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Data Storage

Submission + - Quantum mechanics could save problem of storage

Anonymous Coward writes: "I read here that scientists have managed to use the peculiar quantum properties of electrons to store data. It used to be thought that once we got down to atomic levels, quantum effects would ruin any chance of storing data in very small spaces. But boffins have used a technique that takes advantage of these effects to store data on the electron quantum spins themselves."
Music

Submission + - RIAA is out of control yet again.

An anonymous reader writes: The RIAA is once again at their old tricks. The band Nine Inch Nails has intentionally 'leaked' songs via USB keys hidden at restrooms during their current European tour. Sites hosting the intentionally 'leaked' songs are now being sent cease and desist orders. The link is here: http://www.roadrunnerrecords.com/blabbermouth.net/ news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=69841 I found it via http://theninhotline.net/ When will this ever end? The RIAA is just plain out of control.
The Almighty Buck

Submission + - Biodiesel from Algae

warmbowski writes: Why should we look into large scale production of biodiesel from algae? It produces more oil per acre than food crops. It doesn't need to take up arable land. It can use municipal waste streams as nutrients. It can potentially replace petrodiesel. Who wants to be an algae farmer? (A diagram of the farm) FTA ... 'However, if the feedstock were to be algae, owing to its very high yield of oil per acre of cultivation, it has been found that about 10 million acres of land would need to be used for biodiesel cultivation in the US in order to produce biodiesel to replace all the petrodiesel used currently in that country. This is just 1% of the total land used today for farming and grazing together in the US (about 1 billion acres). Clearly, algae are a superior alternative as a feedstock for large-scale biodiesel production.'
PHP

Submission + - Current state of PHP security, with MOPB recap

cail writes: "J. Forristal over at SPI Dynamics just completed an article on The current state of PHP security (w/ MOPB full review). The article first looks at the overall outcome of the Month of PHP Bugs (MOPB), showing statistics such as 12% of the MOPB bugs have not been fixed to date (deduced by reviewing all PHP CVS commits), and going over which bugs PHP users should be worried about. The article then switches gears and figures out that a plague of phpinfo.php pages on the Internet may be due to default Gallery installations and overzealous hosting providers. Then the article launches into an overview of some PHP configure.sh options and php.ini settings which users can use to make PHP proactively more secure. The article finishes up with some thoughts on source code scanners (and the Coverity open source scan project) and long-term programming advice, all relating back to PHP's history with a little bit of PHP trivia thrown in for kicks."
Privacy

Widespread Spying Preceded '04 GOP Convention 471

Frosty Piss alerts us to a story in the New York Times reporting on details that are emerging of a far-flung spying operation lasting up to a year leading up to the 2004 Republican National Convention. The New York Police Department mounted a spy campaign reaching well beyond the state of New York. For at least a year before the convention, teams of undercover New York police officers traveled to cities across the US, Canada, and Europe to conduct covert observations of people who planned to protest at the convention. Across the country undercover officers attended meetings of political groups, posing as sympathizers or fellow activists. In at least some cases, intelligence on what appeared to be lawful activity was shared with other police departments. Outlines of the pre-convention operations are emerging from records in federal lawsuits brought over mass arrests during the convention.
Censorship

Submission + - Wikimedia Foundation, others sued for defamation

An anonymous reader writes: Barbara Bauer, a literary agent, filed a defamation suit in the Superior Court of New Jersey on March 23. Among the plaintiffs are the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, Inc., the Nielsen Haydens, and the Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit organization which runs Wikipedia and its sister projects. The suit's docket number is L-001169-07 in Monmouth; it can be viewed on the court's website.

Since the filing, Bauer's article on Wikipedia has been deleted by Doc glasgow, citing Wikipedia's policy on biographies of living persons. The deletion has since been brought up for discussion at deletion review. Discussion of the matter has also occurred on the Wikimedia mailing lists.
Databases

Submission + - How do you keep confusing DB data straight

zappepcs writes: "The Washington Post is running a story about the U.S. Terrorist database and how there are so many errors from its use. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2007/03/24/AR2007032400944.html

" Terror Database Has Quadrupled In Four Years
U.S. Watch Lists Are Drawn From Massive Clearinghouse

By Karen DeYoung
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, March 25, 2007; Page A01

Each day, thousands of pieces of intelligence information from around the world — field reports, captured documents, news from foreign allies and sometimes idle gossip — arrive in a computer-filled office in McLean, where analysts feed them into the nation's central list of terrorists and terrorism suspects.

Called TIDE, for Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, the list is a storehouse for data about individuals that the intelligence community believes might harm the United States. It is the wellspring for watch lists distributed to airlines, law enforcement, border posts and U.S. consulates, created to close one of the key intelligence gaps revealed after Sept. 11, 2001: the failure of federal agencies to share what they knew about al-Qaeda operatives. "

The question is 'How do slashdot users keep such data straight. If its a database and somewhere in it is two records; both for people named John D. Elvinhaus, who both lived in or near Denver at the same time, one who works at 7-11, one works at a security company.

What are the correct ways to keep these records straight, unconfused, not marked as duplicates, or in this case, confusing both as terrorists when only one of them has some unbelievably small link to some terrorist activity? What can the government do to avoid this issue?"
Businesses

A Space Junkyard 94

Today's Los Angeles Times has an article about a North Hollywood junkyard that stocks a huge quantity of used aerospace parts, from valves to rocket engines. Norton Sales Inc. got started in the early 1960s. The junkyard had fallen on hard times, with the collapse of the Los Angeles-area aerospace economy in the 1980s, but it's making something of a comeback now with NASA's new plans for moon and Mars missions. The customers used to be rich Hollywood types; nowadays they are as likely to be private space entrepreneurs. "It's dangerous coming to a place like this," said Dave Masten of Masten Space. "It's like shopping on an empty stomach."
Security

Submission + - Digg.com Accounts Compromised

An anonymous reader writes: There is a cross-site scripting vulnerbility on the registration page of popular social networking site Digg.com. The hole allows cookies and sessions of logged-in users to be hijacked, compromising the account. The exploit can be triggered simply by a user clicking a maliciously-crafted link. A full explanation and sample exploit code is available here
Role Playing (Games)

Submission + - Online Gamers Can Now Pay With Their Blood

Weather Storm writes: "According to weirdasiannews.com, a game company called Moliyo, which runs multiple online games in China, has given roughly 120,000 hackers banned from one of its games, Cabal Online, the chance to play once again. The price? A pint of blood. Any banned player that shows up to a blood drive in Nanjing and donates a pint of blood will have their accounts unlock. In a response to a shortage of donors, Chinese hospitals and Moliyo developed an ingenious method of enticing gamers to give the gift that truly keeps on giving. About a hundred of the guilty have stepped forward."
Biotech

Submission + - The mystery of vitamin B12 finally solved

Roland Piquepaille writes: "You probably think that scientists know everything about the common and essential vitamin B12, the only vitamin synthesized by soil microbes. In fact, one part of this biosynthesis has puzzled researchers for at least 50 years. But now, MIT and Harvard biologists have solved this vitamin puzzle by discovering that a single enzyme known as BluB synthesizes the vitamin. So what is the next challenge for the researchers? It's to discover why the soil microorganisms synthesize the vitamin B12 at all, because neither them — nor the plants they're attached to — need it to live. Read more for additional references and a picture of BluB."
Programming

Submission + - Learning Ajax Anti-Patterns prevents design flaws

An anonymous reader writes: You can learn a lot about how to do things correctly by understanding how things are done incorrectly. Certainly, there's a right way and a wrong way to write Ajax applications. Understanding how and why design flaws happen is important and can save you valuable coding time. This article discusses some common coding practices you will want to avoid.
Upgrades

Submission + - OGRE 1.4.0 Released!

Game_Ender writes: The OGRE Team is proud to announce the release of OGRE 1.4.0, codenamed 'Eihort'. OGRE is an open-source, cross-platform real-time 3D rendering engine including all the latest features you would expect, and this version introduces such things as SSE/SIMD support, more advanced lighting and shadowing techniques, threaded loading and much more. Full details can be obtained from the official announcement and change log.
Music

RIAA Going After a 10-Year-Old Girl 510

NewYorkCountryLawyer writes "The latest target of the RIAA's ire is a 10-year-old girl in Oregon, who was 7 when the alleged infringement occurred, and whose disabled mother lives on Social Security. In Atlantic v. Andersen, an Oregon case that was widely reported in 2005 when the defendant counterclaimed against the RIAA under Oregon's RICO statute and other laws, the defendant's mother sought to limit the RIAA's deposition of the child to telephone or video-conference. The RIAA has refused, insisting on being able to grill the little girl in person. Here are court documents (PDF)."
Wireless Networking

Submission + - Brussels Wants to Tax WiFi Antennas

mernil writes: "According to brusselsjournal.com "Olivier Maingain, the mayor of Sint-Lambrechts-Woluwe, one of the 19 Brussels boroughs, is planning to tax all "antennas for the transmission of data". Each antenna will be taxed a staggering 4,000 euros per year. [...] While the small antenna on your wireless router could theoretically be taxed, the new tax seems to target WiFi-antennas that can be seen from the outside, i.e. that are positioned on the outside of buildings. If the owner of the aerial cannot be identified the owners of the buildings have to pay the new tax.""

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