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The Internet

Submission + - Cubans have to dress as tourists to use internet

Stony Stevenson writes: When 32-year-old Yoani Sanchez wants to update her blog about daily life in Cuba, she dresses like a tourist and strides confidently into a Havana hotel, greeting the staff in German. That is because Cubans like Sanchez are not authorised to use hotel Internet connections, which are reserved for foreigners.

She and a handful of other independent bloggers are opening up a crack in the government's tight control over media and information to give the rest of the world a glimpse of life in a one-party, Communist state. But they face many difficulties. Costs are highly prohibitive (US$6 per hour for Internet access or the equivalent of a fortnight's pay for the average Cuban) and less than 2 percent of the population have access to the internet.
Space

Submission + - Pluto Probe Makes Discoveries at Jupiter (jhuapl.edu)

Riding with Robots writes: "No, it's not an accident due to a metric-to-English-units error. In February, the New Horizons probe passed through the Jupiter system on its way to Pluto, and we saw some spectacular pictures. Now, the science teams have published detailed scientific results, along with new images and movies. an overview is now online. The probe's instruments saw clouds form from ammonia welling up from Jupiter's lower atmosphere, and heat-induced lighting strikes in the polar regions, and fresh eruptions on the volcanic moon Io. New Horizons also captured the clearest images ever of the tenuous Jovian ring system, where scientists spotted clumps of debris that may indicate a recent impact inside the rings, or some more exotic phenomenon."
Emulation (Games)

Submission + - Transgaming abondoning cedega Or unable to fix WoW (thejemreport.com) 3

Anonymous writes: Traditionally, TransGaming has responded quickly to WoW patch issues and not only communicated its efforts via its Web site and user forum, but issued a game engine update that fixes the problem within a matter of days. This time around, though, TransGaming representatives have ignored the 2.2.0 patch problems and refused to respond to bug reports and forum posts related to these issues. When I sent TransGaming a press request email asking what was going on, I was not given the benefit of a reply. ........ The only good news is, the latest Wine release solves all of the problems that Cedega has with WoW patch 2.2.0, so you don't need to go running back to Windows just yet, but you do need to install and configure Wine. Hope you're not missing out on any raids in the meantime.
The Courts

Submission + - Judge bars RIAA prez from testifying in P2P case (arstechnica.com) 3

Eskimo Joe writes: A federal judge surprised observers in the Captiol v Thomas file-sharing trial today by barring RIAA president Cary Sherman from testifying. 'After a brief recess this afternoon, plaintiffs' counsel Richard Gabriel and defendant's counsel David Toder made their cases before the judge as to the relevance of Sherman's testimony. Toder argued that Sherman's testimony was not relevant to the question at hand, the fact of whether Thomas was liable for copyright infringement. Gabriel said that Sherman would be able to tell the jury why this case was significant, and more importantly, describe the harm the RIAA believes piracy has caused to the music industry. "I don't want to turn this case into a soap box for the recording industry," Toder argued in response.' Testimony wrapped up today with closing arguments expected Thursday morning.
Censorship

Submission + - Burma Shuts Down Internet 3

Hugh Pickens writes: "MIT Technology Review reports that in the aftermath of pro-democracy protests, Burma's military rulers have physically disconnected their country from the internet:

Last week — after images of the beatings of Buddhist monks and the killing of a Japanese photographer leaked out via the Internet — Burma's military rulers took the ultimate step, apparently physically disconnecting primary telecommunications cables in two major cities, in a drastic effort to stop the flow of information from Burma to the rest of the world. It didn't completely work: some bloggers apparently used satellite links or cellular phone services to get information outside the country.
One Burmese blogger reported last week that "Myanmar main ISP has been shut down by so-called "maintenance reasons" and most of the telecommunication services have been cut off or tapped. ""
The Courts

Submission + - How should I have responded to RIAA lawyer? 10

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes: "The RIAA's lawyers are a bit jumpy these days since their standard "making available" boilerplate was rejected by the Court in Interscope v. Rodriguez. But I still never expected, when I initiated a dismissal motion in Elektra v. Schwartz, that they would be reaching out to me , of all people, for help. But so they did, asking me "in the interest of efficiency... what precisely Defendant contends is lacking from Plaintiffs' Complaint for Defendant to consider it sufficient. Perhaps Plaintiffs may be able to satisfy these alleged deficiencies and spare both parties additional and unnecessary motions practice." Unfortunately my response was not very helpful; I couldn't think of anything better than to say, more or less, that "Plaintiffs have no case whatsoever against Ms. Schwartz, and their case against her was frivolous in its inception. Accordingly, there are no facts they can allege that will satisfy the plausibility standard." On reflection, I'm feeling kind of guilty that I didn't give them a more creative, and helpful answer, and I thought to turn to my friends at Slashdot, who are (a) almost always helpful, and (b) always creative. What would you have said?"
Privacy

Submission + - Two Patriot Act Provisions Ruled Unconstitutional

buswolley writes: Judge Ann Aiken in Federal court ruled two key provisions of the Patriot Act unconstitutional. According to the ruling, the Patriot Act provisions unconstitutionally circumvented the 4th Amendment, and removed the checks and balances provided for by our Constitution. This is a great victory for the people of the United States, and demonstrates the inherent strength of our system of government.
The Internet

Submission + - NZ Police use wiki to develop new legislation (policeact.govt.nz)

Jasper Bryant-Greene writes: "The New Zealand Police are using a wiki to assist with the ongoing review of the Police Act. Members of the public from New Zealand and all over the world can comment on the legislation, make or propose changes, and discuss issues around how the New Zealand Police operate. As reported in New Zealand and international media."
Security

Submission + - Hackers Cause Generator to Self-Destruct

An anonymous reader writes: It has been revealed that in a U.S. Department of Homeland Security exercise codenamed "Aurora" conducted in March of this year, researchers were able to cause a power generator to self destruct remotely via a "cyber attack" which changed the operating cycle of the generator. "Government sources said changes are being made to both computer software and physical hardware to protect power generating equipment."

Full Story

Graphics

Submission + - NVIDIA SLI: Linux vs. Windows

An anonymous reader writes: SLI can be used to improve graphic performance on Nvidia hardware. Results using two graphics cards on Linux are quite impressive. However, this benchmark show that when comparing these numbers to Windows, there is still very much a performance delta between the two operating systems on the latest GeForce 8 hardware. In some of the benchmarks, a single GeForce 8600GT running in Windows was faster than two GPUs running in Scalable Link Interface under Linux. The single GPU improvements in the latest driver are quite nice and the benefits of SLI under Linux are becoming noticeable, but without a doubt it's running much slower than Microsoft Windows with their 162.18 WHQL driver.
Privacy

Submission + - surveillance provisions of PATRIOT act unlawful

An anonymous reader writes: Two provisions of the USA Patriot Act are unconstitutional because they allow search warrants to be issued without a showing of probable cause, a federal judge ruled Wednesday. ... the judge said, the U.S. attorney general's office was ''asking this court to, in essence, amend the Bill of Rights, by giving it an interpretation that would deprive it of any real meaning. This court declines to do so.''

http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/us/AP-Patriot-Act-Lawsuit.html?_r=1
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=3657070
Linux Business

Submission + - Novell Linux business spikes since Microsoft deal (idg.com.au)

StonyandCher writes: "Novell's Linux business has soared 243 percent since last November when the company signed its controversial deal with Microsoft. "The affect on sales year over year, for Novell's first three quarters of our fiscal year, which ends Oct. 31 — our Linux business was up 243 percent year over year," said Justin Steinman, director of marketing at Novell, who, along with executives from both companies, spoke at a program hosted by the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council."
Announcements

Submission + - New Zealand Police Act wiki lets you write the law 1

PhoenixOr writes: New Zealand is now on the top of my list for cool governments. They've opened a wiki allowing the populous to craft a new version of their Police Act, the legislative basis for policing in New Zealand. Stuff.co.nz has an article about it here.
The Courts

Submission + - French Court: Acer must reimburse customer

sjau writes: French court decides: Acer must reimburse customer for pre-installed, unused/unwanted software

A decision of a French court from july 23 sentences Acer to reimburse a notebook-buyer for unwanted software that came with the notebook. The court decided (see the PDF) that Acer has to reimburse the full price of the returned software and not just the 30.- offered by Acer in advance.

Specifically the court decided that totally 311.85 ( 135.20 for Windows XP Home, 60 for Microsoft Works, 40.99 for PowerDVD, 38.66 for Norton Antivirus and 37.- for NTI CD Maker) had to be reimbursed to the customer for a Acer 3t513WLMi 80 notebook he bought for 599.-. In addition Acer also has customer another 650.- in damages and process costs.

In France among others the "Groupe de travail Détaxe" of the "Association Francophone des Utilisateurs de Linux et des Logiciels Libres" (AFUL) campaigns for a release from the "OEM tax". Reports from France say that this is not the first case but it appears to be a tendency that also future decisions will be similar. The AFUL action "Non aux racketiciels" is since this summer also supported by the Linux Distributor Mandriva. "Racketiciel" is a combination from "Racket" for extortion and to the word part "iciels" from the French term "logiciel" for software.

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