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Patents

Doctors Fight Patent On Medical Knowledge 205

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes "Doctor's groups, including the AMA and too many others to list, are supporting the Mayo Clinic in the case Prometheus v. Mayo. The Mayo Clinic alleges that the patents in question merely recite a natural phenomenon: the simple fact that the level of metabolites of a drug in a person's body can tell you how a patient is responding to that drug. The particular metabolites in this case are those of thiopurine drugs and the tests are covered by Prometheus Lab's 6,355,623 and 6,680,302 patents. But these aren't the only 'observational' patents in medicine — they're part of a trend where patents are sought to cover any test using the fact that gene XYZ is an indicator for some disease, or that certain chemicals in a blood sample indicate something about a patient's condition. There are even allegations that certain labs have gone so far as to send blood samples to a university lab, order testing for patented indicators, then sue that university for infringement. Naturally, Prometheus Labs sees this whole story differently, arguing that the Mayo Clinic will profit from treating patients with knowledge patented by them. They have their own supporters, too, such as the American Intellectual Property Law Association." Prometheus doesn't seem to be a classic patent troll; they actually perform the tests for which they have obtained patents.
Bug

Software Glitch Leads To $23,148,855,308,184,500 Visa Charges 544

Hmmm2000 writes "Recently several Visa card holders were, um, overcharged for certain purchases, to the tune of $23,148,855,308,184,500.00 on a single charge. The company says it was due to a programming error, and that the problem has been corrected. What is interesting is that the amount charged actually reveals the type of programming error that caused the problem. 23,148,855,308,184,500.00 * 100 (I'm guessing this is how the number is actually stored) is 2314885530818450000. Convert 2314885530818450000 to hexadecimal, and you end up with 20 20 20 20 20 20 12 50. Most C/C++ programmers see the error now ... hex 20 is a space. So spaces were stuffed into a field where binary zero should have been."
Networking

Submission + - Sen. Franken asks about Net Neutrality at Hearings

blackraven14250 writes: During supreme court nominee Sonia Sotomayor's confirmation hearings, newly-appointed Senator Al Franken asked her about her stand on Net Neutrality. He questioned whether there was an "overriding first amendment right" when it came to content providers not being able to speed up their own content when they are also service providers. Sotomayor dodged the question in the same manner as the day and a half of questions before it, but it's more about Sen. Franken at this point, as he hasn't had much time to make any sort of impression to the nation as a whole what his key fights are.
Security

Submission + - Catching Spammers in the Act (technologyreview.com) 1

wjousts writes: Technology Review has a piece on new research aimed at determining how spammers get your e-mail address.

The researchers exposed 22,230 unique e-mail addresses over five months. E-mail addresses in comments posted to a website had a high probability of getting spammed, while of the 70 e-mail addresses submitted during registration at various websites, only 4 got spammed.

Comment I've put them away, but... (Score 1) 396

I am loathe to call my old toys "Childish". I love my old Zacks, Knex, Mecano and Army Men, and would readily play with them if I have not gained new and boring adult priorities, and other interests since then. There are lots of railroad and r/c aircraft hobbyists who are far from childish. Shit, I just proved myself wrong.
The Internet

Submission + - Net neutrality doesn't exist, CRTC told (www.cbc.ca)

The_AV8R writes: "The CBC reports on hearings where Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) is trying to determine what traffic management practices are "acceptable" under the Telecommunications Act. So far, Don Bowman, chief technology officer for the network technology company Sandvine Inc., urged the CRTC not to impose internet traffic management guidelines, saying "Things evolve over time. Your guidelines may become outdated." These hearings are to continue through July 13."
Privacy

Submission + - Canadian Gov't: No Expectation Of Privacy On Net (tvo.org) 2

The_AV8R writes: "In a recent interview, Peter Van Loan, the new Canadian Public Safety minister, says ISPs should be able to provide private user information without a warrant. He even goes as far as denying that his predecessor promised never to ever allow the police to wiretap the Internet without a warrant, even when presented with an audio clip proving otherwise. The interview was conducted by Canadian tech podcast Search Engine and posted on June 26th. He even went as far as saying, in reference to IP addresses, names, cell phone numbers or email addresses:

[...] that is not the kind of information about which Canadians have a legitimate expectation of privacy

"

Comment I hate to sound alarmist (Score 2, Interesting) 174

Call it naivety on my part, but am I the only one worried about National governments studying the Iranian uprising, in search of countermeasures to YouTube and Twitter? Judging from various crowd control measures being implemented (such as 50,000 volt riot shields, I'm sure there is an interest in figuring out a way around everything people are doing in Iran. I can easily see the physical destruction of a website's servers to be on the top of a government contingency plan. Cut power to Twitter's servers? Done. I hate conspiracy theories, and am looking for anyone to tear me apart on this one.

Comment Re:Easy Answer (Score 1) 844

Finally, condom manufacturers should offer more variance with respect to sizes. My favorite kind, Trojan Large, have been discontinued. The Magnums are too large for my weenie and regulars are too tight.

I always thought the "Magnum" sizes were the same size as "Large", but that they just changed the name to make average sized dudes feel good about themselves when condom shopping. "I guess I'm just too huge and need the Magnum size, that cost $4 more per box".

Games

The Frontier of the MMO Genre 92

Eurogamer is running a feature about what they call "frontier" MMOs, games that are on the fringe of a market flooded with attempts to replicate the success of Everquest and World of Warcraft. Many publishers already have more MMO projects than they know what to do with, and often leave the more unusual and unique games out in the cold, preferring to stick with familiar IP or a tried-and-true approach. "Like any gold-rush, the MMO market also attracts a different kind of adventurer: the fearless, inexperienced, determined and solitary dreamer, making a go of it on nothing but their own resources and pluck. The online distribution and direct revenue streams — be they subscriptions or micro-transactions — make it theoretically possible to make a mint in MMOs without any help from the gaming establishment at all." They take a brief look at several such games currently in development, including Earthrise, Gatheryn, and Global Agenda.

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