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Businesses

Submission + - YouTube and the New Creative Class

Hugh Pickens writes: "Kevin Yen, the director of strategic partnerships for YouTube, writes for Cnet that five years after YouTube's birth, the site exceeds 2 billion views a day and a new creative class of budding, do-it-yourself media moguls is emerging who have transformed their fledgling businesses into successful and profitable online brands. For example with only a small band of regular employees — just 40 staffers — Mekanism has built a reputation as "marketing's twisted troubadours, with a particular talent for attracting the wandering eye of the fickle youth market." YouTube personality Phil DeFranco, a frequent Mekanism collaborator, has the seventh most popular channel on YouTube and beats 'Larry King Live' and 'The O'Reilly Factor' in daily audience. "We give companies a fun way to engage new viewers with excellent click-throughs and exposure," says DeFranco adding that "some YouTubers in 2010 will make seven-figure incomes." Yen writes that content creators and distributors determine the cost and availability around their content charging $5.99 the first week, $2.99 a month later, and then migrate to an ad-supported model to sustain demand and broaden their audience. The model is still in its earliest stages with some content owners able to use a "self service" tool on YouTube to charge for access to their videos but consumer habits are changing and "the money is already starting to come. The question really is, who is positioned to capitalize on it? ""

Submission + - Machine learning and game theory

Bill_s16 writes: Space War reports in "Game Theoretic Machine Learning Methods Can Help Explain Long Periods Of Conflict" on a study in PLOS Computational Biology that tends to deemphasize individual influence on instigating fights and asserts that history carrying forward from past conflicts may be more influential. In other words...grudges. And perhaps a step along the path toward something akin to an approximation of Asimov's Psychohistory.

Comment Re:Useless summary (Score 1) 74

Agreed it's a useless summary - but the humble indie bundle has been widely hyped, penumbra is part of it, and it's linked right there in the summary. If anyone out there hasn't played it, I highly recommend giving penumbra a quick play through- it's genuinely one of the scariest games I've played since Dead Space, and worth throwing a few dollars to charity for. All of the other games in the bundle are due to be open sourced, too - I'm looking forward to getting my hands on the back ends of aquaria and world of goo.

Comment Re:Oh this is going to be fun. (Score 1) 44

Funnily enough, I did exactly the same thing with quake, and my geography teacher was kind enough to give me an A4 map of the school site. I couldn't have been more than 13 at the time, but all the same I'm fairly certain that would never happen today.

There's also the issue of copyright on the interior of buildings; as the Manchester Cathedral controversy with resistance:tFoM shows, just because you *can* set your levels anywhere doesn't mean you won't get sued out of existence for using it. Which is sad, really.

Debian

Submission + - Richard Stallman says No to Mono. (fsf.org) 4

twitter writes: "There's been a lot of fuss about mono lately. After SCO and M$ suing over FAT patents, you would think avoiding anything M$ would be a matter of common sense. RMS now steps into the fray to warn against a serious mistake.

Debian's decision to include Mono in the default installation, for the sake of Tomboy which is an application written in C#, leads the community in a risky direction. It is dangerous to depend on C#, so we need to discourage its use. .... This is not to say that implementing C# is a bad thing. ... [writing and using applications in mono] is taking a gratuitous risk.

"

The Internet

The Pirates Will Always Win, Says UK ISP 241

TheEvilOverlord writes "The head of UK ISP TalkTalk, Charles Dunstone, has made the comment ahead of the communications minister's Digital Britain report that illegal downloading cannot be stopped. He said 'If you try speed humps or disconnections for peer-to-peer, people will simply either disguise their traffic or share the content another way. It is a game of Tom and Jerry and you will never catch the mouse. The mouse always wins in this battle and we need to be careful that politicians do not get talked into putting legislation in place that, in the end, ends up looking stupid.' Instead he advocates allowing users 'to get content easily and cheaply.'"
E3

Sony Rumored To Be Debuting Wiimote-Like Controller At E3 129

Anenome writes "Previously, we saw a Microsoft patent on a Wiimote-like device, and now rumors say that Sony too has a similar device in the works. This isn't surprising, given how dominant Nintendo's Wii has proved to be in this hardware generation. However, many gaming-geeks continue to lament the move away from plain old button-pressing. What is exciting is the prospect that all three companies may incorporate Johnny Lee-style head-tracking into the next console generation, which achieves a convincing 3D illusion on a regular vid-screen, leaving us just a few steps away from true positional 3D. Both the Microsoft and Sony patents incorporate a camera looking at the user, a required setup for achieving positional head-tracking."
The Internet

Submission + - Sarah Palin Threatens Site For Redirecting Traffic (techdirt.com) 3

An anonymous reader writes: Apparently whoever owned the website CrackHo.com (and wasn't using it) decided to have all traffic to the site redirected to Alaska Governor Sarah Palin's official web page on the Alaska state government website. It seems that Palin didn't take too kindly to this and had Alaska's lawyers send a cease and desist, claiming that the *redirect* was "hijacking" the state's website, using the official seal of the state of Alaska without authorization (which could net jail time) and federal copyright infringement. Again, because it seems so unbelievable, this wasn't about making use of the Alaska state website in any way. It was a straight redirect to the page. If that makes one guilty of copyright infringement, basically the entire internet is guilty of copyright infringement.
Communications

Submission + - Pirate bay founders have been found guilty (timesonline.co.uk)

__aashqr1992 writes: The BBC and other sources are reporting that the Swedish courts have handed down a one year jail sentence to the founders of the Pirate Bay for violating copyright law. from the Beeb;-

"Frederik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg, Carl Lundstrom and Peter Sunde were found guilty of breaking copyright law and were sentenced to a year in jail. In a Twitter posting, Mr Sunde said: "Nothing will happen to TPB, this is just theatre for the media." Mr Sunde went on to say that he "got the news last night that we lost". "It used to be only movies, now even verdicts are out before the official release.

Here's another link to a (UK) Times article.

The Courts

Appeals Court Says RIAA Hearing Can't Be Streamed 208

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The US Court of Appeals for the First Circuit has overturned a lower court order permitting webcast of an oral argument in an RIAA case, SONY BMG Music Entertainment v. Tenenbaum, in Boston. As one commentator put it, the decision gives the RIAA permission to 'cower behind the same legal system they're using to pillory innocent people.' Ironically, the appeals court's own hearing had been webcast, via an mp3 file. The court admitted that this was not an appropriate case for a 'prerogative writ' of 'mandamus,' but claimed to have authority to issue a writ of 'advisory mandamus.' The opinion came as a bit of a surprise to me because the judges appeared, during the oral argument, to have a handle on the issues. The decision gave me no such impression. From where I sit, the decision was wrong in a number of respects, among them: (a) it contradicted the plain wording of the district court rule, (b) it ignored the First Amendment implications, and (c) there is no such thing as 'advisory' mandamus or 'advisory' anything — our federal courts are specifically precluded from giving advisory opinions."
Security

Zombie Macs Launch DoS Attack 757

Cludge writes "ZDNet has a story (and several related articles) about how Symantec has discovered evidence of an all-Mac based botnet that is actively involved in a DOS attack. Apparently, security on the exploited Macs (call them iBots?) was compromised when unwary users bit-torrented pirated copies of iWork 09 and Photoshop CS4 that contained malware. From the article: 'They describe this as the "first real attempt to create a Mac botnet" and note that the zombie Macs are already being used for nefarious purposes.'"
Image

Swedish Tax Office Targets Webcam Strippers 384

Sweden's tax authorities are cracking down on unreported webcam stripper income. They estimate that hundreds of Swedish women are dodging the law, resulting in a tax loss of about 40m Swedish kronor (£3.3m) annually. The search involves tax officials examining stripper websites, hours upon hours, for completely legitimate purposes. A slightly disheveled project leader said 200 Swedish strippers had been investigated so far, adding the total could be as much as 500. "They are young girls, we can see from the photos. We think that perhaps they are not well informed about the rules," he said.

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