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Cellphones

Apple Bans Jailbreakers From the App Store 507

Hugh Pickens writes "Adam Mills writes in the Examiner that Apple has been cutting off access to the iTunes App Store for iPhone hackers and jailbreakers. Sherif Hashim, the iPhone developer who successfully hacked the iPhone OS 3.1.3 and unlocked the 05.12.01 baseband for iPhone 3GS and 3G devices, discovered he'd been cut off and twittered: '"Your Apple ID was banned for security reasons," that's what i get when i try to go to the app store, they must be really angry.' Another hacker, iH8Sn0w, who is behind the Sn0wbreeze tool, confirms that his account has also been deactivated even though iH8sn0w's exploit had only been revealed to Dev Team, the group responsible for the PwnageTool. 'It is kind of surprising that two people associated with jailbreaking have had this happen to them so soon after one another, but it's too early to say if this is a campaign that Apple is starting up,' writes Mills."

Comment Quantum "Teleportation" isn't teleportation at all (Score 1, Troll) 365

There is nothing transmitted between "entangled" particles, nor are any relevant bits of information passed between them in any method that comes close to the definition of "teleportation", or even "transportation". The quantum mechanics behind "entagled" particles should be described like this:

1.) You have 2 Rubick's Cubes.
2.) You "entagle" them by making the faces of each Cube exactly identical to the other.
3.) You separate them physically into different geological locations.
4.) You "measure" Cube A by turning one of its sides.
5.) You call a handler at Cube B using a "common channel" (phone).
6.) Cube B is "measured" by having its identical face turned exactly replicating Step 4, per the instructions received by step 5.
7.) Repeat steps 4 through 6 until your heart is content.
8.) Bring the Cubes together, and marvel that their faces are still identical to each other.

I think the principle problem with "quantum teleportation" is that any measurement on one Cube which is not duplicated exactly on the other, breaks the entanglement of the particles. They are only "entangled" in the sense that their states have been synchronized. There may be avenues of recovering the synchronization using permutations of "measurements", but then I haven't read much about what occurs during an error or fault in measurement, so this is all just my best guess.

Image

Zombie Pigs First, Hibernating Soldiers Next 193

ColdWetDog writes "Wired is running a story on DARPA's effort to stave off battlefield casualties by turning injured soldiers into zombies by injecting them with a cocktail of one chemical or another (details to be announced). From the article, 'Dr. Fossum predicts that each soldier will carry a syringe into combat zones or remote areas, and medic teams will be equipped with several. A single injection will minimize metabolic needs, de-animating injured troops by shutting down brain and heart function. Once treatment can be carried out, they'll be "re-animated" and — hopefully — as good as new.' If it doesn't pan out we can at least get zombie bacon and spam."

Comment Re:DARPA is mapping society. (Score 1) 68

Well, the MIT terms and conditions suggest that the data will be anonymized for MIT's purposes, so MIT will not use the data in a personally identifiable way. But, the terms and conditions also state:

"You grant us a non-exclusive, royalty-free, fully-paid, worldwide, irrevocable license to use, reproduce, adapt, modify, publish, translate, create derivative works from, communicate to the public and display the Tracking Data."

So, while they limit their own use, they grant themselves the right to provide the raw data, with personally identifiable information in tact, to some other entity.

So, which one of us RTFA?

Comment DARPA is mapping society. (Score 1) 68

That concerns me. What does the Department of Defense need from understanding the intimate social structures of the nation? So, for free, you're going to voluntarily tell the Department of Defense--those who were once involved in the search for Communists during McCarthy's heyday--everybody you have contact with, or influence over?

Sure, the auspices of the data, in an abstract, non-personally identifying manner, are relevant. But there's another purpose entirely by adding incentive to participate.

First and foremost, it breaks the scientific mold and corrupts the data. All of their data must be taken in the context of the incentive. It can only be applied to other situations that have a similar context. That severely limits the usefulness of the data, and negatively impacts the value of the data.

So what is the true value of this data, and how will it be used in the long run. Also: how long do they plan to keep it? (Until another McCarthy comes along on a witch-hunt? Who then, do you know, that would damn you to interrogation and thorough, disruptive inspection by the DoD?) They say it all with: "Is your blog effective at spreading information?"

I say, "Fuck red-balloons." Find me 10 people willing to die for the sins of everybody that ever lived. Hell, find me 10 Taco Bell dishes that don't make me shit my pants every time I sneeze.

Comment What about the website? (Score 1) 167

How do you calculate the theft of value from a website's internal commenting and user contribution functions by services such as these? What about the violation of Fair Use by adjoining or abridging copyrighted content with such a service? How about damages evident by the content of unmitigated and unmoderated user submissions?

Whether Google or ReframeIt does it, it's stealing, and it's wrong. Sites like DIGG and Fark implement this kind of thing the right way, by centralizing the user submissions away from the site, and into a representation that does not adjoin the linked content. This is not stealing. This is an acceptable, legally-protected, alternate forum for contextual discussion which does not impede, supplant, or otherwise illicit participation from users navigating directly to websites in question.

Google and ReframeIt should be held liable for infringing on the copyrights of every site they encapsulate or otherwise co-opt with their software.

Author Encourages Users to Pirate His Book 237

mariushm writes "Peter Cooper, the author of Beginning Ruby, breaks down how he gets paid for the book, including the advance and royalties, giving a nice clean explanation of how authors get paid for their books. He also describes the negotiations over the second edition of the book, in which he begged his publisher, Apress, to offer the ebook version for free, believing (strongly) that it would promote sales of the paper book. He even notes that the original version's ebook barely had noteworthy sales, so it seemed reasonable to offer up the ebook for free to drive more attention. No dice. Even though Apress has done that with other similar titles, it wouldn't agree. As he retains the copyright for the actual text, he encourages people to buy the book and create an online version of it without covers, contents table and indexes, promising not to enforce his copyright over the new work."
Security

Massive Phishing Campaign Hits Multiple Email Services 183

nandemoari writes "It seems as if the massive phishing campaign reported yesterday was not specific to Hotmail, as was initially believed. According to a report by the BBC, many Gmail and Yahoo Mail accounts have also been compromised. Earthlink, Comcast, and AOL were also affected. While the source of the latest attacks has not been determined, many are pointing to the same bug that claimed at least 10,000 passwords from Microsoft Windows Live Hotmail. Microsoft has done their part in blocking all known hijacked Hotmail accounts and created tools to help users who had lost control of their email. An analysis of the data from Hotmail showed the most common password among the compromised accounts to be '12345.' On their end, Google responded to the attacks by forcing password resets on the affected accounts."

Comment Public Unschooling (Score 1) 1345

Aside from the science, language, and math classes I took until the end of high school, I'd say the it was pretty effective "unschooling". I've learned more about British aristocracy from Wikipedia than I ever learned in school--and far more interesting things than were present in any of the text books that we were tested on. History, Psychology, Social Studies... all of it was filled with crap I ultimately replaced with real education in the real world.

For example (and this may be only my experience), I never got exposed to the *whole* "states rights" argument about the Civil War in school, so for the most part I ended up thinking Lincoln was Jesus' second coming. 9 times out of 10, (especially if you come from the North) you leave school thinking that the whole point of the Civil War was about freeing the slaves, when it really had to do with a lot more things like taxes. Hell, the Emancipation Proclamation didn't come until well into the War. Then some of the things you learn about Lincoln outside of the heavily-doctored, high school textbooks makes him look like a generally nice guy that could be a real dick--which sounds a lot like a recent president I'm familiar with. In fact, in certain lights, he seems like being an agent of Empire than of Democracy. Either way, we can thank him for the world we live in today, as Americans, for better or worse.

My point is that I don't necessarily believe the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, had been imparted in school--making the substance worthless. And while I personally had some great teachers, there were far more "from the book" automatons which made the whole process uninteresting, and useless. But this is a perspective I didn't have until after I exposed myself to information outside of the classroom. Until then, I thought I had been fairly well schooled. Now, I'm certain I had been "unschooled".

What I think is important about the schooling process are those subjects which require a structured environment to really learn: namely science, language, and math. I would not hesitate for a moment to assume that those would be the weakest elements of a wholly "unschooled" individual. Which is a shame, as they are more important than anything else and serve as the best foundation for assimilating the world.

Comment The financial investments made by your customers. (Score 1) 520

Blizzard,

I've dropped more money into Blizzard than I care to admit. Year after year, you boast record profits from your largest titles. Each expansion for WoW costs as much as the original game itself, and with your adjustments to the original game content and the accelerated leveling mechanics the value of the original WoW, and the Burning Crusade, has all but been obliterated. Yet, the prices barely reflect this. On top of this, you are projecting SC2 to be an incomplete game, deliverable in 3 bite-size episodes at (probably more than) $50 a piece.

I'm personally sick and tired of having my wallet emptied by your new corporate strategies and board of directors for incomplete games. There was a time when Blizzard would not release an incomplete game--when years after the initial delivery dates would pass without event while the team worked tirelessly to perfect it and deliver a whole product, with a whole story, self-contained, and independent from any further expansion or episode.

It seems obvious that WoW was the changing point for Blizzard. Was it the lure of money-money-money that made Blizzard change how it treats is loyal fan-base? Why do you repeatedly rake your customers over the coals of investment, while actively depreciating their previous infusions of capital?

Comment Loyalty Exploit Extravaganza (Score 1) 402

I want to know who this "Slashdot" pansy is, and where I can find him--and beat him. Too bad he didn't ask any questions about turning StarCraft 2 into episodic content. Sure, some people will happily pay 3 times for a storyline that continues... but fracturing each of the 3 species into 3 separate games? That's a cliff-hanging outrage if I've ever heard it. I should expect to play the Protoss campaigns sometime before 2020? Or not?
Fuck. How long has it taken to get even just the promise of a new StarCraft, and now we have to wait for their sluggish development cycle to churn out story-lines? Oh, no... they already have the story... what we're really waiting for are the cut-scenes. Read the article.
The cut-scenes from Blizzard are great, but Goddamn it, you guys! Scale the cut-scenes down, give me the whole story for one payment of $50, $60, or whatever the going rate for major titles is these days, and save the great cut-scene stuff for a big-screen movie. That way, I'm not stewing between releases about how I'm getting fucked over the coals by your new Activision Overlords, and you'll probably make more money in the long run from movie-ticket sales. Hell, I'd probably go see a StarCraft movie 5 times in the theater, and still by the Blu-ray--but the difference between that way of bleeding my wallet dry, and the way you're proposing is that I wouldn't feel like my loyalty is being exploited--but rewarded.

Politics

How Can Nerds Make a Difference In November? 950

Scott Aaronson offers an intriguing call for ideas on how nerds can supercharge the political process this year. He's clearly an Obama admirer and phrases his challenge this way: "What non-obvious things can nerds who are so inclined do to help the Democrats win in November?" But the question itself is not inherently partisan. The analogy Aaronson gives is to the Nadertrading idea in 2000 (which we discussed at the time). What's the Nadertrading for 2008? "The sorts of ideas I'm looking for are ones that (1) exploit nerds' nerdiness, (2) go outside the normal channels of influence, (3) increase nerds' effective voting power by several orders of magnitude, (4) are legal, (5) target critical swing states, and (6) can be done as a hobby."

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