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Software

An Open Source Legal Breakthrough 292

jammag writes "Open source advocate Bruce Perens writes in Datamation about a major court victory for open source: 'An appeals court has erased most of the doubt around Open Source licensing, permanently, in a decision that was extremely favorable toward projects like GNU, Creative Commons, Wikipedia, and Linux.' The case, Jacobsen v. Katzer, revolved around free software coded by Bob Jacobsen that Katzer used in a proprietary application and then patented. When Katzer started sending invoices to Jacobsen (for what was essentially Jacobsen's own work), Jacobsen took the case to court and scored a victory that — for the first time — lays down a legal foundation for the protection of open source developers. The case hasn't generated as many headlines as it should."
Windows

MS Reportedly Adds 6 Months of Vista Downgrade 244

LiteralKa sends in a poorly sourced Reg story claiming that Microsoft has granted OEMs six more months to sell PCs using Windows Vista with the support to downgrade to Windows XP. OEMs can now offer such arrangements until July 31, 2009 — the previous deadline was January 31, 2009. The article claims as source "a Reg reader" without further details. Neither Microsoft nor any OEM has confirmed the rumor, and only a few scattered bloggers have picked it up.
Security

Tor Open To Attack 109

An anonymous reader writes "A group of researchers have written a paper that lays out an attack against Tor (PDF) in enough detail to cause Roger Dingledine a fair amount of heartburn. The essential avenue of attack is that Tor doesn't verify claims of uptime or bandwidth, allowing an attacker to advertise more than it need deliver, and thus draw traffic. If the attacker controls the entry and exit node and has decent clocks, then the attacker can link these together and trace someone through the network."

Comment ...maybe they haven't the money? (Score 1) 365

Teens (or just people) don't buy mp3 because they haven't the money, or they don't want to spend money for. ...there are more important things before mp3 & dvds: - mobile connectivity - garments - drinks & food - fuel and tickets for mobility - periodicals & magazines Digital content is just not too much important to share a high percentage of founds from the weekly family income or some extra bucks from daily working, expecially at the thief prices it's sold. I mean: people all over world how many mp3 from P2P have donwloaded since the era of FTPs and P2Ps? Billions? Hundred billions? Multiply them by 0.99$ (the medium price at wich you can buy legal musc) by one trillion: you get 1/6 the public debt of an european country, it is worth to spend this money in music? I think no. I've got about 10-15.000 illegal mp3 (lot of them are in full rar discography) and 60-70 xvid on my media, and -i give you a hint- i'm not teenager, but university student, simply i'm not so stupid to spend the value of a car in mp3s when i can take them for free. If P2P one day will be completely erased, simply I'll stop listen music for something more useful.

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