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- Volume 5, Issue 51 Atari Online News, Etc. December 19, 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:
-
- 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 #0551 12/19/03
-
- ~ Happy Holidays to All! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Fugitive Hunter!
- ~ Net Holiday 'Givelist'! ~ NY Is Big eBay Seller! ~ Linux 2.6 Arrives!
- ~ 2003 Spam "Awards" Out! ~ Net Sales Tax On Hold! ~ Classic BASIC Books!
- ~ Kazaa Loves Going Dutch ~ Retro Gaming Revival! ~ Cayam Worm Found!
-
- -* Microsoft, NY Sues Spammers! *-
- -* Bush Signs Anti-Spam Bill Into Law! *-
- -* Court Declares Net Music Subpoenas "Silly" *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, it turned out to be a pretty good week to take off. My wife and I
- usually take the week between Christmas and New Year's, but this year we
- both couldn't get the same time off, so we opted for this past week. We
- managed to get all of our holiday shopping started, and completed. I got
- more of the flooring done in the new rooms, but they haven't been finished
- yet as I had hoped. Maybe this weekend.
-
- As most people know by now, I do not celebrate Christmas, being a non-
- Christian. However, my wife is, and does - so I share the non-religious
- segment of the holiday, as she does mine. It's the non-secular points of
- the holidays that I enjoy. Not so much the gift-giving (and receiving)
- although that is certainly enjoyable. But more, it's this time of the year
- in which some real goodness comes out of people - people helping out other
- people, in whatever manner that they choose. It's the getting together with
- friends and family; the exchange of holiday cards - especially with those
- whom you may not communicate with as much as you'd like; and a whole lot
- more. And yeah, there are the holiday parties.
-
- With all due respect to Dickens' 'A Christmas Carol,', try to do something
- nice for someone that you don't know this holiday season. During your last-
- minute rush to get your shopping done, pick up a toy and donate it to your
- local Toys For Tots campaign. Make a donation to your local food pantry,
- homeless shelter, or Make-A-Wish foundation. Try to make someone else's
- holiday enjoyable, as you would like yours to be. And during all of your
- holiday cheer, remember not to drink and drive, or allow others to do the
- same.
-
- Have a terrific holiday, whether it be Hanukkah, Christmas, Kwanzaa, or Eid!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- Three Classic BASIC Game Books
-
-
- The full text of a trilogy of classic computer books are now available at
- AtariArchives.org: BASIC Computer Games (published 1978,) More BASIC
- Computer Games (1978), and Big Computer Games (1984.)
-
- http://www.atariarchives.org/basicgames/
- http://www.atariarchives.org/morebasicgames/
- http://www.atariarchives.org/bigcomputergames/
-
- Edited by David Ahl of Creative Computing Magazine, the books feature
- type-in BASIC games, including such classics as Animal, Blackbox, Eliza,
- Hammurabi, Lunar LEM Rocket, Mugwump, and Hunt the Wumpus. Big Computer
- Games also includes Rollercoaster, a unique computer-operated videodisc
- adventure game for the Apple ][ computer.
-
- The two earlier books feature illustrations by George Beker, which will be
- instantly recognizable by anyone who read these books or Creative Computing
- magazine 20 or more years ago.
-
- The books are available with the permission of David Ahl. With this
- announcement, AtariArchives.org has reached the milestone of making 25
- classic computer books available on the Web.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho ho ho, friends and neighbors. Yep, it's that time again... This
- is the last issue before Christmas. I'm not going to launch into a
- religious speech here, since there are many who don't celebrate
- Christmas. But it IS a wonderful time of year; at least three of the
- world's major religions consider it a special time. I'm not going to
- expound upon the other two because, to be quite honest, I don't know
- enough about them. All I can really say is: Whatever you believe,
- believe in it now.
-
- I thought for a moment about telling you my "Harry Chapin Story" again,
- but you've probably heard it already (I must have relayed that story
- half a dozen times here in this column, and I'll not put you through it
- again this year... maybe next year though <grin>).
-
- I would like to remind you that there are still people out there
- scratching just to make ends meet and are, for whatever reason, unable
- to provide the little special things that a lot of us take for
- granted... a big festive meal, a few small gifts for loved ones, things
- like that.
-
- I'll be dropping off a few food items at the local food-share again this
- year and a few toys in the 'Toys for Tots' box. It's not much... not
- enough to change anyone's life... but it's something. More than helping
- anyone else, I think it helps me. It 'grounds' me. It reminds me that
- there are others less fortunate than I am. Boy, is that an
- understatement! I've been truly blessed. I really have. Even though I
- feel put-upon or unlucky or taken advantage of a dozen or so times a
- day, I still have it better than a majority of people on this planet.
- And even if you leave the material things out of the equation, I've been
- blessed with friends and family. The things you can't buy are sometimes
- the hardest to obtain... and luckily, sometimes the hardest to get rid
- of. You remember the old saying "You can pick your friends but you can't
- pick your family"? Well, an old friend of mine from junior high school
- (I guess they call it 'middle school' these days) had his own version...
- "You! can pick your friends and you can pick your nose... but you can't
- pick your friend's nose".
-
- Yeah, I know... it's gross. But it's one of the things that reminds me
- of him. I saw him a few months ago in a grocery store. We stood there in
- the store for several minutes making small-talk. Neither of us quite
- sure of where to start or what questions to NOT ask... "Are you still
- married"? "Did you ever finish that <whatever>" etc.... You know the
- kind of feeling.
-
- But underneath all of our uncertainty of what time might have done to
- the other, there was the bond that had been formed all those years ago.
- It was really quite strange. There was a kind of duality that I haven't
- often encountered. On the one hand, here was an old friend. On the other
- hand, more time had passed since I had last seen him than we had had
- years under our belts when we were in school.
-
- I finally decided that any time spent with old friends is time well
- spent. We've been in contact a couple of times since then, and each time
- we "catch up" a little more. Of course, we always end up interjecting at
- least a few memories of the old days, and that's cool, but the best part
- is just having contact.
-
- Hmmm... I thought there might be a deep thought in that story somewhere,
- but there doesn't seem to be, does there?
-
- Well, before I forget, please don't drink and drive during the holidays.
- Even if there aren't people depending on you, there might be people
- depending on the other guy.
-
- Well, let's get to the news, hints, tips and info available every week
- from the UseNet.
-
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- John Garone asks about HD Driver caches:
-
- "Regarding HDDriver FAT/Data cache settings is it normal for a setting of
- 100/100 to eat up 3.5 meg of RAM? It's 355k with 10/10."
-
-
- Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, tells John:
-
- "You can calculate this by multiplying the number of buffers (200 in your
- case) with the size of the biggest logical sector on your drive. So the
- memory needed depends on your partition sizes, and that's why it is
- impossible to give general recommendations on the best settings."
-
-
- Guillaume D'flache chimes in with an observation:
-
- "In my humble opinion this is not very intuitive for the average user, kB
- would be better!
-
- So perhaps it could be calculated automatically by HD-Driver
- configuration program? One could set the cache size whether in kbytes
- (default) or in sectors, and a switch between the two units would be
- available. If a amount in kbytes (say 17kB) would not convert to an
- exact amount of (say 16k-large) sectors, an alert box would be
- displayed explaining that a rounding has occurred. Just a suggestion
- anyway!"
-
-
- Uwe tells Guillaume:
-
- "Too late. This is the way GEMDOS (the GEMDOS cache) works, so it cannot be
- changed. At least not without a completely new version of TOS ."
-
-
- Kenneth Medin adds:
-
- "I use 10/10 (which happens to be the default, not 100/100!) and it works
- well with 4 HD's and a CD. Max partition size is 1 GByte.
-
- Test with 10/10 and if you don't get any performance loss keep it that
- way. If not increase the buffers. Quite simple, actually."
-
-
- John now asks:
-
- "How does the sector size get set for hard drive partitions? I see only
- choices under "Removable Media".
-
- How does this set up look regarding efficiency and proper HDDriver
- configuration? You mentioned that the FAT/Data cache default is 100/100
- That eats up almost 3.5meg RAM. Is 20/50 with 999 folders ok for proper
- driver usage?
-
- Falcon, Tos 4.04, No Magic, etc.
- Partition Info: 512 bytes per sect. 512 in root dir.
- # of partitions: 12 + 2 CD drives = 14 total
- Partition Sizes: 70meg to 994.9meg (all GEM)
- General: 20/50/999 (RAM used: 1214 kb)
- SCSI Driver: All but Link97 x'ed
- Rem. Media: No x's, min. part. = 1, Max sect. size = 16384, Actual = 16384
- Devices and partitions: No IDE, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.7 "
-
-
- Uwe replies:
-
- "The sector size depends on the partition size, i.e. you cannot change it
- arbitrarily.
-
- Looks as if it is only 10/10. I don't know this by heart as I never change
- it anyway.
-
- Note that most of this discussion will lead to nothing. The GEMDOS cache
- works as it works, it cannot be changed. Hard disk drivers have to stick to
- what GEMDOS provides."
-
-
- Wayne Martz asks about boot resolutions on his CT60:
-
- "I have a Falcon, CT60. The Falcon has no tv out port. It was working
- fine, but while playing with the CT60 config CPX, I tried to set the
- boot resolution higher. I must have hit the wrong button. I've been
- testing with 2 different monitors. One is a flat panel from my Dell
- that I was testing with, since it was easier to move back and forth.
- Booting in 060 mode on the flat panel, I briefly see the "Pretty"
- screen, then it goes black. I think the falcon is continuing to boot
- normally, since I hear the hd start after a typical amount of time for
- the ram check, or I hear the hd start as soon as I abort the ram
- check. Of course, I'm guessing, since I can't see anything. I never
- see the fuji, or the rest. So far, I'd only put on HDDriver, extendos
- and NVDI. I also have a normal 17 inch monitor that I use with my CT2B
- falcon. I tried with it. It is slow to warm up the screen, so when
- booting with it, I never see the "pretty" screen, but I think it is
- acting the same, since the little green light that comes on when
- things are working normally comes on for a second when booting in 060
- mode. I have 2 different vga adaptors. When using the Atari adaptor,
- booting in 030 mode, on the 17 inch I get mostly white jagged lines
- across the screen that pulse on and off about 3 times per second. Same
- setup, in 060 mode I get white jaggies, spaced further apart, pulsing
- slower, about 1-2 times per second. With the dell monitor, no jaggies,
- just black. I posted on the DH site, where I was told that if I hold
- down the shift-alt-undo key, it will reset the falcon to factory
- settings. This is a bit hard for me to do, since I've recased this
- Falcon in a Wizztronics case with a DEKA keyboard adaptor. I only have
- a ps/2 keyboard, and the undo key isn't mapped properly. I tried 1
- time to install the atari keyboard so I could do the control-alt-undo
- thing, but nothing different happened. (I have to move the power supply
- to plug in the keyboard.)
- So, I think I set the falcon to some incompatible mode for a VGA,
- perhaps tv? (no tv out, can't tell!) How exactly can I reset it to the
- "normal" boot resolution? If there is a particular key combination to
- hold down, does it happen at a particular point in the boot process?
- (If so, I'll have to guess, since I can't see where it is in that
- process.) Am I the dumbest assed Atari user you have ever seen post
- here? (I guess you don't really have to answer that, but go ahead if
- you must!)"
-
-
- John Smith tells Wayne:
-
- "If you have two different VGA adapters e.g "bugged" and "debugged" one try
- booting with bugged one and when booting is done change it for debugged one
- or vice versa. Use the monitor which works with CT2.
- I had the same problem."
-
-
- Mark Duckworth adds:
-
- "If it works in 030 mode, what you want to do is.
- A: download TOS 0.99g from aniplay.atari.org if you don't have it.
- If you do, you're screwed
-
- B: update the tos with the flash tool.
-
- THEN do the control-alt-undo.
-
- Without tos .99g it wont' be clearing the flash of the ct60 which
- overrides tos nvram probably."
-
-
- John Garone asks about a problem he's having while copying files:
-
- "My system hangs while trying to copy large files around 10 meg or more!
- This started after replacing one of two hard drives. It occurs when trying
- to copy from either of 2 CD drives, from either hard drive to each other or
- within either hard drive! I've checked ID #s, swapped out cables (total
- length is about 11 feet), reconfigured HDDriver and Extendos Gold, done
- sector tests on both hard drives and a memory test on the 14 meg RAM.
-
- I believe termination is ok (older Seagate, last in chain, no jumper =
- terminated.....new Seagate, second in chain, no jumper selection or
- termination power from cable).
-
- Physical order of devices:
- C-LAB Falcon
- Yamaha CD R/W CRW2200S
- Seagate ST15230WC SUN 4.2g
- Toshiba CDROM XM-5401TA3605
- Seagate ST51080N 1g
-
- Any Thoughts?"
-
-
- Jim DeClercq tells John:
-
- "Yes, thoughts. Have you done a web search on either Seagate part number?
- I have more than one ST32550W, and one of them was acting very strangely.
- Found that typing the part number into a search engine box revealed that
- many people had strange problems with that drive, and one fellow bought
- 12, and found that only 4 of them worked in his systems. That told me what
- was wrong, and what to do about it. Skipping a lot of steps, after finding
- those reports, I installed three jumpers on the top of that drive,
- connecting termpower to the terminators, to the network, and connecting
- network termpower to the drive, and now it works just fine, in the middle
- of the chain, and very thoroughly in the state some people would call
- terminated.
-
- First do that web search. If you are the only one with a problem with a
- drive which is about the right size for a Unix system, that is not the
- problem. And, shorten those cables. Those drive should at least be in the
- same county. That could be all of your problem, or fix your problem.
-
- And, block size might matter. There is Kobold, and there is tosfix, to
- break transfers up into sizes that do not cause problems. "
-
-
- John now posts:
-
- "After checking all that can be checked regarding hardware, termination,
- ID#s and cables, I booted with ICD and had no problem copying a 49 meg file
- from either of 2 CD drives to 2 hard drives or between hard drives but the
- system hangs if I boot with HDDriver 8.04 and try to copy a file over 10
- meg! Same after reducing the system down to 1 hard drive and 1 CDROM. So,
- is there a bug in HDDriver 8.04 or am I not setting it right?"
-
-
- Stephen Moss tells John:
-
- "Even though you have stated otherwise I still believe that it is a
- cabling problem in that basically they are to long. When I tried
- using a 1 Metre extension cable with my HD on the floor I could copy
- floppies to it ok but copying 720K from the HD to a floppy would
- always result in the "Disk Damaged/Drive not connected" alert message.
- When I went back to the shorter cable cable (12-16 inch) that was part
- of the Link 97 adaptor everything was fine.
- The reason why floppy to HD was ok is that the ST is relatively slow
- at reading data from floppy and transfers it out in smaller chunks, I
- cant remember how large these are but it is defined by TOS however it
- does not work the other way because IIRC HD Drive transfers as much
- data as will fit into the available RAM from where the ST then copies
- it in the smaller chunks to the floppy so HD to ST data transfers
- more data faster.
-
- Now I know you will dismiss this because the longer cables worked with
- the ICD Driver but as Uwe stated HD Driver uses a fuller SCSI command
- set and the code may be more optimised than that of the ICD Driver, if
- either if these results in faster data transfer the extra capacitance
- of the longer cables will degregate the faster moving signals more
- that slower signal to the point where the recipient cannot tell if it
- is receiving a 1 or a 0.
-
- You say you have checked the cables but not if you tried HD Driver
- with shorter cables, if you have not give it a go you might find it
- works."
-
-
- John tells Stephen:
-
- "I reduced the system down to a 6-foot cable to one hard drive with
- HDDriver! No other cables. Still the same!"
-
-
- Brian Roland adds:
-
- "I might be barking up the wrong tree here...
- But I didn't have much luck with HDDriver 8 on a Falcon either. In fact,
- version 8 doesn't work with CuBase Audio at all.
-
- I went back to version 7.93, which offers most of the same features as
- version 8...just less optimized, and run the CAFFIX patch, and so far,
- knock on wood, SCSI problems are gone.
-
- This is on a CT2b with gobs of stuff on the SCSI BUS...wide SCSI III (with
- high bytes terminated), and narrow SCSI I and II (50 pin and 25pin cables)
- all mixed together. Okay, I admit when I'm doing serious audio projects I
- take out all the junk and use as short a cable as possible...but in normal
- day to day usage the chain is dangerously long...and so far so good.
-
- The first thing I'd try however, is installing the CAFFIX.PRG from your
- HDUTIL disk. If that doesn't do the trick, see if Uwe will send you 7.93."
-
-
- Uwe Seimet tells Brian:
-
- "This is a known issue, related to Cubase and the fact that Cubase accesses
- to SCSI bus in ways not compliant to the SCSI standard. There is nothing
- one can do about it, like with any software (Cubase in this case) that is
- not maintained anymore."
-
-
- Jason Davey asks about a graphics card for the TT:
-
- "Can any one tell me if there are any VME display cards available for the
- TT and if there is which is has the best screen resolution (colours &
- pixel dimensions) and fastest redraw rate etc."
-
-
- Lonny Pursell tells Jason:
-
- "All such cards are out of production, except perhaps the one from Mario.
- I do not know the status of that card.
-
- I have owned a cyrel sunrise, setup and such was a pain at the time.
- Also I had issues with certain programs incorrectly detecting the video
- mode. Got rid of it.
-
- The nova cards work pretty good, but you end up with 2 drivers, the nova
- driver and nvdi or speedo if you want scalable fonts. Sold it.
-
- Personally I recommend the Crazydots II card. Least amount of hassle,
- works with everything, and you only need nvdi v5 to drive it.
- Also v2 of the card does 24bit, regardless of what others say without
- any add-on board. It will do 640x480 24bit, 800x600 16bit and something
- like 1024x768 256c on my TT. It's also fully programmable, I actually
- bumped it up to 1152x896 or so in 256c mode.
-
- The original Crazydots only does 256c max, and 16bit with some addon board,
- if you can even find the add on board anymore."
-
-
- Mark Duckworth adds:
-
- "The SuperNova card (Mach64) can do 1024x768x16 bit color. I have this
- one. The Matrix Coco can also do higher resolutions/colors but they tend
- to be a bit harder to find. I have a Matrix Moco/Coco upgrade card but it
- is non-functional. Lastly I have an AlberTT card. This card is more or
- less a rez expander, giving you 1024x768x16 colors. It's not too bad of a
- card, but scrolling is painfully slow and the display isn't too crisp.
-
- I'd let go of the AlberTT if someone threw me $50USD. I know that's too
- much for this card but I don't really need to sell it. But if someone
- *really* wants one, it's there. I would also sell the matrix card but I
- am completely troubled by how much to charge. If someone gets the specs
- for the card, fixing it is a matter of 6 wires and it's a GOOD video card,
- but at the same time it's in non-working condition so charging full price
- would be very unfair."
-
-
- Well folks, have a happy, healthy and safe holiday. And again, please don't
- drink and drive. The life you save may be MINE! <grin>
-
- 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 - Retro Gaming, Remembering Youth!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Fugitive Hunter!
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Retro Games, Devices, Recall Electronic Youth
-
-
- When Cindy Simmons and her husband get home from a hard day at the office,
- they cozy up and relax like many young couples - by bombing enemy ships on
- "River Raid" using their classic Atari video game console.
-
- "It is just like being 11 years old again," said Simmons, 32, an on-air
- radio personality from Atlanta. "Except I didn't have 30 games then - now
- I do."
-
- High-tech gadgets like digital cameras top many holiday wish lists, but
- old-school items such as "Pac-Man" video games and vintage televisions are
- finding an audience with tech-savvy consumers yearning for nostalgia.
-
- Rapid advances in computer technology have allowed consumer electronics
- makers to pack increasingly more power into smaller boxes, helping to grow
- the CE market to almost $100 billion.
-
- But even "thirtysomething" shoppers - the first generation to grow up with
- personal "Walkman" music players and own a home version of "Space
- Invaders" - are overwhelmed when confronted with Sony Corp. PlayStation 2
- and Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox consoles that also surf the Web and play DVDs,
- or pocket devices that can store 10,000 songs.
-
- "Devices and games are getting more complex. The learning curve is not what
- it used to be and or you're not as willing to spend the time to learn as
- you would years ago," analyst Danielle Levitas of research firm IDC said.
- "Also, every generation experiences nostalgia, reflecting on what they did
- in their free time when they were teen-agers."
-
- The trend is most evident with video games. Teens today enjoy them
- primarily on living room consoles that can, for example, simulate with
- stunning three-dimensional precision, a World War II battle scene. A single
- game, packed with maps and myriad weaponry, can take hours to learn and
- weeks to complete.
-
- By contrast, beloved games of late 1970s and early 1980s were no-brainers,
- where strategy meant little more than picking whether to chase and chomp
- the stationary picture of a strawberry or the red cone-shaped monster with
- the googly eyes.
-
- "The essence of these games was that they didn't go on for 40 hours. You
- can just pick up and figure out what was going on fairly quickly and then
- play," said Keith Robinson, president of Intellivision Productions, which
- is also selling a version of its 1980s games for new game consoles.
-
- At eBay Inc.'s online auction site, more than 43,000 vintage gaming items
- are being offered for sale, including the classic brand names Atari,
- Colecovision and Commodore. Gross merchandise sales - the value of goods
- sold via the site - for Commodore alone are up 61 percent for the last
- three months.
-
- "This growth is related to the children of baby boomers wanting to
- recapture a piece of their youth in the early 1980s," eBay spokesman Hani
- Durzy said.
-
- Intellivision this year is offering "Intellivision Lives!" for PS2 and
- Xbox, resurrecting long-forgotten titles like "Shark! Shark!" and "Space
- Armada." Its Intellivision 25 direct-to-TV controller lets users without a
- console play 25 games by plugging a game controller into their TV or VCR.
-
- Similar game controller products are available from Atari, Activision and
- Namco, bringing "Dig Dug" and "Asteroids" from the era of Lionel Ritchie
- and Diane Keaton to that of Missy Elliott and Ben Affleck.
-
- Each game controller looks almost exactly like the original
- joystick-and-single-button model - a relic compared to current models that
- often sport six buttons and two directional sticks.
-
- "People identify with the original Atari 2600 joystick," said Genna
- Goldberg of JAKKS Pacific Inc., which makes the three joystick games. "For
- many it was the first video game system they had as a kid."
-
-
-
- Search for Osama bin Laden comes to PlayStation in Fugitive Hunter
-
-
- Add video gamers to the list of governments, special forces and soldiers
- hunting for Osama bin Laden.
-
- When John Botti came up with the idea for a bounty hunter video game, he
- turned to the FBI's most wanted list for inspiration. That was before
- Sept. 11 but bin Laden was already No. 1 on the fugitive list. So Botti,
- the 36-year-old president and CEO of Black Ops Entertainment in Santa
- Monica, Calif., put him in Fugitive Hunter: War on Terror.
-
- The PlayStation 2 title allows gamers to go after 11 terrorists, with the
- search for bin Laden in mountain caves on the Afghanistan-Pakistan border
- the game's final battle.
-
- So far, it seems people like beating up on bin Laden.
-
- "We didn't know how it would be taken," Botti said Tuesday. "But we didn't
- do anything that was inappropriate and I think people like to vent their
- frustration out on him."
-
- You have to work your way up to bin Laden. First you take on murderers and
- bank robbers from Miami, a militia group in Utah, a drug cartel in the
- Caribbean and al-Qaida operatives in France.
-
- Botti, whose twin brother Will is Black Ops' video-president of software
- development, came up with the idea for the game after graduating from the
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1990. He moved to California and
- was living in a tough neighbourhood at the time.
-
- "The idea kind of came from me actually living in that environment, where
- there were police chases and helicopters and police dogs and gang busts all
- the time. Every day," he said from California. "It was a very different
- experience from growing up in a suburban section of New York."
-
- Botti, who wrote computer games as a hobby while growing up, had hoped to
- get into the film business after leaving MIT. But when times were lean, he
- turned back to video games and eventually formed Black Ops in 1994.
-
- Pre-production of Fugitive Hunter started in 1999 and when a team from
- Blacks Ops finished a James Bond title, Botti put them on the new game in
- 2000.
-
- So far Fugitive Hunter has done "fairly well," said Botti. "There's a lot
- of competition right now."
-
- But Black Ops is already pondering a sequel and Botti, proud of the game,
- finds himself still playing it.
-
- "It's not a game that has a $20-million production budget, but it is a game
- that has some cool weapons," he said. "I just get a kick out of blowing
- terrorists away."
-
- Current events caught up with the game designers as they worked on Fugitive
- Hunter.
-
- Bin Laden was No. 1 on the most wanted list, but was hardly in the public
- eye at that time. Still a publisher picked up the game and "then Sept. 11
- hit."
-
- "We actually restructured our game a little bit to remove the New York
- levels and some of the other things, but we kept the al-Qaida and
- Afghanistan stuff."
-
- He also sounded out New Yorkers about the game.
-
- "I'm from New York. I'm the last person to do anything defamatory or
- insulting to my friends and family that live and work in New York," Botti
- said. "Most of my good friends from MIT or high school work in Wall Street
- where all that stuff went down."
-
- Today bin Laden is still on the wanted list, with an FBI bounty of $25
- million US.
-
- Botti even spoke to the FBI during game production, to make sure Fugitive
- Hunter would not cause waves by including an al-Qaida component. The bureau
- had no objections, noting the terrorists had a lot more to worry about than
- a video game.
-
- Botti compares the production of Fugitive Hunter to that of an independent
- film. Money was tight so, with an eye to the bottom line, Botti looked for
- ways to cut costs during game production.
-
- Black Ops' system administrator, a big man, provided the body for bank
- robber Casey Webber. Other employee were used for their voices.
-
- But Botti did not skimp when it came to the game's narrator. He got Will
- Lyman, the voice of PBS's Nova and Frontline.
-
- Lyman's instantly recognizable voice - he also stars in the ABC series
- Threat Matrix - lends the game valuable authenticity.
-
- One criticism Botti has got is that the game's final hand-to-hand battle
- with bin Laden is unrealistic. According to the FBI's most wanted terrorist
- list, bin Laden walks with a cane.
-
- "It's a game," Botti countered. "If we just made the guy come out with a
- cane, like when they captured Saddam Hussein it's not that eventful."
-
- Bring down bin Laden and you get to cuff him, then boot him into a
- helicopter waiting to whisk him back to justice.
-
- Black Ops, which also shoots commercials and is looking at some movie
- projects, has sold more than 5.5 million copies of its video games. It has
- created some 18 titles including the boxing game Knockout Kings, James
- Bond's The World is Not Enough and Tomorrow Never Dies, and basketball's
- Street Hoops.
-
- Tomorrow Never Dies, for PlayStation 1, sold some three million copies
- alone.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Bush Signs First National Anti-Spam Bill Into Law
-
-
- President Bush signed the first national anti-spam bill into law on
- Tuesday, outlawing some of the most annoying forms of junk e-mail and
- setting jail time and multimillion dollar fines for violators.
-
- The law also lays the groundwork for a "Do Not Spam" registry similar to
- the "Do Not Call" anti-telemarketing list that went into effect earlier
- this year.
-
- Bush's signing marks the final legislative step in a six-year struggle to
- curb the unsolicited commercial offers that threaten to overwhelm the
- e-mail system.
-
- But the law is unlikely to provide much of a Christmas present, at least
- this year.
-
- Experts say it will not immediately stop the torrent of unwelcome e-mails
- touting unbelievably low mortgage rates, get-rich-quick schemes and sexual
- enhancement offers that now account for more than half of all e-mail
- traffic.
-
- Skeptics say it will only encourage businesses to send out more unwanted
- e-mail, as the new law allows marketers to send messages to anyone with an
- e-mail address as long as they identify themselves clearly and honor
- consumer requests to leave them alone.
-
- Supporters say the law sets a helpful framework for acceptable e-mail
- practices, but acknowledge it will need to be enforced aggressively to have
- any impact.
-
- "This will help address the problems associated with the rapid growth and
- abuse of spam by establishing a framework of technological, administrative,
- civil and criminal tools and by providing consumers with the options to
- reduce unwanted e-mail," said White House spokesman Scott McClellan.
-
- The new law requires pornographic e-mail to be clearly labeled, and
- commercial "text messages" to cell phones will be prohibited unless users
- expressly permit them.
-
- It encourages but does not require the Federal Trade Commission to allow
- Internet users who don't want to receive any unsolicited marketing to place
- their e-mail addresses on a list that marketers would be required to check.
- FTC officials have said on several occasions that a do-not-spam registry
- would be difficult to enforce.
-
- The law will override some tougher state laws, such as one in California
- that would prevent all unsolicited commercial e-mail, and will prohibit
- consumer lawsuits.
-
- Internet marketers have begun to feel the heat as the skyrocketing volumes
- of spam have strained computer networks and outraged consumers.
-
- Prosecutors in New York and Virginia have used state laws to arrest a
- handful of spammers, and large Internet service providers like Time Warner
- Inc.'s America Online and EarthLink Inc. have sued dozens more for damages.
-
- Microsoft Corp. and New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer are expected to
- announce another anti-spam action on Thursday.
-
- At the national level, the Federal Trade Commission has used
- deceptive-business laws to go after spammers, though settlements generally
- involve promises to avoid spamming in the future rather than fines or jail
- time.
-
- Large Internet service providers and marketing and technology trade groups
- praised the new law, though many said it would need to be coupled with
- better filtering methods.
-
- Forrester Research analyst Jim Nail said the law would have little effect
- as spammers would simply move offshore and come up with new ways to evade
- filters and cover their tracks. A better solution would be to force all
- e-mail users to pay a fraction of a penny for each message sent, as a way
- to discourage indiscriminate mass e-mailings, he said.
-
- Civil-liberties advocate Ari Schwartz said the bill would likely make it
- easier for Internet service providers and prosecutors to go after spammers,
- though it was not without flaws.
-
- Spammers who already violate existing fraud laws are unlikely to honor
- opt-out requests, and the anti-pornography provisions could prove difficult
- to enforce, said Schwartz, an associate director at the Washington-based
- Center for Democracy and Technology.
-
- And by preventing individual lawsuits, Congress shut the door on an
- effective way to harness consumer anti-spam sentiment, he said.
-
- "There shouldn't be extremely high expectations for this law," he said.
-
-
-
- Microsoft, New York State Sue E-Mail Spammers
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. and New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer on Thursday
- sued a group of e-mail marketers they said were responsible for sending
- billions of fraudulent spam messages.
-
- Microsoft, the world's largest software company, said the defendants in the
- civil lawsuits include New York marketing firm Synergy6 Inc. and Scott
- Richter, who runs Westminster, Colorado-based Optinrealbig.com LLC.
-
- Spitzer, known for his aggressive pursuit of corporate fraud in recent
- years, has previously brought three lawsuits against so-called spammers,
- those who send unsolicited commercial e-mails.
-
- The lawsuit, filed by Microsoft in King County Superior Court in Washington
- state and jointly with the New York attorney general in New York State
- Supreme Court in Manhattan, claims the spammers violated New York and
- Washington state laws by offering free goods in exchange for personal
- information, using false sender names, false subject lines, misleading
- sender e-mail addresses and falsified transmission information.
-
- "We believe Scott Richter is clearing several million dollars a month in
- profits," Spitzer told reporters at a news conference in New York, adding
- that the joint legal action was aimed at driving Richter and Synergy6 into
- bankruptcy.
-
- Spitzer said Richter was responsible for sending more than 250 million spam
- messages per day and profited handsomely from his business.
-
- Richter rejected the legal claims by the New York attorney general and
- Microsoft, but did not deny the profitability of his enterprise nor the
- volume of advertising messages.
-
- "We intend to fight it (the lawsuit) and it's not going to affect us,"
- Richter said. "It's going to take an army" of lawyers.
-
- The New York attorney general for the first time teamed up with the private
- sector to enhance its subpoena power with technology tools from
- Microsoft, Spitzer said.
-
- Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft, which has gone on the offensive
- against e-mail advertising touting everything from get-rich-quick schemes
- to pornographic Web sites, is developing anti-spam technology and waging
- legal warfare against spammers.
-
- The company, whose MSN Internet and Hotmail e-mail services have millions
- of subscribers around the world, has said spammers clog its networks with
- traffic and hurt consumers with e-mails that appeared to come from a
- foreign government's defense ministry, a hospital or elementary schools,
- among other purported senders.
-
- Microsoft said 2.4 billion, or 80 percent of the e-mails its users receive
- every day, are spam. Research firm IDC estimates 7.3 billion junk e-mails
- are sent daily.
-
- Spam will cost American companies more than $10 billion in 2003, according
- to consulting firm Ferris Research. Albert Decker, director of security and
- privacy services at computer consultant EDS Corp., said the cost savings
- from reducing spam will be in the billions, simply from the improvement in
- productivity and reduction of processing work.
-
- After investigating the messages, Microsoft was able to determine who sent
- them, Microsoft General Counsel Brad Smith said.
-
- "The finger is now pointing at them," he said. "There is no doubt in our
- minds that the lawsuits today are being filed against the right people."
-
- Microsoft has admitted that legal action alone won't stem the flood of spam
- piling up in inboxes every day.
-
- Microsoft said it filed five additional lawsuits against other spammers
- who allegedly used the same transmission path in New York that originally
- led investigators to Richter and the spam network.
-
- Verizon Communications and Microsoft have previously brought suits against
- the world's largest spammers.
-
- "If these people have any money left ... we will be happy to pursue the
- remainder," Smith said. "We need to send a strong message that this is
- illegal and doesn't pay."
-
- Representatives from Synergy6 were not immediately available for comment.
-
- On Tuesday, President Bush signed into law the first national anti-spam
- bill, which bans some forms of junk e-mail and sets jail time and
- multimillion-dollar fines for violators.
-
- But experts say the new law is not likely to stop the torrent of
- unsolicited commercial e-mail, because it lets businesses send messages to
- anyone with an e-mail address as long as they identify themselves clearly
- and honor consumer requests to leave them alone.
-
- In addition, some are concerned that businesses may outsource the work to
- people outside the United States to escape penalties. Spitzer acknowledged
- any such move would make his work harder, but told Reuters he is confident
- the obstacles will be overcome, "no matter if it's someone pushing the
- button in India, Egypt or Alabama.
-
- "The fact that someone else pushes the button doesn't eliminate the
- liability of the person who is trying to make this a business," he added.
-
-
-
- Dutch Court Throws Out Attempt to Control Kazaa
-
-
- The Dutch supreme court on Friday threw out an attempt by a music copyright
- agency to put controls on popular Internet file-swapping software system
- Kazaa, a ruling the music industry attacked as flawed.
-
- The decision is a fresh blow to the media industry, which has fought to
- shut down file-sharing networks they say have created a massive
- black-market trade in free music, films and video games on the Internet.
-
- "The victory by Kazaa creates an important precedent for the legality of
- peer-to-peer software, both in the European Union as elsewhere," Kazaa's
- lawyers Bird & Bird said in a statement.
-
- The decision by the Dutch court, the highest European body yet to rule on
- file-sharing software, means that the developers of the software cannot be
- held liable for how individuals use it. It does not address issues over
- individuals' use of such networks.
-
- The International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), the music
- trade group representing independent and major music labels including
- Warner Music, Sony Music, BMG, EMI and Universal Music, criticized the
- ruling as "one-sided" and vowed to continue its legal crusade elsewhere.
-
- "Today's ruling on Kazaa by the Dutch Supreme Court is a flawed judgment,
- but still leaves no doubt that the vast majority of people who are using
- file-swapping services like Kazaa are acting illegally - whatever country
- they are in," the group said in a statement.
-
- The music industry in the United States, feeling the pinch of successive
- years of declining CD sales, has begun suing individual downloaders, many
- of whom are Kazaa users. The IFPI has said a similar legal campaign could
- be launched in Europe.
-
- The Supreme Court rejected demands by Buma Stemra, the Dutch royalties
- collection society, that distribution of Kazaa cease and that future
- versions be modified so that copyrighted materials cannot be exchanged over
- the network, lawyers representing Kazaa said.
-
- Kazaa and other new breed peer-to-peer networks have argued they have no
- centralised servers and therefore cannot control what is exchanged by their
- users, a defense the IFPI and other media organizations challenge.
-
- The IFPI maintained Kazaa could be modified to filter out copyrighted
- works. They also demanded the company warn Kazaa users that unauthorized
- distribution of such materials was illegal.
-
- The supreme court upheld a March 2002 ruling in which an appeals court
- ruled in favor of Fasttrack, the Amsterdam-based firm that developed Kazaa.
- Fasttrack later sold the technology to Sharman Networks Ltd of Australia.
-
- The media industry has launched a similar suit in the United States against
- Sharman, which many see as the crucial legal showdown for determining the
- legal future of file-sharing.
-
- Kazaa has become the undisputed king of file-sharing networks. In October,
- Kazaa registered over 17.5 million European and American users, according
- to Internet measurement firm Nielsen//NetRatings.
-
- In the Netherlands alone there are 3.6 million users.
-
- "This is a historic victory for the Internet and consumers," Niklas
- Zennstroem and Janus Friis, the founders of Kazaa, were quoted in the
- lawyer's statement as saying.
-
-
-
- Court: Net Music Subpoenas Not Allowed
-
-
- In a surprise setback for the beleaguered recording industry, a U.S.
- appeals court ruled that record labels cannot force Internet service
- providers to name customers who illegally copy music online.
-
- Existing copyright law does not allow record labels to force Internet
- providers to turn over customer names without a formal lawsuit, the court
- said, adding the industry's legal argument "borders upon the silly."
-
- The decision complicates the recording industry's efforts to stamp out the
- online traffic in copyrighted songs over "peer to peer" networks like
- Kazaa, a practice the industry says has contributed to plummeting CD sales.
-
- The Recording Industry Association of America has reached out-of-court
- settlements with at least 220 Internet users after tracking their activity
- online and forcing Internet providers to turn over their names.
-
- The trade group will continue to file lawsuits against those it suspects of
- copyright violations but will not be able to warn them beforehand, an RIAA
- official said in a statement.
-
- "Regardless of this decision, we will continue to defend our rights online
- on behalf of artists, songwriters and countless others involved in bringing
- music to the public," said RIAA President Cary Sherman.
-
- Verizon Communications challenged the practice last year, arguing that a
- 1998 copyright law does not require it to turn over customer names without
- a lawsuit.
-
- A lower court earlier this year upheld the recording industry's tactics,
- and the appeals court declined to halt the practice while it considered the
- case.
-
- But in a strongly worded ruling, the appeals court sided with Verizon,
- saying a 1998 law does not give copyright holders the ability to subpoena
- customer names from Internet providers without first filing a formal
- lawsuit.
-
- "In sum, we agree with Verizon that (the law) does not by its terms
- authorize the subpoenas issued here," Chief Judge Douglas Ginsburg wrote.
-
- The recording industry's "digital online fishing expedition" violates
- customer privacy and due-process rights, said Sarah Deutsch, a Verizon vice
- president and associate general counsel.
-
- "Verizon is definitely interested in working with all of the copyright
- community in finding ways to stop piracy, but we have to do it in a way
- that supports the balance between users' rights and the rights of the
- copyright holder," Deutsch said.
-
- The RIAA did not provide immediate comment.
-
- An independent copyright expert said the recording industry will have to
- meet a higher legal standard before filing lawsuits against users in the
- future - which could avoid further public-relations embarrassments such
- as the 12-year-old girl who was one of the first to be sued.
-
- "In some ways it's kind of a mixed blessing for the recording industry,
- because they're not going to end up having the grandma in Massachusetts
- who is accused of having Linkin Park and hip-hop music on her computer,"
- said Gigi Sohn, executive director of Public Knowledge, a Washington think
- tank.
-
- RIAA members include Vivendi's Universal Universal Music Group; Time Warner
- Inc.'s Warner Music; EMI Group Plc; Sony Corp's Sony Music; and Bertelsmann
- AG's BMG.
-
-
-
- Internet Sales Tax Effort on Hold for Now
-
-
- The debate over whether the Internet should remain a huge tax-free
- marketplace for U.S. shoppers probably will not be resolved in 2004,
- according to policymakers and experts who cited the upcoming presidential
- election as a political disincentive to action as well as stubborn
- resistance by some lawmakers and business interests to any effort to tax
- electronic commerce.
-
- That prospect would be a setback for a quiet but dogged effort led by state
- officials and some of their allies in the business community to get
- Congress to authorize state governments to collect taxes on their
- residents' Internet purchases.
-
- "I would be stunned if there was a vote on this in a presidential election
- year," said Bartlett Cleland, associate general counsel for the Information
- Technology Association of America, a high-tech lobbying group that has
- lobbied against the plan.
-
- The co-chairman of the states' working group on Internet sales taxes
- agreed. "I don't think anyone doubts this is going to be a tough sell in
- Congress during an election year," said Diane Hardt of the Streamlined
- Sales Tax Project.
-
- Nevertheless, Hardt's group is working overtime to persuade more retailers
- to voluntarily collect taxes from their customers in every state that has
- a sales tax.
-
- "There are huge financial incentives for the states to get this done, and
- the states would like to get this money as soon as possible," she said.
-
- Some state legislatures have already voted to modify their sales tax codes
- to accommodate the plan, but the endgame almost certainly will play out in
- the halls of Congress. Reps. Ernest Istook (R-Okla.) and William Delahunt
- (D-Mass.) introduced a bill earlier this year that would give the
- congressional go-ahead to the sales tax plan, but that proposal will die
- if it does not get a vote before the end of 2004.
-
- The stakes - by some estimates - are high. An oft-cited 2001 study by two
- professors at the University of Tennessee said that the amount of
- uncollected taxes on e-commerce will grow to $45 billion by 2006.
-
- States have long argued that it is unfair that they can't tax all Internet
- commerce, especially when sales taxes are a principal way to ensure that
- business activities support vital local services like education and
- transportation services.
-
- Collecting taxes on online retail transactions is equally appealing to the
- so-called "bricks-and-mortar" business community, which sees the Internet's
- tax-free status as a powerful force discouraging shoppers from heading out
- to physical stores. Even online retailers like Wal-Mart, Target and
- Amazon.com, which initially balked at the idea, have started to support it
- this year. Wal-Mart and Target, which maintain both physical and online
- stores, are particularly anxious to eliminate any state claims on
- previously unpaid taxes on online sales.
-
- On the other side of the debate are groups like the ITAA and the
- Microsoft-funded Association for Competitive Technology, which oppose the
- plan as currently written. These groups say they support simpler state
- taxes but don't want to see the Internet economy sucked dry by
- over-taxation.
-
- Rep. Istook remains optimistic that his bill will pass, said spokeswoman
- Micah Swafford. She noted a 2001 vote in which the House of Representatives
- voted by a 2-1 margin in favor of a nonbinding resolution supporting the
- online sales tax plan.
-
- But given the strong anti-tax sentiment among the House Republican
- leadership, some proponents of the plan are looking to the Senate for a
- better reception, said Maureen Riehl, vice president of state and industry
- relations for the National Retail Federation.
-
- "There's just not as much of an anti-tax crowd in the Senate. They don't
- see this issue like many House Republicans do. The senators seem to
- understand that what we're talking about here is collection, not a new
- tax," Riehl said.
-
- Even though the House leadership under Majority Leader Tom DeLay (R-Texas)
- is opposed to the plan, many of its ardent supporters are Republicans who
- have practically built their careers as anti-tax hawks. Istook, the lead
- sponsor of the House bill, is well known for being tough on taxes, as is
- Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.), sponsor of a similar bill in the Senate. Other
- conservative Republicans backing the state effort include Reps. Ray LaHood
- (Ill.) and Spencer Bachus (Ala.), and Sens. Chuck Hagel (Neb.) and Kay
- Bailey Hutchison (Texas).
-
- For these lawmakers, online sales taxes are a matter best left to the
- states.
-
- "Some of those are very staunch states'-righters," said Richard Prem,
- director of global Internet taxation for Amazon.com. "When people look at
- these issues, they realize that there's a more fundamental issue than just
- taxes on the line here."
-
- Two of the senators currently supporting the states on issues of taxing
- Internet access and sales - George Voinovich (R-Ohio) and Lamar Alexander
- (R-Tenn.) - are former governors and remember the difficulties they faced
- in handling tight state budgets, Prem noted.
-
- Some lawmakers are sympathetic to the complaints of large, established
- retailers in the offline world that say it is unfair for their online
- counterparts to get a tax break, said Gary Gudmundson, spokesman for the
- Ohio Department of Taxation. "Traditional retailers provide jobs, they pay
- taxes ... How can you ignore them? Not to mention that they're much bigger
- players financially."
-
- At this time, 45 states require citizens to pay sales taxes on their
- purchases, even if they're made online or in another state. Few online
- businesses collect those taxes because there's no way for other states to
- force them to hand over the money. That stems from a 1992 Supreme Court
- decision that says businesses can't be forced to collect taxes for a
- different state than the one they're located in. In that ruling, the court
- said Congress can authorize the collection of Internet and catalogue sales
- taxes across state lines, but only if the states simplify their tax systems
- first.
-
- To do that, the Streamlined Sales Tax Coalition must develop a system for
- the states to get their dues while making sure that smaller online
- businesses are not swamped by having to comply with thousands of different
- tax jurisdictions.
-
- If some technology lobbyists have their way, the Internet sales tax effort
- will fade away.
-
- NetChoice, a lobbying group that represents online auction giant eBay and
- travel Web site Orbitz, said that the plan's supporters have not done
- enough to answer difficult questions about how it will work, including how
- to certify tax software vendors, educating online merchants and how the
- states will exchange revenue.
-
- The Direct Marketing Association (DMA), meanwhile, said in a June study
- that the amount of money states could get from Internet sales taxes might
- be far less than they claim - just $3.2 billion by 2006.
-
- The states might win more support from the business community if they cut
- a range of other corporate income and franchise taxes, said Stephen Kranz,
- tax counsel for the Council on State Taxation.
-
- "That could very well be the play that earns the states the momentum they
- need to get their tax plan approved," Kranz said.
-
- Neil Osten, director of telecommunications and commerce at the National
- Conference of State Legislatures, said some states fear that additional
- tax breaks could cancel out any increased tax revenues collected on
- Internet sales.
-
- Riehl of the National Retail Federation said that one possibility under
- consideration is combining the sales tax plan with a proposal to limit how
- states charge business activity taxes.
-
- Business activity taxes include franchise taxes and business license taxes
- that usually affect only the companies that are established in the local
- area where the tax is applied. Some states have angered companies by
- seeking to expand the taxes to more kinds of corporate activity including
- sending salespeople or delivery trucks that cross state lines for even
- just a few minutes or hours.
-
- House lawmakers introduced legislation that would bar states and
- localities from levying businesses activity taxes against out-of-state
- companies unless the company has a store, shipping center or other property
- physically located in the taxing jurisdiction.
-
- Riehl said that the idea is a good one but has no guarantee of success.
-
- "We will know by the first of March whether this thing will get the
- traction it needs next year or not."
-
-
-
- Linux 2.6 Arrives
-
-
- Linus Torvalds released the long-awaited Linux 2.6 on Wednesday night,
- although it won't be adopted by major Linux distributors any time soon.
-
- The release, which Torvalds announced to the Linux-kernel mailing list,
- comes almost three years after the last Linux release, 2.4, in January
- 2001. (Late beta versions of the 2.6 kernel have been available since
- July.) The source code is now available at The Linux Kernel Archive.
-
- In his announcement note, Torvalds wrote, "This should not be a big
- surprise to anybody - since we've been building up to it for a long time
- now, and for the last few weeks I haven't accepted any patches except for
- what amounts to fairly obvious one-liners."
-
- Linux 2.6 isn't flawless. "Some known issues were not considered to be
- release-critical, and a number of them have pending fixes," Torvalds said.
- "Generally, they just didn't have the kind of verification yet where I was
- willing to take them in order to make sure a fair 2.6.0 release."
-
- Torvalds will continue to track the Linux 2.6 tree, but now that Linux 2.6
- is a stable release, he will begin to turn his attention to the next
- version of Linux, 2.7, and Andrew Morton will take over as the maintainer
- of Linux 2.6.
-
- Commercial releases of the 2.6 kernel by major Linux distributors still
- remain months away. Red Hat Inc. won't be adding 2.6 until the Red Hat
- Enterprise Linux 4 product line comes out in 2005. SuSE Linux AG will
- include 2.6 sooner with its summer 2004 release of SuSE Linux Enterprise
- Server 9.
-
- This new version of Linux brings several improvements for enterprise users.
- It now supports up to 32 processors, 64GB of memory with 32-bit processors,
- and new file systems such as IBM's Journaling File System (JFS) and Silicon
- Graphics Inc.'s XFS. Version 2.6 also supports Non-Uniform Memory Access
- (NUMA), which will aid it on advanced multiprocessing systems.
-
- Linux 2.6 also includes fundamental improvements in how it deals with
- devices, which should make it easier for OEMs to deploy Linux on their
- computers. In addition, this Linux has improvements to almost every element
- of the operating system, from system processing to networking to expanded
- support for embedded devices. For more technical details on Linux 2.6's
- changes, see IBM's "Towards Linux 2.6" white paper and Joseph Pranevich's
- "The Wonderful World of Linux 2.6."
-
-
-
- Cayam Worm Angles For eBay Account Info
-
-
- Another phishing expedition appeared on the Internet Thursday, this one
- dubbed W32/Cayam and targeting eBay users.
-
- Cayam, which poses as a message from eBay with a subject heading reading
- 'Verify your eBay account information,' actually contains a worm in its
- attached file. When that attachment is opened, the worm displays several
- legitimate-looking screens that ask the user to enter his eBay user ID and
- password, then complete a seemingly official form.
-
- The form request a whole host of personal and financial information,
- including the user's Social Security number, credit card information, and
- bank checking account number.
-
- The worm propagates by lifting addresses out of the target PC's copy of
- Microsoft Outlook and e-mailing copies of itself to others, and can also
- spread via the peer-to-peer Kazaa and eMule networks.
-
- Phishing, a term used to describe malicious e-mail that pose as legitimate
- messages from major corporations - usually with the intent to trick the
- recipient into disclosing personal or financial information - have been
- more aggressive this year than ever before, according to mail filtering
- firm Postini, which tagged an increase in the potentially lucrative
- practice as one of its top ten predictions for 2004.
-
- Earlier this month, the Mimail series created a stir by trying to fool
- users into giving up account information for eBay's electronic payment
- service, PayPal.
-
-
-
- Spam Slayer: 2003 Spam Awards
-
-
- Seven billion commercial e-mail messages crossed the Internet daily in
- 2003, easily breaking all previous spam records. And despite new laws, and
- ISP suits against spammers, the amount of junk e-mail transmitted daily is
- forecast to hit 9 billion in 2004, according to antispam software maker
- Brightmail. Today about half of all e-mail is spam, the firm reports.
-
- For those of you keeping score in the spam wars, let's take a look back at
- the spam-busting year of 2003 and hand out a few Spam Slayer awards.
-
- Worst Worm
-
- The Sobig e-mail worm that clogged in-boxes in August was the most prolific
- virus of 2003, according to a top ten list of viruses published by
- antivirus software vendor Sophos. The UK-based firm says the Sobig worm
- accounted for almost 20 percent of the virus reports it got this year.
- Coming in second was the Blaster worm, with 15 percent.
-
- Fastest Worm
-
- Sobig was not only the most prolific, but spam-busting firm Postini says
- it was also the most nimble worm of 2003. On one dark day, Postini tracked
- the Sobig worm as infecting 4.5 percent of all e-mail that the service had
- filtered. That was a 2000 percent up-tick from Postini's routine e-mail
- infection rate of 0.3 percent.
-
- Most Common Pitches
-
- The junk e-mail equivalent to death and taxes are pitches for
- pharmaceutical supplements, male body part enlargement, Viagra, sexually
- explicit porn, scams, and mortgages. According to Postini these categories
- are the most common spam subjects.
-
- Most Annoying Spam
-
- Perhaps it's a no-brainer, but for posterity, the winners are: spam related
- to pharmaceutical supplements, male body part enlargement, Viagra, sexually
- explicit porn, scams, and mortgages.
-
- Energizer Bunny Award
-
- The 2003 spam message that most resembles the energetic rabbit was an Iraqi
- variation of the familiar Nigerian Scam 419. That e-mail hoax, which has
- been making the rounds for years, involves an alleged plea for assistance
- getting cash out of a country under siege - for a generous cut.
-
- In the updated version, Eng Farouk Al-Bashar, allegedly the oldest son of
- an oil-rich Iraqi family, pleads for help. The e-mail asks for assistance
- in transporting $12.5 million in cash from a Baghdad vault. For your
- trouble you get 10 percent, or a negotiated amount. Yeah, right!
-
- Best Spam Scam Newcomer
-
- The Mimail e-mail worm easily wins this title. Mimail variants infect PCs
- with a payload containing instructions to launch distributed denial of
- service attacks against a number of antispam and e-commerce Web sites.
-
- Antispam firms say this devilishly ingenious way to thwart their efforts
- will likely grow in 2004.
-
- Biggest Defeat
-
- Three leading antispam sites that hosted spammer blacklists were shut down
- in August after becoming victims of distributed denial of service attacks.
- It's believed spammers launched the attacks using the Sobig worm.
-
- The targeted sites were Osirusoft, Spam Prevention Early Warning System,
- and the Spam Open Relay and Blocking System. All were intermittently
- inaccessible; and, according to some online discussion forums, Osirusoft
- has shut down permanently.
-
- Spamiest Day
-
- February 15 was the busiest day of 2003 for spam, according to
- spam-filterer Postini. That day, 82.4 percent of all the e-mail it filtered
- for its customers was spam, Postini representatives say. Overall, however,
- October was the spamiest month, the company reports.
-
- Lawyers to Love
-
- In August, EarthLink filed lawsuits against two unsolicited commercial
- e-mail rings with operations in the United States and Canada, accusing them
- of sending spam that has cost the ISP millions. The ISP wants to recover an
- estimated $5 million in lost employee productivity and Internet bandwidth.
- That was the cost of managing more than 250 million e-mail messages sent
- from e-mail addresses on its network, according to EarthLink.
-
- Shortest-Lived Spam Law
-
- California took a stand against spam e-mail in September, approving some
- of the toughest antispam legislation in the nation. The new law would
- prohibit anyone from sending unsolicited commercial e-mail advertisements
- to a California e-mail address.
-
- The new law is to take effect in January. Meanwhile, Congress has taken a
- stand that supplants California's measure. The federal Controlling the
- Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing (CAN-SPAM) Act was
- approved in December. It is expected to get President George W. Bush's
- signature any day now, and will take effect in the summer.
-
- The federal legislation requires unsolicited e-mail messages to include a
- mechanism that allows recipients to indicate they do not want future
- mailings. It also orders the Federal Trade Commission to offer within six
- months a plan to establish a national do-not-spam list, similar to the
- national do-not-call telemarketing list now in effect.
-
- What Took You So Long?
-
- The FTC aired concerns in November over exploitation of a Microsoft Windows
- service. The Windows Messenger Service is intended for network
- administrators to send notices to users, but it's being usurped by third
- parties to send pop-up spam.
-
- In October, Microsoft said it will disable the Messenger Service on
- Windows XP machines with the release of Windows XP Service Pack 2, expected
- to ship in the first half of 2004.
-
- Crowning the Spam King
-
- Scott Richter is the Internet's poster boy for spam. Richter is chief
- executive of OptInRealBig.com, an $18-million-a-year business that sends
- out zillions of e-mail messages every day hawking adult porn, Viagra, and
- mortgages.
-
- Richter says he sends out 80 million e-mail advertisements daily. He
- endorses curbing spam and creating an industry code of ethics. He is
- president of the E-Mail Marketing Association, a group that says it wants
- to work with the FTC to help stop spam and build consumer trust. According
- to the EMA Web site, the code of ethics has been "coming soon" since I
- first checked in September.
-
- People's Choice: Best Free Spam Filter
-
- You spoke and I heard you. I've gotten many glowing reviews of the spam
- filter SpamBayes. Indeed, I like it too - and you can't beat the price.
-
- What makes the program unique is that SpamBayes doesn't use predetermined
- spam definitions. Rather, it constantly evolves by scanning your in-box to
- build custom definitions.
-
-
-
- Charity Begins Online with Internet 'Givelist'
-
-
- Do you really need another sweater?
-
- If the answer is no, but if people keep asking what you want for the
- holidays, you might consider a Web site meant to meld charity and online
- shopping.
-
- The U.S.-based site, www.whatgoesaround.org, offers a vast smorgasbord of
- 900,000 non-profit groups, but it is not just a clearinghouse. It's a place
- where users - so far it is targeting Americans - can register their charity
- preferences.
-
- So when your grandmother wonders what you might like for the holidays, you
- won't have to settle for another sweater - you can point her to the Web
- site and your personal "givelist" of preferred charities.
-
- And if you can't decide what to give Grandma but she hasn't figured out how
- to use the site, you can donate to a non-profit group you choose in her
- honor.
-
- Whatgoesaround.org, named in a nod to the expression "What goes around,
- comes around," is the brainchild of marketing expert Sylvia Stein and
- composer-lyricist Holly Gewandter.
-
- Billing itself as "a new non-profit organization that's revolutionizing
- giving in America," the site went live on Nov. 12, and by Wednesday had
- channeled more than $16,000 to U.S.-based non-profit organizations and the
- U.S. arms of such international organizations as Amnesty International and
- Doctors Without Borders (news - web sites).
-
- More than 1,800 Americans have registered on the site.
-
- "A lot of gift-giving is forced, I call it gift fatigue," Stein said by
- telephone from New York. "This is for the 50-year-old who doesn't want to
- write 50 thank you notes for 50 gag gifts about turning 50."
-
- The site aims to remove some of the rampant materialism from giving, not
- just at the holidays, but at other occasions where presents of money are
- customary, such as weddings, bar mitzvahs and memorials for the dead.
-
- It's not supposed to feel like a traditional charitable donation, Gewandter
- said in a telephone interview. It's supposed to feel more like shopping.
-
- "Culturally, Americans have developed this incredible culture of shopping,
- it's become entertainment, it's become a major activity, a favorite
- pastime, but we're all drowning in stuff," she said. "People want to do
- good but it's a very complicated mix, and we started thinking, what if we
- could create this site as a shopping site, not as a charity site."
-
- Those who want to use the site must register personal information,
- including an e-mail address, and then select charities from the site's
- list, either by issue, name or locality.
-
- Children have their own section on the site, and in addition to listing
- favorite charities, kids can ask for donations to a "changejar" for later
- giving.
-
- Stein said e-mail has been overwhelmingly positive, and provided one
- missive that summed up the site's appeal to "everyday philanthropists."
-
- "I talked it over with my fiance... and we came up with a plan," the e-mail
- read. "We'll both set up gift lists and donate to each other for Christmas.
- That way, when people ask us what we got each other, we can tell them about
- the site and they might use it in the future. A while ago, we agreed to
- exchange nothing but stockings filled with small items, since we both have
- way too much stuff."
-
- Gewandter said she hoped for a side benefit from the site: a reduction in
- direct-mail charity donation requests.
-
-
-
- N.Y. Uses EBay to Sell Surplus Property
-
-
- New York state has been quietly selling surplus items for more than a year
- through the highly successful online auction house eBay, officials said
- Tuesday.
-
- "You would be amazed at what people will buy. It's been great," said
- Jennifer Meicht, a spokeswoman for New York state's Office of General
- Services.
-
- Using the seller name "nyssurplus-albany," the state OGS is currently
- peddling a host of items including eight new Goodyear tires and a bunch of
- storage lockers.
-
- "We started as an experiment, selling some surplus property and, based on
- our initial success, we've been slowly adding more items," Meicht told the
- New York Post, which first reported on the eBay sales in its Tuesday
- editions.
-
- OGS sales on eBay have already earned the state almost $300,000 on hundreds
- of items, she said.
-
- Chris Donlay, a spokesman for eBay, said New York is one of at least 14
- states that are making use of the online auction service to sell surplus
- property, unclaimed assets and the like.
-
- "The U.S. Post Office also sells undeliverable items" on eBay, Donlay said.
-
- In addition to New York, Donlay said other states using eBay services
- include California, Colorado, Georgia, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts,
- North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and Washington.
-
- The eBay spokesman said about 86 million buyers and sellers use the service
- worldwide.
-
- "It's possible to get some great bargains now during the holiday season,"
- said the OGS's Meicht.
-
- As of late Tuesday morning, the lot of eight Goodyear Eagle RS-A tires,
- size P225/70R15, had been bid up to $511. The auction on the tires was to
- end Wednesday morning.
-
- According to eBay buyers, dealing with New York's OGS is generally a good
- experience. The state has a positive feedback rating of 98.8 percent. OGS
- registered as a seller with eBay in January of last year, according to the
- state's eBay listing, but Meicht said OGS' selling didn't begin until
- October of last year.
-
- The OGS spokeswoman said the Internet selling saves the state
- administrative costs over its live auctions and "has opened up a larger
- market for us."
-
- "We're getting rid of things that in the past we have had to simply throw
- away ... (and) we're getting great prices," Meicht said.
-
- The OGS spokeswoman said eBay buyers have bought everything from a cotton
- candy machine to cobblestones from the state.
-
- Meicht said most of the items sold by the state have been office equipment.
- She said a real surprise was that OGS is now getting up to $100 each for
- used gray metal desks that it used to have to junk.
-
- "We even sold an old canoe," she added. "It came without paddles."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- at the beginning of any article, to Atari user groups and not for
- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
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- the expressed consent or permission from the Publisher or Editor of
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-
- Opinions presented herein are those of the individual authors and do
- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-