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Apple

Submission + - Apple censors Lion critics in the App Store (apple.com)

MemoryDragon writes: The user has given a detailed and through opinion which was not totally positive. This was enough for Apple to lock the user and disallow future postings from him in the App store.
Cloud

Submission + - ITV ditches Windows for Macs and Google Apps (silicon.com)

doperative writes: ITV will move the majority of its staff from PCs to Apple Mac computers and introduce Google Apps across the business as part of a comprehensive technology transformation project .. The broadcaster will roll out the Google Apps software-as-a-service technology to its 7,000 employees .. while Google Chrome will become ITV's standard browser, with the aim of providing faster and more reliable internet access ..
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - The Fed Audit (senate.gov)

An anonymous reader writes: The first top-to-bottom audit of the Federal Reserve uncovered eye-popping new details about how the U.S. provided a whopping $16 trillion in secret loans to bail out American and foreign banks and businesses during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
Security

Submission + - Reddit founder spent months stealing data from MIT (geek.com)

An anonymous reader writes: In the 24 years Aaron Swartz has been alive he’s done a lot in the world of technology. His first notable achievement was helping to write the RSS 1.0 specification when just 14. He then went on to co-found his biggest venture yet, Reddit. In 2007 Reddit’s parent company asked Swartz to leave and his current focus seems to be his new venture, Demand Progress. He sounds like the type of person you’d want working on your next big project, but is currently facing up to 35 years in prison for data theft.

Swartz was indicted in Boston today where he stands accused of breaking into a secure and restricted area of MIT. Multiple visits to that restricted area are thought to have occurred with him entering a computer wiring closet to access MIT’s systems. Once in he stole 4.8 million documents from JSTOR.

JSTOR is a not-for-profit service offering a digital archive of scientific journals and papers. The only reason he could have for taking such documents is because their access is restricted to academic establishments and libraries, but they are the places most likely to need the information in the archive.

The United States Attorney for the District of Massachussetts, Carmen M. Ortiz, plans to press charges because “stealing is stealing” regardless of what you steal and what you use to steal it with. A guilty verdict could mean 35 years in prison and up to a $1 million fine.

According to the indictment filing Swartz is also accused of taking mesures to elude detection and identification while accessing the system over several months. It is suggested he intended to share those documents on “one of more file-sharing networks.”

The computer used to grab the documents was an Acer laptop purchased on September 24th last year. On the same day he entered Building 16 on the MIT campus and accessed the network from a wiring closet using a guest user registration. The username used was “Gary Host” and his machine was identified as “ghost laptop”.

In order to elude detection the email Swartz used was a Mailinator throwaway address which automatically gets deleted after a few hours. He also setup software on the laptop that quickly downloaded large chunks of the JSTOR archive while at the same time sidestepping any security the system had in place to prevent such behavior. This was mainly achieved by continously changing the IP address of the laptop seen accessing the network.

Submission + - TSA Violated Federal Law with Body Scanners (epic.org)

FtDFtM writes: Federal Appeals Court ruled that TSA violated federal law by not taking public comment prior to implementing body scanners.

Writing for a unanimous court, Judge Ginsburg found there was "no justification for having failed to conduct a notice-and-comment rulemaking," and said, "few if any regulatory procedures impose directly and significantly upon so many members of the public."

Sony

Submission + - Sony Canned Security Staff Just Before Data Breach (thinq.co.uk)

Stoobalou writes: A lawsuit filed this week suggests that Sony sacked a group of employees from its network security division just two weeks before the company's servers were hacked and its customers' credit card details were leaked.

The suit, which seeks class action status, is being brought by victims of the massive data breach that took place in April.

Submission + - Portugal to Make CC Licences Illegal? (blogspot.com) 2

Glyn Moody writes: "A proposal for a worrying new law is being discussed in Portugal that seems to make Creative Commons licences illegal: "The equitable compensation of authors, artists, interpreters or executives is inalienable and non-renunciable, being null any other contractual clause in contrary." The view here seems to be that of Bill Gates when he asked: "Who can afford to do professional work for nothing?" But where would this leave CC-licensed projects like Wikipedia in Portugal?"

Submission + - Is Climate Science Mathematically Correct? (informath.org)

Sara Chan writes: A British mathematician says that the statistical basis of global warming is incorrect, and so the calculations used to determine whether Earth is significantly warming are wrong. According to him, the statistics show that the apparent increase in global temperatures would be better explained by random chance than by other forces. The Wall Street Journal has the story (free version on author's site).

Submission + - DHS Screws Up Domain Seizures Again (techdirt.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Once again, it appears that Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) group has screwed up seizing domains. This time it took a dynamic DNS provider mooo.com, because apparently a few people who used it may have done something involving child porn. In doing so, however, ICE turned every one of the over 84,000 websites that use mooo.com into an image claiming they were taken down for child porn. Perhaps some of those website owners will decide to file defamation charges against the US government for falsely claiming they were involved in child porn.

Submission + - 84,000 domains got ICEd (torrentfreak.com)

cypherwise writes: It looks like ICE, DHS's Immigration and Customs Enforcement wing, redirected 84,000 domains during "Operation Protect Our Children". Out of those 84,000 only 10 were found to be hosting child pornography. The DNS entries were changed at the registrar level to point to 74.81.170.110 which contains an interesting message from the DoJ and DHS claiming the site you are visiting contains child pornography. That's two botched operations in the past few months. What's next?

Submission + - Holland slashes carbon targets / wind for nuclear (theregister.co.uk)

An anonymous reader writes: In a radical change of policy, the Netherlands is reducing its targets for renewable energy and slashing the subsidies for wind and solar power. It's also given the green light for the country's first new nuclear power plants for almost 40 years.

Why the change? Wind and solar subsidies are too expensive, the Financial Times Deutschland , reports.

Holland thus becomes the first country to abandon the EU-wide target of producing 20 per cent of its domestic power from renewables. This is a remarkable turnaround from a state that took the Kyoto Agreement seriously and chivvied other EU members into adopting renewable energy strategies. The FT reports that instead of the €4bn annual subsidy, it will be slashed to €1.5bn.

Holland's only nuclear reactor, the Borssele plant, opened in 1973, and was earmarked for closure by 2003. In 2006 the plant was allowed to operate until 2034, and the following year the government abandoned its opposition to new nuclear plants.

Critics of wind turbine expansion have found it difficult to get figures to judge whether the turbines are value for money. In January, Ofgem refused to disclose the output of each Feed-In Tariff (FiT) location.

The UK is expected to urge the installation of 10,000 new onshore turbines, even though some cost more in subsidies than than they produce, even at the generous Feed-In rates. Holland's policy U-turn means the EU renewable targets aren't set in stone — and there are more cost-effective ways of hitting the targets. ®

Comment Another unfunded mandate (Score 5, Insightful) 247

So, now ISPs all have to buy terabytes of hard disk space to store all of those log files just in case some nosy prosecutor comes a callin'? ISPs might be better off threatening to just shut down operations and leave their customers disconnected to get the point across to the lawyers in congress that they need to consult with the people they're trying to regulate before throwing impractical solutions at them.
Businesses

Submission + - Obama Jobs Chief's 2004 US IT Job Elimination Plan

theodp writes: Last Friday, President Obama made a show of appointing General Electric CEO Jeffrey Immelt to head his Council on Jobs and Competitiveness, traveling all the way to a federal and state-funded GE battery facility in Schenectady, NY to make the announcement. It's definitely outside-of-the box thinking to charge Immelt with putting Americans back to work, since GE's IT offshoring effort is considered a textbook example of how to put Americans out of work. And back in 2004, Immelt graced a presentation on how GE was banking on 'growth driven by smart resource decisions' in India and China. A slide on "GE's Indian IT Strategy" boasted how GE's decision to 'outsource coding' was paying off handsomely, and noted the company was also 'significantly growing remote monitoring and maintenance.' Intellectual sourcing in India, explained GE CIO Gary Reiner, offered 'significant savings over all other English speaking countries.' A beaming photo of Immelt accompanied his testimonial that software development centers in India were 'lowering GE's cost of operations.' The presentation also included a bullet point on GE's mandated 70/70/70 rules: 70% of your processes should be outsourced; 70% of the outsourced processes should be offshore; 70% of the offshore outsourced processes should be done in India (a year later GE discussed moving '80% to 85%' of GE's outsourced IT work offshore, preferably to even-lower-cost China). Still, Obama says he's 'confident' that 'Jeff's leadership' is what's needed to 'attract the best jobs and businesses to America rather than seeing them spring up overseas.'

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