Apr
22
2009
Al Benedetto writes “I stumbled across this article which analyzes the YouTube audio content identification system in-depth. Apparently, since YouTube’s system has no transparency, the behaviors had to be determined based on dozens of trial-and-error video uploads. The author tries things like speed/pitch adjustment, the addition of background noise, as well as other audio tweaks to determine exactly what you’d need to adjust before the fingerprinter started mis-identifying material. From the article: ‘When I muted the beginning of the song up until 0:30 (leaving the rest to play) the fingerprinter missed it. When I kept the beginning up until 0:30 and muted everything from 0:30 to the end, the fingerprinter caught it. That indicates that the content database only knows about something in the first 30 seconds of the song. As long as you cut that part off, you can theoretically use the remainder of the song without being detected. I don’t know if all samples in the content database suffer from similar weaknesses, but it’s something that merits further research.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Analyzing YouTube’s Audio Fingerprinter | tags: database, google, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on World Agenda: ban on scrutiny harms Sri Lankan cause against Tigers – Times Online | tags: google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Two key Tamil Tigers 'surrender' – BBC News | tags: google, news, web, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Obama unleashes political firestorm by raising prospect of torture … – Globe and Mail | tags: google, Intel, news, obama, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Storms dampen hopes of record turnout in South Africa elections – guardian.co.uk | tags: google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
22
2009
Comments Off on Sri Lankan war in endgame, 81000 escape rebel zone – Reuters | tags: cap, google, news, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on CanJet crew helped commandos sneak into cockpit, surprise hijacker – Globe and Mail | tags: 3G, cap, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “Erick Schonfeld has an interesting story in TechCrunch about a consortium of publishers including Reuters, the Magazine Publishers of America, and Politico that plans to take a new approach towards the proliferation of splogs (spam blogs) and other sites which republish the entire feed of news sites and blogs, often without attribution or links. For any post or page which takes a full copy of a publisher’s work, the Fair Syndication Consortium thinks the ad networks should pay a portion of the ad revenues being generated by those sites. Rather than go after these sites one at a time, the Fair Syndication Consortium wants to negotiate directly with the ad networks which serve ads on these sites: DoubleClick, Google’s AdSense, and Yahoo. One precedent for this type of approach is YouTube’s Content ID program, which splits revenues between YouTube and the media companies whose videos are being reused online. How would the ad networks know that the content in question belongs to the publisher? Attributor would keep track of it all and manage the requests for payment. The consortium is open to any publisher to join, including bloggers. It may not be the perfect solution but ‘it is certainly better than sending out thousands of takedown notices’ writes Schonfeld.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Consortium To Share Ad Revenue From Stolen Stories | tags: google, network, news, program, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on Hijacker's family feared the worst as plane stormed – Globe and Mail | tags: cap, google, news, security, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
21
2009
Comments Off on Tamil protest jams Canadian capital – AFP | tags: cap, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news