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Crime

Submission + - Hi Tech Burglars Get Longer Sentences in Louisiana

Hugh Pickens writes: "Burglars and terrorists should be careful not to use Google maps if they plan on committing crimes in the state of Lousiana. Nola reports that a bill approved 89-0 by the Louisiana House will require that judges impose an additional minimum sentence of at least 10 years on terrorist acts if the crime is committed with the aid of an Internet-generated "virtual maps." The bill, already approved by the Lousiana Senate, defines a "virtual street-level map" as one that is available on the Internet and can generate the location or picture of a home or building by entering the address of the structure or an individual's name on a website. If the map is used in the commission of a crime like burglary the bill calls for the addition of at least one year in jail to be added to the burglary sentence. The House measure is now being sent back to the Senate for approval of clarifying amendments made by a House committee."
Intel

Submission + - Intel targets AMD with affordable unlocked CPUs (techreport.com) 3

EconolineCrush writes: For years, AMD has catered to gamers and enthusiasts with mid-range Black Edition processors whose unlocked multipliers make overclocking easy. Intel has traditionally reserved unlocked multipliers for its ultra-expensive Extreme CPUs, but it has now brought the feature to affordable models that compete directly with AMD's most popular processors. The Core i5-655K and Core i7-875K have two and four cores, respectively, and they're priced at just $216 and $342. It appears that both will easily hit speeds in excess of 4GHz with air cooling. Surprisingly, even at stock speeds, the i7-875K offers better performance and power efficiency per dollar than just about any other desktop CPU out there.

Comment Failing to understand concern (Score 0) 306

Just trying to understand all the statements made thus far.

As a company, Cox has come to the conclusion that Usenet/Netnews access is no longer going to be provided for by them. I see this as a general business decision, whether they see it as a cost savings on internal bandwidth usage, or power/storage/maintenance usage. That is entirely up to them. You may feel differently, and you are entitled to your own opinion. If you don’t like it, there are always other options. If there aren’t any options, then make an option (Capitalism in action). They have not stated that I can find (haven't found yet, not saying doesn't exist) that due to lack of customers not knowing that it is there, we will be discontinuing this service. Cox is not the first and most likely will not be the last ISP to turn off their Usenet servers. They have been better than most in the case that they are giving everyone a warning of what is going to happen. Not just throwing the switch and dealing with the aftermath.

Another note to a few posters above is that, while yes "You" and others do not use Usenet for illegal purposes, there are those that do. So using a reference earlier that 99% of current users do not use it puts you in the 1% category. Of the 1% that do actually use it, i would be fair to say that 1 in 5 actually use it for what it was designed. The other 4 use it for porn/software/movies and the like. So in essence you are arguing that they are bad people because they are not keeping a service alive for the .2% of their user base that are using it legitimately.

They have offered 1 alternate provider, but you are not limited to that provider. If those concerned believe that it is not too hard to host a Usenet server, I ask you to create one and host it. Not getting into the argument that walk in their shoes and see what it is like. But legitimately run your own server, if something is of that much importance to you, you will be able to find a way to keep it.

Breakdown: They have decided to allocate their resources elsewhere, have given people options to look elsewhere for other ways of Usenet access. If you don’t like their decision, do your own thing, nothing prevents you from doing it.

My 2 cents.

Mozilla

Mozilla Thunderbird 3 Released 272

supersloshy writes Today Mozilla released Thunderbird 3. Many new features are available, including Tabs and enhanced search features, a message archive for emails you don't want to delete but still want to keep, Firefox 3's improved Add-ons Manager, Personas support, and many other improvements. Download here."
Censorship

Sharp Rise In Jailing of Online Journalists; Iran May Just Kill Them 233

bckspc writes "The Committee to Protect Journalists has published their annual census of journalists in prison. Of the 136 reporters in prison around the world on December 1, 'At least 68 bloggers, Web-based reporters, and online editors are imprisoned, constituting half of all journalists now in jail.' Print was next with 51 cases. Also, 'Freelancers now make up nearly 45 percent of all journalists jailed worldwide, a dramatic recent increase that reflects the evolution of the global news business.' China, Iran, Cuba, Eritrea, and Burma were the top 5 jailers of journalists." rmdstudio writes, too, with word that after the last few days' protest there, largely organized online, the government of Iran is considering the death penalty for bloggers and webmasters whose reports offend it.

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