topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Thursday April 25, 2024, 2:30 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Ehtyar [ switch to compact view ]

Pages: prev1 ... 6 7 8 9 10 [11] 12 13 14 15 16 ... 50next
251
Living Room / Re: Where to find music artist?
« on: July 03, 2009, 07:09 AM »
Someone posted on YouTube that the artist who composed the background music for the HTC ads was bethurum. After having been through the samples for every one of his tracks (ugh) I think this might be correct as I can hear similarities, but alas I don't believe the track I'm after has been released.

Oh well, I'll keep my eye out.

Ehtyar.

252
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3.5 [FINAL]
« on: July 02, 2009, 04:09 PM »
cyberdiva: this will do.

Ehtyar.

253
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3.5 [FINAL]
« on: July 02, 2009, 06:14 AM »
HAH! Priceless Hertz Man :Thmbsup:

Ehtyar.

254
Just quickly, I don't appreciate the hijacking of this thread, nor do I imagine anyone else does. Unless your replies directly relate to the subject of this thread, please take them elsewhere.

Paying for content from TPB would be like buying a pound of apples at the market when you could walk down the road, and pick the apples from a tree, that are of the same quality.
Of better quality in many cases. It's as though the apples down the road were organic, and the kind you buy were sprayed daily with pesticides, and you were a pest. No matter, eventually the content-controlling corporations will realize that if they don't adapt they will go out of business.

Ehtyar.

255
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3.5 [FINAL]
« on: July 01, 2009, 03:46 PM »
I can't see any of the major online services switching to HTML 5 any time soon. The standard is still far from being approved, and indeed the video/audio formats supported by Firefox are not set in stone either. They'd not be supported in IE for some time, and I've no doubt Adobe will be peddling Flash like some retarded monkey over the next few years.

Ehtyar.

256
I must admit Hertz Man has a point. The public support (specifically the financial kind) is now in the toilet - not cool. I still stand by what I said though, I'm not sure how else this could have gone down in the end.

Ehtyar.

257
Living Room / Re: Why The Australian Media Is Just...Awesome
« on: July 01, 2009, 07:06 AM »
ROFL. If that wasn't already in print, that would be a DC quote  :-*

I must admit, I totally :-* Good News Week, but beyond that you're absolutely correct.

Ehtyar.

258
Living Room / Re: Where to find music artist?
« on: July 01, 2009, 07:03 AM »
I'm impressed. :Thmbsup: :Thmbsup:

Maybe you can do up a theme for DoCo's podcast if they ever start it up again. :)
Oh good lord no Hertz Man, those aren't mine, those are just my favorite tunes :S Was just spreading the chip love, sorry for the confusion. Like I said, my attempts at tracking were just embarrassing. I can certainly see where you got that impression, so I edited the post.

Thanks for the links April, will check em out :)

Ehtyar.

P.S. We need to start DC Podcast up again, but have it like a regular chat thing, like TWiT. Would be so awesome  :-*

259
I hold absolutely nothing against the TPB operators for selling the place. Standing up for what you believe in is a wonderful thing, but it needs to stop when it starts to ruin your life. Good on them for quitting while they were ahead.

Having said that though...this sucks!! TPB was awesome :( On the other hand, it's satisfying knowing that the guys who bought it probably have less of clue than your average internet user about how to accomplish what they intend to, so the site will end up being nothing more than a fond memory for the people who used it in its heyday.

RIP TPB

Ehtyar.

260
I hate to say it, but i really wish we could vote for questions/answers like StackOverflow/ServerFault on threads like these.

1 point for suggesting Nuke Anything Enhanced. Thanks :)

Ehtyar.

261
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3.5 [FINAL]
« on: July 01, 2009, 12:17 AM »
I have a local installation of Firefox set as default. When my portable version is running, new links are opened in it, otherwise the local installations opens.

Ehtyar.

262
General Software Discussion / Re: Firefox 3.5 [FINAL]
« on: June 30, 2009, 10:24 PM »
The final is out boils and goils!!!

Get the portable version here to try things out.

Ehtyar.

263
Living Room / Why The Australian Media Is Just...Awesome
« on: June 30, 2009, 09:48 PM »
Untitled.png

'Nuff said.

Ehtyar.

264
Living Room / Re: Where to find music artist?
« on: June 30, 2009, 08:01 PM »
Hi guys, thanks for all the suggestions :)

40hz:
To give things a try, I downloaded (shhh) the highest seeded compilation album in each of the genres you mentioned. I found a few pieces I liked, but nothing that really gave me a kick like the Hero music did. Thank you though :)

I've been a fan of tracked/loop music for some time, and have quite the collection of chiptunes/modules. For nostalgic purposes, I dredged up my collection, here are my two best favorites. I think the looping and uniformity of the Hero music was part of what made it so enjoyable.

I tried my hand at composition with a couple of the more popular trackers at the time and ended up just getting more and more embarrassed as time wore on.

App:
Thanks for all the linkage m'dear, still working my way through them all. I'll post back if I find some stuff that strikes my fancy :)

Ehtyar.

265
+1 for Kings. So crushed it wasn't signed up for a second season.

Ehtyar.

266
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 26-09
« on: June 28, 2009, 06:52 AM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
Enjoy :)
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Social Networking Big Boys Must Bow to EU Data Laws
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/23/social_networking_eu_data_law/
By broadly defining social networking sites as 'data controllers', the EU has made them legally responsible for their users' privacy in the eyes of law. 'Bout friggin time. US/AU, are you watching?

Social networking sites are legally responsible for their users' privacy, Europe's privacy watchdogs have confirmed. A committee of data protection regulators has said that the sites are 'data controllers', with all the legal obligations that brings.

Users of the sites are also data controllers with legal obligations when they are posting on behalf of a club, society or company, the opinion said.

The committee of Europe's data protection regulators, the Article 29 Working Party, has published its opinion on the legal status of social networking operators such as Facebook and MySpace.


2. Web Slows After Jackson's Death
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8120324.stm
The amount of web traffic generated by the death of the King of Pop brought several major sites to their knees, and triggered a Google fail as his name was flagged as originating from automated software.

Search giant Google confirmed to the BBC that when the news first broke it feared it was under attack.

Millions of people who searched for the star's name on Google News were greeted with an error page.

It warned users "your query looks similar to automated requests from a computer virus or spyware application".

"It's true that between approximately 2.40PM Pacific and 3.15PM Pacific, some Google News users experienced difficulty accessing search results for queries related to Michael Jackson and saw the error page," said Google spokesman Gabriel Stricker.


3. Pirate Bay Retrial Call Rejected
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8121680.stm
A Swedish court has determined that his being a member of a pro-copyright organisation did not bias the judge presiding over the Pirate Bay case.

The four were found guilty of promoting copyright infringement in April and face jail sentences and hefty claims for damages.

The Pirate Bay's lawyers called for a retrial when it emerged that one of the judges in the case belonged to several copyright protection groups.

The Swedish court said the judge's affiliations did not bias the case.

The Svea Court of Appeal said Judge Tomas Norstrom should have declared that he was a member of the Swedish Association for the Protection of Industrial Property and the Swedish Copyright Association before the case went to trial.


4. FTC to Crack Down On Undisclosed "sponsored" Blogging
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/web/news/2009/06/ftc-hoping-to-crack-down-on-undisclosed-sponsored-blogging.ars
Apparently the Federal Trade Comission has run out of work to do (yeah, right), and has decided to crack down on bloggers reciving free goods to review without disclosing the terms of the exchange.

Undisclosed "sponsored" blogging may soon go the way of the dodo, the T. Rex, or the quagga under some strict new guidelines under consideration by the Federal Trade Commission. The FTC says it is looking at bloggers who write about certain products or services in exchange for money or favors from the companies behind them, potentially misleading the Internet-reading public about an apparent conflict of interest. The Commission hopes to introduce new guidelines this summer to better define how bloggers can write about these products.

In case you're not familiar with the practice of "sponsored blogging," imagine that Your Favorite Blog written by Joe Schmoe of Little Rock, Arkansas often gives rave reviews of certain home appliances that he allegedly uses. Joe might have purchased those things himself, and he might really love them—but he might be getting paid by GE to push the company's new washer and dryer. Or, if he's not receiving money, Joe might be the recipient of paid trips to Hawaii or prepaid gift cards. All of these things can and do happen in the blogosphere, and there are no rules on disclosure.


5. China Not Backing Off Despite Filter Code Post On Wikileaks
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/web/news/2009/06/china-not-backing-off-despite-filter-code-post-on-wikileaks.ars
China is continuing to mandate the availability of Green Dam Youth Escort with each new PC sold there, despite exploit code being posted on Wikileaks exposing several security vulnerabilities in the software, solidifying concerns about the possibility of mass exploitation.

China is filtering out criticism and diving in headfirst with its plan to roll out controversial filtering software on all PCs sold in China. The Chinese media quoted an unnamed source inside the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, saying that the software will still come with all computers as of July 1 despite the discovery of massive security holes and vulnerabilities by security researchers.

News came out about China's plan to implement Internet access control software, called the "Green Dam Youth Escort" earlier this month. The Windows-only software provides a mix of features, including whitelists, blacklists, and on-the-fly content-based filtering. The blacklists can be updated remotely, however, making Green Dam quite an attractive option for a government that likes to keep tight control over what kind of content its citizens are exposed to.


6. Achtung! RapidShare Ordered to Filter All User Uploads
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/achtung-rapidshare-hit-with-24m-fine-content-filter-rules.ars
Rapidshare has lost a case worth €24 million, and will be required to implement "proactive" content filtering if they want to avoid liability for content uploaded to the site in the future.

German music trade group GEMA has won a court judgment against one-click file-sharing service RapidShare, and the Hamburg Regional Court has confirmed that services like RapidShare must implement proactive content filtering to avoid liability.

The decision has been building for more than a year. GEMA went after RapidShare after it became a popular hub for sharing albums online, and in relative safety. In January 2008, another regional court in Düsseldorf found that RapidShare was responsible for what its users uploaded to the service.

So RapidShare implemented a screening process—six full-time staff members vetted content and dealt with infringement complaints, and RapidShare maintained hashes of all files that were pulled down for infringement. Using the hashes, the site would prevent repeat uploads of identical content, though any alteration in the file would render the hash technique useless.


7. Australian 'Net Filter to Block Video Games, Too
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/australian-net-filter-to-block-video-games-too.ars
As an Australia, I cannot convey in words the feelings I have for my own Federal Government. Due to the fact that in Australia the highest video game rating we have being MA15+, any content regarding games that require a stronger rating will be blocked by the Australian internet filter because they will have been "refused classification". Go suck on a dead dogs nose Stephen Conroy.

Quick, name the country that plans to impose a mandatory Internet censoring regime that will, among other things, block access to all video games intended for anyone over the age of 15?

Answer: Australia.

The Australian government has pressed ahead with a trial of its proposed Internet filtering system, this despite the fact that—by its own admission—"there are no success criteria as such."

The scheme would involve a mandatory filtering service that would block access to all material "refused classification" by Australia's government-run ratings agency. This includes child pornography, bestiality, truly deviant/abusive sexual behavior... and plenty of video games!


8. Google Access Disrupted in China
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/8118055.stm
Access to Google has been disrupted in some parts of China amid claims Google is spreading pornography and breaking Chinese law in doing so.

Users reported they could not access either Google's search engine or its Chinese-language version.

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang accused Google of spreading pornography and breaking Chinese law.

The move came as the US called on China to scrap its plan to put net-filtering software on all new computers.


9. Star Trek: Confusion



Ehtyar.

267
Living Room / Where to find music artist?
« on: June 26, 2009, 08:21 PM »
Hi all.

I'm known among my friends for having rather eclectic/unusual music tastes, mostly because I listen when I'm doing something else (coding usually) so I prefer not to have voices in my music because I find it distracting. I often find clips of music I'd like to hear in odd places, and it's often uncredited which makes it hard to track down the artist. Basically I'm looking for a site which can help me identify the artist of a random piece of music and/or make suggestions for music I'd like.

As an example, I was watching a video demo of the new HTC Hero yesterday, and the background music was really very nice[1][2]. I've scoured the internet and found several comments asking for the song's details, but none have answers (one reply said he had tried Shazam on it but was unsuccessful). It's likely the song was made specifically for the commercials, which is why it would also be good if i could get recommendations for similar music (though the original piece must still have an artist, uncredited or otherwise). Even just a genre would be helpful.

Thanks all, Ehtyar.

268
C/C++ (wxWidgets), PHP/XHTML/JS, C# (Mono) and Perl are probably my favorites, but I get my kicks leaning new languages, so I tend to dabble a lot.

Ehtyar.

269
Went hunting this afternoon for a better alternative for Modify Headers (something per-domain so that I can leave it enabled when browsing pages other than my target) but didn't find anything. I did, however, find a spiffier alternative to Live HTTP Headers, HttpFox. It supports HTTPS and shows more than just the headers in a much tidier layout :Thmbsup:

Ehtyar.

270
Living Room / Re: I can haz LOLMouser plz?
« on: June 22, 2009, 05:29 AM »
:-*

Ehtyar.

271
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 25-09
« on: June 21, 2009, 05:15 AM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
Be sure to watch the vid guys, whether you're a jock or a nerd ;)
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Canadian Bill Forces Personal Data from ISPs Sans Warrant
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/18/canada_isp_intercept_bills/
A bill has been put forth in Canada's Parliament that would, among other things, require ISPs to turn over personal information of subscribers without a warrant.

Canada is considering legislation allowing the country's police and national security agency to readily access the online communications and the personal information of ISP subscribers.

"We must ensure that law enforcement has the necessary tools to catch up to the bad guys and ultimately bring them to justice. Twenty-first century technology calls for 21st-century tools," Justice Minister Rob Nicholson said in announcing two new bills at a press conference in Ottawa, the CBC has reported.

The Technical Assistance for Law Enforcement in the 21st Century Act would require ISPs to install "intercept-capable" equipment on their networks and provide police with "timely access" to subscribers' personal information, including names, street addresses, and IP addresses.


2. Thomas Verdict: Willful Infringement, $1.92 Million Penalty
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/jammie-thomas-retrial-verdict.ars
http://news.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/hi/technology/newsid_8108000/8108589.stm
Jammie Thomas-Rasset has received a guilty verdict in the first filesharing lawsuit to go to trial in the United States. The damages are calculated at $80,000 per infringement.

A new lawyer, a new jury, and a new trial were not enough to save Jammie Thomas-Rasset. In a repeat of the verdict from her first federal trial, Thomas-Rasset was found liable for willfully infringing all 24 copyrights controlled by the four major record labels at issue in the case. The jury awarded the labels damages totaling a whopping $1.92 million. As the dollar amount was read in court, Thomas-Rasset gasped and her eyes widened.

Kiwi Camara, Thomas-Rasset's lead attorney, spoke briefly after the trial. He told reporters that when he first heard the $80,000 per song damage award, he was "angry about it" and said he had been convinced that any liability finding would have been for the minimum amount of $750 per song.


3. ISP, UMG Agree On Unlimited Music Plan, Graduated Response
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2009/06/isp-umg-agree-on-unlimited-music-plan-graduated-response.ars
A UK ISP has announced it will be offering subscribers unlimited, DRM-free downloads of Universal Music's entire catalog. However, it will also be instituting a graduated response plan for those who pirate music on its network.

Universal Music Group has entered into a deal with Virgin Media to offer an unlimited music download subscription service to Virgin's broadband customers in the UK. You read that right—this is a subscription service that lets you download unprotected MP3s that you can keep forever, even after you cancel your subscription. The idea is to lure customers away from pirating music over P2P networks by letting them download legal music to their heart's content, though Virgin is still planning to adopt a system to deal with pirates.

The two companies described the deal as the "world's first" unlimited download subscription service, and said that Virgin Media broadband customers will be able to stream and download as many tracks and albums as they want from Universal's extensive catalog. There will, of course, be a monthly fee (that neither company has chosen to disclose at the time of this writing), but customers will be able to keep their music forever once it's downloaded. There will also be an "entry level" tier for customers who still want in on the action but don't want or need unlimited music.


4. Congressman Has Bill Ready to Give FTC Veto On ISP Data Caps
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/congressman-has-a-bill-ready-to-combat-usage-caps.ars
Congressman Eric Massa, representative of Rochester, NY (the district where Time Warner conducted its bandwidth cap testing) has readied a Bill that would see the FCC play judge and jury on whether or not ISPs can cap their customers' bandwidth.

Congressman Eric Massa represents a district in western New York that's exquisitely sensitive to the current US broadband market. On the phone side, the area, which includes the city of Rochester, is served by Frontier Communications, which shows no indication that it will follow Verizon in offering fiber to the home, while its DSL terms of service suggest that 5GB per month is appropriate usage. On the cable side of the service duopoly, Time Warner used the area as a test market for its brief flirtation with widespread usage caps. At the time, Massa promised to respond to his constituents' outrage by introducing legislation that would regulate the imposition of usage caps; that bill is now ready. It would treat ISPs like utilities, and put the Federal Trade Commission in the role of Public Utilities Commission, ensuring that the service providers had an economic case for imposing usage-based fees.

In making the case for regulation, the bill brings together a few strands of thought that are becoming increasingly common in discussions of the role of government in fostering the development of the Internet. In short, the Internet has become essential for a variety of basic functions—the bill specifically mentions its use for "agricultural, medical, educational, environmental, library, and nonprofit purposes"—making access part of the basic infrastructure. There's also an economic case to be made for broadband, since it allows more sophisticated services and commerce to take place online.


5. City to Job Applicants: Facebook, MySpace Log-ins Please
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/web/news/2009/06/city-to-job-applicants-facebook-myspace-log-ins-please.ars
The city of Bozeman, Montana has found a new way of bypassing private social networking profiles for those seeking jobs with them: demand usernames and passwords from your applicants.

One of the things people tend to forget when posting pictures and personal information online is that a lot of it is only a short Internet search away from their current or potential employers (not to mention their parents). It has now become standard procedure for many employers to sit down with Google and cyberstalk potential employees, while the more savvy hunt down Facebook profiles and Twitter feeds. The city of Bozeman Montana, however, has decided that all of that is too much work—it's now requesting that potential employees hand over the login credentials for any social networking sites they frequent.

Background checks are standard procedure for many jobs, as it allows employers to identify problematic legal histories and things of that nature. Bozeman is no exception, as it uses a waiver form to obtain an applicant's consent to use their Social Security and driver's license numbers to dig into their past. But the form is notable in that about a third of area that needs to be filled out by an applicant is devoted to website information.


6. Researchers Build Anonymous, Browser-Based 'Darknet'
Spoiler
http://www.darkreading.com/security/encryption/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=217801293
A presentation at the next Blackhat conference will show how a Darknet (similar to TOR or FreeNet) can be built using only distributed web servers and an HTML5-capable browser.

A pair of researchers has discovered a way to use modern browsers to more easily build darknets -- those underground, private Internet communities where users can share content and ideas securely and anonymously.

Billy Hoffman, manager for HP Security Labs at HP Software, and Matt Wood, senior security researcher in HP's Web Security Research Group, will demonstrate a proof-of-concept for Veiled, a new type of darknet, at the Black Hat USA conference in Las Vegas next month. Darknets, themselves, are nothing new; networks like Tor, FreeNet, and Gnutella are well-established. The HP researchers say Veiled is the same idea, only much simpler: It doesn't require any software to participate, just an HTML 5-based browser. "We've implemented a simple, new darknet in the browser," Wood says. "There are no supporting [software] programs."


7. Hacker Cracks TinyURL Rival, Redirects Millions of Twitter Users
Spoiler
http://www.computerworld.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9134440
URL shortening service Cligs was compromised, redirecting millions of users to Kevin Saban's social networking blog. 93% of the effected links have been restored, but the rest were not backed up and will be made editable by their creators, or pointed at the Cligs website.

A URL-shortening service that condenses long Web addresses for use on micro-blogging sites like Twitter was hacked over the weekend, sending millions of users to an unintended destination, a security researcher said today.

After Cligs, a rival to the better known TinyURL and bit.ly shortening services, was attacked Sunday, more than 2.2 million Web addresses were redirected to Kevin Saban's blog, which appears on the Orange County Register's Web site. Noticing a dramatic upswing in traffic, Saban -- who uses Cligs in his Twitter messages to shorten URLs -- contacted Pierre Far, the creator of Cligs.


8. Microsoft Lawsuit Takes Aim at Click Fraud
Spoiler
http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Windows/Microsoft-Lawsuit-Takes-Aim-at-Click-Fraud-456312/
Microsoft has filed a $750,000 lawsuit against a group accused of engaging in clickfraud against Microsoft's online advertising platform.

Microsoft has fired a warning shot at online advertising fraudsters with a $750,000 lawsuit against three individuals who allegedly directly bilked advertisers and indirectly deprived Microsoft of potential online advertising revenue through click fraud.

In a June 15 blog post, Tim Cranton, associate general counsel at Microsoft, said the click fraud attacks occurred on online advertisements related to auto insurance and the World of Warcraft online role-playing game.

In his post, Cranton said: "Earlier today, after a thorough investigation, Microsoft filed a civil lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for Western Washington outlining a massive click fraud scheme believed to have impacted Microsoft’s advertising platform and potentially other networks. The case is Microsoft v. Lam, et. al., case number 09-cv-0815."


9. Triumph of the Nerds
Spoiler
http://www.collegehumor.com/video:1915321
Discussion: https://www.donationcoder.com/forum/index.php?topic=18867
John Hodgman Roasts President Obama over his alleged geekyness.

hodgman.jpg



Ehtyar.

272
Living Room / Triumph of the Nerds - John Hodgman Roasts Obama
« on: June 20, 2009, 10:50 PM »
John Hodgman recently spoke at Radio and Television Corresponents' Association Dinner in front of Barack Obama, and used the occasion to quiz the Preseident on all things Geek/Nerd in a very amusing way. This is really worth the watch guys, and it gets better the longer you watch.

hodgman.jpg

Ehtyar.

273
Living Room / Re: IE to be removed from Windows 7 in EU
« on: June 15, 2009, 08:37 PM »
Scan Man is being facetious (I hope). The reason for Microsoft making this decision is two-fold. First, they put egg all over the EU's face, and second, they (potentially) avoid having to bundle competitors' browsers with their operating system. Do not confuse this as being something the EU decided should be done.

I'm unsure whether or not they expected the EU to take that lying down, but I can't imagine they'll go for it.

Ehtyar.

274
Living Room / Re: What annoys you to no end?
« on: June 14, 2009, 06:57 PM »

275
Living Room / Tech News Weekly: Edition 24-09
« on: June 14, 2009, 07:17 AM »
The Weekly Tech News
TNWeekly01.gifHi all.
As usual, you can find last week's news here.


1. Crypto Attack Puts Digital Sig Hash On Collision Course
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/10/digital_signature_weakness/
SHA-1's time is nearing, with a further improvement on collision generation efficiency to 252 from 263 by a research team.

Cryptographers have found new chinks in a widely-used digital-signature algorithm that have serious consequences for applications that sign email, validate websites, and carry out dozens of other online authentication functions.

The researchers, from Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, found a way to break the SHA-1 algorithm in significantly fewer tries than previously required. Although the hash function was previously believed to withstand attempts numbering 263, the researchers have been able to whittle that down to 252, a number that puts practical attacks well within grasp of well-funded organizations.


2. 'Millionth English Word' Declared
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8092549.stm
http://arstechnica.com/media/news/2009/06/ars-toasts-english-language-as-web-20-named-millionth-word.ars
Under rather odd circumstances, the term 'Web 2.0' has been declared the millionth "word" in the English language. You'd think the people who officially declare new words in the English language would be aware of the definition of the word "word"...

Global Language Monitor (GLM) searches the internet for newly coined terms, and once a word or phrase has been used 25,000 times, it recognises it.

GLM said Web 2.0 beat out the terms Jai ho, N00b and slumdog to take top spot.

However, traditional dictionary makers are casting doubt on the claim and the methods behind it.


3. French Court Savages "three-strikes" Law, Tosses It Out
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/french-court-savages-3-strikes-law-tosses-it-out.ars
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8093920.stm
A French court has struck down some of the most important aspects of the new elevated response law passed recently.

The French Constitutional Council has ripped into the new Création et Internet law which would disconnect repeat online copyright infringers, calling the basic premise unconstitutional. "Innocent until proven guilty" remains a central principle of French law, and it cannot be bypassed simply by creating a new nonjudicial authority.

Better known as the "three strikes" law, Création et Internet set up a High Authority in France that would oversee a graduated response program designed to curb online piracy. Rightsholders would investigate, submit complaints to the High Authority (called HADOPI, after its French acronym), and the Authority would take action. Warnings would be passed to ISPs, who would forward them to customers; after two such warnings, the subscriber could be disconnected and placed on a nationwide "no Internet" blacklist.


4. No IE Onboard Windows 7 in Europe
Spoiler
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8096701.stm
http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2009/06/eu-to-pursue-antitrust-case-despite-windows-7-e.ars
Discussion started by Josh: https://www.donationcoder.com/forum/index.php?topic=18736.msg167868;topicseen#new
In a failed (see second link) attempt to force the hand of the EU in relation to the anti-trust case against them, Microsoft have announced the European version of Windows 7 will ship without Internet Explorer.

European buyers of Windows 7 will have to download and install a web browser for themselves.

Bowing to European competition rules, Microsoft Windows 7 will ship without Internet Explorer.

The company said it would make it easy for PC makers and users to get at and install the web browsing program.

In response the European Commission expressed scepticism over the move and whether it would allay accusations of Microsoft abusing its market position.


5. Swedish Pirate Party Headed to European Parliament
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/swedish-pirate-party-headed-to-european-parliament.ars
The Swedish Pirate Party has secured at least one seat in the European Parliament after the June 7 election.

The final returns are still being counted, but Sweden's Pirate Party (Piratpartiet) has secured at least one seat in today's elections for the European Parliament. According to Sweden's election authority, the Pirate Party has crossed the four percent threshold needed for a seat and currently has 7.1 percent of the vote.

"We have just written political history," said Swedish Pirate Party leader Rick Falkvinge. "Tonight, politicians have learned that doing what the lobby asks will cost them their jobs. We're the largest party in the segment below 30 years of age. That's building the future of liberties."

With more than 700 legislators in the European Parliament (see the complete breakdown), a vote or two won't do much to set the agenda. But for a party formed only a few years ago with a narrow set of concerns, this is an excellent showing.


6. Open Source, Digital Textbooks Coming to California Schools
Spoiler
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/06/open-source-digital-textbooks-coming-to-california-schools.ars
Strongly underscoring the game of catch-up being played in the education arena the State of California will, from next year, permit the use of Open Source digital textbooks in classrooms in response to cashflow problems.

On Monday, California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger promoted his state's recently announced initiative, which would see it adopt free, digital textbooks in time for the next school year. The state's current fiscal crisis is an obvious motivating factor, as Schwarzenegger said that the state's share of textbook spending comes in at $350 million a year. But the crisis may simply be accelerating a process that was already under way. For the past several years, the state has run a program designed to evaluate online educational resources and certify that they can be used in a way that is compliant with state educational standards.

In a speech and editorial in which he pushed the program, Schwarzenegger didn't shy from making financial arguments. He suggested that the shift would help both the state and local school districts, which spend their own money for textbook purchases. Once the program is in full swing, a school district with 10,000 high school students could end up with savings in the area of $2 million a year. For now, however, the certification of digital texts will focus on various areas of math and science: Geometry, Algebra, Trigonometry, Calculus, Physics, Chemistry, Biology, and Earth Sciences.


7. Webhost Hack Wipes Out Data for 100,000 Sites, Boss Found Hanged
Spoiler
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/08/webhost_attack/
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2009/06/09/lxlabs_funder_death/
Vaserv.com was the victim of an attack last week which wiped out over 100,000 websites. The next day, the boss of the company responsible for the vulnerability was found hanged in his home.

A large internet service provider said data for as many as 100,000 websites was destroyed by attackers who targeted a zero-day vulnerability in a widely-used virtualization application.

Technicians at UK-based Vaserv.com were still scrambling to recover data on Monday evening UK time, more than 24 hours after unknown hackers were able to gain root access to the company's system, Rus Foster, the company's director told The Register. He said the attackers were able to penetrate his servers by exploiting a critical vulnerability in HyperVM, a virtualization application made by a company called LXLabs.

"We were hit by a zero-day exploit" in version 2.0.7992 of the application, he said. "I've heard from other people they've been hit by the same thing."



8. Military Hush-Up: Incoming Space Rocks Now Classified (Thanks 40hz)
Spoiler
http://www.space.com/news/090610-military-fireballs.html
The US Military will now deem information gathered by their satellites regarding bolides and fireballs around Earth's atmosphere, classified.

For 15 years, scientists have benefited from data gleaned by U.S. classified satellites of natural fireball events in Earth's atmosphere – but no longer.

A recent U.S. military policy decision now explicitly states that observations by hush-hush government spacecraft of incoming bolides and fireballs are classified secret and are not to be released, SPACE.com has learned.

The satellites' main objectives include detecting nuclear bomb tests, and their characterizations of asteroids and lesser meteoroids as they crash through the atmosphere has been a byproduct data bonanza for scientists.


9. Obama Drastically Scales Back Goals
Spoiler
http://www.theonion.com/content/video/obama_drastically_scales_back
President Obama has scaled back the goals he intends to achieve during his presidency after a visit to a Denny's restaurant.

onion.jpg



Ehtyar.

Pages: prev1 ... 6 7 8 9 10 [11] 12 13 14 15 16 ... 50next