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The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Why Digital Rights are Human Rights

Cyrus Mack writes: "I've written a paper on why access to information should be recognized explicitly as a basic human right. Laws should protect citizens from oppressive governments that wish to restrict these rights. If we don't do this, we risk scores of disenfranchised people with no means to fully participate in our digital society. This puts them at a severe disadvantage. Legislation such as California's AB 1668 must be supported and rights protected."
Software

Submission + - Watch MS in Action vs CA's open standards bill

Cyrus Mack writes: "Watch MS lobbyists and their friends in all their disengenuous glory as they explain to this California assembly committee why open standards are bad. Their arguments? * Sun is doing this to give themselves a competitive advantage * proponents of ODF have stifled Microsoft's efforts with standards bodies * The market is addressing the issue anyway, so legislation is unnecessary Never mind the fact that OOXML, should it be approved by the ISO, would most likely qualify under AB 1668, the bill under discussion. Why does Microsoft fight for standards acceptance on one hand, and then against it with the other?"
Announcements

Submission + - Hyperic Chosen over Openview, Nagios

porkrind writes: "Jack Loftus has a story at SearchEnterpriseLinux about how a company's IT dept (mynewplace.com) had problems with its systems management setup but didn't want to pay an exhorbitant fee for monitoring its data center. Their solution? Bypassing HP Openview in favor of Hyperic HQ. As companies discover that they no longer have to pay huge sums of money for systems management, expect a lot more of these types of stories."
Patents

Submission + - Small Developer Feels Pinch of Software Patents

Penguinisto writes: A business has so far felt the very real pain of sotware patent enforcement — but this time, it is a large company who extinguished the little guy. Reyes Infografica had recently sent a Cease and Desist notice to a small Poser hobbyist programmer named Phil Cooke for his "Clothing Creator" program, claiming that it violates one of their patents (Phil's own site/support forum contains the copy of Reyes' C&D, Phil's announcement, and relevant discussions.) Clothing Creator has been out for a couple of years now. Basically, it builds quick custom clothing for humanoid 3d figures within the 3d compositing/rendering program called Poser. Recently, E-Frontier, the current owner of Poser, had partnered with Reyes to sell a competing product in E-Frontier's online store, called "Virtual Fashion". To E-Frontier's credit, they recently announced that they would stop selling the Reyes product until the dispute is settled, though at time of writing the product is still available for sale. So is this the "innovation" that software patents were supposed to foster?
Education

MIT Drops DRM-Laden Journal Subscription 141

Gibbs-Duhem writes with news that MIT has dropped its subscription to the Society of Automotive Engineers' web-based database of technical papers over the issue of DRM. The SAE refuses to allow any online access except through an Adobe DRM plugin that limits use and does not run on Linux or Unix. Also, the SAE refuses to let its papers even be indexed on any site but their own. SAE's use of DRM is peculiar to say the least, as they get their content for free from the researchers who actually do the work. And those researchers have choices as to where they send their work, and some of the MIT faculty are pretty vocal about it. From the MIT Library News: "'It's a step backwards,' says Professor Wai Cheng, SAE fellow and Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT, who feels strongly enough about the implications of DRM that he has asked to be added to the agenda of the upcoming SAE Publication Board meeting in April, when he will address this topic."
Media

Submission + - What is Next Generation Data Center?

porkrind writes: "So apparently, while I wasn't looking, someone coined YABW (Yet Another BuzzWord) — "Next Generation Data Center" which sounds kind of like a web 2.0 wannabe. And hey, it must be real, because there's now a conference by the same name. Not to mention an essay contest giving away $5K. All kidding aside, is it real? What exactly does it mean? From my brief readings, there's some talk about virtualization and... not much else, except for the usual fluff from HP, Cisco and others. What the hell is it? Is it just virtual appliances?"

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