6714875
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
Recently I updated my FireFox Flash plug-in in what was advertised as an important security update. The next day I notice that McAfee Security Scan has miraculously installed itself onto my system. Further investigation revealed that the Flash update had indeed installed the McAfee product and that Adobe and McAfee had formed a partnership. No doubt there was some pre-checked "Install McAfee Security Scan" checkbox that I missed. It's annoying enough when a piece of software installs some other completely unrelated software like this, but when a security update patch does it, it's unforgivable.
A while back I had a similar experience with an ATI driver installing a game demo. Another pre-checked checkbox I must have missed. This seems to be a growing phenomenon. Have you experienced similar "trojan installs" during security updates?
753905
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
The media watch group Media Lens has been threatened with legal action over publishing an email sent by the Times chief foreign commentator, Bronwen Maddox. The Times are claiming it is a breach of copyright. If you indicated in an email to a journalist that you intended to quote from their reply, would that change anything legally? Should you even have to make such an indication when writing to a journalist in their official capacity and what does this mean for efforts to hold the media to account over their news coverage?
721855
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
The British Phonographic Institute (BPI) has responded to criticism by Bill Thomson over it's collusion with Virgin Media in targeting UK file sharers. BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor personally wrote to the BBC to set things straight and asserts that 'it's Mr Thompson, rather than music companies, who is stuck in the past'. Of course, Virgin Media customers who do download Music and TV legally often find their connections being turned down to unusable speeds due to Virgin's aggressive throttling policy.
706373
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
The Daily Mail is reporting that local councils have been using the controversial Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) to spy on peoples phone and email records. Reasons given for the surveillance include checking for evidence of people storing petrol without permission and investigating unburied animal carcasses. The surveillance was uncovered using the Freedom of Information Act. The scope of the RIPA act is staggering. It would be simpler to list who isn't allowed to access your phone and email records. Aside from political action, what can be done technologically to combat this threat? Use Skype rather than the normal telephone?
517366
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
The BBC are reporting on government plans to force service providers to cut off users who 'illegally' download music and films. The government is proposing a '3 Strikes' rule where users will first be warned by email, then have their accounts suspended, then have their contracts terminated. This will ultimately push the cost of enforcing copyrights onto the public. Do we even have an Electronic Frontier Foundation in the UK? I'm suddenly in the mood to make a rather generous donation.
373727
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
A Chinese Song Class submarine has managed to surface close enough to the U.S.S. Kitty Hawk to launch torpedoes. How the sub managed to slip past all of the defences is not yet known. Were the Chinese military trying to embarrass the US? Was it a mistake? Or is it simply a case of one of the U.S.S. Kitty Hawk crew ordering a takeaway?
120477
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
I've been visiting http://www.ericblumrich.com/ for several years. It's sort of an anti-Bush site with videos and fun animations, but it covers all sorts of things. Today I visited and there is a Department Of Homeland Security logo and a notice saying the site has (possibly) violated the Patriot act. I don't know if it's a joke or if it's real. You decide... Is this happening a lot in the US?
76006
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
The BBC is reporting that China has tested an anti-satellite weapon against one of it's own weather satellites. In the past China has called for an international treaty against the weaponization of space, but these calls were rejected by the US, which continues to pursue its own space weapons programme. It is also worth noting that both the US and Russia already posses anti-satellite weaponry.
4131
submission
MrSteveSD writes:
According to the BBC , German officials have seized Sandisk's MP3 players at the IFA show in Berlin. The Italian company Sisvel claims that Sandisk has refused to pay licence fees for the MP3 codec. Sisvel President Roberto Dini has said that Sandisk could get an edge over competitors by not paying the fees. How much are proprietary format licensing fees pushing up the cost of consumer goods?