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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 45 declined, 7 accepted (52 total, 13.46% accepted)

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Media

Submission + - Perez Hilton Pulls Videos From YouTube

El Lobo writes: Celebrity gossip "queen" Perez Hilton said he's unlikely to post videos on YouTube any longer and instead will probably host them on his own site, Perezhilton.com. As informed on TVWeek.com, the blogger and the biggest video-sharing service are feuding after YouTube pulled some of his videos due to complaints from copyright holders. Mr. Hilton, said he's disappointed by the way YouTube handled the matter. After discussion, Mr. Hilton's YouTube account was reinstated Thursday afternoon and he promptly posted a YouTube kiss-off video, telling the site to "F — off." "The way they treated me with this whole incident makes me feel not appreciated," Mr. Hilton said. "They didn't do anything. Not to overestimate my own worth, but I probably have sent more traffic to YouTube than anyone else on the Internet."
OS X

Submission + - The Great Leopard Fallacy

El Lobo writes: MacTopic is featuring an article about how big of a disappointment Leopard acyually is. The article doesn't talk about the firewall debacle or the broken Time Machine, but it focuses instead on much simplier things like "the Finder from hell". From the article: "No cutting in the Finder. You can copy, you can paste, but you can't cut... Open and Save dialogue boxes from hell. The open and save dialogue boxes are moronically disabled..., Column view is irritating and doesn't work right....,The amazing bad design of the transparent toolbar, etc...". The author was flummoxed that even Steve Jobs would have the balls to hint at forthcoming "secret features" and then get on stage and reveal the lame tacked-on additions to the OS that he did. He must have been mortified to say that he was going to reveal 10 new features and then only reveal 3...while pretending that they were all new, despite having given them away a long time ago.
The Courts

Submission + - Sued over a color

El Lobo writes: A swedish phone company (Telia) is being sued by the german Deutsche Telekom (swedish only). The cause of the disput? Telia is using magenta color for their image (logotype, web site, etc). So is Deutsche Telekom even if they are not using an exact shade of magenta (see the color comparation in the article)

"Magenta is one of the most important aspects of our image"- says a Deutsche Telekom representant. They are suing Telia for copyright infringement and want to get 3,4 miljarder euro as a compensation.
OS X

Submission + - Trojan Horse Targets Mac OS X

El Lobo writes: Security software firm Intego is warning Mac OS X users today about a trojan horse that targets the Mac. OSX.RSPlug. A is showing up on pornography sites disguised as a movie. When someone clicks the link to watch the video clip, a Web page states that a new QuickTime codec must be installed. If the option to Open "Safe" Files After Downloading is enabled in Safari (which is the default), the image opens automatically. The trojan changes the computer's DNS settings to point to phishing sites or ads for other pornography sites.
Microsoft

Submission + - Vista Sales Lift Microsoft's Net 23%

El Lobo writes: Microsoft Corp.'s best quarterly revenue growth in eight years, helped by a surge in sales for the Windows operating system, capped a strong earnings season for the technology industry that has made it a rare bright spot for investors this fall.

Microsoft's 23% boost in net income, reported after the 4 p.m. close of markets, lifted its shares more than 10%. For now, demand is strong for Office and Windows, including Windows Vista, introduced last year, and its predecessor, Windows XP. Quarterly sales at the Windows division jumped 27% to $3.37 billion.
Communications

Submission + - Nokia is replacing 46 million batteries

El Lobo writes: It seems that it's not only Apple, Dell and Sony who are having a though time with their batteries. Nokia is now replacing more than 46 million batteries that are experiencing overheating. This advisory applies only to the batteries manufactured by Matsushita between December 2005 and November 2006.
Biotech

Submission + - Pentagon Confirms It Sought To Build A 'Gay Bomb'

El Lobo writes: A Berkeley watchdog organization that tracks military spending said it uncovered a strange U.S. military proposal to create a hormone bomb that could purportedly turn enemy soldiers into homosexuals and make them more interested in sex than fighting.

"The notion was that a chemical that would probably be pleasant in the human body in low quantities could be identified, and by virtue of either breathing or having their skin exposed to this chemical, the notion was that soliders would become gay," explained Edward Hammond, of Berkeley's Sunshine Project.
Microsoft

Submission + - Bill Gates, Harvard dropout, gets degree

El Lobo writes: Gates, who dropped out of Harvard and co-founded Microsoft Corp. (Charts, Fortune 500) to become the world's richest person, stopped off at his former stomping grounds to collect an honorary law degree.

I've been waiting for more than 30 years to say this: Dad, I always told you I'd come back and get my degree," Gates, 51, told the crowd, which included his father, also named Bill.

Jobs and Gates share the spotlight "I'll be changing my job next year, and it will be nice to finally have a college degree on my resume," said Gates in a reference to his plan to shift full time into philanthropy.
Microsoft

Submission + - IIS overtakes Apache among Fortune 1000 sites

El Lobo writes: If you think back a few years to IIS 5.0, the future for Microsoft's web server looked rather bleak. With IIS 6.0, Microsoft made "locked down" mode settings the default at installation, which helped minimize security problems, and helped IIS 6.0 recapture a major part of trust that IIS 5.0 lost. No major security disasters have been reported since the release of IIS 6.0. Now, Microsoft is looking to consolidate IIS 7.0's position as a secure and robust web server.

A recent market survey indicated that Microsoft's IIS has a 31.13 percent market share, which places it in second position behind the open source Apache Web Server. Another survey by Port80 Software that takes Fortune 1000 companies into consideration reports that IIS has overtaken Apache among Fortune 1000 sites.
Microsoft

Submission + - Microsoft and Lenovo in $1 billion software deal

El Lobo writes: CBC news is reporting that Lenovo has agreed to buy up to $1.3 billion US in software from Microsoft Corp. to preinstall Windows and other software suites on its computers.The Lenovo-Microsoft deal, the largest single agreement announced Wednesday, is similar to a $1.2-billion deal signed between the two companies last year.
Microsoft

Submission + - Silverlight on Linux? We're in, says Mono founder

El Lobo writes: The Mono open-source project will create a Linux version of Silverlight by the end of year, said Miguel de Icaza, a Novell vice president and head of Mono. Asked about plans for Linux, Microsoft executives have been non-committal, saying that it will depend on demand. But de Icaza, who is attending Mix, was able to commit without hesitating.
Programming

Submission + - License blues

El Lobo writes: Since many years ago the Delphi community has been using a great set of components to add unicode support to the Delphi VCL. The TNT components have been used in a lot of important projects (from the top of my head, Skype, Cobian Backup and others). Many open sources projects and derivated components were based on the Tnt components since their original license was very permissive (BSD like). Now the components have been adquired by TNS Software and they are charging 30 euros for them. That's fine and dandy, but the original author and the new owners are trying to revoke the original license and are disallowing people to freely distributing the old libraries. Of course the existing Open Source projects will kind of die if this happens.

So the question of the day between Delphi users is: Does the copyright owner have the right to change the license? OTOH, making arbitrary changes like this, could potentially destroy whole projects that were based on this set of components. Where is the limit here, legally and morally, for an author to change or revoke a license?

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