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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 22 declined, 3 accepted (25 total, 12.00% accepted)

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Networking

Submission + - Register.com suffers DDOS attack (theinquirer.net)

edmicman writes: "The Inquirer is reporting on recent denial-of-service attacks on Register.com. Our business website domain is registered under register.com, and hosted ourselves. Yesterday afternoon, we started getting reports of problems resolving to our mail server, also self-hosted. A Twitter search returned a flurry of posts pointing to Register.com being hit. The same thing happened this afternoon — and this time it was all DNS servers for our domain, not just the MX records.

What bothers me, is that Twitter has been the only place to find any info about this. Nothing on the main news sites, and nothing on the tech sites. Register.com's site, if will come up, has nothing.

Could this possibly be related to Conficker?"

Censorship

Submission + - MSU Student Faces Suspension for Spamming Profs (foxnews.com)

edmicman writes: "FOX News is reporting on a story about Michigan State University student who is facing suspension for bulk emailing a number of professors at the university:

A student government leader at Michigan State University could be facing suspension for sending a mass e-mail to professors about a proposed change to the school calendar — an e-mail that the university is labeling spam.

The article contains links to a copy of the original email, the allegations against the student, as well as the university's Email Acceptable Use Policy."

Networking

Submission + - Is the future of the Internet in danger? (infoworld.com)

edmicman writes: "InfoWorld has an in-depth look at the bandwidth problems facing the Internet as we know it. Video and other digital media is creating a perfect storm that the ISPs are trying to head off by introducing bandwidth caps and tiered pricing. In my opinion, this is a losing battle as content companies provide more and more digitally. The only real solution is to provide truly unlimited bandwidth."
Networking

Submission + - How do improve my local broadband options?

edmicman writes: "What can I do to try and improve the broadband options available to me in my local community? I live in the mid-Michigan, about 20 miles away from the capital and a major university, but the entire area is a technological pit. Mine is a smaller town, but it's not *that* small, and we are right along a major interstate highway. I've found out that AT&T's U-Verse is available in the Detroit area,

I am currently paying ~$50 for 4Mb cable internet, bundled with cable service, and started looking at AT&T DSL as another option. However, I found out that the best (and only) DSL option I could get was their basic service, at 768k down. My address is less than two miles from the center of town and the local CO. Essentially my broadband options are expensive cable, cheap slow DSL, or a variety of satellite internet which is even more expensive (and slower) than cable.

What can I do to get better broadband options available to my community? Should I contact the city government? My local state representatives? Is there such a thing as a local community taking the initiative to bring in real high speed broadband options? How do you improve the technology infrastructure of a city? Or am I stuck?"
Sony

Submission + - Sony's DRM-free tracks come with a price (infoworld.com)

edmicman writes: "Leave it to Sony to mess up DRM-free music downloads. According to Infoworld:

The tracks will be offered in MP3 format, without DRM (digital rights management), from Jan. 15 in the U.S. and from late January in Canada.

The move is far from the all-digital service offered by its rivals, though. To obtain the Sony-BMG tracks, would-be listeners will first have to go to a retail store to buy a Platinum MusicPass, a card containing a secret code, for a suggested retail price of $12.99. Once they have scratched off the card's covering to expose the code, they will be able to download one of just 37 albums available through the service, including Britney Spears' "Blackout" and Barry Manilow's "The Greatest Songs of the Seventies."


What is the point of DRM-free tracks if you still have to go to a retail store to buy them?"

Microsoft

Submission + - Perfect 10 sues MIcrosoft for stealing porn (arstechnica.com)

edmicman writes: "Ars Technica is reporting that adult publisher Perfect 10 is suing Microsoft, saying that the MSN/Windows Live search engine infringes on copyright by returning thumbnails of and links to sites hosting Perfect 10's images. Does this sound familiar? In 2004, they tried the same thing against Google. Google was eventually found to be within the bounds of fair use."
The Internet

Submission + - Bill proposed to redefine 'broadband' in the US

edmicman writes: "Infoworld is reporting on a new bill introduced in the U.S. Senate that would have the FCC revise what bandwidth rates qualify as "broadband":

Senator Daniel Inouye, a Hawaii Democrat and chairman of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee, introduced the Broadband Data Improvement Act Thursday along with five Democratic cosponsors. The bill would require the FCC to re-evaluate whether 200Kbps is sufficient bandwidth to justify being called broadband, and it would require the agency to create a new measurement, known as second-generation broadband, to identify networks' capability of transmitting high-definition video.

The bill would also require broadband providers to report availability of broadband and second-generation broadband connections within smaller geography areas than the postal zip codes the FCC now uses to measure the availability of such services.
"
Software

Submission + - Gaim renamed to 'Pidgin'

edmicman writes: "Gaim has posted an update that explains in part why the 2.0.0 version has been in beta for such a long time:

Many years ago when this project was first started, it was called "GTK+ AOL Instant Messenger." AOL naturally complained, and Mark Spencer changed the name to "Gaim." AOL was appeased, and no one really ever heard of it because there were very few users back then. A few years later AOL trademarked "AIM," and started referring to their IM services using that name. They complained. The issue was brought up on Slashdot, and the Gaim developers at the time got some legal support. That legal support advised that the ongoing discussions with AOL be kept confidential until fully settled, and so it remained. The public thought the issue had gone away then. It sorta did, in that AOL stopped responding to Gaim's legal support for a while.


At long last, I am pleased to announce that we have a signed settlement and can release our new version. There is one catch however: we have had to change the project's name. After a long, and unfortunately secret debate (as we could not say why we were looking at a name change, we ended up just doing this ourselves), we settled on the name "Pidgin" for gaim itself, "libpurple" for libgaim (which, as of 2.0.0 beta6, exists), and "Finch" for gaim-text. Yes, the spelling of "Pidgin" is intentional, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pidgin.
"
The Internet

Submission + - Get arrested for using free wifi at the library

edmicman writes: "Tech news outlets are reporting a story from Alaska where a man's laptop was confiscated after he was caught playing online games using the library's free WiFi connection:

Brian Tanner was sitting in his Acura Integra recently outside the Palmer Library playing online games when a Palmer police pulled up behind him. The officer asked him what he was doing. Tanner, 21, was using the library's wireless Internet connection. He was told that his activity constituted theft of services and was told to leave. The next day, Sunday, police spotted him there again.
"
United States

Submission + - NFL: Thou shalt not watch the Super Bowl

edmicman writes: "Dethroner is reporting on how the NFL is cracking down on churches displaying the Big Game this weekend. They had a follow up telling how apparently the . A final update showed that the 55+ rule only applies to the churches or other large groups; community groups can not get together and watch the Super Bowl on a large screen projector or TV larger than 55":

And you know what? The NFL is right. According to US Code Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 110, 5,B, i, II which describes what isn't allowed under copyright code:

(II) if the performance or display is by audiovisual means, any visual portion of the performance or display is communicated by means of a total of not more than 4 audiovisual devices, of which not more than 1 audiovisual device is located in any 1 room, and no such audiovisual device has a diagonal screen size greater than 55 inches, and any audio portion of the performance or display is communicated by means of a total of not more than 6 loudspeakers, of which not more than 4 loudspeakers are located in any 1 room or adjoining outdoor space;
So that's the skinny: You can watch the Super Bowl at home on any size TV you like, but if you're watching it in a church or sports bar, any screen larger than 55-inches actually is in violation of the U.S. copyright code. It may be stupid, but according to my non-lawyerly interpretation, it isn't something the NFL pulled out of thin air.
"
Microsoft

Submission + - Vista upgrade requires old OS currently installed

edmicman writes: "No clean install for you! Ars is reporting that Vista upgrades will require the old OS to be currently installed; no longer can you do a "clean" install from a Vista upgrade disc, pop in the old XP disc to prove it's an upgrade, and go on your merry way.

Upgrade versions of Windows Vista Home Basic, Premium, and Starter Edition will not install on any PC unless Windows XP or Windows 2000 is already on the machine in question. In years previous, upgrade versions of Windows could be installed on any PC. If a PC did not have an older version of Windows installed, users could provide an older installation CD of Windows for verification. After dropping a qualifying CD in the CD-ROM drive, the installation routine would verify the disc and you'd be on your way. With this approach, one could use an "upgrade" copy of Windows to lay a new Windows install on a computer.
I was already waiting before trying out Vista, but as a computer enthusiast I've usually gone the way of buying the "upgrade" version, and doing the clean install from that. Now I'm expected to purchase the full version of Vista? How often has a standing upgrade from one version of Windows to another actually worked?"
Software

Submission + - Convert Crystal Reports to SSRS 2005 with OSS?

edmicman writes: "We currently have a ton of web reports using Crystal 7. My employer wouldn't upgrade to later versions because of Crystal's steep licensing costs. We are now upgrading to the SQL Server 2005 platform from SQL Server 2000, and intend to phase out Crystal in favor of SQL's Reporting Services.

I was able to attend a small seminar put on by Microsoft showcasing the abilities of SSRS, and it looks very cool for what we want to do with it. Unfortunately, the seminar closed out with a presentation by the sponsoring partner as a sales pitch for their consulting services to convert our reports for us. With a hefty fee, for sure.

Looking into it some more, it seems there are a *lot* of 3rd parties selling expensive converters that will be run once, or consulting services with huge fees, all to do a one time conversion from Crystal to Reporting Services. Even Microsoft's webpage suggests a number of consulting firms. The seminar I attended showed the sponsors tool — a simple .NET application that you pointed out your existing reports, and it converted them as a batch. This makes me wonder — where is the open source utilities for something like this? I don't know how they do it, but I assume they are using the Crystal API that's included with Visual Studio .NET 2005. I'd love to make an open source app to do this, both to solve our problem and also to spite the big consulting firms out there essentially selling a "Y2K fix" that will be obsolete in a year or two. So are there any reasons why open source couldn't solve this problem?"
Software

Submission + - Building a Better Voting Machine

edmicman writes: "Wired News has an interesting article about what would make the perfect voting machine:
With election season upon us, Wired News spoke with two of the top computer scientists in the field, UC Berkeley's David Wagner and Princeton's Ed Felten, and came up with a wish list of features we would include in a voting machine, if we were asked to create one.

These recommendations can't guarantee clean results on their own. Voting machines, no matter how secure, are no remedy for poor election procedures and ill-conceived election laws. So our system would include thorough auditing and verification capabilities and require faithful adherence to good election practices, as wells as topnotch usability and security features.


The article raises some interesting points. Why doesn't someone / some group create an open source voting machine software? The hardware could even be open, too. So what are we waiting for? Why doesn't someone do it? Who do we talk to to get started?"
Microsoft

Submission + - Free (basic) webhosting from Microsoft!

edmicman writes: "A coworker passed on a link to Microsoft Office Live Basics beta, which offers free basic webhosting for individuals or small businesses. Even the domain name registration is free while you stay with Office Live, and the basic service says it continues to be free after the beta period is over.

Techweb has an article comparing Microsoft's service to Google's competitor, Google Apps for your Domain. Both services sound interesting, and seem very helpful to the individual or small business that just wants to set up a basic website/homepage and have personalized email. Neither seem to offer services that full hosting companies provide, like database hosting or script access (PHP/MySQL or .NET)."

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