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Privacy

Denials Aside, Feds Storing Body Scan Images 560

The new generation of body scanners employed at airports (and many other places) can record detailed, anatomically revealing pictures of each person scanned, which is one reason they've raised the hackles of privacy advocates as well as ordinary travelers. Now, AHuxley writes "The US Transportation Security Administration claimed last summer that 'scanned images cannot be stored or recorded.' It turns out that some police agencies are storing the controversial images. The US Marshals Service admitted that it had saved ~35,314 images recorded with a millimeter wave system at the security checkpoint of a single Florida courthouse. The images were stored on a Brijot Gen2 machine. The Electronic Privacy Information Center, an advocacy group, has filed a lawsuit asking a federal judge to grant an immediate injunction to stop the TSA's body scanning program."

Submission + - How Far Can Perpendicular Recording Go? (conceivablytech.com)

peterkern writes: Samsung has a new hard drive and says it can now store 667 GB on one disk, which comes out to be about 739 Gb/inch2. That is more than five times the density when perpendicular recording was introduced back in 2006 and is getting close to the generally believes soft limit of 1 Tb/inch2. It’s great that we can now store 2 TB on one hard drive and 3 TB hard drives are already feasible. But how far can it go? It appears that the hard drive industry may start talking about heat-assisted magnetic recording soon, again.
Businesses

Why Designers Hate Crowdsourcing 569

An anonymous reader writes "Since Wired's Jeff Howe coined the term in 2006, 'crowdsourcing' has been a buzzword in the tech industry, and a business model on the rise. 99designs.com is a site that hosts design contests for small businesses requiring relatively smaller design projects. Anyone can submit their near finished pieces of work to the contests, but only one winner gets paid. Forbes covers just why established graphic designers are so angry at this business model's catching on."
Businesses

WordPress Creator GPL Says WP Template Must Be GPL'd 571

An anonymous reader writes "Matt Mullenweg (the creator of open source blog software WordPress), after review by various legal experts, is sticking to his guns that themes and plugins that 'extend' WordPress violate the GPL if they are not themselves distributed under the GPL. Matt has gone so far as to post this on Twitter. According to Matt, the premium template called Thesis should be under the GPL and the owner is not happy about it. WordPress is willing to sue the maker of Thesis theme for not following GPL licensing. The webmasters and Thesis owners are also confused with new development. Mark Jaquith wrote an excellent technical analysis of why WordPress themes inherit the GPL. This is why even if Thesis hadn't copy-and-pasted large swathes of code from WordPress (and GPL plugins) its PHP would still need to be under the GPL."

Comment Re:Expensive (Score 1) 1218

The fine print mentions that you cannot operate above 10,000 feet! So much for use by business travelers in flight:)

Still it looks great - except the price. I might try the Asus eeePC instead $400.
User Journal

Journal Journal: Tax dollars wasted

I just found truemajority.org and sent my legistlature automated faxes, on why they need to clean up the pentagon.

When its so obvious the pork is outa hand, don't they just, have ta clean waste outa their back yards? I hope so.

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