Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts

Bloggers Immune From Suits Against Commenters 142

An anonymous reader writes "Suppose a commenter posts a libelous comment here at Slashdot. Can Slashdot and its owners be sued for defamation? A federal appeals court just held that no, they cannot. The court noted that a federal law was designed to ensure that 'within broad limits, message board operators would not be held responsible for the postings made by others on that board,' adding that, were the law otherwise, it would have an 'obvious chilling effect' on blogger speech."
Privacy

Surveillance Cameras Get Smarter 186

kog777 writes to mention that the IB Times is taking a look at where surveillance camera technology is headed. Soon researchers tell us that cameras will be available that not only record, but are able to interpret what they see. "The advancements have already been put to work. For example, cameras in Chicago and Washington can detect gunshots and alert police. Baltimore installed cameras that can play a recorded message and snap pictures of graffiti sprayers or illegal dumpers. In the commercial market, the gaming industry uses camera systems that can detect facial features, according to Bordes. Casinos use their vast banks of security cameras to hunt cheating gamblers who have been flagged before."
Power

GE Announces Advancement in Incandescent Technology 619

finfife writes to tell us that GE has announced an advancement in incandescent technology that promises to increase the efficiency of lightbulbs to put them on par with compact fluorescent lamps (CFL). "The new high efficiency incandescent (HEI(TM)) lamp, which incorporates innovative new materials being developed in partnership by GE's Lighting division, headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, and GE's Global Research Center, headquartered in Niskayuna, NY, would replace traditional 40- to 100-Watt household incandescent light bulbs, the most popular lamp type used by consumers today. The new technology could be expanded to all other incandescent types as well. The target for these bulbs at initial production is to be nearly twice as efficient, at 30 lumens-per-Watt, as current incandescent bulbs. Ultimately the high efficiency lamp (HEI) technology is expected to be about four times as efficient as current incandescent bulbs and comparable to CFL bulbs. Adoption of new technology could lead to greenhouse gas emission reductions of up to 40 million tons of CO2 in the U.S. and up to 50 million tons in the EU if the entire installed base of traditional incandescent bulbs was replaced with HEI lamps."The California legislature may want to revisit the wording of their proposed ban on incandescents (AB 722). How about mandating a level of efficiency rather than assuming that innovation can't happen?"
Internet Explorer

Submission + - Shut your Windows

Amber writes: "Buzz Technologies Inc BZTG.PK has embarked on a bold strategy, to take on the Giants of the Internet, with a suite of products ready and much more coming the company is ready for the Convergent Media future and the changes that makes to the Internet, TV and Mobile Phone. At the web level, The Buzz Browser, THE BUZZ Instant Messenger, our SMS, VoIP and Search engines are all operational and being integrated into a single powerful Platform. This Competes directly with Windows Live, Windows IE. With further Development the Buzz Browser is also a competitor to Windows Vista and XP. The Buzz Virtual Computer will see a stage 1 release this week allowing Individuals and corporations the ability to store their files within the browser, making those files available from where ever they log on. www.12buzz.com www.12isp.com Microsoft Revenue is expected to be in the range of $50.2 billion to $50.7 billion, The majority of this income came from the markets Buzz will enter in competition. While Buzz does not expect to be catching Microsoft Corporation anytime soon, this week we start the process. While we could explain in detail the technical specifications we think as a shareholder or potential shareholder you should simply compare the products"
Quake

Submission + - Quake Ported to Nintendo DS

Joan Cross writes: ID Software`s Quake the first-person shooter computer game that was released back in 2006 has today been ported to the Nintendo DS, the coder Simon Hall has manged to squeeze the program, working state and game data into the four megabytes of main memory of Nintendo`s handheld. The game is fully playable with both shareware or commercial pak files, total conversions and mods will work also.
Democrats

Submission + - Clinton's Password Protected Blog Revealed

Chris Chiasson writes: "It isn't mentioned on Clinton's front page right now, but I pulled the story from their news feed. I added the feed to Google Reader a few days ago, even though it was an authenticated feed. Either they disabled the authentication for Google's robots or they accidentally left it unprotected for a few minutes but, AFAIK, we now have the first three entries of Clinton's "guest blog" before they have been linked from the front page and password unprotected."
The Courts

Submission + - Piracy crack down targets well-meaning teacher

thefickler writes: Piracy charges have been dropped against a 40-year-old Russian school principal who purchased 12 computers, found to contain pirate software, for his school. The judge ruling on the case, Vera Barakina, said the value of the pirate software is "insignificant" when compared to Microsoft's annual revenue.
GNOME

Submission + - Linux.com | Linus fires latest shot in GNOME Wars

tito2502 writes: "http://applications.linux.com/applications/07/02/1 6/1937237.shtml?tid=26 Some bad blood between Linus Torvalds and GNOME developers is flaring up again. Previously, Torvalds has said that Linux users should switch to KDE instead of GNOME because of the GNOME team's "users are idiots" mentality. Now he has "put his money where his mouth is" by submitting patches to GNOME in order to have it behave as he likes."
Software

Submission + - Blender 2.43 released!

An anonymous reader writes: The 2.43 release of Blender is out today (January 18, 2007)! Lots of goodies here — check out the 2.43 release log to get an impression of just how much has changed. Also, for the first time we have a series of Feature Videos demonstrating the power of some of the most important new features. Very cool stuff. Download 2.43 now! Also, a lot has changed behind the scenes: obviously we redid the entire website with a design by Matt Ebb. We also have a new webserver for the website dubbed 'Emo',and we also have three separate download servers (not counting our international mirrors), bringing our total download capacity up to 300mb. Slashdot and Digg? Bring 'em on!
Microsoft

Submission + - New Xbox 360 Rumored For May 1st Release

EveryNickIsTaken writes: Gameinformer.com is reporting that the oft-rumored Zephyr may in fact be getting a May 1st release. From the artcle:

Retailers have confirmed that the new SKU is in their systems, set for a May 1 release for $479.99. In addition to the new video interface, the system would also pack a 120 GB hard drive into its nifty black exterior.
HDMI, 120GB hard drive, and a new black case? At that price point, I'd say it's rather unlikely the HD-DVD drives will be included.
Communications

Journal Journal: SIP over TCP - using it in NAT friendly way

I have recently browsed through the latest SIP RFC looking for ways to be more NAT friendly for VoIP.

What I found is not very conclusive: The latest RFC indeed tries to push TCP as default transport for SIP (Yessss signalling links are making a come back) but the use of TCP connection is left to a lot of ambiguities.

Security

Submission + - Most Comprehensive Reverse Hash Lookup (MD5, etc)

Dustin Fineout writes: "A new reverse hash look-up web site has been launched which conglomerates the separate efforts of many such sites into a single resource. http://md5.dustinfineout.com/ searches both local databases and several remote servers to create the most comprehensive reverse hash look-up available anywhere, and in under ten seconds.

The initial version, launched yesterday, offers reverse hash look-up for the MD5 algorithm on a total of six servers' databases. By the end of the week, support for SHA1, MD2, MD4, LanMan, and NTLM algorithms have been promised, as well as expanding the server pool to at least 10 different data sources. The web application also allows visitors to add entries to the datapool by checking for their existence in all servers in the datapool before adding to a local database. The source code for both the online PHP application and several Java programs are also scheduled to be released under the BSD license by the end of this week."
The Internet

YouTube AntiPiracy Policy Likened to 'Mafia Shakedown' 103

A C|Net article discusses reactions to YouTube's newly proposed antipiracy software policy. The company is now offering assistance for IP holders, allowing them to keep track of their content on the YouTube service ... if they sign up with the company for licensing agreements. A spokesman for Viacom (already in a fight with YouTube to take down numerous video clips) called this policy 'unacceptable', and another industry analyst likened it to a 'mafia shakedown.' YouTubes cites the challenges of determining ownership of a given video clip as the reason for this policy, and hopes that IP owners will cooperate in resolving these issues. Some onlookers also feel that these protestations are simply saber-rattling before an eventual deal: "'The debates are about negotiations more than anything else--who's going to pay whom and how much,' said Saul Berman, IBM's global media and entertainment strategy leader."
Music

Submission + - Maldroid and YouTube redefine paying your dues

Nate Seltenrich writes: "http://www.eastbayexpress.com/2007-02-14/news/vide o-made-the-radio-star

This is the story of perhaps the first ever indie band to be launched on music videos and to parlay that attention into mainstream success. Bands like Maldroid and OK Go have sparked a renaissance in music videos whereby, thanks to technological advances and user-generated sites like YouTube, an indie band can get its big break through music videos. But unlike OK Go, who were already signed to a major label by the time they acheived mainstream success through their two DIY videos, Maldroid had yet to play a single live show or release a single song for sale when it won YouTube's first-ever music video contest last November. As a result, the band was featured on Good Morning America and met with major labels, still before it had played a show. Another twist is that founder and lead singer Ryan Divine started working on his zero-budget winning video before Maldroid became a band and before YouTube even existed. The group continues to be successful, with their second video earning 700,000 views in less than five days of being featured at YouTube (it's now nearing 1 million). Last night they played only their fifth show at one of San Francisco's most well known venues. Theirs is an utterly unique and fascinating story with widespread appeal, all facilitated by a little creativity, lots of time (the first video took a year to hand-animate), powerful Mac software (Divine spoke at the MacWorld conference about using Apple Motion to make music videos), and the magic of YouTube. It's a technology story, a music story, and a culture story all rolled into one. Please consider posting it. Watch the video linked below or read the first section of the story if you're unsure. Check out the visuals for the story too; they're excellent.

Here's the link again:
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/2007-02-14/news/vide o-made-the-radio-star

And here's Maldroid's incredible Lite Brite video on YouTube, now with almost 1 million views: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxZJYbVd1hE

Check out the newspaper cover too. It's a pretty cool image:
http://www.nate-selt.com/cover.jpg

Many thanks for your consideration.
Nate"

Slashdot Top Deals

Modeling paged and segmented memories is tricky business. -- P.J. Denning

Working...