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owlnation (858981)

owlnation
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Posted by kdawson on Friday July 25, @09:54AM
from the no-pearls-in-sight dept.
Barence sends along PcPro coverage of the second crash of London's Oyster card billing system in two weeks. Transport for London was forced to open the gates and allow free travel for all. "There is currently a technical problem with Oyster readers at London Underground stations which is affecting Oyster pay as you go cards only," explains the TfL website. This follows the first crash two weeks ago, which left 65,000 Oyster cards permanently corrupted. Speculation is increasing that the crashes may be related to the hacking of the Oyster card system by Dutch researchers from Radboud University, though TfL denies any link. Plans to publish details of the hack were briefly halted when the makers of the chip used in the system sued the group, although a judge ruled earlier this week that the researchers could go ahead. During the court action, details briefly leaked on website Wikileaks.
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 [+] story, hardware, hardhack, haha, securitythroughobscurity, mifare, seafood
Posted by timothy on Sunday July 20, @03:36PM
from the why-people-hate-to-call-it-piracy dept.
traycerb writes "The Economist has an article detailing how numerous companies are finding piracy's silver lining: 'Statistics about the traffic on file-sharing networks can be useful. They can reveal, for example, the countries where a new singer is most popular, even before his album has been released there. Having initially been reluctant to be seen exploiting this information, record companies are now making use of it. This month BigChampagne, the main music-data analyser, is extending its monitoring service to pirated video, too.' The kicker is Microsoft's tacit endorsement of Windows piracy in developing markets, namely China. The big man himself, Bill Gates, says it best in an interview with Fortune last year: 'It's easier for our software to compete with Linux when there's piracy than when there's not.'"
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 [+] story, tech, media, business, internet, wellduh, !piracy

  Comment: UGH (Score 5, Funny) 2008-07-18 21:03

by pxc on Friday July 18, @09:03PM (#24248835)
Attached to: Researchers Test BitTorrent Live Streaming

I don't understand why people keep making this association!

Pirates HATE torrents. I can't even tell you how many beautiful vessels we've lost to the fuckers. Ugh.

Sincerely,

The Racketeering Industry Association of America

PS: RAmen.

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Posted by timothy on Wednesday July 16, @02:05PM
from the give-us-your-cake-and-a-fork dept.
Da'Man writes "The Psystar saga takes another series of turns. Not only is the website down but an examination of the suit filed by Apple shows that the Cupertino Goliath wants Psystar to recall all Open Computer and OpenServ systems sold by the company since April. It seems that Steve Jobs is out to totally sink Psystar and put an end to Mac clones."
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 [+] story, apple, business, court, anticompetitive, goodluckwiththat
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday July 14, @06:30PM
from the war-on-two-fronts-is-never-good dept.
ruphus13 writes "Linden Labs has talked about Open Sourcing aspects of their platform for a while, but have not always followed through. Now, the OpenSimulator project has been gathering some solid momentum, and this was followed by an announcement by IBM that showed interoperability between OpenSimulator and Linden Servers. What this means is that you can use a Second Life client to log on to an OpenSim server. Beyond that, anyone can run their own server. 'Working with the protocols derived from the official Second Life client, and a knowledge of how Second Life works, these people have implemented their own compatible server code.' It is only a matter of time before users will be able to move profiles, virtual goods, and other elements of their 'second life' on to any server in a truly open world, thereby threatening Linden Labs' virtual world experience. With Google and Sun at the fringes of this space, things are going to get very interesting, virtually speaking."
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 [+] story, games, rpg, social, sadville, !agame
Posted by Soulskill on Saturday July 12, @08:18AM
from the made-your-bed dept.
NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "RIAA sidekick MediaSentry's 'illegal investigation' problem, which surfaced the other day when it got caught in a lie in Michigan (or got caught telling the truth after having told 2 years worth of lies in Brooklyn), has taken another turn for the worse. We learned today from court papers filed in North Carolina, in one of the cases targeting NC State students in Raleigh, that the North Carolina Private Protective Services Board has scheduled a Grievance Committee hearing to determine whether there is probable cause to investigate an alleged violation of the law by SafeNet (formerly known as MediaSentry). Fortunately for MediaSentry, they won't have to testify under oath, according to the notice (PDF)."
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Posted by Soulskill on Saturday July 12, @12:02AM
from the needs-a-galactic-prophylactic dept.
Astronomers using NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope have found a galaxy producing an average of up to 4,000 stars per year. They contrast this with the Milky Way, which only produces an average of 10 each year. Nicknamed "Baby Boom," it is a young starburst galaxy, and its stellar birth rate conflicts with a commonly accepted model for the growth of a galaxy. Quoting: "'The question now is whether the majority of the very most massive galaxies form very early in the universe like the Baby Boom galaxy, or whether this is an exceptional case. Answering this question will help us determine to what degree the Hierarchical Model of galaxy formation still holds true,' [said Peter Capak of NASA's Spitzer Science Center] 'The incredible star-formation activity we have observed suggests that we may be witnessing, for the first time, the formation of one of the most massive elliptical galaxies in the universe,' said co-author Nick Scoville of Caltech, the principal investigator of the Cosmic Evolution Survey,
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 [+] story, science, space, nasa, galaxy, astronomy, astrophysics
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Wednesday July 02, @06:11PM
from the champagne-method-to-science dept.
FiReaNGeL writes an unexpected side-effect from NASA's STEREO spacecraft has allowed scientists to see a much more well-defined picture of the boundary of our solar system. "The twin STEREO spacecraft were launched in 2006 into Earth's orbit about the sun to obtain stereo pictures of the sun's surface and to measure magnetic fields and ion fluxes associated with solar explosions. Between June and October 2007, however, the suprathermal electron sensor in the IMPACT (In-situ Measurements of Particles and CME Transients) suite of instruments on board each STEREO spacecraft detected neutral atoms originating from the same spot in the sky: the shock front and the heliosheath beyond, where the sun plunges through the interstellar medium."
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 [+] story, science, nasa, space, astronomy, runonsentence, hyperwall
by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 01, @05:03PM (#24019951)
Attached to: Expensive Books Inspire P2P Textbook Downloads

You are stealing from the pockets of the professors who change the text book every semester making your used book worthless.

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by twitter on Sunday June 22, @01:03AM (#23888661)
Attached to: Sandvine CEO Says Internet Monitoring a Necessity

I can assure you that you will need new accounts if Sandvine or anyone else sets their PR firm on you. Five years worth of good reputation can vanish in as few as five posts. Once they have you posting at -1 they can keep you there with very little effort and no one will notice. A new account fixes that and drives them wild, kind of like free speech on the internet obsoletes the MAFIAA business models. The fix for a non neutral net won't be nearly as easy.

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by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 21, @07:03PM (#23887785)
Attached to: Hotmail Full Version Incompatible With Firefox 3
FP.
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Posted by timothy on Saturday June 14, @06:49PM
from the common-sense-being-already-anathema dept.
Corrupt links to a Sydney Morning Herald article which begins "The French state and internet service providers have struck a deal to block sites carrying child pornography or content linked to terrorism or racial hatred, Interior Minister Michel Alliot-Marie announced on Tuesday." The article is thin on details, but what it does say is bad enough: "Under the French plan, internet users, via a platform, will be able to signal inappropriate sites and the state, receiving the complaints in real time, will then decide whether the sites are to go on a so-called black list to be passed on to internet service providers to enforce site blocks." It sounds like the perfect way to organize an especially malicious DDoS attack. The French government has never been shy about wanting to "protect" French people by censoring Internet content, though.
Posted by Soulskill on Friday June 13, @05:23PM
from the i-can-see-clearly-now dept.
An anonymous reader writes "What cool things can be done with the 100,000+ cores of the first petaflop supercomputer, the Roadrunner, that were impossible to do before? Because our brain is massively parallel, with a relatively small amount of communication over long distances, and is made of unreliable, imprecise components, it's quite easy to simulate large chunks of it on supercomputers. The Roadrunner has been up only for about a week, and researchers from Los Alamos National Lab are already reporting inaugural simulations of the human visual system, aiming to produce a machine that can see and interpret as well as a human. After examining the results, the researchers 'believe they can study in real time the entire human visual cortex.' How long until we can simulate the entire brain?"
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 [+] story, tech, supercomputing, biotech, hardware, singularity, skynet
Posted by ScuttleMonkey on Monday June 02, @06:26PM
from the check-your-optics dept.
Roland Piquepaille writes "An international team of scientists has found a strange ring around a dead star by using images taken by NASA's Spitzer space telescope. This star, called SGR 1900+14, belongs to a class of objects known as magnetars. According to NASA, a magnetar is 'a highly magnetized neutron star and the remnant of a brilliant supernova explosion signaling the death throes of a massive star.' So far, about a dozen magnetars have been found. An amazing thing about these stellar objects is their magnetic field. One of the researchers said that 'magnetars possess magnetic fields a million billion times stronger than the magnetic field of the Earth.'
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 [+] story, science, space, news, millionbillion, ringworld, deathstar