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Feed The Growth Of The Pirate Bay As A Political Movement (techdirt.com)

Tim Lee points us to an LA Times article on the growing success of The Pirate Bay's political movement, noting that its membership is growing in Sweden and is nearly equal to that of the country's Green Party. This is ironic for a few reasons -- most of all being that the entertainment industry was so proud over the raids on the Pirate Bay's servers last year, insisting that it had killed off the site. Instead, the site was back up in days, and the attention propelled what had been a fairly minor search engine for BitTorrent trackers into the limelight -- helping to get it many more users and to get the political movement some traction. In fact, we've now seen other political parties take on some of the Pirate Bay's platform. To be honest, I have mixed feelings about this. I don't support the Pirate Bay's position that unauthorized downloads are defensible. Instead, I think that copyright holders need to come to the realization that they're actually better off by letting people download content -- not that it needs to be forced upon them by users taking matters into their own hands. That said, by taking such an extreme position (and having it get some attention), perhaps it's more likely that content holders will come to this realization. They'll simply be forced to adapt and will start coming up with more successful business models that actually benefit from free downloads rather than trying to block them and sue their best customers.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft announces CLR will be cross-platform

axlrosen writes: "The biggest Mix '07 announcement made on opening day of this week's show was one that Microsoft didn't call out in any of its own press releases: Microsoft is making a version of its Common Language Runtime (CLR) available cross-platform. The CLR is the heart of Microsoft's .Net Framework programming model. So, by association, the .Net Framework isn't just for Windows any more.

More here."
It's funny.  Laugh.

Submission + - Dutch Creationist prepares for scaled-down flood

ursuspacificus writes: "This story (also on AOL) tells of a Dutch creationist (crackpot?) who has built a 1/2 scale model of Noah's Ark.

From the Article:


Huibers did the work mostly with his own hands, using modern tools and occasional help from his son Roy. Construction began in May 2005.
and

"The design is by my wife, Bianca," Huibers said. "She didn't really want me to do this at all, but she said if you're going to anyway, it should look like this."

Time? Money? Resources? Wasted? It is in Holland (a country with an accute apprecation of the threat of flooding), after all.

The article neglects to tell whether the "replica" ark has the requisite "big room for poo"."
The Media

Submission + - Help debunk John Stossel's Global Warming is a Lie

Mark C. Robinson writes: "On May 4th John Stossel will tell the world that Global warming can safely be ignored. Before that message airs, we want to prepare compelling counterpoints and, possibly, mitigate the damage he will cause.

Please discuss the points below on the blog at http://www.theenergygrid.com/blog . I will compile your comments into a comprehensive message and submit it for publication. Please try to keep your comments brief, to the point, and include references where appropriate. Please let your associates know that this blog is open for comment at http://www.theenergygrid.com/blog.
TheEnergyGrid.com

Myths, Lies and Downright Stupidity on a special edition of 20/20 Friday, May 4th at 10 p.m. EDT, has a terrifying message; Global Warming Can be Safely Ignored.

Quoted from John Stossel's article at:
http://www.abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=3061015&pa ge=1

1. The fundamentalist doom mongers ignore scientists who say the effects of global warming may be benign.
2. CO2 in the atmosphere may actually benefit the world because more CO2 helps plants grow. Warmer winters would give farmers a longer harvest season, and might end the droughts in the Sahara Desert.
3. The fuss over Kyoto is absurd.
4. Nuclear power is the most practical alternative
5. Building solar panels burns energy, as does trucking them and installing them. Not to mention taking them down again to repair them.
6. To think that solar energy could stop the predicted temperature increase is nonsensical.
7. Windmills are giant bird-killing Cuisinarts, and wed have to build lots of them to produce significant energy
7. Kyoto would decimate just about every Third World countrys economy, and deliver a catastrophic blow to our own.
8. If the world is warming, it is much more reasonable to adjust to it, rather than try to stop it. Farmers can plant different crops or move north.
Comments will be reviewed before becoming visible.
Thank you!

Go to the Blog TheEnergyGrid.com

Mark Robinson
www.TheEnergyGrid.com"
Sony

Submission + - Sony Decapitates a Goat in PR Stunt

AbsoluteXyro writes: PETA is going to be pissed. London Entertainment Guide (Slightly NSFW) breaks the news that electronics giant Sony, in another stroke of marketing brilliance, decided to decapitate a goat and invite guests to "reach inside the goat's still-warm carcass to eat offal from its stomach" as a PR stunt to promote God of War II at a recent party in Athens. Images from the party, including at least one showing the freshly decapitated goat's head hanging by it's corpse by a thread of tissue, have been published in a two page spread in the latest edition of Playstation Magazine. Interestingly, Sony UK has refused to say how the goat was killed, but judging by the pictures, we can guess.
The Internet

Submission + - UK Voters Want To Vote Online

InternetVoting writes: "A recent research survey by ntl:Telewest Business found that nearly half of the respondents would be more likely to vote online. This year the UK government has authorized 13 local election pilots including Internet voting. ntl:Telewest Business estimates 10 million UK households have broadband and 4,789 local libraries offer public access. In the US political parties are beginning to test the Internet voting waters with the Michigan Democratic Party to offer Internet voting in their 2008 Presidential Caucus."
Announcements

Submission + - Hawking, Lording it up..

Quietly_Confident writes: "A petition on the official UK government 'Number 10 Downing Street' web site is inviting British citizens or residents to impetrate the conference of a life peerage on Prof. Stephen Hawking. The petition suggests that; "Professor Stephen Hawking, one of the greatest minds this country has and has had, who should have been Knighted a decade ago should actually be conferred a peerage [Lord Hawking]".

A life peerage would entitle Prof. Hawking to sit in the House of Lords should he wish to. With recent honours for cash scandals, it would be a breath of fresh air if a truly Great and deserving Britton was honoured appropriately, possibly in the Prime Minster's Resignation Honours List."
The Courts

Submission + - Utah Rethinking Anti-Keyword Advertising Law

Eric Goldman writes: "Slashdot previously reported on Utah's recent law banning trademark-triggered keyword advertising. This week, a group of technology executives met with Utah legislators to discuss the law, and it looks like the legislature is rethinking its position. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, "Legislative leaders are looking to tweak a troublesome trademark protection program rather than defend it in court, after an unprecedented meeting with Internet power brokers who would prefer the new registry be scrapped.""
Security

Submission + - Forensic Tool for Macs

Zygote writes: http://www.subrosasoft.com/OSXSoftware/index.php?m ain_page=product_info&cPath=200&products_id=195 "MacLockPick(TM) is a valuable tool for law enforcement professionals to perform live forensics on Mac OS X systems. The solution is based on a USB Flash drive that can be inserted into a suspect's Mac OS X computer that is running (or sleeping). Once the software is run it will extract data from the Apple Keychain and system settings in order to provide the examiner fast access to the suspect's critical information with as little interaction or trace as possible."
Education

Submission + - MIT Dean of Admissions Resigns Over Faked Resume

theodp writes: "Marilee Jones, who crusaded against the pressure on students to build resumes for elite colleges, resigned as dean of admissions at MIT after acknowledging she had faked her own academic credentials. Despite Jones' claims of having degrees from Union College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the Albany Medical College, an MIT inquiry did not find that Jones had any undergraduate or graduate degree."
Books

Submission + - Best popular science books named

solitas writes: A BBC story lists the choices for the Royal Society's six 'Best Popular Science Books' awards.

One of the titles is called "Homo britannicus" — and so I figured I'd take the story to Slashdot where hopefully one of it's learned members could explain to me why an Elton John biography should make a science book list?
Censorship

Submission + - Student arrested for writing essay

mcgrew writes: "The Chicago Tribune reports that an eighteen year old straight A Cary-Grove High School student was arrested for writing a "disturbing" essay. From the Trib:

Allen Lee, an 18-year-old straight-A student at Cary-Grove High School, was arrested Tuesday near his home and charged with disorderly conduct for an essay police described as violently disturbing but not directed toward any specific person or location.
So much for freedom of speech in the US."
United States

Submission + - Is America going fascist?

Random BedHead Ed writes: "The Guardian this week has a call to arms, examining the ten steps to fascism and proposing that America is quietly taking virtually all of them. It's not as much of a partisan concern as you might think: many conservative groups have joined forces under a new organization called the American Freedom Agenda, which along with the ACLU and Center for Constitutional Rights has been fighting to put pressure on the federal government to pull the country away from what they see as a slippery slope. From the article: "As Americans turn away quite leisurely, keeping tuned to internet shopping and American Idol, the foundations of democracy are being fatally corroded. Something has changed profoundly that weakens us unprecedentedly: our democratic traditions, independent judiciary and free press do their work today in a context in which we are "at war" in a "long war" — a war without end, on a battlefield described as the globe, in a context that gives the president — without US citizens realising it yet — the power over US citizens of freedom or long solitary incarceration, on his say-so alone.""

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