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Security

Submission + - Former MS (now FF)Security Honcho: MS Hides Holes (mozilla.com) 1

theranjan writes: "When Jeff Jones, a Security Strategy Director at Microsoft, decided to compare Internet Explorer security vulnerabilities with those of Mozilla Firefox, and decided to publish his results showing that Internet Explorer was more secure, he perhaps forgot that the Head Security Strategist of Mozilla, Window Snyder, was a former MS employee, in fact the security lead for the Service pack of Windows XP and Server. In a rebuttal of the study, Window Snyder said that the number of vulnerabilities publicly acknowledged was just a "small subset" of all vulnerabilities fixed internally. The vulnerabilities found internally are fixed in service packs and major updates without public knowledge. This is probably one of the first times that we have confirmation from one of Microsoft's former workers that this practice is routinely followed in Microsoft. This also confirms that the studies performed or referenced by Microsoft touting itself as the safest Operating system, comparing the vulnerabilities between OSes, needs to be taken with bucketfuls of salt. Finally, Window speaks out against the practice of counting bugs,stating plainly that "If we as an industry would just acknowledge that counting bugs is useless then vendors could feel safe talking about what they are doing to protect users" and "Were not building fixes for our PR team, were building them for our users. Go ahead and count.""
Media

Submission + - Pepsi and Amazon's Super Bowl MP3 Promotion (sciam.com)

MaineCoasts writes: Scientific American reports that at this years Super Bowl, Pepsi will be kicking off a yearlong MP3 download promotion on the inside of 5 billion of its soda bottle caps. Sources said Pepsi customers will need to collect five caps in order to exchange them for a download; this yields the potential for 1 billion redeemable tracks through Amazon. Scientific American suggests that this may be a turning point for MP3s, forcing further consideration by Warner Music Group (WMG) and Sony BMG Music Entertainment to follow EMI and Universal Music Group's lead in distributing music in the MP3 format, which forgoes restrictive digital rights management technology.
Biotech

Journal Journal: Stem Cell-derived bone tissue closes skull injury

The American Society for Cell Biology reports "There are mice in Baltimore whose skulls were made whole again by bone tissue grown from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs). Healing critical-size defects (defects that would not otherwise heal on their own) in intramembraneous bone, the flat bone type that forms the skull, is a vivid demonstration of new techniques devised by researchers at John Hopkins University to
Music

Submission + - Amazon to Sell DRM-free EMI Tracks. Goes MP3.

An anonymous reader writes: The days of Digital Rights Management on paid music files took one step closer to becoming a footnote in record industry history with the announcement by EMI this morning that it signed a deal with Amazon to offer its entire digital catalog DRM-free. Also notable, when Amazon launches its digital music store later this year it will only offer tracks in the MP3 format. "Our MP3-only strategy means all the music that customers buy on Amazon is always DRM-free and plays on any device", said Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos. The announcement follows April's deal between Apple and EMI to sell DRM-free tracks on iTunes. iTunes will sell tracks in the AAC format, a codec played by all iPods, but one that is not universal to all digital audio portables.
Nintendo

Submission + - Nintendo Sponsors New York Film Festival

Anonymous Coward writes: "Nintendo 's prestigious North American flagship store, Nintendo World, will be sponsoring a short film showcase as part of the upcoming New York film festival. Filmmarkers are invited to produce a short, 5-minute film based on a Nintendo theme of their choice for a top prize of USD 10,000 in cash."
The Courts

Submission + - Attempted copyright infringement to be a crime?

mikesd81 writes: "News.com reports that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales is pressing the U.S. Congress to enact a sweeping intellectual-property bill that would increase criminal penalties for copyright infringement, including "attempts" to commit piracy. The IPPA(careful, .pdf) would represent the most dramatic rewrite of copyright law since a 2005 measure dealing with prerelease piracy. For instance:

* Criminalize "attempting" to infringe copyright.
* Create a new crime of life imprisonment for using pirated software.
* Permit more wiretaps for piracy investigations.


A representative of the Motion Picture Association of America states: "We appreciate the department's commitment to intellectual-property protection and look forward to working with both the department and Congress as the process moves ahead." What's still unclear is the kind of reception this legislation might encounter on Capitol Hill. Gonzales may not be terribly popular, but Democrats do tend to be more closely aligned with Hollywood and the recording industry than is the GOP."

Feed Inside Amazon's web services (theregister.com)

SLAs for us but not for you, says Amazon's CTO

In 2006, Amazon.com launched several web services aimed at developers: the Simple Storage Service (S3) offering unlimited internet storage, the Simple Queue Service for reliable message delivery, and the Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) which lets developer create and manage virtual server instances programmatically.


Privacy

Journal Journal: amerika uber alles

The Bush administration asked Congress on Friday to allow monitoring of more foreigners in the United States during intelligence investigations. The plan is among several proposed changes, which have been in the works for more than a year, that go to the heart of a major U.S. surveillance law.
The administration says the changes are intended to help the government deal with national security threats better by updating the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act to bring it into line with rap
User Journal

Journal Journal: BotNet-resistance with multicasted LAMP virtualization

I were brainstorming with my friends about how to resolve answer to The Ultimate BotNet resistant LAMP web hosting service. Well, most of the stuff were already in use, but putting some new ideas and old tricks together, we got a new futuristic way of doing it.

It's funny.  Laugh.

Journal Journal: Goatse.cx for sale

That's right, the original home of that infamous hello.jpg that almost every slashdot user by this time has had the misfortune of seeing is currently up for auction. At the time of this writing the minimum bid is only $460, so step up and get yourself a piece of internet history. http://www.goatse.cx/ Is the original site for anyone who doesn't know, and the site to bid at is http://www.seobidding.com/b
The Internet

Submission + - How Slashdot can help Distributed Proofreaders

punicafides writes: "How Slashdot helped Distributed Proofreaders, and how it can help again

Project Gutenberg is the largest free ebook library on the Internet, and its largest ebook supplier is Distributed Proofreaders International, which has uploaded its 10,000th ebook to Project Gutenberg on March, 27th, as previously announced on Slashdot. Distributed Proofreaders depends on volunteers using their Internet connection to proofread books. All you have to do is proofread a page when you feel like proofreading, like during your lunch hour. This tends to become quite addicting, or anyway I am becoming addicted as many other people.

In 2002, Distributed Proofreaders was slashdoted with a very positive effect, as you can read in a post from the Distributed Proofreaders forum:
  • So, over the course of that six days, membership on the site increased from 841 to 5156.... Thats 4315 new members, roughly a five hundred percent increase. That large an influx put a fairly severe strain on resources, both hardware and human, but they held up remarkably well.
  • That was a very exciting time in DP's history. I wish there were some way to convey to people who arrived later just how much positive energy there was going around the site. Within a very few months we had changed most of our production scheme, acquired important new tools, and really built a community. We had a sense that anything was possible if we just worked together on it. A very "can do" attitude. We all had a common goal — get the books onto PG — and everyone pushed towards it full speed ahead.
Now people from the Slashdot community can help again by signing up to the pledge I created at PledgeBank : http://www.pledgebank.com/booksnculture

People don't even need to be tech-savvy to understand how the site works. Actually, Distributed Proofreaders site is pretty much a Web 2.0 phenomenon, and this is what makes them akin to Wikipedia, but for ebooks.

It's great if people join us, and even better if they stay."

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