15793558
submission
joeflies writes:
New research that looked at the effects of dementia found that active minds may delay the onset of dementia, but once it hits, the symptoms are worse. The researchers hypothesize that brain activity may compress the amount of time that the patient suffers with the disease.
8265878
submission
joeflies writes:
CNN.com published an article entitled "Digital Piracy Hits the e-Book Industry". The article quotes the following statement by novelist Sherman Alexie made: "With the open-source culture on the Internet, the idea of ownership — of artistic ownership — goes away," Alexie added. "It terrifies me."
686616
submission
joeflies writes:
Oxytocin, a hormone known as the love drug, is currently being tested as a trust drug. Participants who inhaled the nasal spray were less fearful of social situations, were more likely to make risky investments, and continued to trust a person even after being swindled.
579242
submission
joeflies writes:
/. readers may want to keep an eye on Dennis Byron, who covers Enterprise Software for an investment website. Over the past few weeks, he has written several articles against Massachusetts Open Source policy, Red Hat, and OSI, with a pro-Microsoft bias.
524786
submission
joeflies writes:
The San Francisco Chronicle reports that some digital picture frames manufactured in China carry an advanced trojan. Currently it is being used to capture credentials from online games, but researches suspect that it may be used for other purposes in the future.
467732
submission
joeflies writes:
The San Francisco Chronicle has an opinion piece on the top video game franchises that deserve to die. Leading the list is Frogger, which has had nearly 2 sequels per year since 2000. What franchises are on your hit list?
71350
submission
joeflies writes:
The dispute arises out of whether the blogger can use clips of show recordings in grassroots activism against the station, and where to draw the line on digital free speech for both parties. The story has been picked up by the San Francisco Chronicle
5008
submission
joeflies writes:
The San Francisco Chronicle has an extensive article on the controversial site Jigsaw, which makes it easy to sell other people's identity information. Jigsaw encourages people to collect business cards and email signature blocks, which is compiled together into a searchable database. Participants earn points towards their own searches or earn money.
Is this exactly what Scott McNealy meant when he said electronic privacy is dead?