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Censorship

Goldman Sachs Tries To Shut Down Dissident Blogger 161

Posted by kdawson
from the maybe-they'd-like-a-different-number dept.
The Narrative Fallacy sends along a piece from the Telegraph on efforts by Goldman Sachs to silence a blogger who is posting commentary critical of the bank. "Goldman Sachs has instructed Wall Street law firm Chadbourne & Parke to pursue blogger Mike Morgan, warning him in a recent cease-and-desist letter that he may face legal action if he does not close down his website goldmansachs666.com. According to the C&D letter, dated April 8, the bank is rattled because the site 'violates several of Goldman Sachs' intellectual property rights' and also 'implies a relationship' with the bank itself. Morgan claims he has followed all legal requirements to own and operate the website and that the header of the site clearly states that the content has not been approved by the bank. In a post entitled Goldman Sachs vs Mike Morgan, the blogger predicts that the fight will probably end up in court. He went through a similar battle with US home builder Lennar a few years ago after he set up a website to collect information on what he alleged was shoddy workmanship in its homes. 'Since I went through this with Lennar, I've had advice from some of the best intellectual property lawyers, and I know exactly what I can and can't do. We're not going to back down from this.'"
Government

Italian scientist forecasts earthquake, is sued-> 1

Submitted by
An anonymous reader writes "On 31/3, Italian scientist Giampaolo Giuliani forecasted that a big earthquake was expected in the zone between L'Aquila and Sulmona (central Italy) and warned Italian authorities on that. The prevision was based on a network of radon sensors; Giuliani (who is not a geologist, but instead works for the "Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica dei Laboratori nazionali del Gran Sasso") observed in the past that an increase of radon gas emission from the ground means that the soil is fracturing and an earthquake is going to happen (some news pages, in Italian language). The head of the "Protezione Civile" (disaster handling agency) Guido Bertolaso promptly declared that "there are idiots raising panic, we all know earthquakes are unpredictable" and Giuliani has so been sued for "procurato allarme" (intent to cause panic).
On 6/4, 3:32 CEST an earthquake of 6.3 Richter magnitude happened near the city of L'Aquila: dozens of victims are currently reported. The media now talk about the prevision (Il Giornale, Corriere della Sera, sometimes mentioning the "randon" (sigh) gas), but no sign of apologies has come from Italian authorities, which often declare the intention to avoid the "fuga di cervelli" phenomenon (brain emigration, i.e. smart scientists moving abroad), without apparently realizing what could be causing that."

Link to Original Source
The Media

PBS Interview with a professor of economics.->

Submitted by
Anonymous Coward
Anonymous Coward writes "The information in this video has been referenced numerous times by me personally in the last six months as I've been researching the economic system. I think it's obvious that the people in control of the economy and the issuance of currency are making blatant policy decisions as politicians in our free democracy. It's thirty minutes you need to see. To pull this off you would need deceit on a massive scale. This guy is a distinguished author and professor of economics: http://www.pbs.org/moyers/journal/04032009/watch.html Justice must prevail, and we must hold those accountable in a court of law. That's how democracy works right? If the ever pervasive mass-media doesn't give you a piece information, do you immediately believe that it's false or feel overcome with apathy? We all know right from wrong and this is one of the worst things to ever happen to western civilization. Why is it that the information in this video doesn't show up in the media, namely the systemic fraud and failure of the banking industry and the political connections to former and current administrations. I've been studying the financial system and I'm truly shocked that this is the best that America can do. I believe in democracy and regulated capitalism. How do we get the power back? We have to do something, friends. The best that my roomate and I have come up with yet is using smaller banks and local credit unions, taking the power of capital away from those responsible. Violence is the worst idea possible, you cannot possibly win that way and it would be horrifying to even try. "Attacking" internet websites is also a horrible idea because they're trying to pass internet regulation laws that could possibly challenge net neutrality already: http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-773"
Link to Original Source
Microsoft

Ballmer Scorns Apple As a $500 Logo 1147

Posted by timothy
from the upholding-shareholder-value dept.
theodp writes "Speaking at a conference in NYC, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer did his best to refan the flames of the Mac vs. PC rivalry: 'Now I think the tide has really turned back the other direction [against Apple],' Ballmer said. 'The economy is helpful. Paying an extra $500 for a computer in this environment — same piece of hardware — paying $500 more to get a logo on it? I think that's a more challenging proposition for the average person than it used to be.'"
Displays

Hitachi Fined $31 Million For LCD Price Fixing 135

Posted by samzenpus
from the pay-up dept.
MojoKid writes "The Japanese electronics manufacturer has just agreed to pay a staggering $31 million fine for its role in a conspiracy to fix prices in the sale of TFT-LCD panels sold to Dell, Inc. The United States Department of Justice made the proclamation, and details show that Hitachi has plead guilty to a one-count felony. The charge, which was filed in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco, blames Hitachi Displays Ltd., a subsidiary of Hitachi Ltd., with 'participating in a conspiracy to fix the prices of TFT-LCD sold to Dell for use in desktop monitors and notebook computers from April 1, 2001 through March 31, 2004.'"
Space

ISS To Become Second Brightest-Object In the Sky 243

Posted by ScuttleMonkey
from the bright-future-of-the-iss dept.
Matt_dk writes "Move over, Morning Star. Once Canadarm2 helps install the fourth and final set of solar array wings to the International Space Station later this month, the Station will surpass Venus as the brightest object in the night sky, second only to the Moon. The Space Shuttle Discovery is set to deliver the power-generating solar panels and Starboard 6 (S6) truss segment to the ISS on the 125th mission in the Shuttle program, known as STS-119/15A (slated for launch on March 11)."
NASA

ISS's Node 3 Might Be Named "Colbert" 276

Posted by kdawson
from the sure-he's-a-star-but dept.
Panzor writes "NASA is running a contest to name the new addition to the space station, Node 3. The polls are open until March 20. The selection that is getting the most votes is 'Suggest your own,' and the leading name besides the official four (Earthrise, Legacy, Serenity, and Venture) is 'Colbert.' Comedian Stephen Colbert suggested on the air that fans write in his name. On March 5th, his vote count passed that of Xenu and Colbert pronounced himself Scientology's 'Galactic Overlord.'"
Supercomputing

Best Solution For HA and Network Load Balancing? 298

Posted by kdawson
from the cluster-wisdom dept.
supaneko writes "I am working with a non-profit that will eventually host a massive online self-help archive and community (using FTP and HTTP services). We are expecting 1,000+ unique visitors / day. I know that having only one server to serve this number of people is not a great idea, so I began to look into clusters. After a bit of reading I determined that I am looking for high availability, in case of hardware fault, and network load balancing, which will allow the load to be shared among the two to six servers that we hope to purchase. What I have not been able to determine is the 'perfect' solution that would offer efficiency, ease-of-use, simple maintenance, enjoyable performance, and a notably better experience when compared to other setups. Reading about Windows 2003 Clustering makes the whole process sounds easy, while Linux and FreeBSD just seem overly complicated. But is this truly the case? What have you all done for clustering solutions that worked out well? What key features should I be aware for successful cluster setup (hubs, wiring, hardware, software, same servers across the board, etc.)?"
Patents

How To Hijack an EU Open Source Strategy Paper 112

Posted by kdawson
from the lobbyists-at-the-policy-table dept.
Glyn Moody writes "Thanks to the indispensable Wikileaks, we have the opportunity to see how an organization close to Microsoft is attempting to re-write — and hijack — an important European Union open source strategy paper, currently being drawn up. Analyzing before and after versions visible in the document demonstrates how the Association for Competitive Technology, a lobbying group partially funded by Microsoft, is trying to widen the scope of open source to include 'mixed solutions blending open and proprietary code.'" And reader Elektroschock adds some detail on EU processes: "The European Commission lets ACT and CompTIA participate in all working groups of the European Open Source Strategy, which defines Europe's future open source approach. A blue editor questions the objectives: 'Regarding the "Europe Digital Independence" our [working] group thinks it is, in general, not an issue.' 'European digital independence' is a phrase coined by EU Commissioner V. Reding, that is what her European Software Strategy was supposed to be about. She didn't reveal that lobbyists or vendors with vested interests would write the strategy for the Commission."
Security

Website Security Without Breaking the Bank? 195

Posted by kdawson
from the man-who-is-his-own-lawyer dept.
An anonymous reader writes "I do my own Web design and have a few websites — MySQL, PHP, CSS, HTML, that kind of thing. It's simple, amateur stuff, but I would love to have some reasonable ways to assess their security myself and patch the big holes, or possibly enlist someone to do 'white hat' work to assist me. I have absolutely no idea how to proceed. I don't want to get mired in a never-ending paranoia-fueled race to patch holes before the hackers find them, but on the other hand, I don't want my websites to look like Swiss cheese. Right now, I wouldn't know what kind of cheese they look like: Swiss, Havarti, or hard as Parmesan. How can I take reasonable steps to protect these websites myself? What books has the community found useful? What groups (if any) can offer me inexpensive white-hat hacking that won't end up costing me a first-born child? Or am I better off just waiting until a problem arises and then fixing it?"
Cellphones

Keeping in Contact With Family, From Afghanistan? 176

Posted by timothy
from the and-don't-say-learn-pashto dept.
LiNKz writes "Within a short while I will be heading to Afghanistan and in the interest of keeping in communication with my wife and family I've been looking at different means of it, from VoIP to cellular services. I'm not sure how well connected or how stable of a connection the base I'm deploying to has, which means VoIP might simply not be an option. I have, however, noticed in my searches that Afghanistan has recently boomed with cellular coverage though that too seems to be difficult to ascertain. I'm curious if the Slashdot community has any information or experience regarding international cellular services offered in this country and the means of obtaining it."
The Courts

RIAA Lied To Congress About New Filesharing Suits 204

Posted by timothy
from the honestly-they're-all-at-the-cleaners dept.
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "On December 23, 2008, the RIAA's Mitch Bainwol sent a letter to the Judiciary and Commerce Committees of both the House and Senate, falsely representing to them that the RIAA 'discontinued initiating new lawsuits in August.' A copy of the letter is online (PDF). In fact, as many of you already know, the RIAA brought hundreds of new lawsuits since August. See, e.g., these 40 or so cases which just represent some of the cases brought in December." Maybe they're just taking a broad view of the world "initiate."
NASA

Does Obama Have a Problem At NASA? 479

Posted by timothy
from the hey-what's-a-few-trillion-in-deficit? dept.
MarkWhittington writes "Has NASA become a problem for the Obama transition? If one believes a recent story in the Orlando Sentinel, the transition team at NASA, led by former NASA Associate Administrator Lori Garver, is running into some bureaucratic obstruction." Specifically, according to this article NASA Administrator Michael Griffin made calls to aerospace industry executives asking them to stonewall if asked about benefits to be gained by canceling the current US efforts to revisit the moon; we mentioned last month that cutting Aries and Orion is apparently an idea under strong consideration by the Obama transition team.
IBM

Graphene Transistors Clocked At 26GHz 174

Posted by CmdrTaco
from the slightly-faster-than-one dept.
KentuckyFC writes "A team at IBM has built the first high quality graphene transistors and clocked them running at 26 GHz . That doesn't quite knock silicon off its perch. The fastest silicon transistors are an order of magnitude faster than that but the record is held by indium phosphide transistors which have topped 1000 GHz. But it's not bad for a new kid on the block. It took silicon 40 years to get this far. By contrast, the first graphene transistor was built only last year. IBM says 'the work represents a significant step towards the realization of graphene-based electronics.' (Abstract)."
Censorship

Student Faces Suspension For Spamming Profs 516

Posted by kdawson
from the how-free-the-speech dept.
edmicman sends word of a Fox News report about a Michigan State University student who is facing suspension for bulk emailing a number of professors at the university 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, and the university's Email Acceptable Use Policy. The student, Kara Spencer, asked a Philadelphia rights organization, FIRE, to get involved. The article quotes the FIRE defense program director: "The fact that MSU is considering punishment of Spencer simply for exercising her right to contact selected faculty members by e-mail shows a disturbing disregard for students' freedom of expression. ... Threatening a member of the student government with suspension for sending relevant, timely e-mails to faculty members is outrageous." Spencer is awaiting the school's judgement after a hearing, and vows to take to the courts if suspended.

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