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Comments: 24 +-   Documentation Compliance Means MS Can Resume Collecting Protocol Royalties on Friday December 11, @11:57PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday December 11, @11:57PM
from the only-took-seven-years dept.
angry tapir writes "Microsoft may begin collecting royalties again for licensing some protocols because clear technical documentation is now available, according to the US Department of Justice. The change comes after the DOJ issued its latest joint status report regarding its 2002 antitrust settlement with Microsoft. The settlement required Microsoft to make available technical documentation that would allow other vendors to make products that are interoperable with Windows."
Read More... 24 comments story

Comments: 72 +-   $860 Million In Fines Handed Out For LCD Price-Fixing on Friday December 11, @09:55PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday December 11, @09:55PM
from the hope-it-was-worth-it dept.
business
eldavojohn writes "Six companies have pleaded guilty to worldwide price fixing of Thin-Film Transistor Liquid Crystal Displays from Sept. 14, 2001, to Dec. 1, 2006. For violating the Sherman Act, the companies have agreed to pay criminal fines of over $860 Million. In addition, nine executives have been charged in the scandal. The pricing scam affected some of the largest companies at the time, including Apple, HP and Dell. (If you bought a TFT-LCD from them in that time frame, you may be one of the victimized consumers.) From the DOJ release, 'According to the charge, Chi Mei carried out the conspiracy by agreeing during meetings, conversations and communications to charge prices of TFT-LCD panels at certain pre-determined levels and issuing price quotations in accordance with the agreements reached. As a part of the conspiracy, Chi Mei exchanged information on sales of TFT-LCD panels for the purpose of monitoring and enforcing adherence to the agreed-upon prices.'"
Read More... 72 comments story

Comments: 544 +-   Sci-Fi Author Peter Watts Beaten, Charged During Border Crossing on Friday December 11, @07:50PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday December 11, @07:50PM
from the canadian-writers-are-a-threat-to-freedom-eh dept.
scifi
JoeGee writes "On December 8th, Canadian sci-fi author Peter Watts, author of the Rifters trilogy and Blindsight, was crossing the US/Canadian border at Port Huron, Michigan when he was involved in an altercation with US Border Patrol agents. According to Watts, he was beaten, left half-naked in a cold cell, and finally dumped on the Canadian side of the border with no coat. A legal consultant from the Electronic Frontier Foundation was successful in helping a civil rights lawyer in Michigan free Watts. Watts faces US charges of assaulting a federal officer. Based on the accounts, one can assume Watts did so by hitting the officer's hand with his face. If convicted, Watts faces two years in a US Federal prison."
Read More... 544 comments story

Comments: 77 +-   Is Earth's Atmosphere an Import? on Friday December 11, @06:55PM

Posted by Soulskill on Friday December 11, @06:55PM
from the one-thing-that-wasn't-made-in-china dept.
earth
garg0yle writes "One of the questions about the formation of our planet is: where did the atmosphere come from? One theory is that the oxygen, nitrogen, and other gases were part of the coalescing ball, and 'seeped out' during the final stages of the planet's formation. However, a new article at Wired says isotopic analysis of krypton and xenon indicates that they (and the rest of our atmosphere) may be of extraterrestrial origin, either arriving via comets or being swept up from gas clouds."
Read More... 77 comments story

Comments: 329 +-   Slashdot Turns 100,000 on Friday December 11, @06:03PM

Posted by CmdrTaco on Friday December 11, @06:03PM
from the has-it-been-that-long-already dept.
meta
This entry represents the 100,000th story posted on Slashdot. Technically this is a bit late since we're missing the first few months of stories from the DB, but there are now 100k items in the story database and I thought that milestone was worthy of sharing with the universe. We've come a long way in the last 12 years, and while the site isn't always exactly what I want it to be, I'm very proud of the work done by our thousands of submitters and to the editors our readers have "affectionately" referred to as "The Slashdot Janitors" for so many years. Special grats to timothy who is just short of his 17,000th story and is far and away the most prolific person here. The hall of fame has a few other bits of trivia.
Read More... 329 comments story

Comments: 67 +-   Virtual Money For Real Lobbying on Friday December 11, @05:22PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday December 11, @05:22PM
from the sheeple-happy-to-be-paid-shills dept.
ogaraf writes "Silicon Alley Insider is reporting that health-insurance industry group 'Get Health Reform Right' paid Facebook users with virtual currency to be used in Facebook games in exchange for lobbying their Congressional Rep. 'Instead of asking the gamers to try a product the way Netflix would, "Get Health Reform Right" requires gamers to take a survey, which, upon completion, automatically sends the following email to their Congressional Rep: "I am concerned a new government plan could cause me to lose the employer coverage I have today. More government bureaucracy will only create more problems, not solve the ones we have."'" Relatedly, Trailrunner7 illustrates growing concern over realistic spammer profiles in social networking sites and their potential to wreak havoc, especially if these two methods were combined. "Many spammers now have large staffs of people working on nothing but building out completely fake personas for non-existent users on social networking sites and blog networks. The spammers use these personas to create accounts on Twitter, Facebook, Blogspot and other sites that have high levels of user interaction."
Read More... 67 comments story

Comments: 101 +-   Apple Counter-Sues Nokia Over Patents on Friday December 11, @04:40PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday December 11, @04:40PM
from the fight-fire-with-more-lawyers dept.
patents
adeelarshad82 writes "About two months ago Nokia sued Apple for infringing Nokia patents in its iPhone. The 10 patents in the lawsuit, filed in the US state of Delaware, relate to technologies fundamental for devices using GSM, UMTS and/or local area network (LAN) standards. The patents cover wireless data, speech coding, security and encryption and are infringed by all Apple iPhone models shipped since the iPhone was introduced in 2007. In the latest development to the case, Apple said Friday that it had filed its own suit against Nokia, countering Nokia's claims of patent infringement with its own."
Read More... 101 comments story

Comments: 116 +-   Judges Can't "Friend" Lawyers in Florida on Friday December 11, @03:58PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday December 11, @03:58PM
from the lawyers-don't-have-friends-anyway dept.
court
Hugh Pickens writes "The NY Times reports that Florida's Judicial Ethics Advisory Committee has found in a recent opinion that judges and lawyers can no longer be Facebook friends. The committee says that when judges 'friend' lawyers who may appear before them, it creates the appearance of a conflict of interest, since it 'reasonably conveys to others the impression that these lawyer "friends" are in a special position to influence the judge.' Stephen Gillers, a legal ethics expert at New York University, says the Florida rule goes too far. 'In my view, they are being hypersensitive because in the case of a truly close friendship between a judge and a lawyer involved in a case, the other side can simply seek to disqualify the judge. Judges do not "drop out of society when they become judges," Gillers says. "The people who were their friends before they went on the bench remained their friends, and many of them were lawyers." Still, legal sycophants can take heart: lawyers can declare themselves Facebook "fans" of judges, the committee says, "as long as the judge or committee controlling the site cannot accept or reject the lawyer's listing of himself or herself on the site."'"
Read More... 116 comments story

Comments: 324 +-   Science Gifts For Kids? on Friday December 11, @03:15PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday December 11, @03:15PM
from the explosives-always-go-over-well dept.
science
beernutmark writes "I have two science-loving kids ages 7 and 9. My youngest knew Neil deGrasse Tyson's name at age 4. With the holidays coming up, I am looking to get them some quality science-related tools. Two items on the list are a quality microscope and/or a real rock-hounding kit. I am looking for any other gift suggestions for this year or future years (or even for younger kids for other readers) and hints on good sources."
Read More... 324 comments story

Comments: 72 +-   Researchers Create Cheap, Flexible, Plastic Flash Memory on Friday December 11, @02:33PM

Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Friday December 11, @02:33PM
from the cheap-plastic-now-cutting-edge dept.
storage
An anonymous reader writes "Researchers at the University of Tokyo, led by electrical engineering professor Takao Someya, have created a new kind of low-cost, plastic, flash memory storage device. Although not as dense or stable as its silicon cousin, the plastic flash memory is useful because of its low cost, simple manufacturing process, and potential use in e-paper or other flexible devices. To demonstrate the memory, Someya's group integrated a 676-memory-cell device with a rubber pressure sensor. The flexible sensor-memory device, which is less than 700 micrometers thick, can record pressure patterns and retain them for up to a day."
Read More... 72 comments story

Poll The best pizza I have ever had, I found ...
In Africa
In Antarctica
In Asia
In Australia
In Europe
In North America
In South America
In some other place (detailed below)
[ Results | Polls ]
Comments:457 | Votes:14019

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