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Exxon Mobile CEO Sues To Stop Fracking Near His Texas Ranch 317

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Exxon Mobile's CEO Rex Tillerson's day job is to do all he can to protect and nurture the process of hydraulic fracturing—aka 'fracking'—so that his company can continue to rake in billions via the production and sale of natural gas. 'This type of dysfunctional regulation is holding back the American economic recovery, growth, and global competitiveness,' said Tillerson in 2012 of attempts to increase oversight of drilling operations. But now Rick Unger reports at Forbes that Tillerson has joined a lawsuit seeking to shut down a fracking project near his Texas ranch. Why? Because the 160 foot water tower being built next to Tillerson's house that will supply the water to the near-by fracking site, means the arrival of loud trucks, an ugly tower next door, and the general unpleasantness that will interfere with the quality of his life and the real estate value of his sizeable ranch. The water tower is being built by Cross Timbers Water Supply Corp., a nonprofit utility that has supplied water to the region for half a century. Cross Timbers says that it is required by state law to build enough capacity to serve growing demand. In 2011, Bartonville denied Cross Timbers a permit to build the water tower, saying the location was reserved for residences. The water company sued, arguing that it is exempt from municipal zoning because of its status as a public utility. In May 2012, a state district court judge agreed with Cross Timbers and compelled the town to issue a permit. The utility resumed construction as the town appealed the decision. Later that year, the Tillersons and their co-plaintiffs sued Cross Timbers, saying that the company had promised them it wouldn't build a tower near their properties. An Exxon spokesman said Tillerson declined to comment. The company 'has no involvement in the legal matter' and its directors weren't told of Mr. Tillerson's participation, the spokesman said."

Comment Re:Umm safety? (Score 1) 305

Ummm, nope... In Ohio (as of a few years ago), the only "safety inspection" for personal vehicles checked to ensure that a vehicle purchased out-of-state matched the VIN # on the title. Illinois has no safety inspection whatsoever for cars & light trucks/B-Trucks. (B-Trucks used to have them until 1984; commercial vehicles excluding light pickup trucks still have annual safety inspections; vehicles in Chicagoland & the IL portion of St. Louis have emissions testing). At the other extreme, states like New York & Texas have a very thorough safety inspection. In some states, "safety inspections" are really nothing more than compliance checks, checking things like window tint.

Comment Re:So, will a 2005-era routers get a firmware upda (Score 1) 264

But you bought an off-the-shelf PC in 1998 with standard components. I'm talking about a (mythical) fridge with unique components, unique software, unique drivers, etc. Sorry, but an IoT device will likely never run more than a "+ 0.1" version higher of an underlying OS & related software ("+ 0.2" for Linux)--given track records of manufacturers working on old products. They won't open source everything for fear competitors would use it competitively against them. To add, even if they did open source the whole IoT fridge, you're assuming that someone would actively pick up the project... Simply open sourcing something & dumping it on the Internet doesn't mean anyone's actively interested & working on that project.

Comment Re:So, will a 2005-era routers get a firmware upda (Score 1) 264

I agree with you, in theory. In practice, however, nobody is fixing bugs/security holes in obsolete platforms. Let's say the IoT existed in 1994 & you bought a new Kenmore IoT fridge running Linux 1.x. Fast forward to 2014--who today is doing anything with the Linux 1.x kernel? Nobody--including Kenmore support engineers. Your fridge was pwned probably 15 years ago...

Comment Re:So, will a 2005-era routers get a firmware upda (Score 1) 264

It's not a question about warranty or even availability of replacement parts, it's a question about opening themselves up to extremely long support schedules, something they have never had to do before. If I call an appliance repairman for a 40 year old fridge, he'll likely be able to find the right replacement part... But that model no longer holds true in IoT. Look at cars (at least in the US)... Auto manufacturers have taken on the responsibility that all of their past models could face a recall, even 15+ years after the fact. (NHTSA still opens cases for cars sold in the '90s). The same would have to be said about Internet-connected devices--specifically household appliances.

The problem is that we're talking about operating systems, web hosting software, network stacks, databases, device drivers, etc., that would need to be supported for, easily, 20+ years. Think back to 1994--what software that existed then is supported now??? NONE. So, imagine you buy in 2014 an IoT refrigerator full of the latest & greatest Android 4.4.x and/or Linux 3.13.x FOSS software--what sort of support would you expect for any of that in 2034??? Would you expect Amana, GE, Kitchenaid, Electrolux, Miele, Kenmore, etc., engineers to be fixing Linux 3.13.x kernel security holes in their 20-year old appliances? FOSS or not, as a consumer, I would expect that appliance to continue to work & not get bricked by malware that was deposited remotely...

Comment So, will a 2005-era routers get a firmware update? (Score 4, Insightful) 264

I seriously doubt that Belkin will put out firmware updates for all the old $50 Linksys router models they inherited support for--instead opting to push users to buy replacement models they otherwise wouldn't need. The likely answer is NO--even with a class-action lawsuit. (In all actuality, a 2006-era 2.4GHz 802.11G WPA2 router is still more than plenty for the crappy broadband speeds available in North America...)

This is what scares me about the Internet of Things when it comes to long-life appliances that you could own/use for decades... How long will manufacturers (many of whom have 0 experience so far with connecting their products to anything but a power cable) continue to support these devices? Ultimately, government regulation may be required in this space. God knows I wouldn't want my IoT refrigerator to get "bricked" (a really heavy, big brick!) after 20 years because the manufacturer went under & the fridge couldn't phone home... Or worse, because someone found a backdoor that had been in place for all models in use for 9 years before my model was developed...

Comment The hidden danger of the IoT... (Score 3, Interesting) 77

Not to sound like I'm a crotchety old man telling kids to "stay off my lawn" and eschewing technology, but the Internet of Things really is opening Pandora's box... Currently, manufacturers tend to make a product, find bugs/get user complaints & make a new product. They might produce a few bug/security fixes--but then ignore that product in very short order. But the IoT really changes things, and not for the better...

Here's an example... Walk around your house and figure out the age of all of your appliances. You probably have a few items (e.g. refrigerator) that are pushing 20 years old??? Now, imagine you buy a few shiny new IoT appliances & they're all connected to the Internet--15+ years from now. Seriously, this is a disaster waiting to happen & a hacker's wet dream... Imagine what support will exist 15 years from now for current versions of Android 4.x, Linux 3.x, Apache, PHP, MySQL, etc. Or better yet, what 1999-era software still receives even security patches or bug fixes? (Win9x--nope. Linux 2.2--nope. IIS4--nope. W2K--nope. SQL Server 7--nope... You get my point...)

Ultimately, with the IoT, we're trusting that companies will be willing to support their products, including OS kernel patching on FOSS platforms that were long-abandoned by their progenitors, 25-odd years??? Dream on... I don't intend to replace my fridge or washer in a few years because it got "bricked" because of a security hole the manufacturer chose to ignore...

Belkin's problems are only the beginning...

Comment So, what exactly is Metro doing in the background? (Score 3, Insightful) 389

One thing that nobody seems to talk about is what is Metro doing behind the scenes? I really haven't seen any articles and we (I believe) incorrectly believe that the Metro "apps" aren't running unless they're explicitly executed... Two big concerns for me...

1) How is my machine being slowed down (CPU cycles, disk I/O, etc.) and how much bandwidth is being wasted (especially if I don't get unlimited data) by Metro apps that are running "in the background"? This is really important at the server level--why do I need any apps running on a server--especially if it's running in a VM???
2) What information is being sent out the door about my usage to Microsoft and other entities (spyware), especially if those apps came preloaded with Windows 8.x / Server 2012 (base/R2)??? Again, servers are especially of concern--why should Microsoft or anyone else know how I'm using my server?

Numerous articles have said that Windows 8.x runs better/faster than Windows 7 on all kinds of hardware (even using less memory), but I can't see how this is possible given the concerns above...

Submission + - North Korea Warned Of Possible Prosecution For 'Crimes Against Humanity' (telegraph.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: The Telegraph reports, "North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong-un, has been warned that he could face prosecution for crimes against humanity after a United Nations inquiry accused him of some of the worst human rights abuses since the Second World War. In some of the harshest criticism ever unleashed by the international community against the Pyongyang regime, a UN panel branded it “a shock to the conscience of humanity”. Michael Kirby, a retired Australian judge who has spent nearly a year taking testimony from victims of the regime, said much of it reminded him of atrocities perpetrated by Nazi Germany and Pol Pot’s Cambodia. Yesterday his team published a 374-page report detailing allegations of murder, torture, rape, abductions, enslavement, and starvation, describing North Korea as a dictatorship “that does not have any parallel in the contemporary world”. In a bid to put pressure on Kim Jong-un, 31, Mr Kirby has taken the unusual step of writing to the North Korean leader to warn him that both he and hundreds of his henchmen could one day face prosecution. " — More at BBC, including a cache of report.

Submission + - Samsung Could Have Bought Android but Laughed Idea out of the Boardroom (ibtimes.co.uk)

concertina226 writes: According to Dogfight: How Apple and Google Went to War and Started a Revolution by Wired's contributing editor Fred Vogelstein, engineer Andy Rubin, who started the Android project in 2003, pitched the mobile operating system idea to Samsung.

"I pitch the whole Android vision to them like they are a venture capitalist. And at the end and I am out of breath, with the whole thing laid out ... there is silence. Literally silence, like there are crickets in the room," said Rubin, who had flown out to Seoul with his team in 2004 to pitch to the electronics giant.

Google acquired Android for $50m two weeks after the Samsung presentation and the icing on the cake for Rubin, was receiving a call from Samsung the day after the acquisition was announced, demanding that Rubin meet with them to discuss his "very, very interesting proposal".

Submission + - Dell Spyware? 2

An anonymous reader writes: I recently purchased a laptop from Dell for a friend. Yesterday I received a call from Dell, that the laptop was downloading material which may make it susceptible to malware. They were very insistent that they had not installed spyware by default, but could not explain rationally how they had come by this information. While I'm not concerned about what my friend is doing with his new laptop, I am very concerned that Dell is monitoring the internet activity of this machine. I want to ensure that my friend has a clean experience, so what's the consensus on limiting the spying? I don't have access to the machine, so any directions on which services to disable or programs to uninstall would need to be followed by a very non-tech person. Any hope on getting Dell to stop the monitoring?

Comment Re:rebuttal misses some points... (Score 1) 551

Renewables may have scaled up already too much in some countries... In January, wholesale prices for electricity in Germany & Nordic countries were negative for a brief period when the January storms sent wind & hydro production up... http://www.reuters.com/article...

Nuclear needs to be a "backup option", but it needs to be always on. What do you do, however, when renewables (solar, wind, etc.) are flooding the grid, but with production that could disappear completely with a weather change in a region within 1 hour?

Comment Re:15% of my customers are IE7 or below (Score 3, Interesting) 390

Let's see... Microsoft has only themselves to blame for this problem. They stopped supporting their non-standard features in newer versions, and made the stupid decision to not make newer versions of IE to try to "nudge their OS choices". In mixed OS environments, even if only temporary, the version of IE used ends up being the least common denominator. So, in a shop that ran a mix of XP, W2K, and 98, you standardized on IE6. Currently, if you're running a mix of XP and Win7, you're likely using IE8...

Obviously, this plan backfired on Microsoft. What other browser vendor supports 6 major versions of their browser? Oh, and if you thought that IE6 would fall off with the demise of WinXP, think again--it came with Windows Server 2003, so IE6 is already supported until 7/2015, just shy of 14 years after it was introduced!!! (And that's not assuming that XP doesn't continue to get support fixes beyond 4/2014 or even 7/2015...)

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