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- Volume 5, Issue 41 Atari Online News, Etc. October 10, 2003
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2003
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
- Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
- Rob Mahlert -- Web site
- Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
-
-
- With Contributions by:
-
- Erik Hall
- Kevin Savetz
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphiforums.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- http://www.icwhen.com/aone/
- http://a1mag.atari.org
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0541 10/10/03
-
- ~ P-to-Ps Going Legal?! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Bad Software Suit!
- ~ AOL Stays With Google! ~ E-Books Bubble Bursts? ~ New MyMail Released!
- ~ Phillies Fan Busted! ~ Pay Napster To Debut! ~ Panther Is Released!
- ~ EarthLink New Features ~ New PSX Game System! ~ Intuit Apologizes!
-
- -* Anti-Spam Bills Losing Time! *-
- -* Do Not Call List Is Back On Track! *-
- -* UK Lawmakers Call for Global Anti-Spam Law *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been another one of those hectic weeks. Usually, things go awry at
- work to cause all kinds of stress. But this week, it was more crazy due to
- things around the house. The work on our sunrooms finally started, but hit a
- short snag. We were told the work would begin first thin Monday morning,
- and likely be finished within the week. So my wife took Monday and Tuesday
- off to be here; and I was off the rest of the week. Monday, the crew
- arrived [late] and took down the remainder of our back porch, parts of our
- existing deck, and put the floors in while reenforcing the bases. They
- didn't show on Tuesday! I made a couple of nasty calls Tuesday night
- complaining about the lack of communication and the broken promises. I got
- a call very early Wednesday morning apologizing for the confusion, and that
- work would resume that same day. It did. Thursday, the rooms were
- completed, although we had to postpone the electrician's work because it
- didn't appear that the rooms would be ready for him on Thursday. The rooms
- look great! Now we have to finish off the interior of them (flooring,
- blinds, and furnishings). I guess this means that I have to start getting
- ready for some more work inside the house now that the major project has
- been completed!
-
- For those of you who have been keeping tabs of the anti-telemarketer ruling,
- it appears that the do-not-call edict is back on track again! Yea! My
- phones will finally get some much-needed rest!
-
- Not much else going on lately, so I'll start my weekend a little earlier for
- a change. Maybe I'll even enjoy a nice cool drink out in the new enclosed
- room, and not have to worry about getting eaten by any few-remaining bugs!
- And, I'll be watching my Chicago Cubs battle their way into the World
- Series, taking on the Boston Red Sox - and winning!! Go Cubbies!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- MyMAIL 1.62 Released
-
-
- Hi all !
-
- New version of MyMail (1.62) released.
-
- I have cause of the large amount of spam put down a big
- work on the spam filter this time and added a function
- for automatic sending of spam reports.
-
- The plan was to include more in this release
- but my free time for coding mymail is limited
- so I decided to do the release now to help
- all of you having problems with spam-mail.
-
-
- Major improvements & bug fixes:
-
- - Spam filter bug fixed and now includes
- a auto-reporting system.
- - Editor now works on texts up to 64K
- - Queue sending with dialer/modem was not working. Fixed now.
- (read more in the history.txt file)
-
-
- Download from:
-
- http://erikhall.atari.org/programs/mymail.html
- - or -
- http://212.214.15.116/~erikhall/programs/mymail.html
-
-
- MyMail mailinglist
- ------------------
- You can add or remove yourself from MyMAIL mailinglist.
- The add/remove page is found at:
- http://www2.tripnet.se/~erikhall/mymailupdates.html
-
- Best Regards
- Erik Hall
-
-
-
- 2003 MiniGame Competition Voting Underway
-
-
- The votepack for the 2003 MiniGame Competition is now available, allowing
- you to vote for your favorite games. This year's competition pits authors
- of 4K and 1K games against one another to see who can write the best games
- in a minimal amount of space. The contest features several Atari 2600 and
- Atari 800 games, with submissions from several homebrew authors you may be
- familiar with. Head on over to the 2003 MiniGame Competition page to vote
- for your favorite games--the deadline for voting is Sunday, October 26th!
-
- http://www.ffd2.com/minigame/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I've still got a bit of that flu bug I had
- last week, but all in all I feel much better than I did the last time we
- met up.
-
- It's strange, but have you noticed that each time there's a mutation to
- one of these flu bugs that it seems to take longer and longer to get rid
- of it? I'm not one of those conspiracy theorists that find deep, dark
- plots behind everything, but let's be honest... just because you're
- paranoid, it doesn't mean that everyone's NOT out to get you. <grin>
-
- My concern is not that some scientist in some lab in a far-away place is
- tinkering with a virus, but that Mother Nature herself is speeding
- things up in some way or another for some reason known only to her and
- Father Time. For every new treatment that medical science comes up with
- there are now two new "wee beasties" out there.
-
- I don't mean to be an alarmist, and I don't intend to leave the
- impression that I think we're all doomed, but it does warrant some
- thought.
-
- Well, while I'm popping the last of my antibiotics and cough surpressant,
- let's take a look at the news and stuff from the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Mark Duckworth talks about overclocking his Falcon:
-
- "I've been trying to overclock my falcon mobo to 20MHz but with problems.
- I updated my CT60 hardware with JTAG and replaced ST-ram card with atari
- 1mb. This solves most problems however there is still present a problem
- where in 20MHz mode, the keyboard and mouse are garbage (mouse moves as
- keypresses), keyboard presses as wrong keys! In 16Mhz it works fine so it
- can't be my wiring/soldering right? Any suggestions? Should I redo my
- solder joint to that ACIA? Also note, none of my problems with my falcon
- appear to be caused by my (crappy) ST-ram card...
-
- Aha! The problem was a mistake on my part which I am quite embarrassed
- about. All is apparently well at 20MHz now. Now for 100MHz and 25MHz bus."
-
-
- 'Rustynutt' tells Mark:
-
- "All right, share your mistakes as well as fortunes. That's how
- everybody learns."
-
-
- Mark replies:
-
- "Well I cut and soldered to pins 4 and 5 instead of 3 and 4. I must admit,
- sometimes I am a bit dyslexic at times. I do feel like a fool though.
- Such a simple job and my mistake could have fried my falcon. At least the
- rest of the job was done properly!"
-
-
- While we're talking about hacking about in the guts of our machines, Greg
- Goodwin sends out an SOS for his CT60 project:
-
- "My CT60 conversion is not going well, and I don't know whether to
- blame the motherboard, the power supply, the RAM, or my somehow
- blowing up something with static.
-
- Here's what I'm up against, with a CT60 plugged in...
-
- 1) The floppy light stays on constantly. This started about an hour
- before I even put in the CT60, but after I had put in the power
- supply. This makes me a bit suspicious of the power supply.
-
- 2) HDDriver 8.13 cannot autoboot or correctly partition my drives.
- It doesn't generate any error messages, but when the desktop comes up,
- the "C" icon does nothing (not even an error message) and installing
- drives "D" and "E" gives the standard 'no drive there' error.
- Actually, one attempt to partition using HDDriver completely corrupted
- both my hard drives, causing a lockup at boot or when running from
- floppy. I have recovered one drive with ICD utilities (the drive now
- works fine if I partition and boot via ICD in 16 Mhz 68030 mode) and
- think I know how to get the second one working, but HDDriver is
- becoming a very frustrating $65 purchase.
-
- 3) The CT60 mode has substantial instabilities. On rare occasions I
- get 2-4 bombs even before the boot sequence finishes or when I change
- resolution. More often, I get 5-20 minutes of use (it's a bit hard to
- test when you're still running off of floppy), but the darn thing
- isn't stable. Recently I've even had a few crashes with 16 Mhz 68030
- mode.
-
- Considering Rodolphe's attention to detail, I'd be very surprised if
- the problem were the CT60 board itself. But where should I look to
- solve these problems?"
-
-
- Carey Cristenson asks/tells Greg:
-
- "Are you sure that everything is installed
- correctly??? Double check all hardware connections
- and installation procedure. Apparently the TRACE is
- cut or you probably would not even be able to bootup.
- Are you using SCSI hard drives to try and bootup your
- system??? If so, I have had serious problems with
- SCSI stuff trying to copy files to that hard drive!!!
- Try and find a very fast IDE notebook hard drive or
- buy and adapter to switch it from notebook hard drive
- connector to regular desktop hard drives. Performance
- gain using IDE is very impressive!!! It is about
- double in MB/sec versus SCSI. Have you sorted your
- auto folder??? XBOOT also gives serious problems and
- will cause illegal format errors while booting into
- CT60 mode. I had SERIOUS system crashes after only 5
- to 20 minutes of use also with the CT60. I was
- getting SPURIOUS INTERRUPTS left and right. The 2
- things I did were sorted the AUTO FOLDER and changed
- the OSCILLATOR from 66.666 mhz to 72 mhz. and all is
- WELL!!!!! Matter of fact I have been running my
- FALCON 060 for 17 to 18 hours today alone straight
- without ANY rebooting!!!! The only other thing I can
- suggest would be your power supply or RAM is your
- SDRAM CL=2 and/or PC133??? PC100 seems to give more
- problems because PC100 most of the time is CL=3 and
- this gives instability problems on the CT60. Let us
- know if you get anywhere with it. Happy to help if
- you need it.
-
- I currently have about a 2 foot cable on my IDE
- chain for 2 IDE hard drives listed at the bottom of
- this page in my SIG. Obviously, the shorter the
- better. It could be possible that booting anything
- from the floppy with the CT60 may give problems
- especially if you do not have the latest updates.
- What updates are you using??? I am using ABE5K and
- SDR5D just for future reference for you. The 72 mhz.
- oscillator came with my CT60!!! Did you not get one
- as well??? It is my understanding that if there was a
- problem with the DIMM that the CT60 would not even
- boot properly. Not sure about this because I have not
- experienced this problem. I received an e-mail from
- Rodolphe a few days ago saying that if your DIMM is a
- PC133 but a CL=3 that it is most likely to not give
- any problems. Mine just so happens to be a KINGSTON
- 512 meg SDRam PC133 part # KVR133X64C3/512 where the
- C3 indicates that it is a CL=3 but on my system it has
- always booted up and given NO problems. Anyone else
- out there also using PC133 but a CL=3 latency and not
- having any problems??? If so, what kinda problems???
- But to answer your question I believe that Rodolphe
- had something put into the bootup that if there was
- problems with the DIMM that it would let you know. If
- there is anything else I can do for you let me know."
-
-
- Chris Wilkinson asks for help with an emula... ummm, a virtual Atari:
-
- "I'm running Aranym 0.8.0-pre3 on my Linux machine. I am trying
- to enable Aranym to read files to/from my Linux filesystems, but
- Betados reports 'c:\auto\aranymfs.dos, BAD file error.' when I
- boot the emulator. I have a TOS 4.04 ROM image, and a disk image
- of my Falcon030 1.2GB IDE disk...
-
- Does anyone have an idea how I can fix this? I'm not sure what
- causes it and I'm just following instructions provided with the
- emulator... "
-
-
- Stranda Opichal tells Chris:
-
- "I'm not sure where you got the c:\auto\aranymfs.dos filename, but we are
- using the hostfs.dos at this time for about a year already. There is
- probably no aranyfs.dos file any more. Please, download the afros disk
- image and try that. It has all the necessary driver binaries. Please use
- the hostfs.dos one. "
-
-
- Chris replies:
-
- "I tried that one now, but both give me the same "BAD file error."
- when Betados boots.
-
- I launch aranym with 'aranym -dm:/home/chrisw/ATARI/'
- In '$HOME/.aranym/config' file there is [HOSTFS] section
- which I also edit to show M: as mapped to /home/chrisw/ATARI/
- Is that the correct way to do this?"
-
-
- Stranda tells Chris:
-
- "The -d command line option is an alternative to the .aranym/config line.
- You don't need to use both of them.
-
- Put the following line into the bdconfig.sys
- *DOS, c:\auto\hostfs.dos, M:M
-
- It should be all and working when you enable the BetaDOS.PRG in your
- C:\AUTO
-
- In case of further problems send the bdconfig.sys snippet and the C:\AUTO
- folder listing to the aranym-user mailing list. There we can help you more
- while not bothering others here."
-
-
- Edward Baiz posts this about my all-time favorite Atari developer:
-
- "After I wrote my STe article for MyAtari, I decided it was time to
- have my STe multi-task. So I installed Geneva and ordered a copy
- of NeoDesk 4 from Gribnif. I was not sure if they were still
- around, but sure enough that are as well as Dan Wilga. He was very
- helpful and sent me my copy pronto. Works just great too.. In case
- no one realizes, I have Geneva installed on my Hades and it works
- great along with the EASE desktop. For some reason though, EASE
- does not like my STe when ran with Geneva, so I ordered Neodesk.
- It is nice to see some Atari software companies still around these
- days..."
-
-
- Greg Goodwin chimes in:
-
- "Dan is around, but he hasn't really done anything since 1999. Still,
- I use Geneva and NeoDesk on my Falcon (and previously on my STe) and I'm
- impressed with how well it works. If you have 4Mb or less of memory,
- it's a very good choice for an OS."
-
-
- Dan himself pops in and posts:
-
- "I also still read c.s.as .from time to time <grin>
-
- Thanks for the mention."
-
-
- John Garone asks:
-
- "Can someone give info on jumpers to change on a PC floppy to be used on
- a Falcon (I seem to have lost the info). Also, I have a PC floppy but
- there's no markings as to where those jumpers are at."
-
-
- Adam Klobukowski tells John:
-
- "The jumpers may be inside, and you may need soldering iron to resolder
- them (as I had to do)."
-
-
- David Leaver asks about HD Driver:
-
- "I have a TT running MagiC 6.20 with HD Driver 8.03.
-
- A couple of months ago I converted a 3.2gb Quantum Fireball drive on
- the SCSI bus to FAT32 partitions. The internal drive and a Syquest
- EZ230 still use BGM partitions. Everything on the SCSI bus seems to
- work normally, except that MagXDesk takes a few seconds to assemble a
- FAT32 partition for display on the first time I open it in a session.
-
- On the ASCI bus I have a SupraDrive FD10 which I seldom use, so it was
- only a day or two ago that I noticed the following behaviour. The FD10
- uses an Hitachi drive and has its own, venerable SCSI adapter.
-
- At any time during a read or write to the FD10, disk operations can
- freeze. The TT has not crashed. Any program already running is
- accessible, but no disk operation is possible. The freeze will last
- a predictable amount on time, a few seconds less than two minutes,
- after which the read or write resumes as if nothing had happened.
- Nothing appears to be wrong with the completed read or write.
-
- In a test copy of a folder containing 25 files files I experienced
- four of these freezes. Initiation of a freeze seems to be random, but
- the duration is constant, as if some long value is counting down from
- -1 to zero. Freezes can occur during a desk-top copy or during a read
- or write by an application.
-
- I have background DMA enabled, but switching it off makes no
- difference.
-
- If a freeze occurs during a copy by MagXDesk and I bring up the MagiC
- task list (Alt-Cont-Esc) something appears strange. The byte-count for
- MGCopy looks like a random number and the entry for MGcopy is followed
- by a second line with no task-name but the same byte-count. I have no
- idea if this is related or means anything.
-
- Does anybody know anything about this?"
-
-
- Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, tells David:
-
- "Did you switch the Fast ACSI option on? This does not work with some
- drives (also refer to the manual) and may result in the problems you have
- observed. Try to switch it off. Besides note that the ACSI bus of many TTs
- is not working properly. But with these TTs you usually get a loss of data
- with fast drives connected to the ACSI bus. In your case it seems to be
- something different."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - New PSX Entertainment System!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" 'Half-Life II" Game Code Theft!
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony Puts $719 Tag on PSX Game/Entertainment System
-
-
- Sony Corp said on Tuesday it would launch the "PSX" - an entertainment
- system boasting a satellite TV tuner and DVD recorder plus its PlayStation
- 2 game player - in Japan later this year at a minimum price of 79,800 yen
- ($719).
-
- It hopes the all-in-one entertainment system, which also has a hard disk
- drive (HDD) recorder, will boost its electronics division, whose aging
- product line-up and high costs were a big factor behind a net loss of
- almost $1 billion in the January-March quarter.
-
- "There is the game industry and game development and we are trying to fuse
- the consumer electronics business with games to make a new growth area,"
- Sony Chief Executive Nobuyuki Idei told Reuters at a technology industry
- show in Makuhari, near Tokyo.
-
- The fusion of games and mainstream electronics products took another step
- forward on Tuesday when Nokia, the world's leading mobile phone maker,
- launched its new combined cellphone and game machine, N-Gage.
-
- Sony is scheduled to enter the portable game machine market next year with
- its PSP device, which will also play music and movies.
-
- The PlayStation 2 (PS2) and Microsoft's Xbox console already come with a
- built-in DVD player, but Sony aims to justify the hefty price by including
- a top-of-the-line HDD recorder.
-
- A version with a 160-gigabyte HDD will sell for 79,800 yen and be able to
- record up to 204 hours of television, the company said. It will also sell
- a 250-gigabyte version for 99,800 yen. There is no timetable for an
- overseas PSX launch, Sony said.
-
- "The price was in line with our expectations and it is likely to have a
- solid appeal for buyers of DVD recorders," said Masahiro Ono, a senior
- analyst at Credit Suisse First Boston.
-
- As a comparison, Sony will also start selling a DVD recorder with a
- 160-gigabyte HDD in November at a retail price of around 100,000 yen. Rival
- Pioneer Corp plans to begin offering a similar DVD recorder the same month
- for around 140,000 yen.
-
- "PSX's price sounds very cheap," a Pioneer spokeswoman said. "But we have
- to look closely at the PSX as it may lack some of the functions on our
- product. We can't compare the two just because their HDDs are the same
- size."
-
- Tadanobu Kawano, a 26-year-old game fan in Wakayama prefecture, said: "It
- sounds cheap, especially since it's Sony's. But whether I will buy it or
- not may depend on the design."
-
- Kawano already has Sony's PlayStation and PlayStation2 as well as Nintendo
- Co Ltd's GameCube console and Microsoft Corp Xbox.
-
- Credit Suisse First Boston's Ono estimated the cost of making a
- 160-gigabyte PSX at 70,000 yen, excluding promotion and marketing. The
- price would bring Sony "some profits," he said.
-
- Since the PSX does not offer any different game features from the PS2, some
- customers said they would prefer to wait for a new PlayStation model.
-
- "I can't see much use in paying this much for the PSX when PS3 is coming,"
- said Koji Nishikawa, a 36-year old graphic designer at the industry show.
-
- Sony has not offered any clues on when a new game machine, which many
- presume will be a "PlayStation 3," will make its debut.
-
- Sony plans to invest 500 billion yen over the next three years in
- semiconductors, including research and development for a high-powered
- microprocessor codenamed "cell" that is being developed with Toshiba Corp
- and IBM.
-
- Analysts expect the chip to power Sony's next-generation game console, but
- the company aims to make "cell" the global standard for consumer
- electronics in the high-speed Internet era.
-
- The company's games division has developed cutting-edge semiconductors for
- the PS2 and the original PlayStation, but it is the upcoming PlayStation
- machine that has people excited about the integration of electronics and
- games.
-
- Sony has invested 300 billion yen since 1999 on microchips for the PS2 and
- its game division head Ken Kutaragi has said it plans to recoup its initial
- investments in the game machine's "emotion engine" and graphic chip this
- year.
-
-
-
- Vivendi's 'Half Life II' Game Delayed by Code Theft
-
-
- The theft of part of its source code has delayed until April 2004 the
- launch of "Half Life II," the hotly anticipated alien-hunting game of
- Vivendi Universal Games, a company official said.
-
- "A third of the source code was stolen. It's serious because it forces us
- to delay the launch of the game by at least four months, that is to April
- 2004. Just the time to rewrite parts of the game," VU Games president of
- international operations Christophe Ramboz told daily Les Echos in its
- Tuesday edition.
-
- According to Les Echos, a hacker broke into the email of the game's
- developer, Gabe Newell, the founder of Valve Software, and planted a spying
- program.
-
- The delay is bad news for VU Games, which suffered a 29 percent fall in
- revenue and an operating loss of 52 million euros in 2003's first half and
- was betting on swift holiday sales.
-
- This is the second time the game's release has been postponed.
-
- Last month, VU games postponed the release of "Half-Life II" from
- September 30 to "an unspecified holiday release."
-
- The game was keenly awaited after last May's games industry trade show, E3.
- Critics previewing it said it brought a new level of realism to characters
- and the virtual world in which they move.
-
- The original "Half-Life," released in 1998, is still popular among PC
- gamers, and a modified version called "Counter-Strike" is widely used in
- gaming competitions.
-
- "Half-Life II" stars Gordon Freeman, a scientist battling aliens from the
- planet Xen in a mysterious European locale known only as City 17.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Anti-Spam Bills Losing Time
-
-
- One of silicon valley's key voices in Congress, Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif.,
- said last week that lawmakers have reached a logjam on several
- technology-related legislative initiatives, including spam, digital rights
- and, to some extent, database protection. With just a few weeks left before
- members plan to return home, Congress is preoccupied with spending
- bills.
-
- Unwanted e-mail, a hot-button issue on Capitol Hill all year long, has led
- lawmakers to an impasse. "We're stuck in the Commerce Committee in spam,"
- Lofgren said. "Nobody's talking to anybody."
-
- Speaking to a small audience of IT industry representatives here, Lofgren
- said the majority of the committee has signed on to the Anti-Spam Act of
- 2003, sponsored by Rep. Heather Wilson, R-N.M., but the committee chairman,
- Rep. Billy Tauzin, R-La., doesn't support it.
-
- "None of us knows what would work on this tremendous problem we have,"
- Lofgren said.
-
- Lofgren's own anti-spam bill, the Reduce Spam Act of 2003, would require
- marketers to label commercial e-mail and include a valid return address,
- allow receivers to opt out of receiving further messages, and create a
- bounty for the first person to identify someone who violates the law.
- However, now Lofgren is considering other novel approaches such as focusing
- legislation on advertisers, she said.
-
- Digital copyright protection, an increasingly controversial issue in light
- of the recording industry's litigation efforts against those who download
- music, has also brought lawmakers to an impasse, Lofgren told the audience
- gathered for the Computer & Communications Industry Association's annual
- Washington caucus.
-
- The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, which authorized copyright
- holders to subpoena ISPs for the identity of alleged infringers, has been
- misinterpreted, Lofgren said. It was not the intent of the act to include
- non-infringing use of copyrighted material, and copyright holders should
- not be allowed to control the way consumers use the content they buy
- legally, she said.
-
- In March, Lofgren introduced the BALANCE (Benefit Authors without Limiting
- Advancement or Net Consumer Expectations) Act, which would permit lawful
- consumers of digital material to reproduce or store that material for
- archival purposes or to perform or display it in a nonpublic place.
-
- Rep. Rick Boucher, R-Va., is sponsoring a similar bill, the Digital Media
- Consumer Rights Act, and although Lofgren and Boucher have cosponsored each
- other's measure, the legislation is unlikely to go anywhere this year.
-
- "I think we've gridlocked ourselves," Lofgren said, adding that gridlock
- on the matter of digital rights management may be OK at the moment.
-
- A litigation bonanza for copyright holders will only make the situation
- worse, Lofgren said. She said she believes there will be new efforts to
- download content without being identified.
-
- "Now we're going to end up with an anonymized system," Lofgren said. "It
- will be completely impossible for [content creators] to deal with it."
-
- Momentum to pass the database protection bill, known as the Database and
- Collections of Information Misappropriation Act of 2003, has also slowed,
- Lofgren said, adding that she is skeptical such legislation can withstand
- judicial review.
-
- "People are now realizing that there's a constitutional problem here,"
- Lofgren said. "The multiple efforts to try and create a property right out
- of something that cannot be protected is an interesting thing to watch. I
- don't think it can be done."
-
- In the Senate, lawmakers are working hard for passage of anti-spam
- legislation, but with a targeted adjournment at the end of the month, few
- are optimistic it will be done this year. The Senate Judiciary Committee
- approved a measure last week that would create jail time and high fines for
- hijacking a computer for the purpose of sending spam. The bill is the
- second Senate anti-spam measure to clear committee.
-
-
-
- UK Lawmakers Call for International Anti-Spam Laws
-
-
- A trio of British lawmakers urged their counterparts in the United States
- and Australia on Monday to adopt tough anti-spam laws modeled after recent
- European legislation to stop the global flow of bulk e-mail.
-
- Spam, the unceasing torrent of get-rich-quick and anatomy-enchancing e-mail
- messages, has grown into a political hot-button issue across the globe. The
- campaign to eradicate junk messages have attracted a united front of
- politicians, business officials and cyber rights advocates.
-
- The All Party Internet Group (APIG), a contingent of British
- parliamentarians, released a report on Monday saying anti-spam legislation
- should be harmonized across the globe to criminalize the cross-border
- activity.
-
- "It is essential that co-ordinated global action be taken against spam,"
- said UK MP Derek Wyatt, chairman of the APIG. The report, which gathered
- input from scores of companies, individuals and trade groups, is the result
- of a year-long probe into the economic toll of spam in the U.K.
-
- With spam accounting for roughly half of all e-mails sent, a crackdown has
- taken on a new sense of urgency. The fear is that, left unchecked, spam
- messages will overwhelm corporate computer servers and personal in-boxes.
-
- But few agree on how best to tackle the problem.
-
- European Union legislation requires all e-mail senders, whether legitimate
- marketers or spammers, to get the prior consent of the recipient.
-
- This so-called "opt-in" route broadly defines spam as any e-mail that
- arrives without a recipient's permission, which European politicians and
- business officials call an effective restraint.
-
- But current U.S. proposals carry a more advertiser-friendly "opt-out"
- mechanism, which has triggered mounting criticism from Europe. Next week, a
- team of UK politicians will travel to Washington D.C. to take their message
- to U.S. lawmakers.
-
- Anti-spam proposals in Australia, one of the handful of countries working
- on such a law, would carry "opt-in" specifications.
-
- Last month, the United Kingdom and Italy were the first EU member states
- to pass anti-spam laws. But industry observers have already questioned the
- effectiveness of such laws, noting that the biggest offenders are based in
- the United States, Asia and the Caribbean.
-
- "What happens when you have spammers coming from the Cayman Islands? Who
- are you going to sue? They don't have any laws," said Alyn Hockey, product
- director for ClearSwift, a UK-based firm that specializes in anti-spam
- software for corporations.
-
- The UK law in particular has drawn criticism for the light penalties it
- would impose on spammers and the fact that it doesn't offer protection to
- corporate e-mail recipients.
-
- In Britain, convicted junk mail peddlers face a 5,000 pound ($8,314) fine
- if found guilty in a magistrates court. The fine from a jury trial would be
- unlimited.
-
- The report suggested Britain's Department of Trade and Industry extend the
- anti-spam law, which goes into effect in December, to corporate victims and
- ensure that the enforcement body, the Information Commissioner, has the
- power to convict suspects.
-
-
-
- Disgruntled Phillies Fan Arrested for E-Mail Spams
-
-
- Federal officers arrested a disgruntled Philadelphia Phillies baseball fan
- in California on charges of hacking into computers and sending thousands of
- spam e-mails to sports writers at two Philadelphia newspapers, officials
- said.
-
- Allan Eric Carlson, 39, was arrested on Tuesday at his home in the Los
- Angeles suburb of Glendale and charged with hacking, spoofing return
- addresses, launching spam attacks and identity theft for using fake e-mail
- addresses, according to the U.S. Attorney's office in Philadelphia.
-
- Carlson was arrested by the agents with the Federal Bureau of
- Investigation. Despite a competitive season, the Phillies failed to win a
- spot in Major League Baseball's championship playoffs.
-
- The spam messages were critical of Phillies management and the media
- including one that had a subject line reading, "Corrupt Philly Media Keeps
- Phils in Cellar," according to the indictment.
-
- Carlson used fake return addresses, belonging to sports reporters at the
- Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Daily News, the indictment said.
-
- Because many of the e-mail addresses the spam was sent to were bad, they
- bounced back to the reporters' e-mail accounts, crippling the servers where
- they were stored, according to the indictment.
-
-
-
- EarthLink Adds Spyware Protection
-
-
- Internet service provider EarthLink said Wednesday that it is offering
- customers free software to protect them from so-called spyware programs.
-
- The Atlanta-based company is adding a program called Spyware Blocker to
- its TotalAccess package of software programs and tools, which EarthLink
- subscribers can download for free from the company's Web site.
-
- Spyware is a generic term that describes a variety of different software
- applications that snoop on an Internet user's activities. Some legal
- programs that monitor Web surfing behavior or display pop-up ads might be
- considered spyware.
-
- However, spyware is often installed and run without the user's knowledge
- and can do everything from capturing and secretly distributing the
- information typed on a computer keyboard to giving a remote attacker total
- access to a Internet-connected computer, Richard Smith, an independent
- security consultant based in Boston, said in a recent interview.
-
- The programs have become a more common presence on users' computers and
- are often bundled with peer-to-peer file-sharing software like Kazaa, or
- installed on the sly in "drive-by downloads" when users visit a Web site
- set up to distribute the programs, Smith said.
-
- Spyware Blocker can detect up to 1500 different types of spyware programs,
- according to EarthLink. Users can scan their computer hard drives for
- spyware programs. Once Spyware Blocker locates a suspicious program, it
- will explain what the program does and give users the ability to shut down
- that application or allow it to continue operating.
-
- An alert function notifies users when a spyware application is running on
- their system, the company said.
-
- The new product is intended to give EarthLink customers peace of mind and
- to help fight a security threat often overlooked by antivirus and firewall
- technology, the company said.
-
- The announcement is just the latest from EarthLink, which in recent months
- has introduced new software tools and filed lawsuits to combat a host of
- online ill including unsolicited commercial e-mail (spam), identity theft,
- and pop-up advertisements.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Suit Could Set Precedent for Bad Software
-
-
- A Los Angeles filmmaker's lawsuit targeting Microsoft's vulnerable software
- could signal a sea change for the software industry if judges and jurors
- decide that vendors should be legally responsible for damages caused by
- flaws in their products.
-
- Alleging that "Microsoft's virtual monopoly has created a global security
- risk" and that its "integration and complexity promotes vulnerability," the
- court papers call for more adequate and effective notification of security
- vulnerabilities and injunctive relief to prevent the violation of laws and
- deceptive trade practices.
-
- "We think it's fundamentally unfair for a company to so dominate the
- marketplace that consumers don't have an option and yet say it's not going
- to be responsible or provide warranties if you have a problem," says Dana
- Taschner, attorney for plaintiff Marcy Levitas Hamilton.
-
- The litigation says the vast majority of successful Internet attacks are
- attributable to major vulnerabilities in Microsoft's operating system
- software, which is used by more than 90% of computer users.
-
- "They have a number of pretty good legal arguments," says Stewart Baker,
- technology department head at legal firm Steptoe Johnson. "The risk that
- they face is that the climate will turn against them."
-
- Baker compares the litigation to that faced by the tobacco industry. He
- says tobacco companies won cases for 20 or 30 years because the climate of
- opinion at the time was that people knew tobacco was bad for them prior to
- using it. Over time, opinion changed and juries came into cases predisposed
- to believe that tobacco companies deserved to pay a big chunk of the damage
- the product did.
-
- "The risk here is that if security problems get worse and worse, juries and
- judges will be less willing to listen to arguments from software companies
- and more and more inclined to make them pay for the problems everyone is
- encountering," says Baker. "It's not a straight legal analysis, it's the
- standing of the company in the public eye."
-
- Though the litigation targets only Microsoft, legal experts say the case
- may impact vendors across the industry.
-
- "I think it sends a wake-up call to other vendors who maybe aren't quite as
- quick in sending advisories and providing patches as Microsoft," Michael
- Overly, a partner in the IT group at Foley Lardner, says in regard to
- notification provisions in California Senate Bill 1386.
-
- Baker says the litigation will face at least a few significant obstacles.
- Chief among them, a legal disclaimer in the end-user license agreement. He
- also notes that proving legal liability for failing to prevent bad acts by
- someone else is far more difficult to prove than liability for an injury
- caused by negligence.
-
-
-
- Intuit Apologizes to Customers Over TurboTax
-
-
- Hoping to signal a return to its customer-friendly roots, Intuit Inc. on
- Thursday apologized to its TurboTax customers who were angered when the
- company installed anti-piracy technology on the popular tax-preparation
- software for the 2002 tax year.
-
- "I want to personally apologize for any frustration you may have
- experienced due to the restrictions that came with our use of anti-piracy
- technology," Tom Allanson, general manager of TurboTax, said in an open
- letter to customers. The letter was published in advertisements in the Wall
- Street Journal and USA Today, as well as on the company's turbotax.com Web
- site.
-
- "In response to feedback from our customers, I want you to know that we're
- making an important change to TurboTax software and have removed activation
- technology," Allanson said, adding that the new TurboTax for the 2003 tax
- year can be used fully on multiple computers.
-
- While some customers were angered by Intuit's move to curb rampant,
- unauthorized sharing TurboTax, most complaints arose due to the
- technology's tying the software to a single computer - which meant people
- couldn't do such things as prepare returns at home and print them at work,
- Barrington Research analyst Eric Wanger said.
-
- TurboTax sales rose more than 25 percent year-over-year in its fiscal third
- quarter ended in April amid the customer flap, while still missing internal
- targets.
-
-
-
- P-to-P Companies Look to Go Legal
-
-
- Under attack from the U.S. entertainment industry and some members of the
- U.S. Congress, the largest peer-to-peer software vendors are forging ahead
- with business plans that some critics find ironic: the distribution of
- music and content licensed from the very industry that calls them
- "outlaws."
-
- At a kickoff event September 29, the six members of the newly formed P2P
- United lobbying group pushed for Congress to legalize the sharing of music
- through P-to-P software by setting up compulsory licensing that would
- require the entertainment industry to make its content available on P-to-P
- networks for a price. Congress needs to "hold a gun to the head" of the
- entertainment industry, Wayne Rosso, president of Grokster, said in an
- interview.
-
- Most P-to-P vendors agree that the unauthorized trading of copyright
- material has to stop, Rosso said. "I think you'll find that most of us
- feel the future for us is in original content," he added. "There are two
- ways to stop piracy online: nuclear holocaust and licensing the content.
- Obviously, the RIAA has opted for nuclear holocaust."
-
- Meanwhile, Sharman Networks, owner of the popular Kazaa Media Desktop
- P-to-P package, wants to persuade companies in the music and movie
- industries to voluntarily license content to them. Sharman Networks is
- pushing ahead with this business plan even as it sues those industries for
- what the company calls an industry-wide "conspiracy" to shut Kazaa out of
- the market of distributing licensed content.
-
- P-to-P vendors say it's almost inevitable that the entertainment industry
- will embrace P-to-P as a distribution model. They argue that P-to-P, with
- most digital content residing on users' hard drives, is a more
- cost-effective and efficient model of distributing digital content than
- maintaining a large array of central servers. They also talk up P-to-P's
- "viral" marketing benefits, where users trust recommendations from other
- users more than products hyped by large companies.
-
- The goal of Sharman Networks and its partner Altnet is to become the
- premier distributor of licensed - that is, authorized - digital
- entertainment, said Alan Morris, Sharman's executive vice president. P-to-P
- companies including the privately held Sharman and Grokster feature
- authorized downloads of some video games and music from some independent
- artists or labels, and they also carry advertising, through banner ads or
- pop-ups that users must endure if they don't want to pay for ad-free
- versions of the P-to-P software.
-
- "We want to work with them," Morris said of his current opponents in the
- entertainment industry. "[Licensed content] is not a sideline for us. I
- don't need the hassle of fighting lawsuits...just to make a few bucks on
- some advertising."
-
- Critics of the current crop of P-to-P vendors say there's little chance
- that the entertainment industry will suddenly turn an about-face and start
- working with the vendors it has been trying to sue into submission.
- Compulsory licensing, which P2P United members champion as an approach
- that would allow artists to be paid for files traded, hasn't been part of
- the extensive P-to-P debate in Congress this year, although hearings on
- the issue have been held in past years.
-
- "The odds that the major studios, the major record labels are ever going
- to want to do business with somebody who's tried to bludgeon them into
- going along is pretty low," said Evan R. Cox, a copyright specialist and
- partner with the San Francisco office of the Covington & Burling law firm.
- "The guys who went into this [P-to-P business] knowing how it was going to
- be used at the onset are never going to be viewed as trusted business
- partners by the establishment."
-
- The entertainment industry might be willing to work with a new P-to-P
- service that pledges not to trade unauthorized music from the onset, added
- Cox, who filed a brief for the Business Software Alliance siding with the
- RIAA in its ongoing lawsuit against several P-to-P vendors.
-
- A spokesperson for the RIAA declined to comment on P-to-P business plans,
- but pointed to a recent statement from RIAA Chairman and Chief Executive
- Officer Mitch Bainwol, urging P-to-P companies to "finally act like
- responsible corporate citizens" by warning users about illegal file sharing
- and filtering copyright content off their networks. P-to-P vendors
- "deliberately induce people to break the law," Bainwol said in his
- September 30 statement, and in a hearing in early September, RIAA President
- Cary Sherman accused P-to-P services of facilitating the trade of child
- pornography and exposing their users to security problems.
-
- The talk coming from the Motion Picture Association of America has taken
- an even more no-compromise tone than the RIAA's statements. "Kazaa,
- Gnutella, Morpheus, and the rest of them are outlaw sites," Jack Valenti,
- president and chief executive officer of the MPAA, said in a congressional
- hearing September 30. "They do nothing but offer illegal music, movies, and
- the most sordid pornography that your mind can ever comprehend."
-
- P-to-P vendors fired back after a Senate hearing in late September on child
- pornography available on P-to-P services. They argued that P-to-P services
- distribute a small percentage of the child pornography available on the
- Internet.
-
- "To portray us, P-to-P developers, as being purveyors of child smut is
- insane," said Michael Weiss, chief executive officer of Morpheus parent
- company StreamCast Networks. "Take a look at their tactics, about how they
- market sexually and violently explicit music and music videos specifically
- to underage kids," he said of the entertainment industry.
-
- In Congress this year, the question of whether P-to-P services have a
- legitimate business model has lurked in the background of debates on the
- dangers of using P-to-P software and the subpoena process that allows
- copyright owners to find out the names and addresses of suspected
- downloaders without a judge's review.
-
- Since March, Congress has hosted a series of hearings on possible dangers
- of P-to-P file trading, from users sharing their hard drives to potential
- connections between piracy and terrorism to the amount of child pornography
- traded between P-to-P users.
-
- In early September, the RIAA announced lawsuits against 261 P-to-P users,
- accusing them each of uploading hundreds of songs to other P-to-P users.
- And in June, the chairman of the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee, Utah
- Republican Orrin Hatch, advocated that unauthorized downloaders of
- copyright songs have their computers destroyed, although he later backed
- away from that remark.
-
- Even senators questioning the RIAA's tactics in its series of lawsuits
- against file traders have made it clear that they believe the unauthorized
- trading of copyright files is illegal. It's in this environment that the
- members of P2P United have begun pushing compulsory licensing, by saying
- it's an idea that needs to be debated instead of shouted down by music and
- movie companies.
-
- The owners of six P-to-P software packages - Grokster, Morpheus, Lime Wire,
- BearShare, Blubster, and eDonkey 2000 - officially launched their lobbying
- group in September, and they acknowledge that selling compulsory licensing
- to Congress may be an uphill battle.
-
- "It's about time that congressional members hear the other side of the
- story," Weiss said. "We, as a P-to-P industry, have allowed the recording
- industry to set the agenda, and it's time for that to change."
-
- If the entertainment industry and P-to-P vendors can't come to an
- agreement, Congress needs to step in, Weiss added. "It's time to stop
- listening to the lobbyists of the recording industry, and start listening
- more to the will of the 63 million Americans that use file-sharing
- software," he said. "It's time to find solutions to get artists paid, to
- keep file sharing legal and to not criminalize 63 million Americans."
-
- P2P United's members argue that compulsory licensing would work much in
- the same way that radio stations and nightclubs with jukeboxes pay
- licensing fees to music companies, although radio licenses are voluntary
- on the part of the recording industry.
-
- A compulsory license would likely be passed on to music downloaders or
- Internet users, in the form of a small tax on blank CDs or on Internet
- service. P2P United and the Electronic Frontier Foundation argue that
- compulsory licenses have a history dating back to the early 1900s and the
- player piano, and a congressional mandate would guarantee both payment for
- artists and a business plan for P-to-P vendors.
-
- The RIAA has opposed compulsory licensing, saying an 'if you can't beat
- 'em, join 'em' approach is the wrong way to go. "Compulsory licensing
- schemes...are simply a way of substituting government regulation for the
- marketplace," the RIAA said in a position paper released in September.
- "When was the last time that government pricing and regulation worked
- better than the free market? Compulsory licensing proposals are a crude,
- inflexible instrument that can't keep pace with the dynamic, rapidly
- evolving Internet. Only the marketplace can do that."
-
- Others suggest Congress may have to step into the war between the
- entertainment industry and P-to-P vendors. Some kind of compulsory license
- may not happen this year or next, but Thomas E. Moore III, a partner in the
- Palo Alto, California, office of the intellectual property law firm
- Tomlinson Zisko, said it seems unlikely that the technological and legal
- arms race between the two sides will stop without congressional
- intervention.
-
- "I would like to see a technological answer," Moore said. "But I think at
- some point Congress almost has to step in. You've got an enormous rebellion
- on your hands among millions of downloaders across the United States, and
- they're people you do not really want to criminalize."
-
- Kazaa distributor Sharman Networks isn't part of P2P United, and one of the
- differences is the view on compulsory licenses. Sharman Networks, through
- its partner Altnet, wants to license digital content and distribute it with
- digital rights management-enabled click-wrap licenses, with an
- e-commerce-style payment mechanism included with files.
-
- Instead, Sharman Networks has been trying to encourage a dialog among
- Internet service providers, copyright holders, and P-to-P vendors through
- its trade group, the Distributed Computing Industry Association. Sharman
- Networks sees compulsory licensing as one tool that could be used by P-to-P
- services, although it "freaks out" the RIAA, Morris said.
-
- Sharman Networks has signed licensing deals with entertainment companies
- outside the United States, including those in India and the UK, and will
- continue to do so even if the U.S. entertainment industry refuses to play
- along, Morris said.
-
- If the U.S. entertainment industry wins in Congress and the courts, "then
- we pack up and go home," Morris said. But that scenario may end up being
- the recording industry's "worst nightmare," he said, because other P-to-P
- services not interested in working with the RIAA will spring up and
- flourish.
-
- "There are hacked versions of Kazaa Media Desktop out there," Morris said,
- predicting what could happen. "The code goes wild...so instead of there
- being 60 million-plus users worldwide served by what we like to think are
- very responsible companies trying to do the right thing, the whole thing
- fragments and goes underground."
-
-
-
- New Pay Version of Napster Set for Debut
-
-
- The Napster name, once synonymous with the digital song-swapping bazaar
- that incensed the recording industry, revives Thursday as an Internet music
- store that will go head to head with such competitors as Apple and
- MusicMatch.
-
- Santa Clara-based Roxio Inc., which bought the rights to the Napster name
- for about $5 million, has shelved its former online music service,
- pressplay, and plans to move subscribers to a beta, or working version, of
- Napster 2.0 beginning Thursday.
-
- Napster 2.0 will be available to the general public within a month,
- according to sources familiar with the plans.
-
- Roxio is betting the Napster brand will help set its service apart from a
- bevy of other digital music retailers that have launched since Apple
- Computer Inc. introduced its iTunes Music Store in April.
-
- Last week, MusicMatch Inc. launched a Web site that sells song and album
- downloads and boasts record label licensing agreements that offered the
- fewest copying restrictions yet outside of iTunes.
-
- Others, including Buy.com's BuyMusic.com, RealNetworks's Rhapsody, MusicNow
- and MusicNet, are also vying for a piece of the market.
-
- The new Napster will also have to contend with iTunes, which has sold more
- than 10 million songs and is expected to be available on the Windows
- platform by year's end.
-
- "The space has become crowded because there's a recognition of this is
- going to be a very substantial business," Chris Gorog, Roxio's chairman
- and chief executive, told The Associated Press. "It validates Roxio's
- strategy to enter this business."
-
- The music industry has seen CD sales plummet over the last three years as
- illegal music file-sharing exploded, beginning with the original Napster,
- which was forced to shut down in 2001 after a protracted legal battle with
- recording companies.
-
- Meanwhile, file-sharing over the most popular peer-to-peer networks has
- declined in recent weeks, coinciding with a lawsuit campaign launched
- against downloaders by the recording industry.
-
- Traffic on Kazaa's network, the most popular, dropped 41 percent between
- the last week of June and mid-September, according to Nielsen NetRatings,
- which monitors Internet usage.
-
- At the same time, online music sales are expected to grow from 1 percent
- of the total music market to 12 percent in 2008, generating about $1.5
- billion in sales, according to Jupiter Research.
-
- To differentiate itself from the growing pack of digital music purveyors,
- Napster 2.0 will offer both individual song and album downloads as well as
- a subscription service. Pressplay, which went off-line Tuesday, only
- offered access to songs for a monthly fee.
-
- Napster 2.0 will launch with more than a half-million songs, from all the
- major labels.
-
- The company also hopes users will buy a new Samsung portable digital music
- player co-designed by Napster to work its program.
-
- Any digital music device that plays Windows Media Audio files can also be
- used, however.
-
- Gorog declined to offer details Wednesday about Napster 2.0's pricing and
- any usage restrictions on downloaded music.
-
- He has said the prices would not be out of line with what other services
- charge, which is about $1 per song and about $10 for full albums or monthly
- subscription.
-
- Gorog did say that while the service will incorporate some usage
- restrictions, he believes most users won't notice them.
-
- "Ninety-nine percent or more of our Napster users will never bump their
- heads against any usage rules," Gorog said. "They're going to be in an
- environment where everything costs the same, where every song that they
- select they can burn to a CD or offload to their device, they can do it
- multiple times and they won't even know what the usage rules are because
- they are so flexible."
-
-
-
- AOL Sticks With Google
-
-
- Not to be left behind in the recent search surge, America Online said
- Tuesday that it has expanded its agreement with Google and shored up its
- own AOL Search capabilities with new query options and navigation tools.
-
- AOL said that it will have increased access to Google's index and
- sponsored links as part of a new multi-year agreement, the details of which
- were not revealed.
-
- The company's expanded agreement with Google spells good news for the
- search leader, according to Danny Sullivan, editor of editor of
- SearchEngineWatch.com, because it shows that AOL sees the company as a
- partner rather than a potential rival.
-
- "AOL seems largely comfortable with outsourcing whereas MSN wants to own
- the technology," Sullivan said.
-
- Microsoft's MSN service has recently moved to update its search
- technologies and just Monday ended its agreement with search listing
- provider LookSmart.
-
- AOL spokesperson David Theis affirmed his company's outsourcing strategy.
- "There is an industry leader that people value and enjoy so we are offering
- our users that technology, as well our own," Theis said.
-
- In addition to its alliance with Google, AOL said that it has introduced
- new search capabilities within its AOL 9.0 Optimized service. The new
- features include a "Smart" box search tool that automatically presents
- relevant choices when a user types in a search query in the quickstart
- toolbar field, and navigation tabs that provide quick access to Web pages,
- images, and groups.
-
- The Dulles, Virginia, Internet service provider has also bolstered its
- local search features, providing query results according to user zip codes.
-
- AOL's search improvements reflect a growing interest among Internet players
- to get in on the search market, which has proven a successful enterprise
- for Google and others with its ability to snag both paid search revenue and
- user popularity.
-
- While Sullivan said that none of the AOL Search updates are a giant step
- in search capabilities, he added that they would probably be useful to AOL
- members.
-
- AOL plans to continue to make moves in the search market, according to
- Theis, as its one of the hottest trends currently happening online.
-
- "We want to show our members that we are keeping up," Theis said.
-
-
-
- Apple's Panther: A Jaguar on Steroids
-
-
- With the release of its new Mac OS X (version 10.3), dubbed "Panther,"
- Apple once again is hoping to break into the corporate market. Analysts say
- Panther looks great, but they still wonder why the company has not
- established a clearer marketing strategy.
-
- AMD's 64-bit chip hoopla has watered down some of the excitement around
- Apple's own 64-bit innovation. But the early consensus is that the new G5
- machines are blazing. Now, with the arrival of Panther - Apple's latest OS
- X - some users and testers are forecasting a sea change in computing.
-
- "We're getting the attention of lots of alpha-geeks who really like it,"
- Brian Croll, Senior director for system-software product marketing at
- Apple, told NewsFactor. "Check out Slashdot.com - you see a huge amount of
- discussion about our software amongst the tech crowd."
-
- The most prominent improved feature in Mac OS X Panther (US$129) is a
- redesigned finder that makes file searching up to six-times faster,
- according to Apple, than its predecessor, Jaguar (version 10.2). The new
- finder also allows browsing of the network for Mac, Windows and Unix file
- servers.
-
- Yankee Group analyst Laura DiDio loves the new features. But, she told
- NewsFactor, "if Apple is to ever do more than make machines for a niche
- market, it has to start turning heads in corporate IT departments."
-
- "We're doing that," says Croll. "OS X is widely applicable because it's
- based on Unix. You have the ability to plug into a Windows network."
-
- If Apple starts to win battles for company desktops, the beachhead likely
- will be in the server rooms of IT departments. Croll touts the firm's new
- Panther server software, which, he emphasizes, "is Unix-based, and makes
- it easy for IT people who are familiar with Linux or Unix."
-
- The Panther server OS features a new server-admin tool to set up and manage
- open-source software, such as Apache or Tomcat. And it allows Windows
- clients to plug into the network. Panther server software ($499 for ten
- client computers, $999 for unlimited clients) runs on Apple's XServe
- rack-mount server hardware.
-
- It has been a while since Apple has contended for a significant piece of
- the corporate market. DiDio does not see it getting any easier. "In order
- to compete for the attention of IT managers, Apple is going to have to ship
- something really revolutionary. And as good as I think the new Panther
- offerings are, I think these are evolutionary."
-
- Apple is one of the few computer firms that regularly makes products that
- practically sell themselves - the iPod, for example. Trouble is, the
- company stands outside of the Wintel paradigm. Firms like Dell have
- developed extensive sales channels that Apple will have a difficult time
- disrupting. "It's ironic," says DiDio. "Apple is the company which
- pioneered the whole concept of 'ease of use,' and today they are seen as
- foreigners by corporate IT managers."
-
- Apple's timing coincides with the replacement cycle that was disrupted
- because of the economic downturn and the 9-11 terrorist attacks. Companies
- have been sitting on old equipment for much longer than usual and are
- expected to buy when the economy turns. But will Apple be able to get a
- piece of the action, along with Dell, Hewlett-Packard and a host of other
- Wintel firms? DiDio says it is unclear. "They have not done a good job
- marketing their strategy for biz users," she observes. "What is it?"
-
- But Apple, which contends that its marketing strategy is top secret, says
- its machines are showing up outside of the graphics studio more and more.
- Croll acknowledges that it is an evolutionary process but, he says, "it's
- happening. Some scientists are using the BLAST gene-sequencing program on
- a Mac." Quite evolutionary.
-
-
-
- FTC Set To Process Protests of Sales Calls
-
-
- The Federal Trade Commission said yesterday that it will begin at 6 p.m.
- Saturday - after a court-imposed 10-day delay - to accept complaints from
- people who put their phone numbers on the national anti-telemarketing
- registry.
-
- "I leave it to you to decide whether it's a coincidence that the complaint
- process opens at the dinner hour," Federal Trade Commission Chairman
- Timothy J. Muris said at a news conference to announce that the registry
- is "fully up and running."
-
- An automated system will take the information, FTC officials said. Saturday
- evening was the earliest the agency could begin taking complaints, they
- added.
-
- Muris said that at 8 a.m. today the registry will resume accepting
- residential numbers not already on the list.
-
- Muris's announcement came less than 24 hours after a U.S. Court of Appeals
- panel gave the agency clearance to start enforcing the list, which contains
- more than 52 million phone numbers, about one-third of all residential
- phone lines.
-
- Enforcement of the list, including $11,000 fines for violators, was
- supposed to begin Oct. 1. But legal challenges by the telemarketing
- industry brought implementation plans to a sudden halt. A U.S. district
- judge blocked the agency on the grounds that the registry violated the
- free-speech protections of telemarketers.
-
- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit said Tuesday that the agency
- was likely to prove that it is in the public interest to curb unwanted
- telephone sales calls.
-
- In the meantime, the Federal Communications Commission has been collecting
- complaints about telemarketing calls. Through yesterday afternoon, the
- agency had received 2,379 complaints and issued at least 19 letters of
- inquiries to telemarketers, the first step of an enforcement investigation.
-
- Less than half of the 13,000 firms that have notified the FTC that they
- intend to purchase some portion of the list obtained it before it was shut
- down. Those firms "are expected to comply immediately," Muris said. Those
- who do not have the list have until Oct. 17 to begin complying.
- Telemarketers will once again be able to gain access to the list tomorrow
- morning, allowing them to obtain the numbers that are not to be called.
-
- "The bottom line here is this: If you registered your phone number on the
- national registry before September 1, and you get a call that violates the
- law, file a complaint," Muris said. For people signing up after Sept. 1, it
- could take three months before telemarketers stop calling their homes,
- because the companies are required to update their call lists only every
- three months.
-
- The telemarketing industry's two major trade associations continued to urge
- their members to comply with the list yesterday. The Direct Marketing
- Association, which represents 4,700 firms that market their goods and
- services over the phone, reiterated its position that "it is not the proper
- role of government to create and implement a national do-not-call list."
-
- In the legal arena, "we are not completely out of the woods," said FCC
- Chairman Michael K. Powell, who joined Muris at the news conference. But,
- he said, "I refuse to believe that the Constitution of the United States
- shuts down the ability of consumers to protect the sanctity of their
- homes."
-
- The three-judge appeals panel set up an expedited schedule for a hearing
- on the constitutional issues, moving up to next month oral arguments that
- were initially scheduled for January. That hearing will consolidate three
- federal lawsuits so all issues can be resolved through a single court
- decision.
-
-
-
- Bubble Bursts for E-Books
-
-
- At the height of the Internet boom, e-books were hailed as the shining new
- tomorrow for publishers and paper books were heading for the scrap heap.
-
- But the bubble has burst and electronic books are still the poor relation
- to the printed word with consumers preferring to turn the pages themselves
- when they curl up by the fire with a good book.
-
- "The limitless euphoria of the beginning belongs to the past," said Arnoud
- de Kemp, a leading electronic publisher with the science and business media
- firm Springer.
-
- Three years after the e-book frenzy reached its peak, publishers in
- Frankfurt for the world's biggest book fair of the year were in a much more
- realistic frame of mind.
-
- Last month, top U.S. bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc announced it was halting
- e-book sales. "We did not see sales take off as we and many others had
- anticipated," a spokesman said.
-
- Targets have been sharply lowered and now publishers look on e-books as a
- much smaller market which does still, admittedly from a very low starting
- point, see steady growth.
-
- "Expectations were widely overblown at the time of the Internet bubble,"
- said British publisher Helen Fraser, managing director at Penguin.
-
- "But there is a small market for them and it may grow as different reading
- devices appear on the market. Sales do go up month by month," she told
- Reuters.
-
- She said if Penguin sold 40,000 copies of a printed book, it would
- typically shift 4,000 audio books of the same title and 400 e-books.
-
- In the technological battle to find the perfect way to read electronic
- books on your palm-top or personal computer, competing formats have put the
- consumer off.
-
- David Steinberg, president of corporate strategy and international in New
- York with HarperCollins, said: "There was a format war. They compete and
- are not compatible. That creates resistance."
-
- "Three years ago, there was a huge amount of hype but we did not get caught
- up in it. We steered away from digitizing all our works and dumping them
- into cyberspace," he told Reuters.
-
- He said e-books, still a tiny part of the overall business, have a "30
- percent plus" annual growth rate with HarperCollins putting out the
- complete works of thriller writer Agatha Christie electronically.
-
- But the reader's love affair with the printed word is far from over
- because, as Chris Barnard, technology analyst at IDC consultancy,
- concluded, "One problem is that e-books are up against a very established
- technology, namely books. And most people are very happy with that
- technology."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
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