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Feed Accessorize With Serotonin (wired.com)

Nothing says I love you -- and your crippling mood disorder -- better than a bio-geeky necklace made of the molecules of key neurotransmitters and hormones. In Bodyhack.


OS X

Submission + - PC World Picks OSX Over XP, Vista (and, uh, Linux)

DenmaFat writes: "The article is buried in PC World's web site, but the ordinarily Redmond-centric magazine comes right out and says that OS X is the best operating system for its readers, over Linux and Windows XP, with Windows Vista ranked dead last. The review is the subjective assessment of just one author, but he provides a lengthy qualitative comparison chart to back up his recommendations. On a related note, chilled beverages now available in Hades."
Privacy

DoJ Mulls Tracking Picture Uploads 169

Dominus Suus passed us a link to a C|Net article about a disturbing threat to privacy from the Justice Department. According to the article, a private meeting was held Wednesday between Justice officials and telecom industry representatives. With individuals from companies such as AOL and Comcast looking on, the officials continued overtures to increase data retention by ISPs on American citizens. This week, they were specifically looking to have records kept of photo uploads. In this way, and 'in case police determine the content is illegal and choose to investigate,' an easy trail from A to Z will be available. The article provides a good deal of background on the Bush Administration's history with data retention, with ties to events even older than the Bush presidency. "The Justice Department's request for information about compliance costs echoes a decade-ago debate over wiretapping digital telephones, which led to the 1994 Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act. To reduce opposition by telephone companies, Congress set aside $500 million for reimbursement and the legislation easily cleared both chambers by voice votes. Once Internet providers come up with specific figures, privacy advocates worry, Congress will offer to write a generous check to cover all compliance costs and the process will repeat itself."
Security

Submission + - OLPC kill switch makes WGA look friendly

Ma'a Nonu writes: Some countries don't want the OLPC laptops to end up in the wrong hands, so the OLPC Project will be including an anti-theft daemon that will allow the laptops to be locked down remotely. 'The system allows countries to optionally establish a "license" period for the laptops, such as 21 days. When laptops are connected to the Internet, they will synchronize with an NTP server to obtain the correct time and date, and then obtain a license which must be renewed in the time specified. Laptops which are not renewed within the timeframe will lock. If the laptops are connected to the Internet after being reported stolen, the license-issuing server can deactivate the laptops immediately, as well. Locked laptops can be reauthorized and returned to normal use by the oversight entity.' The daemon cannot be disabled, according to the OLPC project, even with root access.
Censorship

Submission + - BBC Debunks Itself

Pixelpump writes: "The BBC has proven itself to be a shill for the status quo with the release of it's documentary "9/11: The Conspiracy Files." The documentary builds strawman after strawman and then valiantly knocks them down, all the while leaving the real questions unanswered and unexplored. http://www.factivism.com/content/view/77/33/"

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