tough sell. It’s inexpensive. It eliminates the need for pesticides, so it’s environmentally friendly, but it’s human hair. Plant pathologists at the University of Florida have found the mats eliminate weeds better than leading herbicides and can also make plants grow up to 30 percent larger.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Share

Apr 29 2009

Linux Kernel Log: What’s coming in 2.6.30 – File systems…

There are numerous changes affecting data security and Ext3 and Ext4 performance. EXOFS and NILFS2 and FS-Cache for AFS und NFS are all new. Although it is now barely maintained, there are also fixes for ReiserFS

Share

Apr 29 2009

Firefox 3.5 set for Q2 launch

Can’t wait! I wonder how it will do against IE8?

Share

Apr 29 2009

Ten innovations inspired by Star Trek

In the early years of the last century, a new generation of scientists was inspired by the mysteries of the world around them. Einstein, Bohr and others spent the rest of their lives engaged in a debate about the nature of the atom.

Share

Apr 29 2009

Take That! Hackers Target Pirate Bay Prosecution Law Firm

Today brings more news of hacking at the hands of Pirate Bay fans endeavoring to show support and solidarity. Is anyone surprised?

Share