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United States

Submission + - US Temperature measurement errors? (norcalblogs.com)

Natros writes: "A data set is only as reliable as the instrumentation used to collect the data. One of the important data sets in the climate change field is the system of NOAA/NWS climate monitoring stations. The cumulative data from these stations shows warming trends nationwide. But what if the data from these stations is suspect? This blog has been documenting problems with weather station placement and maintenance that makes the data collected from some of these stations quite questionable. Among the most egregious errors: placing the station in the midst of A/C exhausts, and stations surrounded by asphalt parking lots. Whatever your position on the question of climate change, I think we can all agree that accurate measurement and reporting should be a priority of good science."
Censorship

Submission + - Copyfraud (ssrn.com)

An anonymous reader writes: "Copyfraud," New York University Law Review, available in PDF via this link: http://ssrn.com/abstract=787244 Abstract: Copyfraud is everywhere. False copyright notices appear on modern reprints of Shakespeare's plays, Beethoven's piano scores, greeting card versions of Monet's Water Lilies, and even the U.S. Constitution. Archives claim blanket copyright in everything in their collections. Vendors of microfilmed versions of historical newspapers assert copyright ownership. These false copyright claims, which are often accompanied by threatened litigation for reproducing a work without the owner's permission, result in users seeking licenses and paying fees to reproduce works that are free for everyone to use. Copyright law itself creates strong incentives for copyfraud. The Copyright Act provides for no civil penalty for falsely claiming ownership of public domain materials. There is also no remedy under the Act for individuals who wrongly refrain from legal copying or who make payment for permission to copy something they are in fact entitled to use for free. While falsely claiming copyright is technically a criminal offense under the Act, prosecutions are extremely rare. These circumstances have produced fraud on an untold scale, with millions of works in the public domain deemed copyrighted, and countless dollars paid out every year in licensing fees to make copies that could be made for free. Copyfraud stifles valid forms of reproduction and undermines free speech. Congress should amend the Copyright Act to allow private parties to bring civil causes of action for false copyright claims. Courts should extend the availability of the copyright misuse defense to prevent copyright owners from enforcing an otherwise valid copyright if they have engaged in past copyfraud. In addition, Congress should further protect the public domain by creating a national registry listing public domain works and a symbol to designate those works. Failing a congressional response, there may exist remedies under state law and through the efforts of private parties to achieve these ends.
Windows

Submission + - Must-have Windows utilities for 20 essential tasks (computerworld.com)

jcatcw writes: Which utilities do you need to install? Rule of thumb: anything you'd install on a new PC within a week of getting it. Computerworld has a review of such must-have tools in 20 different categories, plus a couple of bonus apps. Archiving: WinRAR or 7-Zip (screenshots); CD/DVD burning: Nero Ultra Edition or ImgBurn or Burning Studio; Download management: FlashGet; Encryption TrueCrypt; FTP Client: FileZilla or SmartFTP. Other categories include image processing, management, editing, viewing; PDF creation; text editing; antivirus; firewall; virtualization; partitioning; and various maintenance and system information tools.

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