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Censorship

Submission + - Australian secret blacklist leaked 1

dysprosia writes: The Australian secret blacklist has been leaked at Wikileaks. There are some "interesting" choices on the list, as the Sydney Morning Herald story suggests, "...about half of the sites on the list are not related to child porn and include a slew of online poker sites, YouTube links, regular gay and straight porn sites, Wikipedia entries, euthanasia sites, websites of fringe religions such as satanic sites, fetish sites, Christian sites, the website of a tour operator and even a Queensland dentist." Not to mention goat.cx, a picture of a suggestive pumpkin...
Censorship

Submission + - Wikileaks pages banned in Australia (wikileaks.org) 1

cpudney writes: "The Sydney Morning Herald reports that the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has added several Wikileaks pages to its controversial blacklist. The blacklisted pages contain Denmark's list of banned websites. Simply linking to addresses in ACMA's blacklist attracts an $11,000 per-day fine as the hosts of the popular Australian broadband forum, Whirlpool, discovered last week when they published a forum post that linked to an anti-abortion web-site recently added to ACMA's blacklist. The blacklist is secret, immune to FOI requests and forms the basis of the Australian government's proposed mandatory ISP-level Internet censorship legislation. Wikileaks' response to notification of the blacklisting states: "The first rule of censorship is that you cannot talk about censorship.""
Censorship

Submission + - Wikileaks added to Australian internet blacklist

An anonymous reader writes: Late last year, the whistleblowing site wikileaks released a secret list of blacklisted sites in Denmark, to highlight the dangers of censorship without the possibility of public scrutiny. Given that a similar Finnish blacklist of 1047 websites contains only 9 instances of child pornography (ostensibly the only category of blocked material), public scrutiny of such lists is clearly important, and is of particular relevance to Australia, which plans to implement a mandatory ISP-level content filter. Wikileaks has now been added to the Australian blacklist, which also contains over 500 sites which are legal to view in Australia, and those who link to the Danish list of links are being threatened with a $11,000 fine. As stated by wikileaks, 'The first rule of censorship is you cannot talk about censorship'.
Cellphones

Submission + - Telco threatens customers over cheap VoIP calls

Herman Toothrot writes: APCmag is reporting that Optus, Australia's second largest telco, sent out a threatening SMS to thousands of its mobile customers on Christmas Day, warning that calls to local calling card services that divert calls overseas via VoIP will be charged at international rates. Despite the fact that the telco isn't responsible for transmitting the call internationally and the service provider pays for the diversion, it claims that these calls are classified as "international" and the customer should be billed as such.

This begs the question, if Optus claims this is acceptable behaviour, should customers be charged international rates when their support call is inevitably transferred to India?

Comment US Copyright Office search (Score 4, Informative) 648

Mac OS X Leopard Version 10.5.
Type of Work: Text
Registration Number / Date: TX0006849489 / 2008-01-24
Application Title: Mac OS X Leopard Version 10.5.
Title: Mac OS X Leopard Version 10.5.
Description: Print material + CD-ROMs.
Copyright Claimant: Apple Inc.. Address: 1 Infinite Loop, Cupertino, CA 95014
Date of Creation: 2007
Date of Publication: 2007-10-26
Nation of First Publication: United States
Authorship on Application: Apple Inc., employer for hire; Domicile: United States. Authorship: new and revised text, illustrations and compilation; new and revised computer program.
Previous Registration: 2006, TX-6-325-148.
Pre-existing Material: Previous versions of "Mac OS" and "Mac OS X" operating system software code.
Basis of Claim: new and revised text, illustrations and compilation; new and revised computer program.
Copyright Note: C.O. correspondence.

Comment Re:No big surprise (Score 5, Insightful) 417

5) Despite the fact that the MP3 technology is over a decade old, encoders are still getting better. You only have to look at the progress LAME has made (particularly the 3.90 and 3.97 'milestone' releases) in not just surpassing the quality of other once-popular MP3 encoders such as Fraunhofer and Xing but in some more recent listening tests even equalling its successor, at ~128kbps VBR, let alone the more high quality VBR presets (V0/V2) that many people rip in and that most pirated releases are released in via the scene.
Software

Submission + - Test Shows Safari 3 Fastest Browser on Windows (staging)

czei writes: "With Apple's bragging about the speed of Safari 3 on Windows, how could we not do our own measurements? We took the top 16 websites according to alexa.com and measured the average page load times using Safari, Firefox, and IE 7, and found that Safari actually was 1.4 to 1.7 times faster, at least on initial page loads."
Censorship

Submission + - Software companies sues popular Australian forum (whirlpool.net.au) 3

Pugzly writes: In a recent announcement on the Whirlpool front page, it appears that accounting software maker 2clix is sueing the founder of the forums as the founder "allowed statements 'relating to the Plaintiff and its software product that are both false and malicious' to be published on the Whirlpool forums."
Hopefully sanity will prevail, but it is the legal system...

AMD

Submission + - AMD 690 Series IGP Chipset Launched

MojoKid writes: AMD has taken the wraps off their first product in the chipset arena since the acquisition of ATI last year. Here is a preview look at AMD's new 690 series chipset with integrated Radeon X1200 graphics. Poised at taking on NVIDIA's long since mature nForce 430 chipset, AMD has provided a competitive new offering in the IGP space it seems. The RS690's integrated Radeon X1250 sports a 400MHz, 128-Bit graphics engine, is Direct X9 compatible and has a maximum resolution of 2048x1536 with 32-Bit color. In addition, both VGA and HDMI outputs can run independently and its HDMI interface supports the 1.2 specification as well as HDCP 1.1.
Education

Submission + - Top 50 Things To Do To Stop Global Warming

An anonymous reader writes: Global warming is a dramatically urgent and serious problem. We don't need to wait for governments to solve this problem: each one of us can bring an important help adopting a more responsible lifestyle: starting from little, everyday things. It's the only reasonable way to save our planet, before it is too late.

There's an handy list of the Top 50 things to do to fight Global Warming that gives useful advices that everyone can follow in order to help the environment: some of them are at no cost, some other require a little investment but can help you save a lot of money, in the middle-long term!
XBox (Games)

Submission + - Xbox360 Hypervisor Vulnerability - Homebrew on 360

RedLine writes: A new post on the BugTraq list released details on a critical vulnerability in Microsoft's Xbox360 that allows privilege escalation into hypervisor mode. Together with a method to inject data into non-privileged memory areas, this vulnerability allows an attacker with physical access to an Xbox 360 to run arbitrary code such as alternative operating systems with full privileges and full hardware access. The post is a follow-up on the anonymous presentation held on December 30th at the 23C3 Hacker Congress that suggested running homebrew code on Xbox360 would be possible soon. The vulnerability works in kernel 4532 and 4548 but was fixed by Microsoft in kernel 4552 (released on Jan 09, 2007) after they were notified about the exploit.

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