Feb 25 2009

Visto to buy mobile email rival Good from Motorola – Reuters India


NewsOXY

Visto to buy mobile email rival Good from Motorola
Reuters India
HELSINKI/NEW YORK, Feb 24 (Reuters) – Privately held mobile email provider Visto said Tuesday it agreed to buy rival Good Technology from Motorola Inc (MOT.
Visto's Good buyout relieves Motorola Computerworld
Visto Grabs Good Technology eWeek
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Feb 25 2009

Google Apologises to Millions of Users Left without Email

Millions of Gmail users were faced with blank screens for two hours this morning, after a widespread outage of the webmail service.

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Feb 25 2009

Attackers Infect Ads With Old Adobe Vulnerability

thethibs writes “eWeek is reporting that just as everyone is buzzing about the latest Adobe vulnerability, someone poisoned ads hosted by Ziff-Davis with an older Adobe exploit (affecting versions 8.12 and earlier, and long since patched). Z-D fixed the problem less than 24 hours after its first appearance. The interesting bit of this is that a bunch of people probably got hit with the old Trojan when they browsed to a story about the new one.”

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Feb 25 2009

Terry Childs Case Puts All Admins In Danger

snydeq writes “Paul Venezia analyzes the four counts San Francisco has levied against Terry Childs, a case that curiously omits the charge of computer tampering, the very allegation that has kept Childs in jail for seven months and now appears too weak to present in court. Count 1 — ‘disrupting or denying computer services’ — is moot, according to Venezia, as the city’s FiberWAN did not go down due to Childs’ actions. Venezia writes, ‘Childs’ refusal to give up the passwords for several days in no way caused a disruption of the normal operation of the FiberWAN. In fact, it could be argued that his refusal actually prevented the disruption of normal network operation.’ Counts 2 through 4 pertain to modems Childs had under his control, ‘providing a means of accessing a computer, computer system, or computer network in violation of section 502,’ according to case documents. As Venezia sees it, these counts too are spurious, as such devices are essential to the fulfillment of admin job requirements. ‘If Childs is convicted on the modem charges, then just about every network administrator in the world could be charged with the same “crime,”‘ Venezia writes. All the authorities would have to do is ‘point out that you have a modem or two, and suddenly you’re wearing pinstripes of the jailhouse variety.'”

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Feb 24 2009

Court Upholds AP "Quasi-Property" Rights On Hot News

I Don’t Believe in Imaginary Property writes “A federal court ruled that the AP can sue competitors for ‘quasi-property’ rights on hot news, as well as for copyright infringement and several other claims. The so-called ‘hot news’ doctrine was created by a judge 90 years ago in another case, where the AP sued a competitor for copying wartime reporting and bribing its employees to send them a copy of unreleased news. The courts’ solution was to make hot news a form of ‘quasi-property’ distinct from copyright, in part because facts cannot be copyrighted. But now the AP is making use of the precedent again, going after AHN which competes with the AP, alleging that they’re somehow copying the AP’s news. The AP has been rather busy with lawsuits lately, so even though the AP has a story about their own lawsuit, we won’t link to it.”

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Feb 24 2009

The Hard Upgrade Path From XP To Vista To Win 7

An anonymous reader writes “Microsoft executives have been telling the tech industry that if hardware supports Windows Vista, it will support Windows 7, but it now looks like that may not entirely be the case. According to CRN: ‘But after a series of tests on older and newer hardware, a number of noteworthy issues emerged: Microsoft’s statement that if hardware works with Windows Vista it will work with Windows 7 appears to be, at best, misleading; hardware that is older, but not near the end of most business life cycles, could be impossible to upgrade; and the addition of an extra step in the upgrade process does add complexity and more time not needed in previous upgrade cycles.’ And here is CRN’s overview of the difficulties Microsoft faces in asking enterprise users to walk this upgrade path: ‘Across the XP-Vista-Windows 7 landscape, Microsoft has fostered an ecosystem that now holds out the prospect of a mind-numbing number of incompatible drivers, unsupported devices, unsupported applications, unsupported data, patches, updates, upgrades, ‘known issues’ and unknown issues. Sound familiar? That’s what people used to say about Linux.'”

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Feb 24 2009

VeriSign Will Support DNSSEC In .com By 2011

alphadogg writes “VeriSign has promised to deploy DNS Security Extensions, known as DNSSEC, across all of its top-level domains within two years. DNSSEC is viewed as the best way to bolster the DNS against vulnerabilities such as the Kaminsky bug discovered last year. (Yesterday we discussed the workarounds coming into place until the US government signs the Internet’s root zone.) DNSSEC has been deployed on top-level domains operated by Sweden, Puerto Rico, Bulgaria, Brazil, and the Czech Republic. Two larger domains — .org operated by the Public Interest Registry and .gov operated by the US government — are deploying DNSSEC this year.”

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Feb 24 2009

Botched launch ends US satellite's mission – Reuters


guardian.co.uk

Botched launch ends US satellite's mission
Reuters
By Irene Klotz CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) – The US government's first attempt to map carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere from space ended early on Tuesday after a botched satellite launch from California, officials said.
NASA Satellite Crashes Before Reaching Orbit Washington Post
NASA global warming satellite lands in ocean after launch CBC.ca
New York Times – Telegraph.co.uk – Computerworld – Times Online
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Feb 24 2009

Safari 4 a big step up, but not as far as rivals – CNET News


guardian.co.uk

Safari 4 a big step up, but not as far as rivals
CNET News
by Stephen Shankland With Safari 3, I admired Apple's chutzpah for bringing its browser to Windows. With the new Safari 4 beta, I'm actually starting to admire the browser, too.
Hands on: Safari 4 beta fast, mixes polish, rough UI edges Ars Technica
Apple Lifts The Curtain On Safari 4 Beta ChannelWeb
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Feb 24 2009

Chlorine evacuation order has been lifted – Canada.com


CTV British Columbia

Chlorine evacuation order has been lifted
Canada.com
An evacuation order in the northern town of Mackenzie prompted by a chlorine dioxide leak over the weekend has been lifted, an town official said Monday.
Mackenzie residents going home after spill of chemicals Globe and Mail
Evacuation lifted after chlorine dioxide leak at mothballed BC The Canadian Press
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