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Data Storage

Submission + - UK: Man Mistakenly Arrested, DNA Stored For Ever (guardian.co.uk) 1

crush writes: "A man arrested in the UK when his mp3 player was mistaken for a firearm will now have his DNA stored for ever in the national police database. The story reported in The Guardian details how armed police tracked him with CCTV, arrested him, detained him in a cell and have now stored his fingerprints, photograph and DNA even though no one is contesting that he is completely innocent. This appears to illustrate all the arguments civil liberties campaigners have made against the Orwellian police state which is unfolding."
The Internet

Submission + - Comcast Changes ToS to Thwart Lawsuits (comcast.net)

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes: "Comcast has updated its ToS for the first time in two years. It now mentions, among other things, that Comcast 'uses reasonable network management practices that are consistent with industry standards.' This mirrors language in the FCC's 2005 Internet Policy Statement (PDF) and is a clear attempt to thwart off lawsuits from customers who claim they were mislead. Of course, calling the forging of RST packets 'reasonable network management' doesn't make it true."
Censorship

Submission + - Muslims Attempt to Censor Wikipedia

Nom du Keyboard writes: As reported on Fox News and The New York Times, some Muslims are attempting to censor Wikipedia because of images of Muhammad contained in the article about him. So does one religion get to tell the rest of the world how they must behave because they'll be offended otherwise, or does the Internet represent all views, even when that view may be offensive to some particular minority?
Censorship

Submission + - Yarro Wants to Force Wi-Fi Operators to Filter (arstechnica.com)

I Don't Believe in Imaginary Property writes: "Ralph Yarro, the former SCO chairman, wants the Utah legislature to pass a law force anyone running an open Wi-Fi access point to be forced to verify the age of anyone using it in order to protect minors from harmful materials online. This idea was brought up by his non-profit group, CP80, which was founded to promote the idea that pornographic websites should use their own port instead of port 80. Hopefully, they don't get the filtering technology from Japan because Yarro might be disappointed to know that his last name, in some contexts, is the equivalent of 'you bastard' in Japanese."
Sci-Fi

Submission + - Steven Brust releases CC-licensed Firefly fanfic

An anonymous reader writes: Back in 2005, Steven Brust, Big Damn Author Extraordinaire (often compared to Roger Zelazny, and justly so), first discovered the Firefly universe, and decided he liked it so much that he just had to write about it. (He often says that he writes the books he wants to read.) When the resulting novel was finished, a long process was started to see if he could get it published. The last hope of this finally having vanished, he has now released his 'fanfic' novel, "My Own Kind of Freedom" under a Creative Commons license. You can download it here. (If you discover you like his style, consider picking up some of his regularly published works, or donating.)

Feed Schneier: UK Two-Tier Tax Security System (schneier.com)

Poor security for everyone except the rich and powerful: The security of the online computer system used by more than three million people to file tax returns is in doubt after HM Revenue and Customs admitted it was not secure...

Feed Engadget: Holocube brings 3D projection down to desktop size (engadget.com)

Filed under: Displays

After years of promises, it seems that holograms are finally starting to gain a little traction, although the applications for the technology so far have been fairly limited. At least one company thinks that's about to change, however, with it now touting its retro-styled Holocube as an all-purpose solution for company's to advertise their products "like never before." Measuring about 20-inches square, the Holocube packs a 40GB hard drive for storing up to 18 hours of compressed video, which can magically float at 1080i resolution within the cube at the flick of a switch. Of course, the fact the company is targeting the device solely as a means of advertising should tell you something about the price (which is on a need to know basis, it seems). Still, it's a start, and we're guessing there are at least a few folks out there that'll snag one of these to fully round out their Star Wars-inspired home theater no matter what the cost. Head on past the break for some video of it in action.

Continue reading Holocube brings 3D projection down to desktop size

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Hardware Hacking

Submission + - First ever "Bionic Eye" contact lens creat (discovery.com)

azuredrake writes: "Discovery News reports that, for the first time, researchers have fitted a contact lens with an imprinted circuit and lights. This could be used to overlay electronic information on natural vision, essentially providing a hassle-free heads-up-display. The device receives power from radio signals presumably emitted by a carried device. While practical implementations are still probably years away, the significant technological hurdle of crafting a safe LCD inside a contact lens has now been cleared."
Biotech

Submission + - Human body heat to power energy-efficient chip (computerworld.com.au)

An anonymous reader writes: A new energy efficient chip designed by researchers at MIT may use so little power that someday human body heat will be able to charge implantable medical devices. The new chip design, which researchers say will reduce power consumption by 10 times, is being unveiled this week at the International Solid State Circuits Conference in San Francisco. The chip, still in the proof-of-concept stage, is expected to be used in portable electronic devices, like cell phones, PDAs and even implantable medical systems. "We intend to implant these new low-voltage techniques as quickly as we can," said Dennis Buss, chief scientist at Texas Instruments, TI engineers worked with MIT researchers on the two year project. "To get to where we'd need to be with this will take about five years. Doing a research demonstration is an important step, but making it robust for commercial production will require some work." The key to the chip's improved energy efficiency lies in making it work at a reduced voltage level, according to Joyce Kwong, a graduate student in MIT's Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and a member of the chip design project team. Most of the mobile processors today operate at about 1 volt. The requirement for MIT's new design, however, drops to 0.3 volts.
Cellphones

Submission + - Waking Engineers from the Dead

wizman writes: Hi Slashdotters! I am responsible for maintaining the uptime of our 80-ish servers. My company has an after-hours on-call rotation. At any given time, there are two engineers in the notification pool. When an outage is detected, an e-mail is sent to both engineers cell phones.

Over the past several months, I've been having more and more problems with engineers not responding to outages. This is often due to some failure of their phones. Sometimes they don't receive the SMS, sometimes they don't hear the notification sounds, sometimes they leave the phone on vibrate accidentally. The list goes on.

I'm sure there are other geeks out there who have had to deal with similar situations. I'm curious what others have found to resolve this. We've discussed having more people in rotation at once, buying secondary cell phones, providing alpha pagers (which are surprisingly hard to find these days), and other ideas. What has worked for you?
Hardware Hacking

Submission + - KS Hobbyist Hacks "Green" Vehicles, Shames (fastcompany.com)

Dragee writes: Goodwin, a 37-year-old who looks like Kevin Costner with better hair, is a professional car hacker. [And grade-school dropout.] He takes the hugest American cars on the road and rejiggers them to get up to quadruple their normal mileage and burn low-emission renewable fuels grown on U.S. soil — all while doubling their horsepower. The result thrills eco-evangelists and red-meat Americans alike: a vehicle that's simultaneously green and mean. And word's getting out.

Oh, and the conversation with GM engineers who happened upon one of Goodwin's creations?
One engineer turned and said, "GM said this wouldn't work."

"Well," Goodwin replied, "here it is.

Privacy

Submission + - The iPhone Meets the Fourth Amendment (ssrn.com) 3

background image writes: According to Alan M Gershowitz, the doctrine of "search incident to arrest" may allow devices such as mobile phones, pdas and laptops to be thoroughly searched without either probable cause or warrants, and incriminating evidence found in such searches may be used against you whether or not it is germane to the reason for the original arrest.

Imagine that police arrest an individual for a simple traffic infraction, such as running a stop sign. Under the search incident to arrest doctrine, officers are entitled to search the body of the person they are arresting to ensure that he does not have any weapons or will not destroy any evidence. The search incident to an arrest is automatic and allows officers to open containers on the person, even if there is no probable cause to believe there is anything illegal inside of those containers. What happens, however, when the arrestee is carrying an iPhone in his pocket? May the police search the iPhone's call history, cell phone contacts, emails, pictures, movies, calendar entries and, perhaps most significantly, the browsing history from recent internet use? Under longstanding Supreme Court precedent decided well before handheld technology was even contemplated, the answer appears to be yes.

Feed Techdirt: Full Of SQL And Fury, Signifying Nothing (techdirt.com)

The RIAA's website was hacked early Monday morning — their out-of-date CMS installation proved to be vulnerable to a number of SQL injection attacks — and as you might expect the internet has been having a good laugh about it since.

Well, ha ha. I won't pretend to be immune from a little shadenfreude at the expense of this particular blogospheric bête noir. But in a larger way, this incident validates the RIAA's existence. After all, it's not the RIAA's name that appears on lawsuits filed against P2P users: it's those of the record labels. The association serves a number of functions, but not least among them is its role as a consequence-free focal point for consumer backlash — backlash that most recently channeled itself into meaningless vandalism against a brochureware site that no one visits.

Of course, this displacement of blame works in both directions. It's considerably easier for copyfighting triumphalists to claim they're in the right when the enemy is a constituency-free trade group rather than a business that represents (however poorly) the artists whose work is being appropriated. For this reason, I wouldn't take too seriously the rumors of the RIAA's demise. So long as the labels choose to prosecute their war on filesharers, everyone concerned will have a use for a scapegoat.

Tom Lee is an expert at the Techdirt Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Tom Lee and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.



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The Military

Submission + - Israel Eyes Thinking Machines for 'Doomsday' 1

An anonymous reader writes: Israel is worried about Iran launching an all-out, "doomsday" barrage of rockets and missiles. So military leaders have begun early planning for a new, robotic defense system, armed with enough artificial intelligence that it "could take over completely" from flesh-and-blood operators. "It will be designed for... autonomous operations," the commander of Israel's air defense forces, insists.

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