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Encryption

Why Sony Cannot Stop PS3 Pirates 378

Sam writes "A former Ubisoft exec believes that Sony will not be able to combat piracy on the PlayStation 3, which was recently hacked. Martin Walfisz, former CEO of Ubisoft subsidiary Ubisoft Massive, was a key player in developing Ubisoft's new DRM technologies. Since playing pirated games doesn't require a modchip, his argument is that Sony won't be able to easily detect hacked consoles. Sony's only possible solution is to revise the PS3 hardware itself, which would be a very costly process. Changing the hardware could possibly work for new console sales, though there would be the problem of backwards compatibility with the already-released games. Furthermore, current users would still be able to run pirated copies on current hardware." An anonymous reader adds commentary from PS3 hacker Mathieu Hervais about Sony's legal posturing.
Games

Balancing Choice With Irreversible Consequences In Games 352

The Moving Pixels blog has an article about the delicate balance within video games between giving players meaningful choices and consequences that cannot necessarily be changed if the player doesn't like her choice afterward. Quoting: "One of my more visceral experiences in gaming came recently while playing Mass Effect 2, in which a series of events led me to believe that I'd just indirectly murdered most of my crew. When the cutscenes ended, I was rocking in my chair, eyes wide, heart pounding, and as control was given over to me once more, I did the only thing that I thought was reasonable to do: I reset the game. This, of course, only led to the revelation that the event was preordained and the inference that (by BioWare's logic) a high degree of magical charisma and blue-colored decision making meant that I could get everything back to normal. ... Charitably, I could say BioWare at least did a good job of conditioning my expectations in such a way that the game could garner this response, but the fact remains: when confronted with a consequence that I couldn't handle, my immediate player's response was to stop and get a do-over. Inevitability was only something that I could accept once it was directly shown to me."

Comment Geotargetting (Score 1) 315

There is already geotargeted of videos online done on commercial grounds. If different types of traffic get "throttled" it'll only make it harder on the users of any high-bandwidth activity whether video, gaming or anything else where the ISPs are likely to be costed more than these consumers are paying. For example I used to be able to watch The Daily Show on the Comedy Channel's website from the UK. Since they sold the rights to E4, that isn't possible without going through a proxy.
Image

Digg In the Future 54

jamie writes "A new site called Digg In The Future - created by 17-year-old high-school student Raj Vir as a research project - says that its algorithm can predict with 63-percent accuracy what shared links are going to make it to the front page of the Digg website. (Does it allow for brigades?)"
First Person Shooters (Games)

Gamer Plays Doom For the First Time 362

sfraggle writes "Kotaku has an interesting review of Doom (the original!) by Stephen Totilo, a gamer and FPS player who, until a few days ago, had gone through the game's 17-year history without playing it. He describes some of his first impressions, the surprises that he encountered, and how the game compares to modern FPSes. Quoting: 'Virtual shotgun armed, I was finally going to play Doom for real. A second later, I understood the allure the video game weapon has had. In Doom the shotgun feels mighty, at least partially I believe because they make first-timers like me wait for it. The creators make us sweat until we have it in hand. But once we have the shotgun, its big shots and its slow, fetishized reload are the floored-accelerator-pedal stuff of macho fantasy. The shotgun is, in all senses, instant puberty, which is to say, delicately, that to obtain it is to have the assumed added potency that a boy believes a man possesses vis a vis a world on which he'd like to have some impact. The shotgun is the punch in the face the once-scrawny boy on the beach gives the bully when he returns a muscled linebacker.'"

Comment Re:This study is nothing but Communist propaganda (Score 1) 961

Well you're very talented at parody lyrics then! I do have the musical talents (church organist amongst other things); but unfortunately I don't have the sheet music for Bohemian Rhapsody or a kareoke tape of it. Maybe if I can get the tune worked out in a singable key I'll record myself singing your lyrics and upload it to youtube for a laugh. :)

Comment Re:Frightening (Score 1) 270

>I have no say in how my society is governed; I >doubt very much you do either. I do through voting and standing in public elections. I did hold public office for two years. This year I got 699 votes (roughly 1 in 6 of people voting). Although some politicians ignore me, I do have influence in affecting decisions. Unless you don't live in a democracy ultranova; in which case why not change your society to something that gives the public more of a say?

Comment Re:Hiders Keepers? (Score 1) 251

From what I remember card skimming has been going on locally here in the UK too. I remember a report from the police into it a while ago; although they didn't go into as much detail about the devices used.

Here most cards are "chip and pin" so you need the magstripe, chip and PIN to make a transaction.

However in foreign countries, especially over the phone or internet where a PIN can't be entered, the information on the magstripe eg card number/expiry date can be enough. The trouble with foreign transactions is they can take days after the transaction before the bank reports them.

Many people with high limits wouldn't notice until the end of the month, or if their card gets declined for hitting its limit. There are people who can view their credit card statements online; which reduces the risk of a fraud going unnoticed for longer periods.

Either way its fraud, which banks have systems in place to detect, however fraud/Identity theft is hard for the police to investigate and prosecute without evidence eg fingerprints, mobile phone numbers, details of where the fraudulent sales were sent to etc.

I've known fraudsters use stolen card details to top up a mobile phone; others have just gone on a spending spree. A similar con is writing cheques that'll bounce (although that does at least give the retailer (and in States District Attorney) a name or names as well as address (from the bank or cheque) to prosecute.

Comment Re:I must admit... (Score 1) 181

Wireless hard drives sound cool, but what about latency and lag?

I'm on the internet wirelessly, I do get latency problems from time to time due to the extra "hop".

As far as I'm concerned the internet is like a wireless hard drive to me. :) Ok, a wireless network of networks.

Graphics at a decent FPS rate does require huge amounts of bandwidth at a decent screen resolution. Just look at how online video (eg Youtube) is buffered before it starts.

A wireless network at speeds whereby wireless hard drives and wireless displays sounds very interesting, especially in say a university library where the units people use would just need to be basically a display, keyboard and mouse if they could access the servers quickly enough wirelessly. How many computers could or would be supported with wireless hard drive access (and/or wireless displays) before the available bandwidth would be used up?

Wired networks have their downsides (especially if damaged or cut accidentally), but I've generally found them to be faster and have a lower error rate.

So what are other people's experiences of the issues?

Comment Re:On par with USA... (Score 1) 193

When I was on holiday in the States in 2005, I used payphones and I bought a friend a pre-paid (pay as you go) cellphone.

However I bought it with a credit card (which does tie it to me). In 2005 I also bought a pre-paid (100 Euro credit) cellphone with cash.

The problem with cellphones is that you need an awful lot of dimes to make an international call. :)

Our European cellphones (unless they're dual band pricy models) don't work in the states and vice-versa.

Considering cellphones set off metal detectors, I'd quite happily leave a "useless in America" mobile phone behind with me and just buy one locally. If the Yankee government wants to listen in to my calls (especially if I'm calling family in the UK), so be it! I've got nothing to hide; and they have my fingerprints/photo from immigration as we Brits travel under the US VISIT/visa waiver programme.

You should never say anything over a phone line you don't want recorded (as it could be at the other end) or overheard anyway... same goes for email.

Comment Re:Frightening (Score 2, Insightful) 270

The truth of the matter is; although we're just watching a video. Personally, I'd prefer to go down to the park, river or sea and go fishing; interacting with a real person rather than a fantasy boy.

I was born at the start of the 1980s. I got my first computer (Commodore 64) for my 7th birthday. I've spend a lot of my life in front of a screen, growing up with video games as a pastime, then working in computer troubleshooting and website design.

I also play music professionally. The latter I prefer as you get a reaction from an audience, whether singing or clapping. A computer can't provide the human touch yet, but artificial intelligence has come a long way from the robot dogs, a robot violin player and Sony's robot that can walk.

Sooner or later, we'll move beyond a computer's AI capacity being like a child or baby. What will we do when artificial intelligences have a similar neural capacity to humans? Will we treat artificial life as comparable to human; or continue to see human life as more important?

More of society's decisions are being taken by machine, not by people (although people programmed the machines). Where will it all end? Will we have robots like those that Isaac Asimov described with laws drummed into them not to harm people? Will we explore space, the universe and the deep ocean with artificial intelligences in places we can't go? Will we put machines at work to come up with cures to cancer, diseases or social problems eg poverty or famine?

Or in the end would we prefer our societies to be governed by people as our political systems have for generations? What will we do when artificial intelligences get physical bodies and they can pass the Turing Test?

All these are things that may come to pass in my lifetime; alternatively we may just screw things up and make the human race extinct by complete ecosystem collapse (or at least enough that the human race is made extinct).

That's why manned colonies on the Moon and Mars are essential; as a failsafe in case Planet Earth should face a major disaster (meteroid strike, global warming, biodiversity problems, problems affecting human fertility).

Submission + - Iroquois team refused UK visas RFID passport chips (yahoo.com) 1

56ker writes: I found this interesting story on Yahoo (there are other news stories too) about the Iroquois team being refused UK visas to travel to the UK as part of the once every four year world lacrosse championship.

It seems the sticking point is that as a sovereign nation within the United States (and Canada) they issue their own passports. As these are just paper passports (like the big black passports we used to use for years before joining the European Union) and don't have digital photos and RFID tags the lacrosse teams have been turned down for visas by the local British embassy or consulate.

My grandfather's passport (which I still have) which has no RFID tags got him into France before they were invaded by the Germans in the 1940s. According to the article the first game the Iroquois have is against England.

One of the ironies of the situation is that in the UK we have different nations; England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, each with their own national team. Why can't the native American or First Nation Canadians be recognised in this way? Their sense of identity and nationality is the tribal group they belong to. Understandably regarding their history they have strong feelings about having a Yankee or Canadian passport.

If the US will let them leave (which they have with a one-time waiver) and they've got return tickets, what's the problem (or is it just a cunning way for England to win by default against a better team)? ;)

As usual comments, including personal or otherwise stories about strange immigration decisions.

P.S. Anyone any idea how to get the spellchecker on livejournal to use British English by default rather than American English?

In the interests of open journalism, the author of this article is married to a person of native Lakota Sioux descent born on a reservation in Canada, who now lives in the UK.

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