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Old 13-06-01, 03:10 PM   #1
walktalker
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Say Wha? The Newspaper Shop -- Wednesday edition

There's no way I can get out of the news train I came on

Windows XP: Too much for some PCs?
The new features will demand more PC horsepower than previously anticipated. Windows XP beta testers may have found Microsoft underestimated its recommended minimum configuration -- a 300MHz Pentium II processor and 128MB of RAM (random access memory). The final version of Windows XP is expected to carry more stringent requirements. Officially, Microsoft says any PC purchased from late 1999 onward should comfortably run Windows XP. But Gartner analyst Michael Silver sees this as way too conservative. "You want to avoid installing Windows XP on a system more than a year old," he said.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...chkpt=zdnn_tp_

Angry users slam Creative Labs 'spyware'
Irate users are accusing Creative Labs, the maker of popular soundcards and music players, of spying on them. The dispute revolves around a piece of software called newsupd.exe, installed with the software that comes with most Creative products, which many users say is connecting to the Internet without their authorization and relaying data secretly back to Creative servers. Users say newsupd.exe installs itself on the sly, and doesn't give users the option of turning it off. Creative admits the feature needs tweaking, but says it is basically there to help users.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...774385,00.html

Buy Net access from the checkout line
With the Internet's free ride screeching to a halt, some jilted free-ISP users need a discount alternative for Internet access. Enter prepaid Net cards. Long-distance callers searching for bargains are used to the idea: Pay a few bucks up front, get a cache of minutes that can be used anywhere. Credit-challenged callers who can't get a long-distance discount plan are particularly fond of them. A few start-up firms think the same logic can be applied to Internet access. But analysts say the target market - Internet wannabes without credit cards - is slim pickings.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...774259,00.html

HP computers take up chip design
In a world where semiconductor designers can't keep up with the demand for their services, Hewlett-Packard researchers are working on letting computers design themselves. The Silicon Valley stalwart, opening the doors to its HP Labs on Tuesday, showed a glimpse of a technology that converts a computer program into a chip tailored to run that program -- a method that bypasses laborious human fiddling with the abstruse rules of electronic circuit design. For now, though, the technology works only for some types of smaller chips.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...092609,00.html

Bertelsmann opens full catalog to music site
Online music subscription company FullAudio has reached an agreement with BMG Music Publishing, a unit of Bertelsmann, for a catalogwide license from the major publisher. New York-based FullAudio until now remained independent of the world's biggest record labels. Vivendi Universal's Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment, AOL Time Warner's Warner Music Group, EMI Recorded Music and Bertelsmann's BMG Entertainment have been readying new alliances to deliver Internet-based subscription services in recent weeks.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=mn_hd

Online vandals take on security sites
In what appears to be a response to the geek-chic equivalent of a dare, a notorious group of online vandals has begun defacing security company Web sites. The group, known as PoizonB0x, put its online graffiti on 12 sites in the past week, according to hacking and security site Alldas.de. The targeted sites span the globe, with little in common except for the word security in their domain name. The group's graffiti consisted of simple text messages. Many merely stated "PoizonB0x was here," but others bragged about the ease with which the Web sites were falling. "I told ya PoizonB0x owns any security!" the group said on one site.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200...html?tag=cd_mh

As cybercrime rises, officials seek help
Citing an increasing number of cases -- including one in which hackers had the ability to shut down the 911 emergency system -- law enforcement officials asked Congress for more money and expanded powers to fight cybercrime. Speaking Tuesday before the House subcommittee on crime, an official with the Secret Service described several of that agency's cases to illustrate the rise in different flavors of computer crimes. As part of the Treasury Department, the Secret Service investigates crimes against financial institutions.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200...html?tag=cd_mh

Online ads get in your face
Like many recent visitors to The New York Times' Web site, Mike Brittain was surprised to find an extra browser window loitering on his PC after he took his daily dose of news. The window, which held an ad promoting X-10's "Tiny Wireless Video Camera," is known as a "pop under" ad, or a lurking page that loads behind the requested one, springing up once the reader exits. "It was surprising but confusing -- a distraction more than anything else," said Brittain, a student in digital media studies at the University of Denver. Readers such as Brittain aren't the only ones struggling to understand such techniques.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=cd_pr

MP3.com sets sights on subscriptions
MP3.com said Tuesday it has launched a new subscription service in a move to raise money and reach profitability. MP3.com's Premium Listener Service, or PluS Express, combines the My.MP3.com online music-storage service with a player that includes features such as the ability to burn songs to CDs, transfer music to a portable device, view ad-free streaming and browsing, manage a personal library, and stream up to 50 CDs per year to an online account.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=cd_mh

Lost Films Found on the Road
A traveling digital film festival run by a punk rocker continues to tour the country, harkening to a time when freaks ruled the Internet and major media corporations refused to contemplate a future online. The Lost Film Festival has been on the road for the last two years, making rounds in Austin, San Francisco, Seattle, and even north of the border, in Ontario, Canada. Put together by Scott Beiben, the show comes with a heavy dose of activist films with socially conscious themes that are spun together by Beiben himself. Viewers are treated to the visual equivalent of a House DJ spinning records.
http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,44454,00.html

The Battle for Defining the future of books in the digital world
Commercial publishing interests are presenting the future of the book in the digital world through the promotion of e-book reading appliances and software. Implicit in this is a very complex and problematic agenda that re-establishes the book as a digital cultural artifact within a context of intellectual property rights management enforced by hardware and software systems. With the convergence of different types of content into a common digital bit-stream, developments in industries such as music are establishing precedents that may define our view of digital books. At the same time we find scholars exploring the ways in which the digital medium can enhance the traditional communication functions of the printed work, moving far beyond literal translations of the pages of printed books into the digital world. This paper examines competing visions for the future of the book in the digital environment, with particular attention to questions about the social implications of controls over intellectual property, such as continuity of cultural memory.
http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_6/lynch/index.html

Mobile firms patent 'brain shields'
Mobile phone companies have been developing their own devices to reduce the amount of radiation absorbed by the brain. The industry's official line is that there is no proven link between mobile phones and health problems. However, patents unearthed by US campaigners suggest that the biggest companies - Nokia, Ericsson and Motorola, have been working on "protective" devices for a large part of the last decade.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/hea...00/1382873.stm

Experts: Birds are imitating cell phones
The electronic tweeting of mobile phones is so widespread that some Australian birds are mimicking the sound as part of their mating and territorial songs, a bird expert says. Australia has six so-called mimic birds which commonly imitate sounds in nature, particularly other bird calls, as part of their mating and territorial displays. Australia has one of the highest rates of mobile phone use. Common Australian mimic birds are increasingly hearing the ringing of mobile phones in rural areas, Queensland Museum bird expert Greg Czechura said Tuesday.
http://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/science....ap/index.html

New Tool Will Expose Security-Slacker ISPs
The problem of denial of service attacks could be solved overnight if Internet service providers cleaned up their act, a security gadfly said Tuesday. Steve Gibson, president of Gibson Research Corp., is developing a free tool that will hold ISP's feet to the fire if they have not implemented a security technique known as "egress filtering." Gibson's utility, which will be called Spoofarino, enables Internet users to test whether their ISPs allow them to send forged or "spoofed" packets of data to Gibson's Web site.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166814.html

IFPI Logs Significant Rise In Music Piracy
Music piracy grew by 25 percent and is now worth three billion pounds ($4.11 billion) a year, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) says in its annual report. Coming in a year that has seen the rise of Internet music file-sharing services like Napster, the IFPI's findings may not seem surprising. But the music copyright organization says that the 25 percent hike relates mainly to pirated CDs and CD-R (recordable) discs. The IFPI estimated that sales of pirated music discs has risen from 510 million units in 1999 to 640 million units in 2000.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166785.html

More news soon, friends
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Old 13-06-01, 03:14 PM   #2
Dawn
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Thanks again for your time and effort newsman
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I love you napho and I will weep forever..........
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Old 13-06-01, 03:37 PM   #3
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Yeah - thanks again WT!!

Oh, and thanks as well for copying the older news threads into the News forum!
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Old 13-06-01, 03:47 PM   #4
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Gracias!!!!!!!!
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Old 13-06-01, 04:49 PM   #5
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Wink Re: The Newspaper Shop -- Wednesday edition

Thanks again WT!

Quote:
Originally posted by walktalker
New Tool Will Expose Security-Slacker ISPs
The problem of denial of service attacks could be solved overnight if Internet service providers cleaned up their act, a security gadfly said Tuesday. Steve Gibson, president of Gibson Research Corp., is developing a free tool that will hold ISP's feet to the fire if they have not implemented a security technique known as "egress filtering." Gibson's utility, which will be called Spoofarino, enables Internet users to test whether their ISPs allow them to send forged or "spoofed" packets of data to Gibson's Web site.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166814.html
For anybody interested in internet security matters I highly recommend Steve Gibson's The Strange Tale of the Denial Of Service Attacks. "I believe you will be as fascinated and concerned as I am by the findings of my post-attack forensic analysis, and the results of my subsequent infiltration into the networks and technologies being used by some of the Internet's most active hackers." Gibson delivers what he promises - and at the end of the story you will find some easy instructions on how to check that you don't have IRC Zombie/Bots (used in many DOS attacks) on your own computer!

- tg
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Old 13-06-01, 05:24 PM   #6
walktalker
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Love Napsterites like me !

Thanks everyone, these words go straight into my heart

I'm not done yet with this issue, I still have plenty of stories to put in it... I was away to get hot dogs, french fries and onion rings at the local restaurant... hummm
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Old 13-06-01, 06:01 PM   #7
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Arrow Hey, who said it was all ?

MPAA Settles With Accused Net Pirate
The Motion Picture Association of America today said it had reached a settlement of its civil lawsuit against Antonio Daniele III. The MPAA alleged Daniele sold pirated movies via an e-mail address on the Internet. The MPAA, a trade association of the seven major movie studios, said in a press release that Daniele, from Chicopee, Mass., acknowledged engaging in the illegal sale of motion pictures and agreed to a judgment against him in the amount of $110,000.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166817.html

Studies Forecast Quadrupling Of Broadband By 2005
The number of subscribers to broadband Internet access services will top 21 million this year and roughly quadruple to about 84 million by the end of 2005, says a new study by research firm Cahners In-Stat Group. And in another study, In- Stat forecast even faster growth in broadband services to multi- tenant buildings. In the report "The Broadband Marathon: Access Technologies Jockey for Subscribers," the research firm says broadband access will grow rapidly in the next few years thanks to increasing reliance on the Internet.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166816.html

MP3.com Expands Services As Library Tops 1 Million Tunes
Earlier this month, in an effort to promote the first CD from a California-based group called Lapdog, band manager Joe Lyons uploaded what turned out to be the millionth song in the databases of digital music distributor MP3.com. Now, boasting that it has the largest music library on the Internet, MP3.com is rolling a new service that takes another run at generating subscription revenue for the company that is being purchased by record giant Vivendi Universal.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/166788.html

Real, the digital media player
RealNetworks has become the swinger of the digital media set, inking deals with everyone from Cisco to the record labels, but will its dalliances bolster sales? Real is suffering as its dotcom startup customers go out of business and as more established customers rein in plans to stream audio and video online. But it has shown no shortage of energy this year.
http://www.upside.com/DigitalMedia/3b26a7091.html

Slim Shady takes a hit from the FCC
For years the FCC has neglected its oversight role concerning radio content. But on June 1, citing its newly revised indecency guidelines, the FCC fined KKMG $7,000 for airing a "clean" version of Eminem's "The Real Slim Shady," a song that, according to the FCC's ruling, "contains unmistakable offensive sexual references in conjunction with expletives that appear intended to pander and shock." The station has until July 1 to appeal the fine. The station's lawyers will likely note that the original complaint was filed by a listener nearly one year ago -- predating the FCC's current indecency guidelines.
http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/20...fcc/index.html

Mobile industry adopts new Internet standard
The world’s leading mobile phone makers and operators announced on Wednesday an industry-wide initiative they hope will bring true Internet functionality to next-generation cell phones. The mobile services initiative (M-Services) aims to introduce an open software and hardware standard within mobile Internet in a bid to avoid the fiasco which surrounded the first attempt at mobile Internet, Wireless Application Protocol (WAP).
http://www.msnbc.com/news/586791.asp?0dm=B15MT

Broadband in the sky
Check your e-mail. Change your hotel reservation because the plane is late. Download that last document for your presentation. Surf the Web. Passengers of three major airlines should be able to do all that from the air beginning next year as American, Delta and United start providing fast Internet access aboard their planes. The three airlines announced Wednesday they are developing the system with the Boeing Co. They eventually plan to install the high-speed connections on 1,500 of their planes and sell the system to other airlines.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/586872.asp?0dm=B11MT

NASA Expects More, Cheaper Probes to Stress Communications System
NASA is bracing for a flood of radio signals as more than 25 spacecraft exploring the solar system all phone home. And with Japan, Europe and the United States all launching probes to Mars and other destinations, the stress on the web of antennas tuned to space will only increase, scientists say. The crunch time will be during late 2003 and early 2004, when many of the missions reach crucial points in their journeys, according to NASA.
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/scite...ace010613.html

EU's safer Internet site hacked and down
The European Union's attempt to promote a safer Internet and "tackle the controversial issue of illegal and harmful content on the Internet" has been hacked and is still down a day later. Perhaps even more embarrassing than being hacked though (you'd think the EU would be a bit more up to speed with security, wouldn't you?), is the number of holes and dodgy security on the site.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/8/19682.html

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Old 13-06-01, 07:22 PM   #8
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A bump for the man with the news... keep it up!
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