Mar 26 2009

Stardock, Microsoft Unveil Their Own New Anti-Piracy Methods

Island Dog sends news that shortly after Valve showed off their new anti-piracy methods in Steamworks, Microsoft and Stardock were quick to demonstrate their new, similar technologies as well. All three companies are bending over backwards to say that this is not traditional DRM. Stardock (the company behind the Gamer’s Bill of Rights) calls their system Game Object Obfuscation (Goo), “a tool that allows developers to encapsulate their game executable into a container that includes the original executable plus Impulse Reactor, Stardock’s virtual platform, into a single encrypted file. When a player runs the game for the first time, the Goo’d program lets the user enter in their email address and serial number which associates their game to that person as opposed to a piece of hardware like most activation systems do. Once validated, the game never needs to connect to the Internet again.” Microsoft’s update to Games for Windows Live has similar protections. “You can sign in and play your game on as many systems as possible, but you have to have a license attached to your account. Of course, this only works for online games.”

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Mar 26 2009

GMail Adds 5 Second Send Rule

theatrecade was one of a few folks to note that Google Labs has added the five second rule to email. Once upon a time this rule only applied to delicious food stuffs dropped on the floor, but at long last you can change your mind on that email to your boss or ex. We shall see peace in our lifetimes.

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Mar 25 2009

Google Voice Fixes Security Flaw, Almost

gardel writes “Google appears to have fixed a significant security hole in its two-week-old Voice calling service though some vulnerabilities remain. Until about 7pm PDT Tuesday, an unauthorized party could use a SIP device to spoof a phone number attached to a Google Voice account to call the Google Voice number, giviing the spoofer access to greetings and voicemail, and the ability to make outbound calls, including expensive international calls. Though spoofing via SIP is no longer possible, continued existence of some vulnerability was still apparent Tuesday night. Voxilla was able to set the caller ID of a PBX extension to a mobile number attached to Google Voice account and call in, using a business VoIP trunk, to gain access.”

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Mar 25 2009

Canadian Court Orders Site To ID Anonymous Posters

An anonymous reader writes “A Canadian court has ordered the owners of the FreeDominion.ca to disclose all personal information on eight anonymous posters to the chat site. The required information includes email and IP addresses. The court ruled that anonymous posters have no reasonable expectation of privacy, a major blow to online free speech in Canada.”

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Mar 20 2009

Gmail Gets A Panic Button

Have you ever sent an email, and just as it was going on its merry way, you realize you misspelled something or you sent it to the wrong person. Now you can take advantage of that delay to “undo” the message.

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Mar 13 2009

Libel Suits OK Even If Libel Is Truthful

Defeat Globalism writes to tell us that many journalists, bloggers, and media law specialists are concerned about a new ruling by a US Court of Appeals in Boston. The new ruling is allowing a former Staples employee to sue the company for libel after an email was sent out informing other employees that he had been fired for violations of company procedures regarding expenses reimbursements. “Staples has asked the full appeals court to reconsider the ruling, and 51 news organizations have filed a friend-of-the-court brief saying that the decision, if allowed to stand, ‘will create a precedent that hinders the media’s ability to rely on truthful publication to avoid defamation liability.’ But Wendy Sibbison, the Greenfield appellate lawyer for the fired Staples employee, Alan S. Noonan, said the ruling applies only to lawsuits by private figures against private defendants, that is, defendants not involved in the news business, over purely private matters.”

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Mar 13 2009

Ten Must-Have Gmail Filters Available for Download

Now that you can export and import email filters with Gmail, we’ve decided to compile some of our favorite filters for organizing your inbox into a single, handy download. Come and get it!

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Mar 13 2009

Cybercrime-As-a-Service Takes Off

pnorth writes “Malware writers that sell toolkits online for as little as 0 will now configure and host the attacks as a service for another , according to email offers cited by security experts. A technical account manager at authentication firm Vasco said that cyber crime is becoming so business-like that online offerings of malicious code often include support and maintenance services. He said ‘it was inevitable that services would be sold to people who bought the malware toolkits but didn’t know how to configure them. Not only can you buy configuration as a service now, you can have the malware operated for you, too.'”

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Mar 12 2009

Cybercrime-As-a-Service Takes Off

pnorth writes “Malware writers that sell toolkits online for as little as 0 will now configure and host the attacks as a service for another , according to email offers cited by security experts. A technical account manager at authentication firm Vasco said that cyber crime is becoming so business-like that online offerings of malicious code often include support and maintenance services. He said ‘it was inevitable that services would be sold to people who bought the malware toolkits but didn’t know how to configure them. Not only can you buy configuration as a service now, you can have the malware operated for you, too.'”

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Mar 12 2009

GrandCentral Reborn As Google Voice

Some anonymous person wrote in to say that Google has relaunched and rebranded GrandCentral as “Google Voice.” The article says it will “revolutionize telephones. It unifies your phone numbers, transcribes your voice mail, blocks telemarketers and elevates text messages to first-class communication citizens.” Sadly, the voicemail didn’t integrate very nicely w/ my phone back in the day, so I guess I should give it a shot.

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