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Submission + - LiveJournal Giving Russian Sites Your Username (livejournal.com)

An anonymous reader writes: As if LiveJournal didn't have enough problems, a member of the no_lj_ads community discovered that whenever you visit the Russian sites kommersant.ru or livejournal.ru (confusingly, not actually owned by Livejournal), it automatically hands them your currently logged-in username. Unlike normal OpenID, you don't get asked for permission first, or even told that this has happened. Better still, livejournal.ru has a JavaScript injection hole that allows any other site to discover your LiveJournal username too, without your knowledge.

The official solution? Log off from LiveJournal before visiting the sites. It may also be possible to get the same result by deliberately breaking OpenID on your journal, but it remains to be seen how long this loophole will last for.

Announcements

Submission + - Russian nuclear waste depot can explode any time

saddlark writes: "A new report from Rosatom (ru), the Russian government's highest nuclear authority, shows that there is a grave danger that a stockpile of nuclear waste can explode. (...) no one knows how imminent the danger is — if it is a question of years — or hours. From the article: "It will at least, at a careful estimate, hit Northern Europe. There are enormous members of radioactivity stored in these tanks,"said Nils Bøhmer, nuclear physicist and head ofBellona's Russian division.

It is well known that Russian nuclear waste storage has shortcomings. However, it has not been widely known that an entire depot could detonate, with an "uncontrollable chain reaction".

The original report is published in "Atomnaya energia", v. 101, issue 1 (Journal published by Rosatom).
News articles in English: Kola "a nuclear bomb", and Clean-up poses dangers."
Media

Submission + - Dateline" producer slams popular "Predator

An anonymous reader writes: MAY 29 — In a scathing broadside at NBC's popular "To Catch a Predator" series, a former producer charges that she was canned last year after complaining that the show violated "numerous journalistic ethical standards" and many of the network's own "policies and guidelines." In a breach of contract lawsuit, Marsha Bartel, 49, alleges that her 21-year career at NBC ended months after her August 2006 appointment as "sole producer" of "To Catch a Predator," which conducts sting operations targeting men seeking illicit liaisons with children they've met online. According to her complaint, which was filed last week in U.S. District Court in Chicago, Bartel charges that many of the program's ethical lapses stem from its relationship with Perverted Justice, a shadowy vigilante group that the show uses to "troll for and lure targets into its sting." A copy of Bartel's lawsuit can be found below. According to Bartel, by paying Perverted Justice, NBC has given the group a "financial incentive to lie to trick targets of its sting." The identities of the group's 50-plus volunteers were kept secret from her, Bartel says, adding that Perverted Justice does not provide "complete transcripts from its trolling operations," so network officials "cannot independently verify the accuracy" of the group's transcripts. In some instances, Bartel claims, sting targets are "led into additional acts of humiliation (such as being encouraged to remove their clothes) in order to enhance the comedic effect of the public exposure of these persons." She also charges that NBC has unethically covered up the fact that law enforcement officials have acted improperly while working in conjunction with the "To Catch a Predator" crew, such as "goofing off by waving rubber chickens in the faces of sting targets while forcing them to the ground and handcuffing them." Bartel says that when she "raised concerns" about controversial comments made by Perverted Justice's founder, David Corvo, executive producer of the newsmagazine "Dateline," responded, "We all know they're nuts." Bartel, who signed a four-year contract in March 2006, contends that soon after reporting her concerns about "To Catch a Predator" to NBC management, she was terminated effective December 24, 2006. While NBC told her she was part of a "mass layoff precipitated by general business factors," Bartel alleges that she was canned in retaliation for insistence on "ethical and accurate reporting on the Predator series." NBC, she adds, was "more interested in sensationalizing and dramatizing the Predator series for profit than news reporting." Bartel is seeking at least $1 million in damages from NBC. In a statement, NBC said it has been "transparent about our reporting" on the Predator series, for which audience reaction has been "overwhelmingly positive. NBC News is proud of its reporting and we believe this lawsuit is without merit." http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2007/05 29071nbc1.html
AMD

Submission + - AMD Releases Detailed Phenom Die Photo (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: A few weeks ago, AMD released information on new branding for their desktop derivatives of the Barcelona core, now dubbed the Phenom FX, X4 and X2. If you're unfamiliar with Phenom, the processors will be based on AMD's K10 architecture and will feature a faster on-die memory controller, support 64-bit and 128-bit SSE operations, and they'll be outfitted with 2MB of on-chip L2 cache (512KB dedicated per core) in addition to 2MB of shared L3 cache. Today,instead of revealing some more of the juicy details regarding those enhancements, AMD just sent over a tasty photo of a Phenom die. Click the image for a high-res version.
Censorship

Submission + - Canada Blocks Fair Use of Video of Parliament (kevinbondelli.com)

PoliSciASU writes: "The Canadian House of Commons is exercising complete control over video of its proceedings. The Speaker of the House is restricting the use of its video and is challenging YouTube over posted coverage. Kevin Bondelli argues that Canada is worse on fair use than the United States and that partisan control of access to video is dangerous to society."
Media

Submission + - How Long Until DRM Is Mandatory?

Bernie writes: The content producers (eg, movie studios and music labels) have been trying and trying to get consumers to accept DRM by telling us that it "enables" us. We recently heard that a HBO exec want to start calling DRM by the name "Digital Consumer Enablement" instead. Of course, we here at Slashdot know that DRM is actually about restricting us. However, I recently realized that DRM restricts and not enables because our DVD players, MP3 players, computers, etc. can play content without DRM. If the tables were turned, then they would really be turned. That is, if our media players did not play non-DRM content, then DRM would become an enabling technology. My question: How long until media players will NOT play non-DRM content? Or will we be able to avoid this tragedy?
Republicans

Submission + - UT & CA Republicans Sign Global Warming Pact

hairygenes writes: "Today Governor Schwarzenegger visited Salt Lake City, UT to visit with Governor Jon Huntsman and the two signed on to the Western Regional Climate Action Initiative. The WRCAI is a pact intended to join the Western US states and British Columbia in a joint effort to combat human contributions to global warming... (Read the rest here)"
Media

Submission + - Mass outage hits XM

An anonymous reader writes: XM Satellite Radio is experiencing a major outage right now, having lost one of its satellites and a massive number of repeaters. Listeners on the East Coast are mostly affected since XM's second satellite doesn't have a national footprint. Customer service reps are saying anywhere from 2 hours to 2 days for service to be restored.

The cause to all this mayhem? A software update.
Privacy

Submission + - Obscene' Devices Head for the Supreme Court

Funky125 writes: WASHINGTON — You know a case is ripe for Supreme Court review when the retelling of its history cites lower court decisions labeled "Williams I," "Williams II," "Williams III," "Williams IV" and "Williams V." -advertisement- The "Williams," of course, is Sherri Williams, who along with eight co-petitioners is seeking to overturn Alabama's obscene device law, which in Williams' case would prevent her from selling and/or distributing any sex toy intended primarily for the stimulation of humans to orgasm in the privacy of their own homes. http://avn.com/index_cache.php?Primary_Navigation= Articles&Action=View_Article&Content_ID=289264
Music

Submission + - Amazon Joins Apple in the DRM-Free Music Movement

dour power writes: According to this blog post on the Washington Post web site, DRM-free MP3s will soon be available for purchase from amazon.com. As is the case with Apple's iTunes Music Store, the only publisher onboard at this point is EMI. This could be the beginning of the end of having to consult a lawyer in order to legally manage our digital music collections. MPAA, are you paying attention?

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