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Spam

Porn Spammers Get Five Years Each 187

PC World is reporting that 'California's Jeffrey Kilbride and James Schaffer of Arizona, have been sentenced to more than five years in federal prison. Both were convicted of conspiracy, money laundering, fraud, and transportation of obscene materials, according to The East Valley Tribune, a newspaper covering the case.' Because sometimes bad things happen to bad people.
Microsoft

Submission + - WGA Stores Your MAC Address, But No Mention On Web (wordpress.com)

bobbocanfly writes: "The Windows Genuine Advantage application stores your network cards Media Access Control (MAC) addresses in the Windows Registry, but there is no mention of this happening anywhere on the WGA site or even on the whole of Microsoft.com. Nobody, not even Microsoft it seems, know what they are doing with these addresses but it certainly looks like yet another personal privacy issue with Microsoft's flawed WGA scheme."
NASA

NASA Announces 120 Small Research Projects 41

eldavojohn writes "NASA's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) has released a list of the winning businesses that submitted research proposals in 2006. This is the second phase of a three phase award system and NASA has announced the winners. If you click on any of the projects, there is an interesting writeup of the proposal and technical abstract."
Science

Does Computer Use Actually Cause Carpal Tunnel? 339

BoldAC writes "A geek physician has reviewed the medical literature that explores if a relationship exists between computer use and carpal tunnel syndrome. 'Typing at the keyboard or using the mouse for hours and hours upon end just seems like it has to be horrible for your joints, right?' His conclusions certainly seem to contradict the thinking of many: 'The current research shows that computer use has very little role in causing carpal tunnel syndrome.' It even seems that both Harvard and the Journal of the American Medical Association agree with his conclusions."
The Military

Submission + - US Navy warships can't take pounding waves? (networkworld.com)

coondoggie writes: "It would be pretty dicey for the US Navy to have destroyers that couldn't take the pounding of heavy seas across their bows but that seems to be the case. The US Navy today admitted that many of its 51 Arleigh Burke-class (DDG) destroyers currently in service have serious structural defects, with repairs and bow-strengthening work to cost at least $62 million, according to a press statement from Jane's Navy International. The USN has confirmed to Jane's 'class-wide' structural buckling in the destroyers, with a source saying the impact of rough-sea slamming on the bow has led to the warping of main transverse bulkhead beams and some of the cribbing, Jane's said. http://www.networkworld.com/community/node/20610"
Oracle

Submission + - Feds Investigating Oracle Tax Claims (informationweek.com)

Preedit writes: Information Week says it's reporting exclusively that the IRS is looking at whether Oracle improperly claimed a $78 million tax refund. The story also states that Oracle may have trumped up almost a quarter-of-a-billion in losses in order to get the tax breaks. The losses were purportedly incurred after Oracle sold off shares in subsidiaries Treasury Service Corporation, Concentra Software and DataLogix. The investigation is ongoing, Info Week says.
Biotech

Submission + - Plastic to help water and gas industries

Roland Piquepaille writes: "Researchers have lots of imagination. After developing plastic as solid as steel, other scientists from in Australia, Korea and in the U.S. have created a plastic which could cut CO2 emissions and purify water. Their new material mimics pores found in plants and is exceptionally efficient. As said one of the lead researchers, "it can separate carbon dioxide from natural gas a few hundred times faster than current plastic membranes and its performance is four times better in terms of purity of the separated gas." Now it remains to be seen if commercial companies are interested, either for water desalination or for natural gas processing plants. Read more for additional details and pictures showing how the pores in this new material allow some chemical elements to pass through while rejecting other substances."
Biotech

Submission + - What does it feel like to die?

Hugh Pickens writes: "The New Scientist reports that individuals who have had a brush with death can offer us some insight into what it feels like to die.

None of us can know the answers for sure until our own time comes, but the few individuals who have their brush with death interrupted by a last-minute reprieve can offer some intriguing insights. Advances in medical science, too, have led to a better understanding of what goes on as the body gives up the ghost. Whether as a result of a heart attack, drowning or suffocation, for example, people ultimately die because their neurons are deprived of oxygen, leading to cessation of electrical activity in the brain — the modern definition of biological death. If the flow of freshly oxygenated blood to the brain is stopped, through whatever mechanism, people tend to have about 10 seconds before losing consciousness. They may take many more minutes to die, though, with the exact mode of death affecting the subtleties of the final experience. If you can take the grisly details, read on for a brief guide to the many and varied ways death can suddenly strike.
"
The Media

Submission + - Hurricane Expert Calls Gore Theory "Ridiculous (smh.com.au) 5

DrWho520 writes: ONE of the world's foremost meteorologists has called the theory that helped Al Gore share the Nobel Peace Prize "ridiculous" and the product of "people who don't understand how the atmosphere works".
Dr William Gray, a pioneer in the science of seasonal hurricane forecasts, told a packed lecture hall at the University of North Carolina that humans were not responsible for the warming of the earth.

Education

Submission + - Schools Placing at 99th Percentile for Cheating 3

theodp writes: "Time reports that sometimes No-Child-Left-Behind really means No-Test-Scores-Left-Behind, creating opportunities for data forensics firms like Caveon (check out their Ten Most Wanted Cheaters poster). Take Houston's Forest Brook H.S., which was a shining example of school reform. In 2005, after years of rock-bottom test scores, 95% of its 11th graders passed the state science test. Teachers were praised and the school was awarded a $165,000 grant by the governor. But an investigation found a host of irregularities and last year's testing was monitored by an outside agency. Test scores plunged and only 39% passed science."
Privacy

Submission + - Monitoring Software Helps Police Find Laptop (signonsandiego.com)

fhic writes: "A father installed monitoring software on his son's laptop. The laptop was stolen and used by the thieves. The monitoring software worked as designed, and emailed the details to dad. Dad called the cops, and they were able to locate the laptop and arrest the thieves."
Privacy

Submission + - Was Qwest Punished For Not Spying?

Avantare writes: QWest did the right thing and rejected the governments request for telephone records. But at what cost? An interesting article from CBS News bringing to light court papers that suggest convicted Exec's rejection of classified project led to loss of goverment business. Makes you wonder what kind of 'rewards' AT&T, Bellsouth and Verizon got from the government.
United States

Airlines Have to Ask Permission to Fly 72 Hours Early 596

twitter wrote to mention that the TSA (Transport Security Administration) has released a new set of proposed rules that is raising quite a stir among groups ranging from the ACLU to the American Society of Travel Agents. Under the new rules airlines would be required to submit a passenger manifest (including full name, sex, date of birth, and redress number) for all flights departing, arriving, or flying over the United States at least 72 hours prior to departure. Boarding passes will only be issued to those passengers that have been cleared. "Hasbrouck submitted that requiring clearance in order to travel violates the US First Amendment right of assembly, the central claim in John Gilmore's case against the US government over the requirement to show photo ID for domestic travel. [...] ACLU's Barry Steinhardt quoted press reports of 500,000 to 750,000 people on the watch list (of which the no-fly list is a subset). 'If there are that many terrorists in the US, we'd all be dead.' TSA representative Kip Hawley noted that the list has been carefully investigated and halved over the last year. 'Half of grossly bloated is still bloated,' Steinhardt replied."
The Courts

US Faces $100 Billion Fine For Web Gambling Ban 522

Stony Stevenson writes with the news that the World Trade Organization is seeking billions of dollars in compensation from the United States from their ban on internet gambling. The view of the WTO is that the US has reneged on commitments to the organization. "The disputed concessions arise from Antigua's victory earlier this year when the WTO ruled that the US violated its treaty obligations by excluding online Antiguan gaming operators, while allowing domestic operators to offer various forms of online gaming. Instead of complying with the ruling, the Bush administration withdrew the sizeable gambling industry from its free trade commitments. As a result, all 151 WTO members are considering seeking compensation for the withdrawal equal to the size of the entire US land-based and online gaming market, estimated at nearly US$100 billion."

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