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- Volume 6, Issue 51 Atari Online News, Etc. December 17, 2004
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2004
- 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:
-
-
-
-
- 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 #0651 12/17/04
-
- ~ Microsoft Gets Spyware ~ People Are Talking! ~ Panther Gets Update!
- ~ Users Still Snookered! ~ Apple Sues Over Leaks! ~ Christmas Viruses!
- ~ Getting Oddball Gifts! ~ Selling the Queen's Pud ~ PSP Japan Debut!
- ~ Video Game Ban Attempt ~ Maryland Spam Law Out! ~ Google Beats GEICO!
-
- -* Copyrighting Software Suit! *-
- -* Oracle Finally Inks PeopleSoft Deal *-
- -* Congress Fails To Act On Copyright Bills! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, winter is a matter of days away, and it has felt like it lately. No
- snow on the ground; I won't complain, but I think Christmas traditionalists
- might not like it. After thinking about my plans the past few weeks to head
- down Atari memory lane, I'm reminded of a number of holiday seasons in which
- something Atari made it "under the tree". Some new software that I had
- talked about, a subscription to one of the various Atari magazines that were
- on the dealers' shelves, that second double-sided floppy disk drive, a new
- 2400 baud modem....I remember those days with fondness.
-
- I haven't had much opportunity yet to rummage through our archives to bring
- back some of the stories from yesteryear. But I have been thinking about
- some of the good memories from the gold old Atari days. I still remember
- driving eight hours from Boston to Reston, Virginia for the WAACE shows.
- Driving all night to make it to the Fest when it began was an experience.
- Seeing all of the developers that we heard about and talked with online, and
- finally getting that new version of a terrific program, or finding that new
- piece of software that we read or heard about. Some of the dealers that we
- knew about, but due to distance, never able to enjoy. The user groups, the
- various people that we knew online, but finally managed to meet in person.
- And some of the people from Atari itself! Those weekend shows never seemed
- to go by slowly! Driving home afterward, I was looking forward to the next
- year's show!
-
- Probably after the first of the year, I'll pull together some of the reports
- that were published about WAACE, or Boston, or the Connecticut shows. I
- still remember the unveiling of the Falcon at the Boston Computer Society
- meeting, over 10 years ago already. Wow, it's been that long already!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I gotta tell ya, I'm one hurtin' pup at
- the moment. You may (or you may not) remember my mentioning that I've
- got a herniated disc, arthritis and bone spurs in my neck. Well, the
- little cold snap that Mother Nature has thrown at us here in the
- northeast is causing me some discomfort.
-
- There was a study done last year that said there was no evidence that
- people with joint disorders could forecast weather changes... or
- something to that effect. I'm hear to tell ya that that's crap! If the
- weather here makes a drastic change, I'll know about it... usually with
- only a 15 or 20 minute warning window, but definitely BEFORE the actual
- change. And right now, there's a change on the way!
-
- Well, given the average age of Atari community members, there's an
- even-money chance that you're in the same boat that I am. So I'm not
- going to press the point... you probably know what I'm talking about.
-
- The holidays are rushing toward us, and this might well be the last issue
- you have a chance to read before Christmas. So I'd like to take this
- opportunity to wish you a happy, holy and safe holiday. And please be
- careful out on the road too. I'm fond of saying that there are enough
- morons out there on the road without adding yourself to the mix. Don't
- drink and drive.... the life you save may be MINE! <grin>
-
- Okay, let's get to the news, hints, tips and info from the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- While answering a question about Linux on Atari computers, Edward Baiz
- posts:
-
- "I have Mint on my Hades and had Linux on it also. Actually, Linux was
- easier to install, but I think EASYmint has been upgraded to a point
- which may make it easier. Yes there are a lot of packages for Mint, but
- I am staying away from it until there is a way to back up the Mint
- partitions to a CD. I hear the Extendos people are working on this. I
- have backed up my Mint partitions to a CD, but I had to use GZIP to do
- it.
-
- Running Linux on an Atari is possible. I had it running just great on my
- Hades060 until I decided to upgrade my motherboard. After that I could
- not get it work at all. Too bad I really liked it. I am thinking about
- give it another try and seeing if maybe the installation files have been
- upgraded. It should most definitely run on a TT. It takes awhile to
- install, but after it is all loaded you will see that it was worth the
- wait."
-
-
- No, there's no real dialogue.... it's a monologue. But I like Linux a lot
- and MiNT is of the same general flavor as Linux... I'm talking 'broad
- strokes' here, not carbon copy or functional equivalent. But anytime I
- hear someone speaking well of Linux, I just have to point it out to
- everyone who'll listen.
-
- Next up, 'Chris' asks about an odd hard drive problem:
-
- "I've just swapped my 540MB drive for a 1.5GB one, formatted fine,
- partitioned fine, but when I go to install HDdriver to the C: drive ,
- nothing comes up in the list ? Normally I get a list of partitions I can
- install to but on this drive nothing comes up at all ?? I my 540MB
- drive works fine, and even SCSI drives are fine, just have problems with
- this 1 drive, I can't imagine why it would partition and format and not
- come up in the drives list! I can't do a thing from the desktop either,
- will have another go tomorrow but tried a few times now, also when I
- click on "auto configure" it can't find HDDRIVER.SYS I think it was,
- will have another go but its looking very odd to me since my other
- drives work fine."
-
-
- Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, tells Chris:
-
- "Check your cables and termination. This sound exactly like a problem
- caused by wrong termination."
-
- Chris tells Uwe:
-
- "It's an IDE drive."
-
-
- Uwe replies:
-
- "Did you ensure that the partition size is less than 1 GByte? Plain TOS
- does not support partitions > 1 GByte."
-
-
- Chris tells Uwe:
-
- "Yeah, its split into a few drives of about 200MB each."
-
-
- Uwe tells Chris:
-
- "This is strange. If I understood you correctly you could partition the
- drive even though the ID test does not find it (anymore)?
- Is this an old IDE drive? Note that some old drive must not be
- formatted."
-
-
- Chris tells Uwe:
-
- "I just tried it again...
-
- when booting HD8 reports partitions C D E F G H, I can get the drive
- letters up on the desktop with "install devices" but when I click on
- them, nothing happens..
-
- I've just gone back into HD8, can format, partition, but when I go to
- install HD8 onto a partition, same problem, no partitions listed."
-
-
- Uwe tells Chris:
-
- "Are you sure that you created TOS compatible partitions, and not Windows
- compatible ones? Please remember also to check with the current demo
- version."
-
-
- Chris explains:
-
- "I have tried all combinations, each has same problem, There's not much I
- can alter in the demo version but that also has the same problem.
-
- The drive works fine on my PC, its been on my desk for a great deal of
- time since the last time I tried I couldn't get the drive to work either
- then. I thought it would be a good time to try again with update
- versions, and since my falcon is in bits due to fitting CT60 I thought
- id try to fit the drive again."
-
-
- Sam F. tells Chris:
-
- "Try ahdi v6....I had to go with that first, then hddriver was a happy
- camper. Don't know why, but it worked and I'm happy."
-
-
- Henrik GildבÑ posts this about EtherNat cards:
-
- "Just wanted to say that we placed the order for manufacturing of the
- EtherNat prototypes last week. The prototype boards should arrive
- on Friday this week. It'll be a weekend full of soldering...
-
- February (or early March) sounds reasonable for the prototypes to be
- finished and tested so that you can place your orders. So keep your
- cash ready."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. I know it's short, but we've got
- this weather front moving in and... well, you know what I'm talking
- about.
-
- 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 - PSP Debuts In Japan!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Atari Classics for DS!
- Another Game Ban Try!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony PSP Draws Crowds and Lines on First Day
-
-
- Game fans stood in lines through a chilly Tokyo night to be among the first
- in the world to get their hands on Sony Corp.'s PlayStation Portable, the
- consumer electronics firm's first handheld game machine.
-
- About 200,000 of the sleek black devices, able to play movies, music and
- games, went on sale early Sunday morning as part of a drive by Sony to
- loosen rival Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s iron grip on the market for handheld game
- machines.
-
- The PlayStation Portable (PSP), at a discounted launch price of 19,800 yen
- ($189), went on sale 10 days after the successful launch of Nintendo DS, a
- game machine the size of a paperback book with a wireless connection and
- two screens, one of which is touch-sensitive and works with a pen-like
- device.
-
- Analysts say both will sell well this holiday season, bringing the biggest
- buzz to the sector since Sony launched its PlayStation 2 (PS2) game console
- in 2000, although Nintendo's much greater production capacity will give it
- an initial edge in sales.
-
- Excitement over PlayStation Portable, with high-quality graphics normally
- only seen on a full game console, has been building for months with the
- Japanese press eagerly comparing it with the rival Nintendo DS, made by the
- company that brought the world games featuring characters Pokemon, Mario
- and Donkey Kong.
-
- "With the DS you can only play games, but with the PSP you can also play
- music and movies. There's added value there," said Asuka Senaga, a 24-year
- old in the line outside an electronics retailer at 11 p.m. (9 a.m. EST) on
- Saturday.
-
- Equipped with a wireless LAN feature, the Sony machine allows users to play
- games with each other over the Internet.
-
- Ahead of Sunday's launch, fans bought 500 PSPs for about 30 million yen
- ($286,000) in an online auction on Nov. 25 for victims of an earthquake in
- northern Japan in October - paying a premium of up to 13 times the proposed
- retail price to get ahead of the pack.
-
- Nintendo's defense of its strangle-hold on portable game machines has
- included an advertising blitz featuring pop singer Hikaru Utada. It set up
- sidewalk booths to capture the attention of passers-by as it also pushes
- to attract customers beyond its base of young game fans for the new
- machines, which cost 15,000 yen ($143).
-
- Retailers face likely shortages of both machines but Nintendo is likely to
- win the bulk of initial sales as it is able to ship more than five times
- as many units as Sony.
-
- Nintendo launched DS in the United States on Nov. 21 and in Japan on Dec.
- 2, in time for the holiday spending rush, and has raised its forecast of
- shipments this year by 40 percent to 2.8 million units.
-
- Sony has said it will ship just 500,000 units in Japan by the end of the
- year and it will miss the holiday season in the United States and Europe,
- where a launch is expected early next year.
-
- Some American gamers are not willing to wait. Last week a Play Station
- Portable with one game was bid at $560 on eBay's auction Web site - the
- price rising even though it was a Japanese-language version and the seller
- did not yet have it in hand.
-
- Analysts have said the DS and PSP will capture different markets, with
- Nintendo keeping its grip on game fans and Sony reaching out to new
- consumers.
-
- "The PSP is trying to create a completely new market beyond traditional
- games. I'm rooting for them, but it will be difficult," said Hirokazu
- Hamamura, president of game magazine publisher Enterbrain.
-
- Nintendo would hang on to its 58.1 million users of its existing Game Boy
- Advance machines, who can play their old games on the new Nintendo
- machine, he said.
-
- Sony has said it plans to ship 3 million PSP units worldwide by March 31
- while Nintendo expects to ship 5 million units.
-
- Industry watchers generally expect the two companies to hit those targets,
- but say the availability of attractive software will play a key role in
- determining who wins the sales war.
-
-
-
- Atari Announces Retro Atari Classics for Nintendo DS
-
-
- Atari will revisit the roots of modern video games with a contemporary spin
- with its upcoming Retro Atari Classics for the Nintendo DS. The game,
- expected to be available in March 2005, will reinvent 10 classic Atari
- titles with fresh graphics provided by world renowned graffiti artists. The
- game will also take advantage of all Nintendo DS innovations, including
- dual screen gameplay, touch screen controls and wireless play.
-
- "Some of gamers' favorite classics are getting tagged for the 21st century
- by some of the most talented graffiti artists in the world," said Wim
- Stocks, Executive Vice President, Sales and Marketing, Atari. "With its
- blend of old school addictive gameplay and new school artistry and
- technology, Retro Atari Classics is the must have game for all Nintendo DS
- gamers, young and old."
-
- Retro Atari Classics will feature 10 original Atari games, including Pong,
- Missile Command, Asteroids, Breakout, Centipede, Tempest, Warlords,
- Gravitar, Lunar Lander and Sprint. Each title will be playable in its
- original form as well as in the all new "Tagged" mode, featuring brand new
- looks from some of today's most popular graffiti artists, including REAS,
- Delta and Obey Giant.
-
- The game will take advantage of all the technical innovations the Nintendo
- DS brings to gaming including touch screen functionality for tighter game
- controls, up-to-four player wireless multiplayer, dual screen gameplay for
- larger game environments and the ability to play head-to-head against
- another player on the same Nintendo DS in classic arcade fashion.
-
- Developed by Los Angeles-based Taniko, Retro Atari Classics is expected to
- be available in March 2005 for the Nintendo DS.
-
-
-
- New Grand Theft Auto Video Game Heads to Xbox
-
-
- Video game hit "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas" is coming to the Xbox and
- personal computer platforms next June, publisher Take-Two Interactive
- Software Inc. said on Thursday.
-
- San Andreas, initially released for Sony Corp's PlayStation 2 console in
- October, is estimated to have sold more than 5 million units.
-
- It will be released for Microsoft Corp's Xbox platform and PCs on June 7,
- 2005, in North America and June 10 in Europe.
-
-
-
- Governor Seeks Ban on Violent Video Games
-
-
- Gov. Rod Blagojevich is proposing to make it a misdemeanor for businesses
- to sell violent and sexually explicit video games to minors, a step that
- other states have tried with little success.
-
- Blagojevich's proposed legislation would prohibit the distribution, sale,
- rental and availability of mature video games to children younger than 18.
-
- "We're talking about violent games that use realistic depiction of
- human-on-human violence, video games that include dismemberment and
- disfigurement, video games where the kids control the process,"
- Blagojevich said Thursday.
-
- Current Illinois law does not prohibit selling or renting video games to
- children, regardless of how violent or sexually explicit the games may be.
- Retailers are not supposed to sell them to people under 17 but have been
- blamed for lax enforcement.
-
- "If you're 18 or older and you're a grown-up and an adult, that's your
- business," the governor said. "But I don't believe that my 8-year-old
- daughter has a constitutional right to cut somebody's head off in a game
- that she plays."
-
- Under the governor's plan, the proposed fine for violating the bans would
- be a Class A misdemeanor, punishable by up to one year in prison or a
- $5,000 fine.
-
- The proposed legislation also would require retailers to label violent or
- sexually explicit video games. Video games now are rated with general
- labels such as "M" for "mature."
-
- The Illinois Retail Merchants Association blasted the governor's proposal
- as a way for retailers to become "the violence and sensitivity police for
- the state of Illinois."
-
- "This is not just about video games. This is about the government asking
- their taxpaying, tax-generating and employing companies to do what parents
- should be doing. It's wrong," said David Vite, president and chief
- executive officer of the association, which represents about 23,000 stores
- statewide.
-
- Other states have tried similar bans with little success.
-
- A federal judge in July struck down Washington state's ban on selling some
- violent video games to minors, calling it a violation of free speech
- because it banned violence against police officers but not other depictions
- of violence, and too broad because it was unclear what games would fall
- under the ban.
-
- Last year, a federal appeals court struck down a St. Louis County, Mo.,
- ordinance that required children under 17 to have parental consent before
- they could buy violent or sexually explicit video games or play similar
- arcade games. A similar ordinance in Indianapolis was struck down by a
- federal appeals court in Chicago.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Oracle Inks $10 Billion Deal for PeopleSoft
-
-
- The deal is done, finally, with Oracle Monday signing a definitive merger
- agreement to acquire PeopleSoft for US$26.50 per share, or some $10.3
- billion. The transaction has been approved by the boards of directors of
- both companies and should close by early January.
-
- Oracle is amending its current tender offer for all outstanding shares of
- PeopleSoft, set to expire on December 28th. As of the close of business on
- Friday, about 120,600,093 shares had been tendered in and not withdrawn
- from the offer, the company said.
-
- The agreement ends a protracted, 18-month hostile takeover attempt by
- Oracle and represents a concession by the company that last month made its
- "best and final" offer of $24 per share ($9.2 billion). Following that
- offer an estimated 60 percent of PeopleSoft's outstanding shares were
- tendered by stockholders.
-
- "This merger works because we will have more customers, which increases our
- ability to invest more in applications development and support," says CEO
- Larry Ellison in a statement. The company will focus on developing upgrades
- of PeopleSoft's flagship software as well as its JD Edwards product, he
- adds.
-
- George "Skip" Battle, chair of PeopleSoft's transaction dommittee, says in
- a statement: "After careful consideration, we believe this revised offer
- provides good value for PeopleSoft stockholders and represents a
- substantial increase in value from October. This has been a long, emotional
- struggle, and our employees have consistently performed well under the most
- challenging of circumstances."
-
- This outcome was expected, say analysts, and Oracle now faces the challenge
- of recouping its huge investment. "They have to articulate their roadmap,
- moving the PeopleSoft products forward to retain that customer base,"
- Yankee Group program manager Sheryl Kingstone told NewsFactor.
-
- From a business perspective, Oracle eliminates a serious rival and gains
- the application development of PeopleSoft through this merger, she said.
- "For Oracle, the customer-interaction technology from PeopleSoft is a big
- benefit."
-
- Yankee Group had projected that an a agreement would be reached in the $19
- to $29 per share range, Kingstone said. "The latest offer was not too much
- different, but Oracle already had support from a majority of PeopleSoft
- stockholders," she said. "This was inevitable after the government got out
- of the way."
-
- Forrester Research analyst Paul Hamerman suggested that the turning point
- came just as testimony was to begin, today, in a Delaware court hearing a
- dispute between the two companies. "PeopleSoft apparently got an indication
- from the court that it was in their best interest to accept a deal from
- Oracle," he told NewsFactor.
-
- Oracle had asked the court to strike down a PeopleSoft "poison pill" that
- Oracle says would make its purchase prohibitively expensive.
-
- With shareholders applying pressure as well, Hamerman said, "There was no
- way out for PeopleSoft." The analyst also indicated that Oracle got a
- better look at PeopleSoft's books and apparently saw more value than
- expected.
-
- He noted that with the purchase Oracle gains license fee revenues from
- PeopleSoft along with its maintenance business. "Most customers won't
- switch to Oracle, but at the same time Oracle recently launched a stronger
- enterprise product," he said.
-
- Kingstone said the deal was more about adding to the Oracle customer base
- than technology, though, since the two firms had overlap in both software
- and services.
-
- Oracle and PeopleSoft also agreed to dismiss all pending litigation
- following the closing.
-
-
-
- Congress Fails to Act on Copyright Bills
-
-
- The U.S. Congress passed a telecommunications bill in the final hours of
- the 2004 session, but some groups praised lawmakers for failing to act on
- legislation that would create new penalties for copyright violations.
-
- The Senate approved legislation that allows funding to continue for the
- E-Rate program, intended to provide money for schools and libraries to hook
- up to the Internet. Last week, the Senate approved a telecommunications
- bill that included authorization for the E-Rate program to continue funding
- projects, even though E-Rate has been under fire in Congress this year for
- fraud and abuse within the program.
-
- Among the bills that didn't pass this year is one that would have allowed
- entertainment companies and artists to sue others that "induce" copyright
- violations. Another bill that failed to pass would have established prison
- sentences for some electronic distribution of copyrighted works.
-
- The Senate failed to act on the Cooperative Research and Technology
- Enhancement (CREATE) Act, a bill passed by the House of Representatives in
- March. The bill, a combination of other copyright legislation introduced
- in the House, included prison sentences of three to 10 years for the
- electronic distribution of copyrighted works worth more than $1000. The
- prison sentences could be imposed for willful violations or, in some cases,
- the distribution of more than 1000 copies of a copyrighted work.
-
- A spokesman for Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas), author of the CREATE
- Act, did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment on Smith's
- plans for copyright legislation in 2005.
-
- Another copyright bill, the Inducing Infringements of Copyright Act, failed
- to move out of the Senate Judiciary Committee after Chairman Orrin Hatch
- (R-Utah) couldn't reach a compromise with technology and civil liberties
- groups that opposed the bill. Critics said the bill, intended to target
- peer-to-peer (P-to-P) software vendors, was worded so broadly that it would
- allow the music and movie industries to sue many groups, including venture
- capitalists who invest in new technologies and journalists who review
- digital recording products.
-
- In August, a group of companies and organizations, including MCI, SBC
- Communications, and Verizon Communications, offered Hatch a proposal that
- would have softened the bill. That proposal, advanced by the Home Recording
- Rights Coalition, would have penalized only those companies that actively
- distribute computer tools "specifically designed to cause or enable
- infringement."
-
- But Hatch and critics of the bill weren't able to hammer out an agreement.
- A spokesperson for Hatch didn't immediately respond to a request for a
- comment on the status of similar legislation for 2005.
-
- Public Knowledge, an intellectual property advocacy group, applauded
- Congress for not acting on the two copyright bills. Congress acted in
- consumers' interest when it decided not to strengthen copyright penalties,
- says Gigi Sohn, president of Public Knowledge.
-
- Two sessions of Congress have passed without passage of major copyright
- legislation, Sohn notes. "It's time for the content industry to move on to
- a new strategy - that is, take the technology, build business models, and
- make a lot of money," she says.
-
- The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) says the copyright
- legislation had "strong bipartisan
- support."
-
- "At the end of the session, the intellectual property package was caught up
- in a crossfire about completely unrelated issues," RIAA spokesperson
- Jonathan Lamy says in an e-mail. "The substance of it was not the issue."
-
- A change in Federal Communications Commission accounting rules had forced
- the E-Rate program to stop sending out payments to schools and libraries
- that had been promised money, according to a spokesperson for Senator
- Conrad Burns (R-Montana), who pushed the Senate to approve the
- telecommunications bill that passed last week. The bill, if signed by
- President George Bush, will restore that funding, says Burns spokesperson
- Grant Toomey.
-
- Burns argued the E-Rate program is important to schools and libraries in
- rural areas. "There are many areas across the country that are deficient
- in the available technology," Toomey says. "The nice thing about technology
- is you can bring those folks up to par. They can have access to the same
- information as a kid in New York City."
-
- Other groups praised the Senate for passing the telecommunications bill,
- called the National Telecommunications and Information Administration
- Organization Act. The bill provides incentives to advance E-911 deployment,
- and it attempts to improve radio spectrum management as well as to maintain
- the Universal Service Fund, a pot of money from taxes on carriers that
- funds E-Rate and other telecommunications services to rural and poor areas.
-
-
-
- Lawsuit Claims Software Should Not Be Copyrighted
-
-
- Computer software should not be protected by copyright laws designed for
- music, literature and other creative works, according to a lawsuit filed in
- a U.S. court in San Francisco.
-
- Intellectual-property consultant Greg Aharonian hopes to convince the court
- that software makers can protect their products adequately through patents,
- which provide more comprehensive protection, but are difficult to obtain
- and expire in a shorter period of time.
-
- The case seeks to clarify which laws the $100 billion U.S. software
- industry uses to protect its products. Currently, software makers like
- Microsoft Corp. use both copyright and patent laws to protect their
- creations, as well as "clickwrap" agreements that stipulate terms of use.
-
- An official with a software-industry trade group said not every software
- product is protected by patents.
-
- "If you eliminated the ability to sue somebody for copyright infringement,
- you would eviscerate our ability to go against pirates," said Emory Simon,
- counselor for the Business Software Alliance, which estimates that U.S.
- businesses lost $6.5 billion last year to piracy.
-
- Aharonian argues in his complaint that software copyright laws violate the
- right to due process enshrined in the U.S. Constitution because they do not
- provide clear boundaries for appropriate use. That means industry players
- and courts do not have a clear idea of the rules.
-
- "Until you're sued and a judge makes up his mind about what is the idea
- and expression (at stake), no one knows," Aharonian said in an interview.
-
- In one well-known case, Lexmark International Inc. invoked copyright laws
- to prevent a competitor from making computer circuits that allow cheaper
- inkjet cartridges to work on its printers.
-
- One court ruled in Lexmark's favor in 2002, but an appeals court in October
- overturned that decision and allowed rival Static Control Components to
- sell its inkjet cartridge parts.
-
- Aharonian said in his complaint he does not know if he personally has run
- afoul of copyright laws because he has set up a database of thousands of
- computer programs to help software companies figure out if their products
- infringe on existing material.
-
- If the owner of any of those programs decides to sue, he could face
- hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties and possible jail time.
-
- While patents protect an idea - say, a way to direct traffic on the
- Internet - copyrights only protect the expression of that idea, usually the
- written code that tells the computer what to do.
-
- Inventors applying for a patent have to prove their idea is new and
- original, a process that typically takes years and costs thousands of
- dollars. Patents expire after 20 years.
-
- Anybody who scribbles a poem on the back of a cocktail napkin, by contrast,
- is protected by copyright laws for 70 years after their death, or 95 years
- if the work is owned by a corporation.
-
- Both the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and the Copyright Office began
- accepting applications for computer programs in the 1960s. Congress
- included software in copyright law in 1976.
-
- An official with the U.S. Copyright Office declined to comment on the case,
- but said copyright protection was vital for U.S. software makers.
-
- "I think it is fair to say it is the primary means of protecting U.S.-based
- software," said Kent Dunlap, principal legal advisor to the Copyright
- Office's general counsel.
-
-
-
- Apple Sues Over Web Leak of Advance Products
-
-
- Apple Computer Inc. is suing anonymous people who leaked details about new
- products by posting information on the Internet, court documents showed on
- Friday.
-
- Apple's complaint, filed with the Santa Clara County California Superior
- Court, comes only weeks ahead of the Macworld conference in San Francisco,
- the annual show where CEO Steve Jobs unveils the latest Apple products.
-
- Apple is notoriously secretive about its product plans, while many fan
- sites routinely discuss what may be in store, including posting pictures of
- real products and hoaxes.
-
- The complaint alleges that "an unidentified individual, acting alone or in
- concert with others, has recently misappropriated and disseminated through
- Web sites confidential information about an unreleased Apple product."
-
- Apple said in the seven-page civil complaint, filed on Dec. 13, that it did
- not know the "true names or capacities, whether individual, associate,
- corporate or otherwise," of the defendants. Once they have been discovered,
- the Cupertino, California-based company said it would amend the complaint.
-
- It was not the first time Apple has gone after fanatics who have posted
- information about upcoming products on the Internet.
-
- In December 2002, Apple sued a former contractor who allegedly posted
- drawings, images and engineering details of the company's PowerMac G4
- computer in July of that year, several weeks before the product was
- officially unveiled.
-
- "Apple has filed a civil complaint against unnamed individuals who we
- believe stole our trade secrets and posted detailed information about an
- unannounced Apple product on the Internet," the company said in a statement
- provided to Reuters. "Apple's DNA is innovation and the protection of our
- trade secrets is crucial to our success."
-
- Mac rumor Web sites are at their busiest ahead of the annual Macworld
- conventions, which are highly anticipated by the Mac faithful for product
- introductions and Jobs' keynote.
-
- In recent weeks, the Web sites have been buzzing with speculation that
- Apple will introduce a smaller, cheaper version of its market-leading iPod
- digital music player that uses flash memory, rather than the hard disk
- drives of the standard iPods.
-
- Flash memory chips retain data stored on them even when electrical current
- is shut off.
-
- Financial analysts Andy Neff of Bear Stearns and Charlie Wolf of Needham &
- Co. have also published notes in recent weeks mentioning flash iPods.
-
- "To succeed, Apple must develop innovative products and bring those
- products to market in advance of its competitors," the company said in its
- complaint. "If Apple competitors were aware of Apple's future production
- information, those competitors could benefit economically from that
- knowledge by directing their product development or marketing to frustrate
- Apple's plans."
-
-
-
- Users Still Snookered By Spam
-
-
- Computer users just keep click, click, clicking away - falling repeatedly
- for spam scams that promise software at fire sale prices.
-
- In fact, one in five consumers surveyed bought software from unwanted spam,
- said a study released by the Business Software Alliance, a software
- industry anti-piracy lobby.
-
- "More than 40 percent of Americans are expected to shop online this holiday
- season, and many will be tempted by unsolicited email touting unbelievable
- savings on well-known brands of commercial software," Bob Kruger, BSA vice
- president, said in a statement Thursday. "That software may be a pirated
- version rather than a genuine product."
-
- The BSA and the Council of Better Business Bureaus (CBBB) released the
- results of a study conducted by a unit of Forrester Research, which polled
- 6,000 Internet users in six countries. It said 21 percent of those polled
- clicked through on spam to purchase software.
-
-
-
- Maryland's Spam Law Suffers a Setback
-
-
- A ruling by a state judge that Maryland's anti-spam law is unconstitutional
- because it seeks to regulate commerce outside the state should not affect
- future cases, the state's attorney general said Tuesday.
-
- The ruling last week threw out a lawsuit against a New York e-mail marketer
- by a George Washington University law student who had set up a Maryland
- corporation to fight unsolicited e-mail advertisements, known as spam.
-
- Attorney General J. Joseph Curran said in the case in question the sender
- was in New York, the receiver was in Washington and the Internet service
- provider was in Virginia.
-
- Whether the Maryland law applies in that case "is a real question," Curran
- said.
-
- "The facts in this case may well be beyond the scope of our law, but that
- doesn't mean our law is unconstitutional," Curran said.
-
- The Maryland law applies to e-mail sent to or from Maryland residents, but
- it leaves vague the actual location of the resident - potentially affecting
- companies who send e-mail to people who live in Maryland, but might receive
- it elsewhere.
-
- Eric Menhart, the George Washington University law student who brought the
- case in Maryland against Joseph Frevola, promised to appeal. Andrew
- Dansicker, the lawyer representing Frevola, the New York e-mail marketer,
- said all of Menhart's cases are based on the Maryland statute and will be
- dismissed.
-
- Menhart set up the corporation in Maryland but lives in Washington. The
- judge concluded that the law unconstitutionally attempts to regulate
- commerce that may never enter Maryland.
-
- Congress and more than three dozen state legislatures have passed laws to
- corral spam, the popular term for junk e-mail advertising. An appeals court
- in California and the Washington state Supreme Court have upheld state laws
- that had been declared unconstitutional by lower courts on grounds similar
- to the Dec. 9 ruling in Maryland.
-
- Curran said Maryland's law is modeled after the Washington state law and he
- expects it will be upheld if challenged.
-
- Maryland's law allows residents who receive e-mail with certain false
- information to sue for damages. A separate criminal statute enacted in
- October adds criminal penalties of up to $25,000 and 10 years in prison.
-
- The federal anti-spam law that took effect this year does not allow
- individuals to sue spammers. That law superseded most state laws unless -
- like Maryland - they specifically addressed deceptive or fraudulent e-mail.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Software to Remove Spyware
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. disclosed plans Thursday to offer frustrated users of its
- Windows software new tools within 30 days to remove spyware programs
- secretly running on computers. But it might cost extra in coming months.
-
- In a shift from past practice, the world's largest software manufacturer
- said it may charge consumers for future versions of the new protective
- technology, which Microsoft acquired by buying a small New York software
- firm. Terms of the sale of Giant Company Software Inc. weren't disclosed.
-
- Spyware is a category of irritating programs that secretly monitor the
- online activities of Internet users and can cause sluggish computer
- performance or popup ads.
-
- Microsoft, whose Windows operating systems have often been criticized for
- lax security, traditionally has given consumers - at no charge - separate
- programs to improve security. It also has increasingly built other
- protective tools, such as firewall software, into Windows to repel hackers.
-
- The company's upcoming tool, available for its Windows XP and Windows 2000
- software, will sweep for spyware and offer to remove suspicious programs.
- It also will continuously protect a computer against new spyware threats,
- said Mike Nash, vice president of Microsoft's security business unit. Rival
- anti-spyware tools, such as Lavasoft Inc.'s popular "Ad-Aware" product,
- offer similar functions and many are free.
-
- Microsoft's tool, expected to be available within 30 days, initially will
- be free but the company isn't ruling out charging for future versions.
- "We're going to be working through the issue of pricing and licensing,"
- Nash said. "We'll come up with a plan and roll that out."
-
- The security efforts, which cost hundreds of millions of dollars, are aimed
- at promoting consumer confidence in its flagship Windows products - which
- generated nearly $3 billion in revenues this year. They also help attract
- new customers worried about growing threats from viruses, hacker attacks,
- spam e-mails and spyware.
-
- "Because Microsoft has a near monopoly, they don't have anybody to compete
- against. Giving away free stuff is a side effect of being a monopoly,
- whether they like it or not," said Daniel E. Geer, a prominent security
- expert and one of the company's most vocal critics.
-
- Microsoft's disclosure that it may eventually charge extra for Windows
- protection reflects a recognition inside the company that it could collect
- significant profits by helping to protect its customers.
-
- Some experts blame Microsoft for Windows vulnerabilities that help spread
- spyware. Microsoft and some others, meanwhile, said blame should be
- directed instead at spyware manufacturers.
-
- "Spyware usually gets on your computer through human error," said Marc
- Maiffret of eEye Digital Security Inc., which regularly discovers serious
- Windows flaws.
-
- Alan Paller, research director for the SANS Institute in Bethesda, Md., a
- computer-security organization, compared Microsoft's new anti-spyware tool
- to sophisticated products sold to help manage computer networks. "It's not
- just a clean-up-our-mess tool," said Paller.
-
-
-
- Zafi Worm Hides Behind Christmas Cheer
-
-
- A new version of the Zafi e-mail worm is spreading Christmas wishes along
- with its malicious code, according to antivirus software companies.
-
- Zafi.D is a mass-mailing worm that arrives in a.zip file attached to e-mail
- messages with the subject "Merry Christmas." Instead of a gift, however,
- the e-mail package delivers worm code that infects Microsoft Windows
- systems on which it is opened. Leading antivirus companies, including
- McAfee, Sophos, and Computer Associates issued warnings about the new worm
- and updated antivirus signatures to stop the new threat.
-
- In addition to the Christmas well wishes in the subject line,
- Zafi-generated e-mails contain the message "Happy Hollydays" and are signed
- "Jaime."
-
- CA researchers collected almost 100 samples of Zafi.D since spotting the
- new worm variant early Tuesday, says Stefana Ribaudo, manager of the
- company's eTrust Security Management division. At McAfee, around 50 samples
- of the worm were collected, mostly from Europe, says Vincent Gullotto, vice
- president of McAfee's Anti-Virus Emergency Response Team.
-
- Both companies rated Zafi.D a "medium" threat, indicating that a number of
- samples have been spotted, and that the worm has a destructive payload.
-
- Like most other mass-mailing e-mail worms, Zafi.D modifies the
- configuration of Windows machines, shutting down other security software
- and harvesting e-mail addresses from files on the infected computer. After
- it harvests e-mail addresses, Zafi uses a built-in SMTP (Simple Mail
- Transfer Protocol) to send e-mail to those addresses with copies of the
- worm code, antivirus companies say.
-
- The worm has had more luck spreading than earlier Zafi variants, possibly
- because of its well-timed and appealing subject line and message, which
- are good examples of what antivirus researchers call "social engineering" -
- subtle tricks used to gain victims' confidence, Ribaudo says.
-
- However, the increase in reports could be due to an initial spam
- distribution of the worm. The similarity of Zafi.D to its predecessors -
- and to other mass mailing worms - means that it's likely that few examples
- of the new worm are actually getting through to e-mail inboxes, Gullotto
- says.
-
- Antivirus experts advise e-mail users to update their antivirus software
- to obtain the latest virus definitions for Zafi.D and to use extreme
- caution when handling unexpected e-mail attachments.
-
-
-
- Apple Releases Mac OS X v10.3.7
-
-
- Apple Computer Inc. on Wednesday released an update to Mac OS X Panther,
- bringing the current version of the operating system to 10.3.7. The update
- includes "enhanced functionality and improved reliability" and is
- recommended for all users.
-
- According to Apple Mac OS X 10.3.7 offers improved AFP support for saving
- documents with long file names; improved OpenGL technology and updated ATI
- and NVIDIA graphics drivers; improved FireWire device compatibility;
- updated Preview application; improved compatibility for third party
- applications; and previous standalone security updates.
-
- Improvements to existing applications were a focus of the current update,
- where Apple made several changes.
-
- An issue was resolved with Apple's text editing application, TextEdit,
- allowing it to open certain RTF documents that previously wouldn't open,
- resulting in an error message. The update also improves compatibility with
- Pacific Tech's Graphing Calculator 3.5, fixing an issue where some 3D
- surfaces might not render in Mac OS X 10.3.6.
-
- Improvements to networking in Mac OS X 10.3.7 will solve an issue that many
- users have experienced since installing Security Update 2004-09-30 with Mac
- OS X 10.3.5 or later. Safari, Mail and other networking applications that
- use DNS lookups will no longer have intermittent connectivity issues,
- according to Apple.
-
- Mac OS X users that play Blizzard's World of Warcraft will be especially
- happy with this update - Mac OS X 10.3.7 addresses three separate issues
- with the popular game.
-
- First, the update addresses an issue with World of Warcraft in which the
- game's frame rate could drop considerably when in "Ghost mode," if the
- computer uses an Nvidia graphics card. Another issue with Nvidia graphics
- cards was also fixed where enabling Vertex Shaders in World of Warcraft
- could lead to unexpected graphics issues.
-
- Owners of ATI's Radeon 9600 also received a fix in this update, addressing
- an issue with World of Warcraft in which incorrect colors or unexpectedly
- flashing objects could appear, making gameplay difficult.
-
- Apple also tackled several other issues in Mac OS X 10.3.7, fixing a number
- of PDF and video-based problems.
-
- With the update installed users can now view E*TRADE PDF account statements
- in Preview. Shadowed text in a PDF file, which didn't always print as it
- appeared on the screen when printing to a raster printer, has also been
- fixed.
-
- Users of certain PowerBooks had an issue when connecting an Apple Cinema
- 22-inch display where random "stuttering" or other graphics anomalies in
- the Finder and DVD Player occurred. This, as well as an issue with Mac OS
- X 10.3.6 in which DVD Player might not open on some Power Mac G4 computers
- that use an ATI Radeon 9800 AGP video card, have been fixed.
-
- Mac OS X 10.3.7 is available for download from Apple's Web site or using
- the Software Update Control Panel.
-
-
-
- Google Wins Court Victory Over GEICO
-
-
- A federal judge on Wednesday handed online search engine Google Inc. a
- victory in a trademark infringement case on Wednesday, ruling that when
- users searched for insurer GEICO, Google could display rivals as well.
-
- U.S. District Judge Leonie Brinkema of the Eastern District of Virginia
- said there was not enough evidence of trademark violation in the suit by
- Maryland-based GEICO, a subsidiary of billionaire investor Warren Buffett's
- holding company Berkshire Hathaway Inc..
-
- Google said it was very pleased with the decision. "This is a clear signal
- to other litigants that our keyword policy is lawful," said Google General
- Counsel David Drummond.
-
- Brinkema announced her decision in court after presiding over two days of
- proceedings in which GEICO outlined its case.
-
- The move came in response to a motion by Google's lawyers, who asked the
- judge to dismiss the entire case on legal grounds.
-
- Brinkema agreed in part, but said she would allow the case to proceed on
- the narrower question of whether Google should be barred from displaying
- advertisements for other insurers that contain the word "GEICO."
-
- An analyst said the court's ruling lifts what amounts to the biggest legal
- risk to Google's business of selling advertisements based on keyword
- searches by its users.
-
- "It is a pretty firm and clear-cut decision that is good for Google," said
- Martin Pyykkonen, a financial analyst with Janco Partners who tracks
- Internet stocks.
-
- Google derives most of its revenue from selling ads that are triggered when
- visitors to its site search for specific terms such as "Geico low-cost auto
- insurance." Google reported revenue of $806 million during its most recent
- quarter.
-
- GEICO, which sells low-cost insurance directly to the public, is one of
- several companies which have challenged how Google allows competitors to
- use their trademarked names to generate advertisements linked to the Web
- sites of rivals.
-
- "If this case had proceeded as it was, hundreds of thousands of companies
- might take issue with keyword ads and comparison-shopping," Pyykkonen said.
-
- A lawyer representing another company suing Google, privately held American
- Blind and Wallpaper, said Brinkema's decision would not affect other
- similar suits against the search engine.
-
- "You can't look at this decision as a sweeping per se ruling that Google
- can profit by selling other companies' trademarks," said David Rammelt, who
- represents American Blind.
-
- Other online companies who offer comparison-shopping features on their site
- could also have been hit - including Yahoo Inc., eBay Inc. and Amazon.com
- Inc., the analyst said.
-
- Google says it already has a policy to exclude such ads. An attorney for
- Google told Brinkema the policy was "not perfect" but that was insufficient
- ground for finding against Google.
-
- An attorney for GEICO told reporters afterward that Brinkema had given both
- sides part of what they wanted. He said GEICO would continue to seek an
- injunction banning Google from displaying ads containing the word "GEICO."
-
- "GEICO will continue to aggressively enforce its trademark rights against
- purchasers of its trademark on search engines and against search engines
- that continue to sell its trademarks," GEICO General Counsel Charles Davies
- said in a statement later in the day.
-
- Brinkema adjourned the case for several weeks while she writes an opinion
- and encouraged both sides to continue settlement talks.
-
- Pyykkonen said the judge's move preserves a distinction in trademark law
- that allows for coincidental juxtaposition of one company's advertising
- against rivals but draws a line when one company attacks another party in
- print via its own ads.
-
- Keyword-searches can be understood as the online equivalent of consumers
- holding a company's in-store discount coupon electing to buy a rival's
- product, the analyst said. He contrasted that with traditional trademark
- violations in magazines, in which one advertiser uses an ad to bash the
- products of a rival.
-
-
-
- Web Site Lists Oddball Gifts for Holidays
-
-
- What to get for the psychiatrist who has everything? A pair of "Freudian
- slippers," perhaps, or a Mad Hatter pill box? Just a few of the ideas on a
- holiday gift Web site for the academic or oddball in your life.
-
- The site is the creation of Fred Stoss, an associate librarian at the
- University at Buffalo and acknowledged shopper of its wares, and his
- colleague, David J. Bertuca.
-
- It promises something for everyone, at least everyone with an above-average
- interest in math and science, literature or the environment.
-
- "A lot of the people that are using it have a particular student or faculty
- member or relative that otherwise would be getting a box of chocolates or
- something like that," Stoss said of his site,
- http://ublib.buffalo.edu/libraries/asl/guides/asl_gifts.html.
-
- It links to other Web sites and their stores, such as Nasatech.com, which
- offers books, software and DVDs "geared towards the cutting-edge engineer."
- Among items for sale is the "Fuel Cell Technology Handbook" for $99.95.
-
- Stoss and Bertuca introduce the sites with their own commentary: "The
- paleontologists in your life might really dig" the Bone Clones site, the
- librarians write. Another site promises to "tickle the funny bone of the
- hazardous waste manager, environmental consultant, environmental engineer,
- HAZWOPER, remediation tech, or waste management expert."
-
- "This started as a project to show that scientists can be funny, or at
- least have a sense of humor," said Stoss, who works in the university's
- Science and Engineering Library. He is partial to Susan Loy's "Literary
- Calligraphy" prints, which combine classic texts from Shakespeare or the
- Bible with illustrations. He has purchased prints with readings from his
- wedding more than 30 years ago as anniversary gifts for his wife.
-
-
-
- Worker Sacked for Selling Queen's Xmas Pud on EBay
-
-
- A worker at Britain's Buckingham Palace has been sacked for trying to sell
- a Christmas pudding gift from Queen Elizabeth on an Internet auction site.
-
- Ben Church, 25, who worked as a property administrator at the palace, was
- dismissed after royal officials learned he had put the pudding from luxury
- food store Fortnum & Mason for sale on eBay, the Daily Mirror reported on
- Friday.
-
- A palace spokeswoman confirmed that an employee had faced disciplinary
- action over a Christmas pudding.
-
- "Someone was dismissed but we are not giving out further details," she
- said, adding it was a tradition of the queen to give every member of staff
- a pudding as a Christmas present.
-
- The Mirror said the 6.25 pound ($12.18) pudding, which went on sale for
- 20 pounds, was a spare as Church had not been given one himself as he had
- not worked at the palace long enough.
-
- An unnamed source told the paper Church had been sacked for committing a
- "security breach."
-
- "It's really mean and petty to sack him so close to Christmas, all for the
- sake of a pudding," the source said.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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