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Social Networks

Submission + - Attacking Chat Noise with Original Statements

Googling Yourself writes: "Randall Munroe has an interesting post on his xkcd blog on a new approach to keeping the signal-to-noise ratio high when social communities grow past a certain point. While many forums use moderators to deal with noise as it happens, and communities like Slashdot use running peer-moderation, these methods don't seem to work very well for live time-dependent things like IRC channels. Munroe has put together an experimental auto-moderation system on the #xkcd-signal that uses "enforced originality" to keep content original and interesting. A moderator bot only allows members to say sentences that had never been said before and the bot mutes chatters for a period after every violation. "There would be no "all your base are belong to us", no "lol", no "asl", no "there are no girls on the internet." Just thoughtful, full sentences," says Munroe. So far the method seems to be working well with good, solid chat between relative strangers and very little noise. The Perl bot is available if you'd like to try it."
Wii

Submission + - Nintendo Wii Fully Hacked at 24C3, runs Homebrew (wiinintendo.net)

cHALiTO writes: "From the site:
The guys over at 24C3 just demoed a Wii hack that is set to provide native Wii homebrew in the near future (not running in GC mode, and with full access to all the Wii hardware!)
They were able to find encryption and decryption keys by doing full memory dumps at runtime over a custom serial interface. Using these keys, they were able to create a Wii 'game' that ran their own code (their demo happened to show live sensor/Wiimote information, amongst a few other things).
Read here and watch video here."

Censorship

Submission + - YouTube censoring atheists. (youtube.com)

Metaleks writes: 'Tis the season to be jolly. But all is not well. It would seem that YouTube is censoring those who lack Christmas spirit. One after another, atheists on YouTube are being removed from Top 100 lists, and having their channels stripped of any honours. To prove this wasn't some sort of YouTube glitch, one atheist went as far as creating another account. As soon as he was "discovered" of being an atheist his videos were stripped of any honours and his name taken off of the Top 100 lists. Why is YouTube censoring atheists?
Announcements

Submission + - New AT&T DSL Ripoff 1

rhadagast writes: "The AT&T $10 DSL is a great deal. I signed up for it last summer and have been enjoying $10 DSL since.

But to make it even better, AT&T sent me a great offer(?) in the mail this week.

I can increase my speed by "up to 2X your internet speed without paying 2X more"

If I sign up for this great new offer, my cost goes from only $10 a month to only $32.95 a month. What a deal. I can get UP TO 2X the speed, and NOT pay 2X more. I only have to pay 3.295X more. What a deal!!!"
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Slashdot Gems 1

Anonymous Coward writes: "In the years I have read Slashdot, I have often enjoyed the cleverness and humor of some of the readers replies to the various stories. Take for instance one of the stories posted today about Iran building a supercomputer with 216 AMD processors, one wit quipped that 'Not only can they never be allowed to have nukes but it will be a cold day in hell before they are allowed to get the processing power to run Windows Vista!!!!!'

For the benefit of posterity, I recommend that these 'gems' should be collected and published in a book entitled 'Slashdot Gems.' However, if you feel this task would be quite an undertaking, a simplier way of sharing the mirth would be ask your readers for a list of their memorable Slashdot moments, and then post them in a story thread entitled 'The Best of Slashdot Humor'."
Math

Submission + - Could It Be Possible To Divide By Zero? (bbc.co.uk) 2

cdrdude writes: "We've all learned that it isn't possible to divide by zero, an age-old problem in mathematics. However, one Dr Anderson thinks he has found the solution,. The BBC writes: "Schoolchildren from Caversham have become the first to learn a brand new theory that dividing by zero is possible using a new number — 'nullity'. But the suggestion has left many mathematicians cold". In short, Dr Anderson has proposed that 0/0 = a new number called nullity. "Nullity is a fixed number with value 0/0, It is not undefined, it is not indeterminate". Could this really be possible? It seems impossible, but I don't have the math background to definitively prove or disprove it."
Software

Submission + - Russian chatbot passes Turing Test (news.com)

CurtMonash writes: "According to Ina Fried, a chatbot is making the rounds that successfully emulates an easily-laid woman. As such, it dupes lonely Russian males into divulging personal and financial details at a rate of one every three minutes. All jokes aside — and a lot of them come quickly to mind — that sure sounds like the Turing Test to me. Of course, there are caveats. Reports of scary internet security threats are commonly overblown. There are some pretty obvious ways the chatbot could be designed to lessen its AI challenge by seeking to direct the conversation. And finally, while we are told the bot has fooled a few victims, we don't know its overall success rate at fooling the involuntary Turing "judges.""
Government

Submission + - House Bill to Require Illegal Images Reported (googlepages.com)

Velcroman98 writes: "The Securing Adolescents From Exploitation-Online (SAFE) Act

John Walsh of America's Most Wanted stood as the U.S. House of Representatives to overwhelmingly (409 to 2) approved a bill saying anyone offering an open Wi-Fi connection must report illegal images including "obscene" cartoons and drawings or be fined up to $300,000.

This Bill is aimed at individuals, coffee shops, libraries, hotels, social-networking sites, domain name registrars, and e-mail providers (anyone who provides "electronic communication service" or "remote computing service" to the public). SAFE also holds anyone who does comply is immune from civil lawsuits and criminal prosecutions. Any prognostications on unintended consequences of this Bill?

Full story on CNET News"

PC Games (Games)

Submission + - Latest EVE Online Patch Destroys Windows Systems

Smoke2Joints writes: The latest EVE patch is a big expansion of the game, introducing new environments, missions, ships, an overhauled graphics engine supporting DX10 effects, deleting your system boot.ini file, numerous bugfi- hold on, what? Apparently they have withdrawn graphics update patch because a vast crowd of people have been unable to boot up again after applying the patch. Vista is apparently unaffected, but XP users and below have had a nasty present left for them. Official statement here. Nice work guys.
Google

Submission + - Google Betas a new game

Belial6 writes: I don't know if I'm the only one that missed this, but Google has launched a new game. Image Labeler. The game involves players being randomly matched with other players, and being presented with images. Each player starts typing what they see, and when a match is found, the players get a score based on how common their words are. Fun AND useful!
The Matrix

Submission + - Electricity revives "bleached" coral (nationalgeographic.com)

psyopper writes: "Just a few years ago, the lush coral reefs off Indonesia's Bali island were dying out, bleached by rising temperatures, blasted by dynamite fishing, and poisoned by cyanide. Now they are coming back, thanks to an unlikely remedy: electricity.

From the article:

"[sic] The project — dubbed "Bio-Rock" — is the brainchild of scientist Thomas Goreau and the late architect Wolf Hilbertz... Goreau's Bali project constructs metal frames, often in the shape of domes or greenhouses, and submerges them in the bay. When hooked up to a low-voltage energy source on the shore, limestone — a building block of reefs — naturally gathers on the metal. Workers then salvage coral that has broken from damaged reefs and affix the pieces of live coral to the structure. Goreau and his supporters say the electricity spurs the weakened coral to restore itself.

Indeed the corals on the structures appear vibrant, and supporters say they have rebounded with impressive vigor. The coral in Pemuteran teems with clownfish, damselfish, and other colorful tropical animals."

"Rod Salm, coral reef specialist with the Nature Conservancy, said while the method may be useful in bringing small areas of damaged coral back to life, it has very limited application in vast areas that need protection. 'The extent of bleaching ... is just too big,' Salm said. 'The scale is enormous and the cost is prohibitive.' ""

Software

Submission + - Can my rights granted by the LGPL be limited? 2

An anonymous reader writes: I recently had a brief e-mail conversation with the people of Ext JS — a rather neat JavaScript/AJAX library — about their licensing terms. They offer their library under the LGPL 3.0 which is their alternative open-source offering next to their commercial license.

However, unlike MySQL — where you can also choose between GPL and a commercial license — they limit your freedoms as to what you can do with their software under the LGPL 3.0 license. It is my understanding that once I obtain a copy of a work under LGPL 3.0 I can do with it pretty much anything I want — including re-distribute it — as long as I comply with the terms of the license.

Specifically, they say you cannot build your own framework on top of their software when using the LGPL 3.0 version. For that you need to buy their commercial license. It seems strange to me to limit users in such a way and still claim you're distributing under the LGPL.

I have two specific questions for the Slashdot audience:
  1. Is it allowed to extend the LGPL by imposing limitations in freedom of usage?
  2. If limiting the freedoms granted by the LGPL is not allowed, is their entire open-source licensing offer void OR only their additional limitations.


To ask the second question in another way: can I or anybody else consider their additional limitations void and assume they offer their software under the terms (and freedoms) of the LGPL?
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Inspired by XKCD: MBR Love Note (virtualroadside.com)

virtuald writes: "After reading Friday's XKCD (#340), I was inspired to write a program that does exactly that — it writes a "love note" to your computers MBR, except in a neat twist it displays the "love note" on bootup.

There is a screenshot.

There is also a quiz to determine whether or not you're qualified to actually install the program. :)"

It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Best Military Rank-Mexican Food username (poll) 1

An anonymous reader writes: ColonelBurrito
GeneralGordita
MajorEnchilada
BrigadierChimichanga
PrivateFrijoles
EnsignGuacamole
CaptainQuesadilla
CmdrTaco

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Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

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