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Submission Summary: 0 pending, 29 declined, 17 accepted (46 total, 36.96% accepted)

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Submission + - OMG! Text-speak is almost 100 yo (mashable.com)

c0lo writes: The older crowd likes to blame the youth for the popularization of text-speak. You know the type: LOL, LMFAO, ROFL, OMG, Totes. Well, it turns out that we’re blaming the wrong people for at least one of those abominations to the English language. “OMG” is almost 100 years old.

The earliest known usage of the abbreviation OMG was found in a letter to Winston Churchill. The sentence in question reads:

“I hear that a new order of Knighthood is on the tapis — O.M.G. (Oh! My God!) — Shower it on the Admiralty!!” [sic]


America Online

Submission + - AOL looks to sell 800 patents (bloomberg.com)

c0lo writes: AOL Inc. (AOL) hired Evercore Partners Inc. (EVR) to find a buyer for its more than 800 patents and explore other strategic options.

The beleaguered internet provider squeaked out fourth quarter earnings that were better than expected in February. However, AOL is still drawing poor profit returns from major online publishing purchases such as TechCrunch and The Huffington Post (bought last year for $315 mil).
AOL’s fourth-quarter net income declined 65 percent from a year earlier to $22.8 million on sales of $576.8 million.
Earlier this month, AOL let go of more than 40 employees, with approx another 100 expected by the end of the month

Many of AOL’s patents cover Internet advertising and communications services, and Evercore is trying to help the company wring value from a patent portfolio that AOL shareholder Starboard Value LP said may yield more than $1 billion in licensing income.

Security

Submission + - Hack reaction caught on pwned webcams (scmagazine.com.au)

c0lo writes: University of Michigan researchers have used webcams in a data centre to capture the moment administrators of a voting system learned they had been pwned.

The system, developed by the Washington DC Board of Elections and Ethics, was designed to allow military and overseas voters registered in cast electronic ballots in a local election.
Their attack attempts went unnoticed by the intrusion detection system (IDS) device deployed in front of the web server, because it "was not configured to intercept and monitor the contents of the encrypted HTTPS connections that carried" the attacks.

The researchers found a pair of publicly-accessible webcams showing the server room that housed the pilot network. The cameras were pointed at the entrance to the room and at the rack of server and network hardware.
"We used them to gauge whether the network administrators had discovered our attacks," the researchers said. "When they did, their body language became noticeably more agitated."

Submission + - Nobel Peace Prize officials under investigation (washingtonpost.com)

c0lo writes: On Saturday, Icelandic member of parliament Birgitta Jónsdóttir posted a nomination letter on her blog on behalf of the three-member parliamentary group The Movement, proposing suspected WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning as a candidate for the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize. Nobel Peace Prize nominations can be submitted by any member of a national assembly, among others.

The nomination comes on uncertain times for the Nobel Piece Prize, as its officials are facing a formal inquiry over accusations (brought by a Norwegian peace researcher) they have drifted away from the prize’s original selection criteria.
If the Stockholm County Administrative Board, which supervises foundations in Sweden’s capital, finds that prize founder Alfred Nobel’s will is not being honored, it has the authority to suspend award decisions going back three years – though that would be unlikely and unprecedented, said Mikael Wiman, a legal expert working for the county

Submission + - ACTA in Poland – A Story of Passion (kluwercopyrightblog.com)

c0lo writes: A good example of the /. spirit extended at a size of a nation.

What has happened with ACTA in Poland has surely caught the attention of the world (or at least Europe), but perhaps the scale of it is still underestimated. When word got out that ACTA was to be signed by the Polish government only IP specialists knew what it was. Nevertheless, in a very short time the Polish internet started buzzing and a moment later exploded in fury.

The government’s reaction was at the beginning a genuine and utter disbelief, as no one saw it coming, but frankly speaking how could they? There was for example no public outcry against the enforcement directive (99,9% of the population still does not know it exists).

At first the Prime Minister tried to keep his cool. He declared Poland would sign ACTA and it did so in Tokio (because of time zones it was about 3 am in Poland and hence a funny exchange in one of the radio stations:
A: They signed ACTA under the guise of the night! Scandal!
B: But it was about noon in Tokio! A; What? In broad daylight! Scandal!)
The protests, again surprisingly, did not recede, so the government declared the ratification of ACTA was not certain.

As to the question why in Poland and why so vehemently one could only speculate. But it is important to stress that in Poland the quarrel was and is not about ACTA as such. It is mostly about intellectual property in general, about the scope of copyright exceptions and limitations and about the frustrating uncertainty of copyright law, which has not been able to precisely define what is a copyright work and what constitutes fair use.When people hear they can be tracked down, brought to court, maybe even accused of criminal behaviour for something they have been doing for years, it is natural they feel threatened. When they hear a simple photo is a copyright work and they can be made liable for using it on Facebook, they do not develop warm feelings for copyright law.


Submission + - IT tops the list of most hated jobs (zdnet.com.au)

c0lo writes: A 2011 CareerBliss survey says that four out of the 10 most hated jobs are IT related.
Even the listed jobs are well-paid positions and fairly high up in the corporate infrastructure, the issues with the IT positions seem to be with the way their companies are run.

Microsoft

Submission + - Prototype Win8 tablets sold on on eBay (gottabemobile.com)

c0lo writes: Just last week at the Build conference in Anaheim, California, Microsoft revealed more information Windows 8 and Windows on a tablet while at the same time giving the 5,000 or so developers in attendance a free prototype Samsung tablet with Windows 8 pre-loaded.

Less than a week later and it appears that those very developer tablets are now appearing on eBay, with bids over $2000.

Microsoft tried to put a positive spin into that: "Some wonder if there is any demand for Microsoft’s new tablet OS.".
Well, would you buy into that?

Apple

Submission + - Samsung plans to block the IPhone5 in Korea (koreatimes.co.kr)

c0lo writes: In apparent retaliation to its U.S. rival's continual patent suits against it in global markets, Samsung Electronics is seeking a complete ban on the sales of the upcoming Apple iPhone 5 in Korea.

Most recently opened (by Samsung) fronts in the patent world wars: Apple is sued in France on 3 technical patents and counter-sued in Australia over 7 technical patents (after an Apple "offensive" temporarily blocked Galaxy Tab for Australian market).

Australia

Submission + - Samsung sues back Apple (zdnet.com.au)

c0lo writes: After it sued Apple in France on 3 technical patents, Samsung also counter-attacks Apple in Australia, suing for an alleged infringement of 7 technical patents granted to Samsung in Australia. While Apple blocked the launch of Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Australia, Samsung's action could result in blocking the entire by iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4 and iPad 2 product ranges if successful.

Some 3 weeks back, Apple lawyers cried foul alleging an anticompetitive use of the Samsung and Google (ex-Motorola) patent portfolio.

Australia

Submission + - Warner attempt to register "The Diggers" as TM (smh.com.au)

c0lo writes: The Australian federal government will object to entertainment giant Warner Music trademarking the term "The Diggers" along with an image of a soldier saluting.

This term had special significance in Australian military history in describing the people who served their country in the First World War.

The move has already sparked concern among veterans.
"No bloody way. If this trademark goes through `The diggers' cannot be used by even us without permission," one told AAP in an email.

News

Submission + - LulzSec teams with Anonymous, in Operation AntiSec (abc.net.au)

c0lo writes: After a brief spat where the notorious Anonymous hacking collective sniped at Lulzsec, the 'upstart' hacking collective, for crowing about low-rent Denial of Service attacks on the CIA and 4chan websites, the two groups have apparently teamed up in operation Anti-Sec.

The operation's: "Top priority is to steal and leak any classified government information, including email spools and documentation. Prime targets are banks and other high-ranking establishments. If they try to censor our progress, we will obliterate the censor with cannonfire anointed with lizard blood."

We can only predict that the following will be unpredictable: store canned food and flash batteries, change your eBanking password daily.

Facebook

Submission + - Facebook steps wrong again with Facial Recognition (pcmag.com)

c0lo writes: Now might be a good time to check your Facebook privacy settings as many Facebook users are reporting that the site has enabled the face recognition in the last few days without giving users any notice.
Once again, Facebook seems to be sharing personal information by default, instead on users having to 'opt-in'.
Some other comments and an interesting reaction from Google and how to get around/disable it .

Idle

Submission + - Mine BitCoin get busted for pot farming (computerworld.com)

c0lo writes: Among other risks caused by the low understanding of police and gub agencies on what BitCoin is, the high amount of electricity needed to create a single bitcoin bills can lead to marijuana busts.

The Canadian town of Mission, BC has a bylaw that allows the town's Public Safety Inspection Team to search people's homes for grow ops if they are using more than 93 kWh of electricity per day. There have allegedly been reports floating in IRC of two different cases of police showing up at a bitcoin miner's residence with a search warrant.

Ohio police and the DEA file at least 60 subpoenas each month for energy-use records of people suspected of running an indoor pot growing operation. DEA Agent Anthony Marotta said high electricity usage does not always mean the residence is an indoor pot farm and has surprised federal agents. "We thought it was a major grow operation ... but this guy had some kind of business involving computers. I don't know how many computer servers we found in his home."

Sony

Submission + - Anonymous announces the #OpSony (techworld.com.au)

c0lo writes: A press release has targeted Sony in response to the corporation's legal action against hacker George Hotz (GeoHot) and Alexander Egorenkov (Graf_Chokolo).

What seems to be pissing-off the collective is the fact that Sony continues to target persons who seeks the information and, in the already known style, likens Sony actions with sticking some private-and-dear-parts in hornet nests.

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