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Comment Re:Sounds Ok (Score 0) 171

When reading anything written by Sony, like specs, features, news etc. I have started adding 'for now' after each sentence.

"PSN free won't change. For now."

"Yes, you can install Linux on it. For now."

"We will remove the DRM on audio CDs. For now."

and so on and so forth.

Submission + - Beautifully Rendered Music Notation with HTML5 (blogspot.com)

An anonymous reader writes: This is incredible. This guy has built a music notation engraver entirely in Javascript, allowing for real-time music editing right in the browser. Here's a demo: HTML5 Music Notation Demo. The library has no external dependencies, and all the glyphs, scores, beams, ties, etc. are positioned and rendered entirely in JavaScript.
Piracy

Estimating Game Piracy More Accurately 459

An anonymous reader tips a post up at the Wolfire blog that attempts to pin down a reasonable figure for the amount of sales a game company loses due to piracy. We've commonly heard claims of piracy rates as high as 80-90%, but that clearly doesn't translate directly into lost sales. The article explains a better metric: going on a per-pirate basis rather than a per-download basis. Quoting: "iPhone game developers have also found that around 80% of their users are running pirated copies of their game (using jailbroken phones). This immediately struck me as odd — I suspected that most iPhone users had never even heard of 'jailbreaking.' I did a bit more research and found that my intuition was correct — only 5% of iPhones in the US are jailbroken. World-wide, the jailbreak statistics are highest in poor countries — but, unsurprisingly, iPhones are also much less common there. The highest estimate I've seen is that 10% of worldwide iPhones are jailbroken. Given that there are so few jailbroken phones, how can we explain that 80% of game copies are pirated? The answer is simple — the average pirate downloads a lot more games than the average customer buys. This means that even though games see that 80% of their copies are pirated, only 10% of their potential customers are pirates, which means they are losing at most 10% of their sales."

Submission + - The ACTA negotiation documents officially released (europa.eu)

Edisman writes: The European Commission (EC) welcomes the release of the documents.

According to the EC:
"The negotiation draft shows that specific concerns, raised in particular by the civil society, are unfounded. No party in the ACTA negotiation is proposing that governments should introduce a compulsory '3 strikes' or 'gradual response' rule to fight copyright infringements and internet piracy. Similarly, ACTA will not hamper access to generic medicines."

Privacy

Submission + - Facebook retroactively makes more user data public (eff.org)

mjn writes: "In yet another backtrack from their privacy policy, Facebook has decided to retroactively move more information into the public, indexable part of profiles. The new profile parts made public are: a list of things users have become "fans" of (now renamed to "likes"), their education and work histories, and what they list under "interests". Apparently there is neither any opt-out nor even notice to users, despite the fact that some of this information was entered by users at a time when Facebook's privacy policy explicitly promised that it wouldn't be part of the public profile."

Submission + - youtube down ?

ZXSpectrum42 writes: i am trying to view some videos in youtube but all i get is
Http/1.1 Service Unavailable
does anyone have any more information about this

Submission + - How to protest the Australian censorship scheme? (theage.com.au)

bjarnem writes: 4chan is at it again, making death threats against the Australian communications minister for his utterly silly internet filter. Utterings like that are not helping our cause. I for one decided to relinquish my membership of the Australian Computer Society when they made Senator Conroy an honorary member. I just couldn't face being in the same 'club' as someone who believes mandatory secret censorship is good for a healthy democracy. I for one wish more Aussie IT professionals would do the same, all along telling the ACS why they no longer want to be a member. Maybe that would make the ACS strike Conroy off as an honorary member and send a message. But leaving this dream aside, how else do we send a legitimate but strong message to our 'dear leader' that his single minded idea is offensive and unworkable?
Security

Submission + - More than 100 companies targeted by Google hackers (goodgearguide.com.au)

angry tapir writes: "The hackers who broke into Google two months ago have gone after more than 100 companies, according to an estimate by security vendor Isec Partners. Investigators had already identified 34 hacked companies after examining the single command-and-control server used in the Google attack, and the discovery of another 68 servers could mean that many more companies were compromised than previously thought."

Submission + - Ask Slashdot: Will the Serial Console ever Die? 2

simpz writes: Will the serial port as a console connection esp for devices switches, routers, SAN boxes etc ever be displaced? Okay in one sense it's an simple connection, but it is the only current port you need to know about wiring/baud rates/parity etc to use, has non-standard pinouts and is now becoming too slow to quickly upload massive firmware updates on dead devices. And it is rapidly being removed from new laptops where you really need it in data centers. Centronics, PS/2, Current loop have mostly passed on. Any sign of a USB console connection?
Science

Submission + - How telescopes deal with earthquakes in Chile (edgeofphysics.com) 1

edgeofphysics writes: Given that Chile is one of the most seismically active countries in the world, how do astronomers protect their giant telescopes that have been built or are being built in the Chilean Andes? This blog post discusses how Chile's most advanced facility — the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) — protects its precious 8.2-metre primary mirrors in the event of an earthquake.
Medicine

Submission + - Man HIV Free 2 Years After Stem Cell Treatment (singularityhub.com)

kkleiner writes: According to a recent report in the New England Journal of Medicine, a stem cell transplant performed in Germany has unexpectedly removed all signs of HIV from a 42 year old American patient. The unnamed white male was treated two years ago for Leukemia with a dose of donor stem cells and his HIV RNA count has dropped to zero and remained there since. While the treatment was for Leukemia, Dr. Gero Hutter and colleagues at the Charite Universitatsmedizen in Berlin had selected the stem cell donor for his HIV resistant genes. While there are still many questions unanswered, this is the first such case of stem cells treating HIV that has been reported in a NEJM-caliber publication.
Patents

Submission + - Facebook patents the news feed (thenextweb.com)

daedae writes: It seems Facebook has been granted a patent for the news feed, as a method of monitoring activities, storing them in a database, and displaying an appropriate set of activities to an appropriate set of users.

Submission + - Europe to block ACTA disconnection provisions (zdnet.co.uk)

superglaze writes: The European Commission is "not supporting and will not accept" any attempt to have Acta (the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement) force countries to disconnect people for downloading copyrighted material, a spokesman for the new EU trade commissioner has said.

All the signs are that the new commission, which took office earlier this month, intends to take a hardline stance against US proposals for a filesharing-related disconnection system. 'Three strikes' is allowed in EU countries, but not mandated by the European government itself, and it looks like the new administration wants to keep it that way. From trade commssion spokesman John Clancy, quoted in ZDNet UK's article:

"[Acta] has never been about pursuing infringements by an individual who has a couple of pirated songs on their music player. For several years, the debate has been about what is 'commercial scale' [piracy]. EU legislation has left it to each country to define what a commercial scale is and this flexibility should be kept in Acta."

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