Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Media

Submission + - An application for Berkeley's Nanotube radio

jmichaelg writes: Hot on the heels of yesterday's article about Berkeley's nanotube radio receiver comes this Los Angeles Times article about John Kanzius, a former radio technician who was diagnosed with cancer. Kanzius, who has no medical background, applied his radio skills to his cancer with the intent of baking the cancer. Between chemotherapy treatments, he built a radio transmitter in his garage. To find the ideal radio receiver, he teamed up with Richard Smalley , the 1996 Chemistry Nobel Prize winner, who was also being treated for cancer. Smalley gave him two vials of nanoparticles which, when heated by Kanzius' radio transmitter, destroyed 100% of cancerous cells in a petri dish. The task now is to design a delivery mechanism based on antibodies that'll transport the particles an in-vivo cancer. Kanzius is listed as a co-author on a peer-reviewed paper to be published in the December issue of Cancer.
Privacy

Submission + - First RIAA case victim finally speaks out. (p2pnet.net)

An anonymous reader writes: It’s, “no secret that the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has responded to the growth of online file sharing with a wave of copyright infringement litigation,” wrote James Alonso, Marc Friedenberg, Michael Nguyen, Shawn Oakley and Sarah Calvert from The Columbia Science & Technology Law Review.

“Often, the individuals targeted by the RIAA fear the overwhelming costs of defending themselves in court, and many have agreed to pay large settlements.”

Often, but not always.

Now, inspired by the examples of people such as the five very reluctant heroines mentioned below, increasing numbers of victims are deciding not to let themselves be terrorised into settling.

The five, courageous in every sense of the word, are:
  • Patti Santangelo, a New York mother of five children, two of whom have now become RIAA targets
  • Rae-Jay Schwartz, another mother, bound to a wheelchair by multiple sclerosis, the terrible central nervous system disease
  • Marie Lindor, a 57-year-old home health aid whose knowledge of computers and computer systems is zero
  • Tanya Andersen, a disabled mother living off a disability pension
  • Jammie Thomas, a young mother of two from Minnesota


But it’s Thomas, the first of the American RIAA victims to actually appear in court, who’s caught the attention of the international mainstream media for more than just a day or two.

Horrified by the negative (for them) PR the case has been generating, using their connections, political power and influence, the labels are doing their best to distort facts and spin Thomas as a cold schemer whose depredations forced the RIAA to take her to court.

Cary Sherman, the organisation’s chief spin doctor, said he was “surprised it took this long for one of the industry lawsuits to go to trial” when in fact, the organisation has done everything it can to stop any of these cases actually reaching a judge and jury.

Thomas has also achieved two other firsts:

As far as I know, she’s the first to launch her own forum, and for the first time since she was forced into the limelight, she’s telling her own story, in her own words.



One of the subjects she touches on was that it wasn't her decision to replace the harddrive. This fact was a major decision in her persecution.

also never dreamt how large of a story my case would become. Before I went to court, no one except those close to me knew of this situation I was dealing with. Now, I can Google my name and read articles about me. A very odd and surreal feeling for me as I never wanted this much notoriety, ever. Unfortunately, a lot of the articles I’ve read are full of half-truths, conjectures, and right out lies. I can understand media outlets having a deadline to meet, but I cannot understand media outlets filling the holes in their stories with incorrect information.

‘Best Buy made the decision to replace the hard drive’

I would like to now talk about some of that incorrect information which has plagued news articles and comments. First, I will finally set straight the issue with my computer hard drive, when it was replaced, why it was replaced, who replaced it and what might have happened to the old drive. I have read many comments and articles that I had my hard drive replaced after I learned of my suit. This could not be further from the truth. What most people don’t know, if I did have my hard drive replaced after I was served the initial complaint to this suit, that would be considered spoliation of evidence, which is a criminally prosecutable offense. All the following dates, keep in mind so you can see the timeline yourself.

Security

Submission + - Norton AntiVirus makes Mac OS X less secure.

NAVwatch writes: Symantec has known about a vulnerability in NAV for more than nine months now that allows any local program on Mac OS X to gain root access without any of the usual password prompts Mac OS X presents for gaining super-user access thus allowing worms to be installed undetected. Attempts to get Symantec to simply fix permissions on their application directories have largely resulted in Symantec saying other vendor's have insecure software too.
Operating Systems

Submission + - Could a mega-OS vender become less relevant?

NoOnesMessiah writes: It has finally happened in my little corner of Corporate America. I heard the words, "Mega$quish is irrelevant here. We're talking about Apache, PHP and MySQL," from senior management. And just the day before I heard, "...I don't care if you did just upgrade (to Awfulness 2007), you'll have to re-save them (all of those documents) so that the OpenOffice users can open them."

Do my ears deceive me? Is it possible that hundreds of thousands of dollars in licensing fees, obfuscated formats, and a sociopathic desire to jerk with anyone who might develop something compatible/inter-operable might have finally caused a reasonably large company to push their chair back from the Mega-OS table? It's happening, little by little. It IS happening.

So how can I help? I'm an Open Source advocate and a FreeBSD disciple, but... where can I send middle managers for an "objective" view of alternative OS-es and applications that isn't sullied by my (in their eyes) tree-hugging, hippie, free-software-loving views?

Yeah yeah, sure, FSF and EFF. Those are the obvious ones. Check.
FreeBSD and Ubuntu, check.
I even have PortableApps.Com and Groklaw on the list.

But does there exist a links site for the non-technical (mildly-retarded/ADD) middle management crowd? I'm interested in rational, reasonable, and justifiable views. No sensationalism. No bashing. I want some long-term traction on this "brand new" concept. The message I'm trying to send out is, "Hey, these are easy to use too, and they can add value in this way. We're not replacing the old, we're just augmenting it with something new."

So what resources are out there? Has someone already built such a beastie? I don't want to re-invent the wheel, so to speak, but I'll do it if I need to.

Thanks for listening.
Media

Submission + - BBC says "We'll ignore 600 Linux users"

ChunKing writes: A classic case of foot-in-mouth syndrome this week from the possibly highly-educated and not-very-usefully-employed Director of Future Media and Technology at the BBC, Ashley Highfield who has claimed that among BBC's 17 million-odd users 5% of them use Macs but only about 400-600 users run Linux. The implication being that as so few users use Linux then they realistically be ignored with regard to the iPlayer and online media provision.

A Facebook group has already been started in an attempt to make Mr Highfield "eat his words" and in the great British tradition a petition is also under way. This blog site refers to figures from 2005 that would put Mr Highfield's wild and unsubstantiated claims out by at least a factor of ten.

Notwithstanding the fact that thousands of Linux users are also BBC licence payers, I wonder what response Slashdotters have to say to the BBC's Mr Highfield?
Books

Submission + - Top Ten Strangest or Cruellest Science Experiments 1

aalobode writes: "The Times of London has a current story based on the review of a book by Alex Boase, Elephants on Acid and Other Bizarre Experiments. There they list the top science experiments — including the one from which the book gets its name — that were conducted by otherwise sane humans who tragically or otherwise ignored the effect of their research on the subjects themselves. Nowadays, most institutions have a review board for research on human subjects which would flag most proposals that could lead to harm for the subjects, but not so in the past. See for yourself at the url http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/science/article2779808.ece?OTC-HPtoppuff&ATTR=elephants"
The Military

Submission + - DARPA looks to adaptive battlefield wireless nets (networkworld.com) 1

Anonymous Coward writes: "A new Department of Defense project is trying to use cutting-edge wireless research to create a tactical radio net that can adapt to keep soldiers linked with each other on the battlefield. Project WAND, for Wireless Adaptive Network Development, will exploit commercial radio components, rather than custom ones, and use a variety of software techniques and algorithms, many of them only just now emerging in mature form. These $500 walkie-talkie-size radios will form large-scale, peer-to-peer ad hoc nets, which can shift frequencies, sidestep interference, and handle a range of events that today completely disrupt wireless communications. http://www.networkworld.com/news/2007/110107-wand.html"
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Combined Storage and WiFi SD memory card announced (dpreview.com)

Wormfan writes: As reported on dpreview, Eye-Fi have announced a new two gigabyte SD card with built-in WiFi capability that functions in (virtually) any camera supporting SD cards. Once configured the Eye-Fi card allows images to be automatically uploaded to your computer and also any one of seventeen online photo sharing sites.
Input Devices

Submission + - The 10 Worst PC Keyboards of All Time (pcworld.com)

Harry McCracken writes: "We've posted a slideshow on the 10 Worst PC Keyboards of all time — most of which date from the early 1980s, and all of which are just terrible, with missing keys, keys whee they shouldn't be, and some truly strange design decisions. (I'd forgotten that the IBM PCjr didn't even have characters printed on the keycaps.) If you ever owned any of these, browsing through our picks may make your fingers numb all over again. — Harry McCracken, editor in chief, PC World"
Microsoft

Submission + - Windows Vista Corrupts Database Files

Major General Ist writes: ""Time for a rant. If ever there was proof that Vista was rushed out the door, this is it. If ever there was proof that there is slow uptake of Vista by enterprise clients, this is it. Let me explain..." This blog article goes on to discuss how the much hyped Bitmap Differential Transfer (BDT) feature of Windows Vista's Folder Redirection corrupts databases! It seems that the new block synchronization needs some work. I'm amazed this hasn't been discussed everywhere."
OS X

Submission + - Mac OS X gets a trojan

An anonymous reader writes: MacWorld is reporting that there's a trojan making the rounds for OS X. It's a pretty simple and largely harmless affair that, once onboard, directs users to phishing and porn sites, rather than the sites they intended (it installs a fake DNS on the computer). MacOSXHints provides a method of removing the trojan. This couldn't have come at a worst time for Apple, following revelations of a poor firewall implementation in Leopard that could help avoid things just like this.
The Courts

Submission + - Ohio University finds key to getting RIAA to stop 7

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes: "Ohio University, in Athens, Ohio, has found the key to getting the RIAA to stop inundating it and its students with "settlement" letters. According to the university's student online publication, the university paid $60,000, plus $16,000 per year "maintenance", to Audible Magic, the business partner of the RIAA's all-purpose expert witness Dr. Doug Jacobson, for its "CopySense" filtering software. Once it made the payments, the letters stopped. This of course raises a lot of questions as to the 'disinterestedness' of Dr. Jacobson, whose deposition in the UMG v. Lindor case was the subject of interesting Slashdot commentary."
Encryption

Submission + - Bank of America Phishing Exploit (bbaadd.com)

devs writes: "Challenge/Response Labs, a MIT spinoff, is reporting a live man-in-the-middle attack against SiteKey, a security system used by Bank of America and other major financial institutions. What is interesting is, CR Labs (and others) have anticipated the possibility of such attacks more than a year ago. However, apparently those reports have been completely ignored by the financial institutions who is responsible for protecting their customers."
Robotics

Submission + - New Robots Hunt Pirates by Sea, Traffic by Land (popularmechanics.com)

mattnyc99 writes: Two interesting first-looks over at PopularMechanics.com's "Robot Week": a lengthy preview of this weekend's DARPA Urban Challenge, which unlike in past years will put self-driving vehicles through a world of parked cars, three-point turns and oncoming traffic; and a peek into the growing world of high-tech piracy on the open seas, which the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard are looking to cut off by investing in a new fleet of superfast, gun-mounted unmanned surface vessels (USVs). From the article: "The Interceptor is available now. But the USV market is just getting started: Two months ago, British defense firm Qinetiq debuted its own robotic vessel, the jetski-size Sentry. Among its potential duties is intruder investigation, which could include scouting out unidentified boats, along the lines of the raft that detonated alongside the USS Cole in Yemen, as well as offering a first look at a possible pirate-controlled vessel."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Bluetooth picks Wi-Fi as UWB drags along (techworld.com)

judgecorp writes: "The Bluetooth community has decided to make a fast version of Bluetooth running over Wi-Fi. They're doing it because handset makers are increasingly frustrated by the wait for ultra-wideband (UWB), which is supposed to be the next fast generation of Bluetooth. UWB chip makers say the Wi-Fi version of Bluetooth is a waste of time, but Motorola and Sony-Ericsson say that UWB handsets are two years away and a lot of handsets already have Wi-Fi radios — so why not use them?"

Slashdot Top Deals

Hotels are tired of getting ripped off. I checked into a hotel and they had towels from my house. -- Mark Guido

Working...