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Comment Mod parent up (Score 1) 175

This is a fact that a lot of people don't seem to care enough about.

I am a freelance writer. Most of the time, I contract with my newspaper to sell a stories (and the rights thereto) to that one publication. Yet when I search for myself on Google these days, I find more and more links to the full text of my articles on Web sites with names like "freebizarticlessourcedestination.com" (* not sure if that's a real site; I use that name purely for example).

And, more and more often, my name shows up attached to the story without the name of the publication.

Seeing this on some guy's shill site irks me, even though legally it's not my problem - I sold the rights to that story, it's the newspaper's story now. Even so, this reflects on me when it appears I may have written this story for the site in question. I don't write "content" for Web sites; I write for newspapers as a freelance journalist. And I don't like the thought of my work being plagiarized or repackaged, in general, although at this point the money is less of an issue than the annoyance of it being taken out of context.

Portables (Apple)

Submission + - Teen unlocks iPhone from AT&T network

H_Fisher writes: "The Associated Press reports that a New Jersey teenager has managed to unlock the iPhone from AT&T's network. From TFA: " George Hotz of Glen Rock, N.J., confirmed Friday that he had unlocked an iPhone and was using it on T-Mobile's network, the only major U.S. carrier apart from AT&T that is compatible with the iPhone's cellular technology." The 'proof' — a video showing the TMobile logo on Hotz's iPhone — and the directions for the hack were posted on Hotz's blog. According to the AP: "Both hacks leave intact the iPhone's many functions, including a built-in camera and the ability to access Wi-Fi networks.""
Biotech

Submission + - Mitochondria may hold secret to preventing death

H_Fisher writes: "Research into mitochondria — small parts within a cell that have their own DNA — are a cause of cellular death, Newsweek reports. The article from the most recent edition of the magazine, entitled "The Science of Death: Reviving the Dead," reports on people who have recovered from sudden death due to cardiac arrest through the use of medically-induced hypothermia. The cooling process may help stop the death of brain and heart cells caused by the mitochondria once they are deprived of oxygen. The next step: figuring out how to keep the brain from dying, and arguing for or against "the view that the mind is more than the sum of the parts of the brain, and can exist outside it.""

Comment Misread ... (Score 1) 1

For a second, I thought I read "a meth lab in your cell phone," and wondered if Kevin Federline's rap album had been made into ringtones ...

In all seriousness, I could see this sort of program (on a phone or other small-scale wireless device) becoming a tool for people who work in technical fields. The only problem is, there is likely to be a disconnect between the people who aren't afraid of trusting a cellphone for complex operations (i.e. graphing) and those who are still lugging around a TI-81 from the mid-'90s, or one of its decendants. Cellphones might work well for casual mathematics, but who really needs to graph something while out shopping or waiting in line at the bank?

Education

Submission + - A math lab in your cell phone 1

Roland Piquepaille writes: "As most of us are using cell phones today, Israeli scientists have decided to put a math lab in your pocket. They developed a library of math modules which can be installed on almost cell phones available today. So you'll be able to see graphs or solve equations on your phone while on a train or a bus ride. You'll also be able to send graphs or formulas by SMS to other students — and to send the results of your exercises to your teacher. Did I mention you can download these applications for free? But read more for additional details and a look at one of the Math4Mobile applications."
Google

Submission + - New Form of Googlebombing: The "Link Prank" (zug.com)

et_phone_home writes: Googlebombing has raised its head again, now disguised as a "link prank."

Will be interesting to watch results for the phrase "Chinese Tattoo Prank" on Google if this meme catches on. Will the prank itself rank first, or the page explaining the prank?

If the latter, doesn't that defeat the point of the prank, and doesn't Google win?

Doesn't Google ALWAYS win?

Networking

Submission + - Germany passes "Anti-Hacker" law

RotHorseKid writes: German legislators have just passed the much-dreaded "Hacker Paragraph", which essentially says that all software that can potentially used as a "Hacker Tool" is outlawed. Somehow these IT-savvy legislators missed the fact that most of these tools are also used for intrusion detection. So, essentially all german Security Consultants, Network Administrators and other users of intrusion detection software are halfway in jail now.

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