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The Internet

Submission + - OpenSource Documentary on Copyright - $250 contest

etherworks writes: "OpenSourceCinema.org is a website to make an Open Source documentary about Copyright in the digital age. All footage for the film is released under a creative commons license and made available on the site. The audience can then remix scenes of the film — including scenes with Lawrence Lessig, Girl Talk, Negativland, DJ Food, Jimmy Wales and more. The entire script of the film is also available as a wiki for the audience to edit. The documentary film created from the website, Basement Tapes, is a co-production with the National Film Board of Canada and will be broadcast on the documentary channel in 2008. Open Source Cinema is also announcing a remix contest, where the audience can remix scenes with mashup megaman Girl Talk. Winners will have their scenes included in the feature documentary and will also be up for $250 in cold cash!"
The Internet

Submission + - Why must internet companies suck?

AetherWolf writes: "After spending 6 days with intermittent connectivity, I finally(and dreadfully) called up my ISP(Verizon) I've called them before and knew what to expect. A scripted person on the other end of the phone, Who can barely understand english, And is obviously hard of hearing. So as soon as I got on the phone with a tech, I stated my problem. "After looking into the logs on my DSL modem, I have identified that the reason my connection Is lost so often is due to the fact that You DNS server keeps loosing connection, After loosing the connection, the modem Restarts. Leaving me without internet for About Five to Ten minutes. This is unnacceptable, As I do alot of business online." They responded by having me remake the connection in The modem. Basically I just re-entered my username and password. Obviously, this made the modem reset its connection, and it worked. Well, the tech said, "Congradulations you are back online!" With which I instantly responded, "This does not fix my problem." The tech got confused, and started saying something about how I was online. Out of shear irritation, I simply hung up. I work for an ISP myself. Valkyrie Wireless, out of Millersburg, Ohio. I at least know that simply re-entering my account info will not Fix a DNS issue.

Is anybody else fed up with the outsourced, scripted, and plainly Non-Computer Literate Techs?"

Bill Gates' Management Style 362

replicant108 wrote in to give us Tom Evslin's fascinating account of working for Microsoft in the early 90s. "So you're in there presenting your product plan to billg, steveb, and mikemap. Billg typically has his eyes closed and he's rocking back and forth. He could be asleep; he could be thinking about something else; he could be listening intently to everything you're saying. The trouble is all are possible and you don't know which. Obviously, you have to present as if he were listening intently even though you know he isn't looking at the PowerPoint slides you spent so much time on. At some point in your presentation billg will say "that's the dumbest fucking idea I've heard since I've been at Microsoft." He looks like he means it. However, since you knew he was going to say this, you can't really let it faze you. Moreover, you can't afford to look fazed; remember: he's a bully."
Security

AOL's Embarassing Password Woes 192

An anonymous reader writes "AOL.com users may think they have up to sixteen characters to use as a password, but they'd be wrong, thanks to this security artifact detailed by The Washington Post's Security Fix blog: "Well, it turns out that when someone signs up for an AOL.com account, the user appears to be allowed to enter up to a 16-character password. AOL's system, however, doesn't read past the first eight characters." This means that a user who uses "password123" or any other obvious eight-character password with random numbers on the end is in effect using just that lame eight-character password."
Science

Cold Fusion Gets a Boost From the US Navy 168

Tjeerd writes in to alert us to the publication in a highly respected, peer-reviewed journal of results indicative of table-top fusion. The US Navy's Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center in San Diego, CA (called Spawar) has apparently been conducting research on "cold fusion" since the days of the discredited report of Pons and Fleischmann. They are reporting on the reproducible detection of highly energetic charged particles from a wire coated in palladium-deuterium and subjected to either an electric or a magnetic field. Their paper was published in February in the journal Naturwissenschaften (which has published work by Einstein, Heisenberg, and Lorenz). New Scientist also has a note about the fusion work but it is available only to subscribers.
Businesses

eBay's Ill-Timed Lifetime Achievement Webby 316

theodp writes "eBay CEO Meg Whitman will accept a special Webby Lifetime Achievement Award next month on behalf of the eBay Community, which has 'permanently changed the way people connect, discover and interact with each other.' Perhaps by then, people will have forgotten how eBay enabled buyer 'Blazers5505' to hook up with sellers like 'oneclickshooting' just weeks before the worst mass shooting in modern US history, prompting eBay to issue a gun-parts-don't-kill-students-guns-and-ammo-do statement that showed little evidence of its celebrated commitment to social consciousness. CEO Whitman, who received $11.1M last year for her leadership efforts, has kept a low profile since tooting eBay's trust-and-safety horn for Wall Street analysts two days after the Va. Tech rampage."
User Journal

Journal Journal: BBC iPlayer Not Just For Windows! 2

It seems that on various sites (and petitions!) people are making a big issue about the BBC's iPlayer being restricted to Windows DRM only. While it's true that it only works on Windows at the moment the BBC Trust has asked the BBC to investigate a platform antagonistic solution so it can also work on Macs and Linux. You can even see this conclusion in their
Music

Submission + - Pianist's Husband Admits Faking Recordings

bugg_tb writes: Earlier this month Slashdot reported on Gramophone Magainze's article about Joyce Hatto's music not actually being recorded by her....

It turns out that this appears to be correct as the BBC is reporting that her husband William Barrington-Coupe "began faking passages because Joyce Hatto, who had ovarian cancer, could be heard groaning in pain during recordings"
Security

Submission + - Citibank: training users to be less secure

Llamedos writes: Citibank has redesigned their credit card website (Citicards.com) so that the login page is not an SSL encrypted page. Instead, they expect users to simply accept a little lock GIF file they put up themselves, and their assurance that the form is submitted via SSL. According to Citibank, "Your security is important to us. While the new Citicards.com has an "http" address and no lock icon displays in your browser, your personal information is still protected." Citibank's security page While other sites are moving to more security and more ways for the user to protect himself (e.g., Bank of America's SiteKey program), Citibank is tearing away at protections and trying to train users not to care about security.
Microsoft

Submission + - Keyloggers Installed via Windows Update Service?

sedimentary_rock writes: "A Dell computer user found a keylogger installed on his computer with Guardian Monitor registry keys after updating the OS through the Microsoft Windows Update service. The article suggests that Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA), which "calls home" to Microsoft, functions as a mechanism to surreptitiously install surveillance software on a computer.

http://www.dellideastorm.com/article/show/63923/No _WGA_preinstalled"
The Matrix

Submission + - Do we need to make voting mandatory?

gd23ka writes: "Australia and Belgium force their electorate to the ballot boxes. Disaffected in Australia and don't want to get out of bed on election day? Pay a fine or go to jail or at least explain why you couldn't come. With these laws on their books both countries enjoy a high percentage of participation in their elections. Proponents say that forced participation in the elections strengthens democracy. What are your thoughts on the matter? You can read Slate's opinion piece first or tell me right away: Is mandatory voting a good idea for America?"
Yahoo!

Submission + - Yahoo! Pipes Developer Wants Programmer's Feedback

lisah writes: "While some people are still trying to figure out how to apply the slightly enigmatic Pipes mash up tool to their daily lives, programmers, developers, website owners, and bloggers are coming up with new and wildly creative uses every day. Pipes creator Pasha Sadri says he's amazed at the brilliant ideas people have dreamed up so far but he's really looking forward to seeing what folks with a little programming experience can create and will welcome their feedback as Yahoo! continues to develop new ways to implement and improve Pipes. From the article, "'We encourage developers regardless of their programming expertise to try out Pipes,' he says. 'We look forward to tech-savvy users providing feedback to help as we expand the functionality of Pipes. The opportunities for Pipes are endless and we are planning to enable more complex applications in the near future.'""
Enlightenment

Submission + - Video Games Train A Better Surgeon!

Phooey42 writes: "Reuters is reporting today that Surgeons who play video games are more skilled at laparoscopic surgery. From the article, "Playing video games appears to help surgeons with skills that truly count: how well they operate using a precise technique." It continues to say that, "Out of 33 surgeons from Beth Israel Medical Center in New York that participated in the study, the nine doctors who had at some point played video games at least three hours per week made 37 percent fewer errors, performed 27 percent faster, and scored 42 percent better in the test of surgical skills than the 15 surgeons who had never played video games before." Sounds like every hospital needs a Wii with Trauma Center: Second Opinion."
Software

Submission + - NTFS-3G Version 1.0 Released

An anonymous reader writes: NTFS-3G is a free open source NTFS read/write driver. It's already available for over 60 Linux distributions and systems like FreeBSD, BeOS, Haiku and Mac OS X, to big-endian and 64-bit computer architectures, and to new CPU's like AMD64, ARM and MIPS.

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