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Comment Re:What the problem with Gmail? (Score 1) 489

My school system put every 6th grader through a few very brief typing lessons until they showed demonstrated some very basic skills. It's only grown more important to be able to type since then, so it's not that surprising there are classes for it.

As for the e-mail though, I'd suggest a gmail account. The filters are likely as good as any, and with the kid being in 7th grade (and not 5 years old, he really needs to learn to be prudent when online.

Help him pick out an address designed to be less likely to receive spam (as discussed here), and teach him not to broadcast his address to every corner of the internet. That includes not registering for an account on every website he might come across, and probably keeping it 'private' on any sites he might have an account on.

The most important part though is that no email solution will get rid of 100% of the spam that he'll get. You'll need to teach him the appropriate response. Spam represents the 'bad neighborhoods' of the internet, be it porn (or "male enhancement"!) or phishing attacks or virus-ridden something else. The lessons you teach him will have a significantly greater affect on what ends up in his inbox than whether you use gmail, yahoo mail (don't), or a supposedly kid-safe alternative.
Security

Man Fired When Laptop Malware Downloaded Porn 635

Geoffrey.landis writes "The Massachusetts Department of Industrial Accidents fired worker Michael Fiola and initiated procedures to prosecute him for child pornography when they determined that internet temporary files on his laptop computer contained child porn. According to Fiola, 'My boss called me into his office at 9 a.m. The director of the Department of Industrial Accidents, my immediate supervisor, and the personnel director were there. They handed me a letter and said, "You are being fired for a violation of the computer usage policy. You have pornography on your computer. You're fired. Clean out your desk. Let's go."' Fiola said, 'They wouldn't talk to me. They said, "We've been advised by our attorney not to talk to you."' However, prosecutors dropped the case when a state investigation of his computer determined there was insufficient evidence to prove he had downloaded the files. Computer forensic analyst Tami Loehrs, who spent a month dissecting the computer for the defense, explained in a 30-page report that the laptop was running corrupted virus-protection software, and Fiola was hit by spammers and crackers bombarding its memory with images of incest and pre-teen porn not visible to the naked eye. The virus protection and software update functions on the laptop had been disabled, and apparently the laptop was 'crippled' by malware. According to Loehrs, 'When they gave him this laptop, it had belonged to another user, and they changed the user name for him, but forgot to change the SMS user name, so SMS was trying to connect to a user that no longer existed ... It was set up to do all of its security updates via the server, and none of that was happening because he was out in the field.' A malware script on the machine surfed foreign sites at a rate of up to 40 per minute whenever the machine was within range of a wireless site."
The Internet

Submission + - Thoof reviewed by Read/Write Web (readwriteweb.com)

Sanity writes: "New social news website Thoof is reviewed by Josh Catone of Read/Write Web. "It's a bit like Digg meets Findory with a wiki flavor ... Thoof relies on a story personalization algorithm to analyze the links you've clicked and attempts to deliver links based on your interests." In addition to the collaborative filtering aspect, the site is also different in that users can propose changes to stories which other users can vote on before they are applied. This means that rather than just complaining about poorly written story summaries, users can just fix whatever problems they see."
Media

Submission + - iPhone Media Blitz: Letterman, Leno, The Works! (appleinvestornews.com)

Frankc23 writes: "Last week's iPhone media coverage will go into the record books of product public relations. The volume of press coverage has been truly staggering. A web check shows the following:

1. The iPhone blanketed network TV last week with coverage on all the network morning shows and evening newscasts. Jay Leno joked about it and, of course, David Letterman's Friday Top 10 List was "Top Ten Things Overheard In Line To Buy The iPhone."

2. A Google News search of iPhone headlines (at midnight PT Sunday) showed 17,126 articles.

3. AppleInvestorNews.com's database of stories with iPhone in the headline almost tripled for the week ending Sunday, July 1 (actually 2.8 times) from the week before.

4. Four of Digg's Top 10 most popular technology stories on Sunday night were iPhone related.

It got so big that some media started apologizing for repeatedly covering the story. Many reporters also referenced other media coverage as part of the story. This is a sure sign that coverage is peaking. So iPhone media mania will likely recede from broad-based consumer press over the next two weeks.

Apple took a PR risk orchestrating such an enormous media frenzy. The iPhone marketing was riding the good will of the iPod's cultural impact. If the iPhone was not as well received this past weekend, Apple might have squandered much of its golden image. That could still happen as the media — who love to raise something up, then watch it fall — will be on the lookout for negatives in the coming weeks. But if those negatives don't show up, the upside could be even more dramatic. That's what Apple is banking on.

Apple is in rare air right now, even for Apple."

Networking

Submission + - Preparing 4 Digg / Slashdot Effect: Beyond Caching (njection.com)

Anonymous Coward writes: "When preparing for an onslaught of traffic to your web site, the smallest mistake can turn your servers one time chance for fame and fortune into an overly-expensive brick sitting in a collocation cabinet. A great example is MeetMoi.com that, when it was profiled on Fox News as an mobile dating service, was almost unreachable."
Classic Games (Games)

Submission + - whogets - digg similar online game show (whogets.com)

Enam writes: "It is hard to describe whogets.com. In the semi-final, its users can enter contests to win products (most under $100). After a week or so, seven finalists are selected. The community then votes on which of these finalists gets the product. whogets.com claims that no spam or other annoyances will be generated as a result of participation."
The Internet

Submission + - U.S.' net access not all that speed (usatoday.com)

Ant writes: "USA Today reports that United States of America (U.S.A.) trails other industrialized nations in high-speed Internet access and may never catch up unless quick action is taken by public-policymakers, a report commissioned by the Communications Workers of America warns. The median U.S. download speed now is 1.97 megabits per second — a fraction of the 61 megabits per second enjoyed by consumers in Japan, says the report released Monday. Other speedy countries include South Korea (median 45 megabits), France (17 megabits) and Canada (7 megabits). Seen on Digg. It also shows a chart of Internet on-ramp speeds by each state. Bah at #36. #1 and #2 are surprises to me."
Media

Submission + - Social news site ranks stories on reads, not votes

Stony Stevenson writes: Spotplex on Monday announced a new content-aggregation site that it said will provide Digg.com-like rankings of Internet content — with a twist. Instead of requiring users to rank content, Spotplex will automatically rank it based on the number of people reading it.

Unlike Digg, content is not submitted to Spotplex by the community, rather is automatically indexed by inserting Spotplex's proprietary code within your site. The stories that get to the front-page of Spotplex aren't the ones that readers vote for, rather are the ones that the code tells the service got the most page views on your site. So much for community-powered news aggregation and promotion.

Spotplex provides internet users with real-time ranking of blog articles based on actual impression count. In other words, you can find what is the hot news today, this week, or this month in real time at Spotplex. This is not a list of articles people recommended or voted for, but a list of articles read most in a given timeframe.
Slashdot.org

Submission + - Digg.com users launch new revolt over comments sys (computerworld.com) 1

Hot Diggity Dog writes: Digg users wish they could be more like Slashdot! "The complaints starting rolling in within a few hours after the comment system was launched Thursday evening. By Friday morning, the volatile Digg.com users — they had staged one of the first online revolts against a social networking site last month — had "Dugg" almost 5,000 comments that they wouldn't be "force-fed" the new system."
Media

Submission + - Web 2.0 Media: Digg For SEO Only! (media-sight.net)

Anonymous Coward writes: "There are thousands if not millions of web pages, articles, blogs, and news sites that discuss and share tips and advice, but for the first time here you can find the first Digg like site but only for SEO. great place to learn a lot about how to promote your web site or blog in search engine. take a look!"
Censorship

Digg.com Attempts To Suppress HD-DVD Revolt 1142

fieryprophet writes "An astonishing number of stories related to HD-DVD encryption keys have gone missing in action from digg.com, in many cases along with the account of the diggers who submitted them. Diggers are in open revolt against the moderators and are retaliating in clever and inventive ways. At one point, the entire front page comprised only stories that in one way or another were related to the hex number. Digg users quickly pointed to the HD DVD sponsorship of Diggnation, the Digg podcast show. Search digg for HD-DVD song lyrics, coffee mugs, shirts, and more for a small taste of the rebellion." Search Google for a broader picture; at this writing, about 283,000 pages contain the number with hyphens, and just under 10,000 without hyphens. There's a song. Several domain names including variations of the number have been reserved. Update: 05/02 05:44 GMT by J : New blog post from Kevin Rose of Digg to its users: "We hear you."
Security

Submission + - Hard drive snafu has NBA star suing, fuming

coondoggie writes: "All basketball player Bruce Bowen wanted was his hard drive fixed. What he got apparently is an invasion of privacy and a big mess. The Smoking Gun Website says the San Antonio Spurs forward hired a Texas company to fix but instead the repair company removed the machine's hard drive and sold the item — which contained confidential personal and financial information — to another customer. Bowen is now seeking over $2 million in damages from Computer Nerdz, the San Antonio company used to repair his Gateway computer. http://www.networkworld.com/community3/?q=node/147 53"
Music

Music Decoded From 600-Year-Old Carvings 243

RulerOf writes "Musicians recently unlocked a 600 year old mystery that had been encoded into the walls of the Rosslyn Chapel in Scotland, the one featured in The Da Vinci Code. The song was carved into the walls of the chapel in the form of geometric shapes that a father-son team — both are musicians and the father is an ex-Royal Air Force code breaker — finally matched to so-called Chladni patterns (see the Wikipedia article on cymatics). The recovered melody was paired with traditional lyrics (translated into Latin) and recorded; the result can be heard in this video (also linked from the musicians' website). The video also gives a visual representation of how the engravings match up to the cymatic patterns." From the Reuters article: "'The music has been frozen in time by symbolism... [The carvings] are of such exquisite detail and so beautiful that we thought there must be a message here.' The two men matched each of the patterns on the carved cubes to a Chladni pitch, and were able finally to unlock the melody."

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