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America Online

Submission + - 6 Engadget editors quit in 2 months time (edibleapple.com)

An anonymous reader writes: And that makes 6. Following in the footsteps of Paul Miller, Ross Miller, Josh Topolsky and Nilay Patel, two more Engadget editors have called it quits — all within a 2 month time frame. Is there trouble behind the scenes at AOL or are we supposed to believe that 6 top editors departing in 7 weeks is nothing more than a coincidence?

Submission + - Samsung installs keylogger on its laptop computers (networkworld.com)

NetSurferHI writes: Apparently Samsung thinks it is ok to capture every keystroke you type in on your Samsung laptop. From the Network World article by M. E. Kabay and Mohamed Hassan Mohamed Hassan:

"While setting up a new Samsung computer laptop with model number R525 in early February 2011, I came across an issue that mirrored what Sony BMG did six years ago. After the initial set up of the laptop, I installed licensed commercial security software and then ran a full system scan before installing any other software. The scan found two instances of a commercial keylogger called StarLogger installed on the brand new laptop. Files associated with the keylogger were found in a c:\windows\SL directory.

According to a Starlogger description, StarLogger records every keystroke made on your computer on every window, even on password protected boxes.

This key logger is completely undetectable and starts up whenever your computer starts up. See everything being typed: emails, messages, documents, web pages, usernames, passwords, and more. StarLogger can email its results at specified intervals to any email address undetected so you don't even have to be at the computer your[sic] are monitoring to get the information. The screen capture images can also be attached automatically to the emails as well as automatically deleted.

After an in-depth analysis of the laptop, my conclusion was that this software was installed by the manufacturer, Samsung. I removed the keylogger software, cleaned up the laptop, and continued using the computer. However, after experiencing problems with the video display driver, I returned that laptop to the store where I bought it and bought a higher Samsung model (R540) from another store.

Again, after the initial set up of the laptop, I found the same StarLogger software in the c:\windows\SL folder of the new laptop. The findings are false-positive proof since I have used the tool that discovered it for six years now and I am yet to see it misidentify an item throughout the years. The fact that on both models the same files were found in the same location supported the suspicion that the hardware manufacturer, Samsung, must know about this software on its brand-new laptops.

[Mich Kabay adds:]

Research online brought up a discussion of "Samsung rootkit" from May 2010 in which contributors reported a freeze on rootkit scans of Samsung laptop computers. However, no one seems to have reported a StarLogger installation as far as we have been able to determine using Web search engines.

In the next article, Mr Hassan discusses how Samsung responded to his discovery.

Comment Old news, but the router and tracking is awesome (Score 3, Informative) 196

Old news, and it was even posted on Slashdot when the program started last summer. I've been running an FCC White Box for several months now and love it. The router is a high quality Netgear with QoS filtering and all the bells and whistles you expect out of a $100+ router. It beats the ever living crap out of my old Belkin Wireless N. The tracking software doesn't monitor actual sites or any actual private information. Just packet loss, ping times, download and upload speeds, streaming stability, voip stability, etc. The graphs and charts it spits out are extremely useful and I've been using them for the past 2 months when complaining to Mediacom about my slow speeds, packet loss, and horrible ping times. It keeps 2 weeks of hourly data, and after that just tracks it as an average/min/max for the day. http://i53.tinypic.com/35bt5ro.jpg

Comment Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? (Score 1) 539

I'm not going to argue it, but whatever the reasoning the fact of the matter is that Amazon is far quicker to push against the industry in the MP3 market and is far more consumer friendly to their Digital Music customers than they are with the book industry and their ebook customers. Every time Amazon has done something new and amazing with the Kindle and the Publishers took offense, Amazon almost immediately backtracked and did everything they could to appease the publishers. Remember the text-to-speech firmware upgrade? Publishers threw a shit fit until Amazon caved and let them turn it off on a book by book basis, even though the chances of text-to-speech actually having any affect on the audiobook industry were pretty much zero. A robot voice does not compare to a professional voice actor doing the reading. Amazon could have easily fought that, but they didn't.

Comment Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? (Score 1) 539

Small as far as market share goes. iTunes, as of Dec 2010, had 66% of the total digital music market share. Amazon has 13%. If Amazon wants to cut into Apple's digital music sales they have to do something drastic. Source: http://www.bgr.com/2010/12/17/itunes-now-holds-66-of-digital-music-market/ Kindle is something like 75-80% of the market share. Amazon OWNS that market. It's their's and they have no reason to rock the boat. Even the iPad and iBooks isn't enough to scare them into taking action yet. http://www.teleread.com/ebooks/amazon-has-76-of-e-book-market-survey-reports/ It's frustrating to watch Amazon push hard against the RIAA, and blindly accept anything the book industry shoves at them.

Comment Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? (Score 1) 539

You're completely wrong. When Amazon MP3 started iTunes was JUST beginning to offer DRM-free music for $1.29 when their normal, shitty quality DRMcrap was $0.99. Amazon bargained for a far better deal to offer high quality VBR mp3s for $0.99 without any DRM. Apple wasn't forced to give in, Apple was forced to keep up with Amazon's higher quality for lower prices. Amazon is the company that made DRM-free the standard, and it wasn't until MONTHS later that Apple dropped the double pricing system and went purely DRM-free... and yet they're STILL mostly $1.29 per song.

Comment Re:Two payments for the single license? (Score 2) 539

That's exactly what they're doing, or arguing that Amazon didn't pay for a license that lets you download your MP3s that you purchased from them multiple times. Their argument would basically be that each separate download or stream of the MP3 should be it's own license. Previously that is how Amazon MP3 worked, and how iTunes works now. Each single download is it's own license.

Comment When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? (Score 2) 539

Amazon has shown several times now that they're willing to go toe to toe with the RIAA. They had DRM free music before that was the standard, and now they're pushing for cloud storage and streaming. Everything they're doing in regards to the music industry is pro-user and pro-consumer. So what about the Kindle? Why do they bend over backwards at every turn to please the book publishing industry and continue to DRM protect their eBooks? Why is it that they didn't fight the publishing industry on the Text-to-Speech feature? Why aren't they fighting for the consumer's right to lend books to their friends? Amazon is only fighting for the consumer on the MP3 issue because they have nothing to lose. They're a small time player in digital music services and they want to make a mark. If they get shut down, they're no worse off than they are now, but if it takes off they have a chance to be the first out of the door with a HUGE service. I'm becoming less and less confident we'll ever see Amazon fight for the consumer when it relates to the Kindle.
Government

Submission + - US government seizes 10 streaming domains

An anonymous reader writes: In the last 24 hours, the Department of Justice (DOJ) and Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement branch (ICE) have seized several domains belonging to major streaming websites, most of which focused on sports. The following 10 domains were taken down: atdhe.net, channelsurfing.net, firstrow.net, hq-streams.com, hq-streams.net, ilemi.com, iilemi.net, iilemii.com, rojadirecta.com and rojadirecta.org.

Comment Re:Kindle & Nook sales on the rise! (Score 1) 584

I use Mobibook formats on my kindle all the time, which I got for free from Tor publishing during their ebook give aways last year (or the year before, whatever it was). I even was able to port my Secure eReader format to a format the Kindle can read. I have yet to find an ebook I've purchased that I haven't been able to get onto my kindle in one way or another.
Science

Submission + - Famous scientists in LEGO (flickr.com)

An anonymous reader writes: This is my ever-growing set of (mostly) famous science tweeters. Latest additions include Sylvia Earle, Lisa Randall, and Craig Venter. Earlier models include Richard Dawkins, Carolyn Porco, PZ Myers, Phil Plait, Jane Goodall, and Brian Cox.
Earth

Submission + - NASA finds family of habitable planets (networkworld.com) 1

coondoggie writes: NASA's star-gazing space telescope continues to find amazing proof that there are tons of habitable planets in space and we have only scratched the surface of what's out there. The space agency said today its Kepler space telescope spotted what it called its first Earth-size planet candidates and its first candidates in what it considers to be the habitable zone, a region where liquid water could exist on a planet's surface. Kepler also found six confirmed planets orbiting a sun-like star, Kepler-11. This is the largest group of transiting planets orbiting a single star yet discovered outside our solar system.
Graphics

Submission + - AMD's Fastest Mobile GPU Yet, Radeon HD 6970M (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: AMD recently launched their fastest mobile graphics chip yet. Previously code-named Blackcomb, the Radeon HD 6970M is the mobile counterpart to AMD's flagship desktop GPU code-named Cayman. This chip is currently AMD's fastest GPU for mobile applications and it's meant for use in high performance gaming and workstation laptops. Radeon HD 6970M graphics modules have 960 shaders, 2GB of GDDR5 memory and a 256-bit memory bus. Performance-wise, the chip takes on NVIDIA's fastest mobile chip (GeForce GTX 470M) handily, but word is a faster GeForce GTX 485M is right around the corner of course.
IT

Submission + - Behind-The-Scenes Superbowl Tech: A Video Tour (itworld.com)

jfruhlinger writes: You might be a hardcore sports fan or might think of jocks with disdain, but if you're a geek you'll probably be intrigued by the tech behind the brand-new stadium where this weekend's Superbowl will be played. 84 Cisco access points, 70 wiring closets, 40,000 wired ports, 8 million feet of Ethernet cabling, 260 miles of fiber, 100 TB of storage — all on a single network.

Comment Re:Maybe I'm missing something? (Score 1) 500

Even the Galaxy S and Backflip (the two most locked down AT&T phones) can be sideloaded with little effort. A) Droid Explorer. Even the most computer illiterate users can side load using this app. B) Android SDK -> adb install These work regardless of the manufacturer's ability to "lock down" the ability to install non-market apps. It's completely impossible to remove the feature entirely.

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