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Media

Submission + - Gore Criticizes Trivialities in News

54mc writes: At a New York City book signing on Friday, former US vice president Al Gore criticized the "trivialities and nonsense" of celebrity gossip in the media and called on people to focus instead on issues like Iraq and climate change. The story is hosted on Breitbart, who were kind enough to give an example of this "nonsense" in a story about a boy who bagged the largest wild hog ever.
Intel

Submission + - Intel Laments Software Development Malaise

chromozone writes: At a recent roundtable discussion in San Francisco ( http://weblog.infoworld.com/realitycheck/archives/ 2007/05/intel_has_gripe.html) Shekhar Borkar, Intel Fellow, director of microprocessor research complained that the software industry was not taking advantage of parallel processing. "It is imperative that software has to double the amount of parallelism [it can address] every two years...If the software doesn't keep up, the chip becomes a paperweight." Borkar said.
Music

Submission + - First Publishers Sign for Free, Legal Guitar Tabs

MXTabs.net writes: "Musicnotes and MXTabs.net have announced the first publishers to sign on to offer free guitar, bass and drum tab downloads at the MXTabs.net web site. Thousands of publishers have signed on, including BMG, peermusic, Famous and Bug Music. Artists include Coldplay, Maroon 5, Linkin Park, Wilco, Ryan Adams, Elvis Costello, Spoon and others. Musicnotes Announces Songwriter Support and Initial Publisher Signings for MXTabs.net"
Censorship

Submission + - Major Thai ISPs are blocking Blogspot subdomain

Anonymous Coward writes: "For the last few days in Thailand, the blogspot subdomain has been blocked by Thai ISPs at the government's request. Currently, the Thai government is controlled by a military junta which shares power with a civilian cabinet, led by a former general. Even though the military controlled Thai government has agreed not to interfere with the media, it has vigorously pursued its enemies on the internet. It has blocked YouTube under the guise of an anachronistic and unjust lese majeste law. It has shut down community radio stations all across the country. And now, it has blocked blogspot. Further, the Bangkok Post(http://pages.citebite.com/p1s7v5g2q8drc) reports that the National Legislative Assembly, the interim puppet parliament hand picked by the military, just passed a draconian Cyber Crime bill that limits free speech and criminalizes political dissent on the internet. You can read further at: http://bangkokpundit.blogspot.com/ http://thailandjumpedtheshark.blogspot.com/"
Security

Submission + - Verisign Sued for false advertising

meltoast writes: Got notice today of a pending lawsuit between the Southeast Texas Medical Associates and Verisign, claiming that there is no difference between Verisign's Secure Site SSL Certificate (40-bit) and the Secure Site Pro SSL Certificate (128-bit). A copy of the notice can be found here. Are the courts capable of deciding that there is no ostensible difference between 40-bit and 128-bit encryption?
Music

Submission + - Trent Reznor Vs the Music Labels

eldavojohn writes: "While it may not seem pertinent to Slashdot, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails, had a frank interview in which he described his pained relationship with his label and record label executives. Reznor complained about his band's latest album, Year Zero, that hasn't sold too well but is still on everyone's iPod. Reznor explains that he asked an executive why the album cost (AUS) $10 more than any other album and got a reply that his fans are loyal so the label knows they'll buy anything at any price. You can imagine that Reznor's reply was not a happy one. One of the more interesting quotes involves Reznor explaining how he would like to release his next album, "If I could do what I want right now, I would put out my next album, you could download it from my site at as high a bit-rate as you want, pay $4 through PayPal." Reminds me of what Stephen King tried years ago. Trent Reznor's interview is an interesting tale from someone on the other side of the RIAA war machine."
Security

Submission + - Next Time You WarDrive? Buy A Latte'

mrneutron2003 writes: Some people need to really understand where the legal system stands on open Wi-Fi networks. Routinely when driving around we find oodles of open access points, and this is far from a big city we live in. But, don't assume when you find an open hotspot that you can do whatever you like. A Michigan man got stuck with 40 hours of community service and a $400 fine for Wi-Fi access from a parking lot. http://www.fastsilicon.com/latest-news/next-time-y ou-wardrive-buy-a-latte.html?Itemid=60
Privacy

Submission + - Hack My Son's Computer, Please

SafteyInNumbers writes: Can an elderly father give police permission to search a password-protected computer kept in his adult son's bedroom, without probable cause or a warrant? In April, a three judge panel of the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals said yes. This week, the son's attorney, Melissa Harrison, an assistant federal public defender in Kansas City, will ask the court to reconsider the panel's ruling. At stake is whether law enforcement will have any responsibility to respect passwords and other expressions of user privacy when searching devices which contain the most sensitive kinds of private information. In United States v. Andrus (.pdf), agents suspected that the defendant was accessing websites containing child pornography, but after eight months of investigation still did not have sufficient probable cause to get a search warrant. Instead, they decided to drop by the defendant's house for an impromptu conversation. The suspect was not at home. However, his 91-year-old father answered the door in his pajamas, invited the agents in, and eventually gave them permission to enter his son's bedroom and search the hard drive on his son's password-protected computer. The agents used EnCase to perform the search, a common forensic tool programmed to ignore Windows logon passwords. Agents found child pornography on the computer. Without a judge's permission, the search depended on the father's authority to allow police access to his son's computer. On this point, the fact that the son locked his parents out of the computer with a password is critical. http://www.wired.com/politics/law/commentary/circu itcourt/2007/05/circuitcourt_0523 Looks like it's time to dust off those encryption programs.

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