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- Volume 7, Issue 37 Atari Online News, Etc. September 9, 2005
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2005
- 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 #0737 09/09/05
-
- ~ States Tighten Ad Laws ~ People Are Talking! ~ New Firefox Beta!
- ~ Columbus Atari Club! ~ New Trojan Uses Koran! ~ NerdTV Is Now Free!
- ~ Yahoo Aids China Bust? ~ Online Dating Lawsuit! ~ Going After Patents!
- ~ Microsoft Crime Portal ~ ~ Game Sale Controls?
-
- -* Microsoft Appeals EU Ruling! *-
- -* Court Orders Kazaa To Stop Pirates! *-
- -* Is Yahoo Guilty of Hosting Web Phishers? *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's always tough going back to work after a vacation. I'm just not ready
- to get back to the routine work grind. It's taken me a week to get close to
- uncovering my desktop! Lots of things just kept piling up, waiting for my
- return. Sooner or later, I'll get caught up; I always do.
-
- Thinking over the years that I've been a part of writing for an online
- magazine, I remember my longtime friend and former editor, Ralph Mariano of
- STReport fame, and how he always took a stand against just about any
- injustice that he felt needed commentary - be it Atari-related or some
- something else going on in the "real" world. I can't help but think about
- what he's currently saying about the tragedy that has occurred in the gulf
- states with this recent hurricane. Ralph, as we all know, never minced
- words. He always told it like it is, from his perspective. Being close to
- the area that was affected, I'm sure that this catastrophe has affected him
- deeply. Personally, I still cannot believe the slow action taken to help
- the victims down there. There's certainly enough blame to go around; and
- I'm sure that Ralph would point that out quite effectively. I'm sure that
- there will be a number of cover-ups, as well as scapegoats. None of that
- will help to bring back victims and their lives, homes, etc. Hopefully,
- something like this will never occur again. And, it does something to help
- us be better prepared to handle such an emergency. Please, do what you can
- to help, by whatever means possible. Off my soapbox.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE User Group Notes! - Meetings, Shows, and Info!
- """""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Atari Swapmeet to be September 10
-
-
- Here's a last-minute reminder of this weekend's event:
-
-
- Subject: Atari swapmeet to be September 10 in Columbus, Ohio
-
-
- Here are details for the annual swapmeet to be held by
- the Columbus Atari club:
-
-
- DATE: Saturday, September 10, 2005.
- TIMES: 9 am to 3 pm.
- ADMISSION: $4. (For vendors, including table: $6.)
- PLACE: Oakland Park Community Building, 980 Lenore Avenue,
- Columbus, Ohio.
- MORE INFO AT: http://www.angelfire.com/oh4/acec/acec.html
- CONTACT: R. Wayne Arenz (rarenz at columbus dot rr dot com)
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. It's been a heck of a week, and news is
- still emerging from the mucky depths of New Orleans. I'm not going to
- say a lot about it this week, because it's everywhere you turn. You
- can't swing a dead cat without hitting someone who wants to tell you
- something new about what's going on in New Orleans. I DO want to
- mention that once the width and depth of the devastation in New Orleans
- have numbed us to just about everything else, there will still be
- communities from Biloxi to Gulfport to Mobile... and probably beyond...
- that are also going to by trying to get their houses in order.
- Please remember to donate what you can to your favorite reputable
- charity. The people... indeed, the entire communities... need our help.
- Let's get 'em some. It's a sure bet we'll get it to 'em faster than the
- government.
-
- Speaking of governments... I would never have imagined that the United
- States would be the recipient of offers of aid from the cadre of
- countries that we're now hearing from... China, France, Germany, Italy,
- Great Britain, India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia... oh, God bless Indonesia.
- Would you ever in your wildest dreams have thought about Indonesia
- offering aid to the United States?
-
- Well, I'll tell you what!... if we do ANYTHING but show our gratefulness
- and kinship, we are not the people that we think we are. If I forgot to
- mention a country that's offered aid that's near and dear to your
- heart, please forgive me. There have been dozens of countries that have
- made offers of help, and I simply can't remember them all.
-
- I find it remarkable, and even heartwarming, that even though there have
- been so many very basic disagreements lately, these countries have
- offered assistance. Even though I'm not an assigned spokesperson for my
- country, I'd like to thank them all. There's only one country that I'd
- like to make a request of, and that's Afghanistan. Instead of giving us
- aid or assistance, just give us that six-foot-six son-of-a-gun dragging
- the dialysis machine behind him!
-
- Okay, let's get to the news, hints, tips and info from the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Peter' asks for help in resolving a problem with COPS and Xaaes on a
- CT60:
-
- "I'm having issues with COPS in Xaaes/FreeMiNT 1.16.0 - 1.16.CUR.
- Cops starts up, but crashes when it loads CPXs. Doesn't matter which
- CPXs, and fooling around with the memory protection settings doesn't
- help either. I've tried starting it both as an APP and as an ACC.
- I can of course use zControl, but I want to use COPS. Any clues?"
-
-
- Adam Klobukowski tells Peter:
-
- "Probably Cops does not flush 060 caches after loading CPX."
-
-
- Peter tells Adam:
-
- "I forgot to try it with caches off. I should do that. Thanks!"
-
-
- 'Dave' asks for help getting into his misbehaving C: drive:
-
- "Just setting up a Gasteiner HD with an Atari 4160 STE. I've formatted
- all the partitions, and copied a few ACCs into the auto folder along
- with the Little Green Selector (LGS) program. Problem is that LGS
- causes the ST to freeze on bootup and as C is now the boot drive I
- can't get into disable it. I tried putting a disk in to the A drive
- but the ST keeps trying and failing to boot from C.
-
- Can't even get in booting from the Gasteiner disks either. How can I get
- back into the C drive and disabled LGS?"
-
-
- Edward Baiz tells Dave:
-
- "Hopefully you are using HDDriver. Just boot up the STe using a floppy
- so all you get is a desktop with the A and B drive icons. Then run the
- HDDriver program and install the C hard drive icon. You should be able
- to get in and adjust what needs to be adjusted. I do it all the time
- this way when I have a booting problem."
-
-
- Ronald Hall adds:
-
- "Which hard drive software are you using? With HDDriver, and most of the
- other HD software, you can use a keypress combination at bootup to
- achieve various things.
-
- Try holding <alt>, <control>, and <shift> in various combinations at
- boot time. It works, I've done it before as well. I just can't remember
- the -exact- combinations right now. <grin>
-
- Try them one at a time first, then try 2 key combinations like <control>
- and <shift> together at the same time.
-
- By the way, sometimes just because it freezes at a certain point,
- doesn't necessarily mean its the last thing you see on the screen. It
- probably is what you said, but once you do get back in, be prepared to
- disable all your ACCs and add one at time back, until you find the
- exact culprit."
-
-
- Coda adds:
-
- "Its in the ROM. Pressing and Holding ALT at boot time will bypass
- booting from hard disk, and boot from floppy."
-
-
- Mike Freeman asks about 'the best' ZIP program:
-
- "I currently use STZip 2.6 and unzip 5.1. Those seem to work for
- most things. However, recently these have not been able to unzip some
- things - specifically FreeMint kernals, XaAES snapshots, and anything
- from Patrice Mandin. What do people use to get those? I normally run
- Magic 6 because of various problems getting Mint working right, as well
- as it's horrible lacking of a good GUI. Can someone please suggest
- something that would work for me on that OS?"
-
-
- Peter West tells Mike:
-
- "I don't know if you know, but there are later versions of both:
- ZIP23_02 and UNZIP540. Usually I use ArcView which calls
- UNZIP540.TTP, or sometimes 2-in-1 which calls ZIPJR.TTP. So far I
- haven't come across any ZIPs which one of these didn't handle (but
- I haven't tried to unzip any of those mentioned above)."
-
-
- Edward Baiz adds:
-
- "STZip 2.6 is ok, but it has some bugs. I use Arcview which is a great
- shell program. It uses Unzip.TTP. I also have LZH,TAR and ZOO
- incorporated with this. Works great..."
-
-
- Mike asks Edward:
-
- "I'll give it a try, but would that solve my problem? It's still using
- unzip.ttp (which I'm assuming is the same as the unzip.ttp included in
- the unzip 5.1 archive? maybe not?)
-
- Basically, both STZIP and Unzip cannot find any files in the archive at
- all if I leave them as downloaded. STZIP shows an oddly truncated
- folder filename, and maybe a file or two, but nothing exists in the
- folder. Unzip simply says that the archive contains no files and quits.
- If I change the filename to be 8+3 instead of long filename (i.e.
- alpha.zip instead of alpha-04-september-2005.zip as is the case with
- the latest XaAES snapshot), then Unzip will actually recognize that
- there are files in the archive, but still won't be able to write them
- to the disk (there is enough disk space, and any other file unzips fine
- there). Not sure what the problem is, but it seems to happen most often
- with Mint-related items, and people who specifically program using gcc
- and other Mint-specific tools. Maybe it's something different between
- the way Mint's ZIP compression works as opposed to other TOS/Magic
- compatible versions? I don't know! Thanks for your input!"
-
-
- St-Aphane Perez adds:
-
- "Try this one :
-
- ftp://chapelie .rma.ac.be/atari/archivers/zip20.lzh
- It works perfectly and is faster than STZIP on CT60."
-
-
- Coda tells Mike:
-
- "With MiNT and MiNT archives you want to be using zip 2.3 and unzip 5.5
- or greater. Get these from http://sparemint.atariforge.net/sparemint
-
-
- Mike asks Coda:
-
- "One problem with that... it's an RPM file -- no way to unpack it with
- Magic. And I just can't get a usable full Mint setup (even with
- EasyMint) in order to unpack it with that. If someone is willing to
- e-mail the binary to me in a form that is usable under Magic, then I'll
- definitely try it! Please use the address below my signature. Thanks
- for your suggestion, though!"
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Games To Get You Off Couch!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Controlling Video Game Sales?
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Games That Force You to Get Off Couch
-
-
- Every article about America's obesity epidemic seems to mention video
- games. That's not surprising, considering that video games have been blamed
- for juvenile delinquency, low SAT scores, teenage promiscuity, high
- gasoline prices and just about every other problem facing the nation.
-
- But being a dedicated gamer doesn't mean you have to turn into a Jabba the
- Hutt-sized couch potato, particularly if your regimen includes selections
- from the ever-growing genre of rhythm games.
-
- To play games like Konami's "Dance Dance Revolution," you have to replace
- your controller with a floor pad and try to match the onscreen action by
- stepping on different sections. Even the most devoted gym rats will work
- up a sweat during a good "DDR" session.
-
- Any of the following games are a good bet to get you up off your La-Z-Boy:
-
- * "Pump It Up: Exceed" (Mastiff, $59.99, for the PlayStation 2, Xbox):
- "Dance Dance Revolution" remains the most popular rhythm game in America,
- but in Asia it's being challenged by "Pump It Up." Likewise, "DDR" experts
- will find themselves challenged by this newcomer, thanks to a simple
- gameplay twist. Instead of having pressure points directly to the left,
- right, front and back of the player, the "Pump It Up" pad puts them on the
- corners, demanding quite a bit more agility.
-
- Oddly, the additional movement makes the workout feel more like dancing.
- "Pump It Up" is not recommended for those who are out of shape or
- asthmatic; progressing through just the first few levels is exhausting.
- Later levels require you to press three buttons at a time, so you have to
- crouch and use your hands - good practice if you have ambitions of becoming
- a break-dancer. The music is the usual beat-centric techno, with enough
- elements of metal, classical and Latin to keep things interesting. Three
- stars out of four.
-
- * "In the Groove" (RedOctane, $39.99, for the PlayStation 2): "DDR" fans
- impatient for Konami to release some fresh beats have flocked to this game
- from dance pad manufacturer RedOctane. "In the Groove" sticks to the
- classic dance pad layout, but like "Pump It Up," it throws in some three-
- and four-button moves that will have you hitting the floor on all fours.
-
- Fortunately for some of us geezers, "In the Groove" has five difficulty
- levels, starting with a laid-back novice mode that lets you ease your way
- into the game. A fitness mode asks you to input your weight and then tells
- you how many calories you've burned in a session.
-
- The music, again, is a lot of bass-heavy techno, although disco-fied
- remakes of tunes like Natalie Imbruglia's "Torn" and the Cardigans' "My
- Favorite Game" sent us into a fit of '90s nostalgia. Three stars out of
- four.
-
- * "EyeToy Play 2" (Sony, $49.99, for the PlayStation 2): Maybe you're
- looking for more of an upper body workout? "Play 2" is the latest
- application for Sony's EyeToy peripheral, a camera that picks up your own
- movement. For example, you can swing punches at an onscreen boxer, or use
- your hands as paddles in a game of pingpong. You can play air guitar or
- drums, kick soccer balls or hit home runs, wield a chain saw or a cheese
- grater.
-
- At times the lack of precise control is frustrating, but all the games are
- very simple, and there are a lot of them. That simplicity and variety -
- along with the sheer ridiculousness of watching your friends flail their
- arms about - make "Play 2" an ideal party game. Two stars out of four.
-
- On the Net:
-
- "Pump It Up: Exceed": http://www.piu4home.com/
-
- "In the Groove": http://www.inthegroove.com/
-
- "EyeToy Play 2": http://www.eyetoy.com/
-
-
-
- California Lawmakers OK Control of Video Game Sales
-
-
- California lawmakers have approved a bill that would ban the sale of
- violent video game to minors, but Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has
- not yet taken a position on the legislation, his office said on Friday.
-
- The bill would end the sale and rental of violent games to minors that
- depict serious injury that is especially heinous, atrocious or cruel. It
- allows for $1,000 fines for violators and requires violent video games to
- be labeled.
-
- The Democratic-controlled legislature approved the measure late on
- Thursday, but the governor's office said the actor- turned-politician -
- whose Hollywood film career includes violent movies - has not taken a
- position on the bill.
-
- The $10-billion video game industry has bitterly contested the bill. Game
- developers and console makers say laws restricting game sales are
- unnecessary because their industry already has safeguards to prevent minors
- from buying "Mature"-rated games.
-
- The debate over video game content grew more heated in July when game
- publisher Take-Two Interactive Software Inc. was forced to pull a
- blockbuster game from retailers because of hidden sex scenes.
-
- The controversy over the best-selling game "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas"
- prompted calls in the U.S. Congress for a crackdown on the sales of violent
- and sex-laden games to minors.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Firefox 1.5 Beta Expected Soon
-
-
- The first beta test version of the next major upgrade to the popular
- Firefox open-source browser will be available next week, the Mozilla
- Foundation has announced.
-
- Firefox 1.5 Beta 1 will be available September 8, according to a posting in
- the section of the Mozilla Foundation's Web site devoted to developer news.
-
- A second beta version of Firefox 1.5 is currently slated for October 5,
- according to the posting. The update is running a little later than initial
- projections that it would become available in late summer.
-
- Meanwhile, Firefox 1.5 Release Candidate 1 is scheduled for October 28. A
- version described as release candidate is usually the same as a final
- version that is made available for users to test and discover any remaining
- bugs.
-
- Tuesday's posting didn't go into details of what new features and
- improvements Firefox 1.5 will offer users, but, according to information
- on the Mozilla Foundation's Web site, some enhancements Firefox developers
- have worked on in alpha test versions of the upgrade include:
-
- A software update system to streamline product upgrades, faster browser
- navigation, the ability to reorder browser tabs through drag-and-drop
- operations, improved pop-up blocking, and better support for Mac OS X
-
- The Mozilla Foundation didn't immediately reply to a request for comment.
-
- After recently giving the dominant Microsoft Internet Explorer some
- competition, Firefox has slipped a bit in popularity. However, developers
- at The Mozilla foundation recently made some organizational changes to
- further promote the open-source project, such as creating a subsidiary to
- promote its products.
-
-
-
- New Free Software License Takes Aim at Patents
-
-
- The free software foundation said on Tuesday it would start adapting rules
- for development and use of free software by including penalties against
- those who patent software or use anti-piracy technology.
-
- Free software needs to be licensed under specific rules to guarantee that
- it can be freely studied, copied, modified, reused, shared and
- redistributed. The Linux operating system kernel is one of the best known
- examples of free software.
-
- The most popular rule book, the GNU General Public License (GPL) developed
- by Richard Stallman, was developed 14 years ago, before big Internet shops
- and web services.
-
- The license needs to be adapted to a world in which e-commerce firms like
- Amazon.com (Nasdaq:AMZN - news) have patented 'one click ordering' which
- prevents software makers from freely using such a feature in their
- programs, said the president of the Free Software Foundation Europe, Georg
- Greve.
-
- "Software patents are clearly a menace to society and innovation. We like
- this to be more explicit," Greve said.
-
- The idea is that if someone uses software patents against free software,
- that company or person loses the right to distribute that particular
- program and use it in their product, he added.
-
- Such a clause may have some impact, because many commercial companies have
- benefited from free software. The GPL is employed by tens of thousands of
- software projects, and companies and governments around the world use it in
- their software or services.
-
- Such software runs on or is embedded in devices ranging from mobile phones,
- handheld computers and home networking appliances to mainframes and
- supercomputing clusters.
-
- Others in the open source community were doubtful, and warned the clause
- may be "toothless."
-
- "Someone who uses a patent against a piece of software will usually be a
- competitor and won't care about the right to distribute that particular
- program himself," said Florian Mueller, an intellectual property specialist
- who founded NoSoftwarePatents.com.
-
- The European Union failed to adopt a new software law earlier this year,
- after a stalemate in the heated debate between advocates of free software
- and commercial companies which wanted more freedom to patent software.
-
- Stallman will write a draft version of the new GPL by December, after which
- it will be evaluated and discussed by thousands of organizations, software
- developers and software users in 2006.
-
- The draft version may contain a proposal to penalize those companies which
- use digital rights management (DRM) software which protects songs and films
- against piracy, and which is seen as an anomaly by the free software
- association.
-
- "We're fundamentally opposed to DRM. We think it's a dead end for society,"
- Greve said, adding all software should be free to use and that artists
- could be paid for their films and music by a general 'taxation' on Internet
- connections.
-
- "Web access could come with a cultural flat fee," he said.
-
- This position is expected to lead to a fierce debate.
-
- "I can't imagine they really want to ostracize companies that use DRM.
- There are highly legitimate interests of copyright holders involved," said
- Mueller.
-
- The efforts by the free software foundations in the United States, Europe,
- India and Latin America will be supported by a 150,000 euro grant from a
- Dutch not-for-profit Internet development association called NLnet.
-
- The new GPL will also be adapted to address regional differences in law and
- language, Greve said.
-
-
-
- Court Orders Kazaa to Stop Pirates
-
-
- A federal judge on Monday ordered distributors of the popular file-swapping
- program Kazaa to alter the software, which millions have downloaded, so it
- can no longer be used for music piracy.
-
- Hailed as a victory by the recording industry that brought the suit, the
- decision has implications well beyond Australia, where Kazaa executives are
- based, because Kazaa's users span the globe.
-
- In some ways, it mirrors the U.S. Supreme Court's June ruling that
- Hollywood and the music industry can sue technology companies that
- encourage their customers to steal music and movies over the Internet.
-
- Federal Court Judge Murray Wilcox determined in Monday's ruling that
- Kazaa's owners and distributors, led by Sharman Networks Ltd., took no
- action to rein in illegal file-sharing despite posted warnings on their Web
- site urging Kazaa users not to swap copyright material.
-
- Wilcox said it had been in the financial interest of Sharman and its
- partners "to maximize, not minimize, music file-sharing."
-
- He found six of the 10 defendants, including Sharman, its Sydney-based
- chief executive Nikki Hemming, as well as Altnet, a Sharman software
- partner, guilty of copyright infringement and ordered them to pay 90
- percent of the record industry's costs in the case.
-
- A hearing will be set later to establish damages.
-
- "We will ask the court when it comes to damages to reflect the value of the
- music these people ripped off," Michael Speck, a spokesman for the
- Australian recording industry, said of the millions who have downloaded
- Kazaa.
-
- In a brief statement, Sharman said it would appeal and Kazaa software
- remained available online, with more than 800,000 downloads reported last
- week and 390 million total since Kazaa first became available in 2001.
- Sharman says its software is no different from a tape recorder or
- photocopier - and that Kazaa could not control copyright infringement by
- users.
-
- But Wilcox said that Kazaa's distributors actively encouraged users to
- share files, the vast majority of which were copyright material.
-
- He said that if Kazaa is to continue its owners will have to ensure that
- new versions of the software filter out unlicensed copyright material, a
- task the judge said would be extremely difficult.
-
- Wilcox stressed, however, that he was anxious not to damage legitimate
- file-swapping with his ruling. He said Kazaa needs to be changed "without
- unnecessarily intruding on others' freedom of speech and communication."
-
- Kim Weatherall, a lecturer in intellectual property law at Melbourne
- University, called Wilcox's decision brave but potentially chilling to
- technology innovators.
-
- "It is clear that the judge is concerned not to stop the technology
- completely but to try and work some middle line," she said.
-
- The case is the latest in a long line of courtroom showdowns between
- purveyors of so-called peer-to-peer (P2P) networks and copyright holders
- led by the music and movie industries.
-
- The U.S. Supreme Court's related June decision gave those industries the
- go-ahead to proceed with suits against file-sharing software developers
- Grokster Ltd. and Streamcast Networks Inc. It said such companies can be
- liable if they deliberately encourage customers to infringe on copyrights
- as their businesses attempt to grow audiences and sell more advertising.
-
- In a statement Monday, the Recording Industry Association of America
- praised Wilcox's ruling as continuing in that vein: "... this decision
- reflects a growing, international chorus: those who promote theft can be
- held accountable no matter how they may attempt to escape responsibility.
-
- "A corrupt business strategy of attempting to hide off-shore is not
- off-limits to the enforcement of rights by creators or law enforcement,"
- the RIAA added.
-
- Kazaa has lost significant popularity since its 2002 heyday, due in part to
- legal pressure and sabotage efforts by the recording industry but also to
- the emergence of competing technologies.
-
- Other peer-to-peer file-sharing tools and services that similarly do not
- require a central server, including BitTorrent and eDonkey, have supplanted
- it as the Internet's most popular.
-
- FastTrack, the network tapped by Kazaa users, accounted for 10 percent of
- traffic volume in a six-week study begun in June of data swapped using the
- Internet's top four file-sharing applications. The study was done by
- CacheLogic.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Files Appeal Against EU Ruling
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. has filed a second appeal against a European Union ruling
- that ordered it to share code with open-source software companies,
- officials said Wednesday.
-
- Microsoft spokesman Tom Brookes said the new appeal before the EU's
- second-highest court comes in the wake of a June agreement with the EU head
- office to let the courts decide the source-code issue.
-
- "Microsoft has filed an application for annulment with the Court of First
- Instance specifically concerning the issue of broad licenses in source code
- form of communications protocols which are based upon Microsoft's
- intellectual property," he said.
-
- "We are taking this step so the court can begin its review now of this
- issue, given its far-reaching implications for the protection of our
- intellectual property rights around the world," he said.
-
- EU spokesman Jonathan Todd said the interoperability protocols of Microsoft
- software were not eligible for intellectual property protection and should
- be able to circulate among open-source companies according to their usual
- business licenses.
-
- However, the EU's executive European Commission said it believed the matter
- would be settled if the Luxembourg-based Court of First Instance upholds
- the March 2004 ruling against the company.
-
- Microsoft's latest filing on Aug. 10 could open up a second case. Todd said
- the EU was aware that Microsoft did not share its point of view on sharing
- the protocols with open-source firms.
-
- "If they do not share our point of view, they are of course free to go back
- to the court if they want to, which is what they've done," he said.
-
- A date has not yet been set for the first appeal against the EU's order for
- Microsoft to pay 497 million euros ($620.41 million), Europe's largest-ever
- antitrust fine.
-
- The EU claimed the software giant had abusively wielded its Windows
- software domination to lock competitors out of the market. It ordered
- Microsoft to sell a version of its Windows software without its Media
- Player and compelled it to share technology with competitors that make
- server software so their products can better communicate with
- Windows-powered computers.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Launches Internet Crime Portal
-
-
- At a High Technology Crime Investigation Association event on Wednesday,
- Microsoft announced plans to launch a Web site that will aid police in
- investigating Internet crime.
-
- Analysts say the move should resonate with the law enforcement community as
- a valuable crime-fighting tool. The announcement comes on the heels of the
- FBI's Microsoft-aided investigation into the origins of the ZoTob worm,
- which crippled business across the U.S. last month.
-
- "Over the past months, cybercrime has gone from casual to malicious to
- criminal," said Joe Wilcox, a senior analyst at Jupiter Research.
-
- Planned resources for the site include online training sessions on how to
- conduct Internet investigations, extract information from hard drives and
- trace an IP address back to its source to identify Web site owners. The
- portal also will offer information on recently passed legislation related
- to Internet crime.
-
- Analysts say that Microsoft's enormous resources and intimate knowledge of
- its software prompted the creation of the Web portal. Given Microsoft's
- recent focus on security and its in-house taskforce of roughly 50
- investigators, some analysts see the new portal as a win-win for the
- company, its users and law enforcement.
-
- According to Wilcox, everyone wins when industry is cooperating with law
- enforcement. "This is a way for Microsoft to give back to its customers,"
- Wilcox said. "After all, who knows Windows better than Microsoft?"
-
- But other experts are bit more skeptical about casting Microsoft as some
- sort of Lady Bountiful. They suggest the new portal might simply be a cry
- for attention.
-
- "[It's] tough to say at this point how much of this is really more than a
- public relations exercise," said Phil Hollows, president of Open Service,
- a security-solutions developer. Hollows pointed out that the impact of
- such a Web site probably would be minimal for local law enforcement
- agencies that do not have the funds to secure dedicated I.T. resources and
- track down Internet criminals.
-
- Hollows added that, although the smaller agencies will not be able to take
- advantage of the site, larger metropolitan forces will benefit because the
- site will help them consolidate their current knowledge and expertise with
- formal training.
-
- But Hollows warned that businesses and consumers should not expect to see
- a significant drop in Internet crime. This move, he said, only will serve
- to help law enforcement agencies analyze Internet crime but do little to
- reduce or prevent it.
-
-
-
- Yahoo Guilty of Hosting Phishers?
-
-
- According to a consumer advocacy group, Yahoo and other Web site hosts are
- guilty of housing thousands of fraudulent Web sites aimed at ripping off
- Internet users.
-
- The accusation was made by Spamhaus CIO Richard Cox during the eConfidence
- Spam and Scams conference held in London. Cox pointed to some 5,000
- phishing sites, currently hosted by Yahoo, whose domain names include words
- such as "bank," "eBay" and "PayPal."
-
- While the evidence seems overwhelming, only part of the blame can be laid
- at the door of Yahoo and other Web site hosts, according to at least one
- Internet security expert who agrees with Cox's overall analysis but points
- out that this is a problem facing all domain-registration companies and
- hosting providers.
-
- According to Jonathan Penn, an analyst at Forrester Research, phishing
- sites are problems that originate when the domain name is acquired rather
- than when a company agrees to house it. "Yahoo is just hosting the site,"
- he said. "Why is the registrar issuing those domain names?"
-
- Yet Web site hosts are guilty of being ill prepared to handle fraudulent
- sites, he contends. "I suspect this is an area where policies weren't well
- defined," he said. "They need to look at better policy management in terms
- of how to look for and deal with these sites."
-
- Penn suggests that hosting providers insert themselves into the
- domain-registration process if they want to avoid more reactionary security
- policies. While Yahoo does offer domain-registration services, the company
- is not involved in the registration of every site it hosts.
-
- Penn also suggested that hosts streamline the process through which
- Internet users can report phishing. Complicated reporting procedures
- significantly contribute to the length of time these fraudulent sites
- remain up and running.
-
- "A more efficient and effective response system will reduce the number of
- victims of any particular attack," he said.
-
- Regardless of all the preventative and reactionary measures in place, Penn
- warned, phishing will continue.
-
-
-
- States Tighten Laws On Internet Ads
-
-
- In Michigan and Utah, companies now face stiff penalties and criminal
- prosecution if their Internet ads for products like alcohol, tobacco,
- gambling, lotteries or pornography end up in a child's e-mail box. Even an
- e-mail ad for an R-rated movie, something that is legal for kids to see
- with an adult, could violate the new laws, which went into effect last
- month.
-
- Under Michigan's law, violators face fines up to $250,000 per day and up
- to a year in jail. In Utah, violators pay $1,000 for each message, are
- subject to criminal charges and face civil suits from parents.
-
- What advertisers find particularly troubling is language in the Utah law
- that prohibits any e-mail ads that could be considered "harmful to minors."
- The law outlines "nudity, sexual content, sadomasochistic content, sexual
- excitement or sadomasochistic abuse when it appeals to the prurient
- interest of sex in minors" as examples of what would be deemed harmful.
-
- "This could be an ad for an R-rated movie in some communities in Utah,"
- said Mary Ellen Callahan, a Washington lawyer with clients affected by the
- laws. "These laws could significantly harm advertisers and don't protect
- children."
-
- To combat what it sees as a growing threat that could block legitimate
- advertising to adults, the Association of National Advertisers said it is
- considering filing a lawsuit against the two states.
-
- "What gets put on the list of prohibited products is open-ended," said Dan
- Jaffe, ANA's evp of government relations. "If some product gets
- controversial, does it go on the list? People can start picking and
- choosing."
-
- Other states, such as Illinois, are considering similar legislation. Given
- people's negative views of unsolicited e-mails, advertisers fear the
- movement could gain enough popularity that Congress will eventually pass
- national do-not-e-mail legislation.
-
- Supporters of the laws counter that consumers should decide what type of
- commercial speech they want to see.
-
-
-
- New Trojan Aims Koran at Viewers of Porn
-
-
- A new Trojan has surfaced that targets Windows-powered PCs and displays a
- message from the Koran if it determines that a pornographic Web site is
- being accessed.
-
- Called Yusufali.a by some security firms, and Cager.a by Trend Micro, the
- Trojan monitors a browser's title bar once a system is infected with the
- malware.
-
- If a word in the URL matches one of the worm's trigger words, the site's
- window is minimized and a Koran quote pops up.
-
- "Yusufali: Know, therefore, that there is no God but Allah, and ask
- forgiveness for thy fault, and for the men and women who believe: for Allah
- knows how ye move about and ye dwell in your homes," the message reads.
-
- Although infections with the new Trojan have been reported mainly in Iran,
- the malware has received global attention for its unusual nature. Rather
- than trying to lure victims into parting with their money or trick them
- into damaging their systems, Yusufali.a is more intent on preaching a
- message of morality.
-
- "It's quirky and very different from what we usually see," said Graham
- Cluley, senior technology consultant at security firm Sophos. "It's
- certainly a change from the monotony of worms designed to steal from you."
-
- While the Trojan is not considered much of a threat, it could inspire
- imitators bent on spreading a religious or political message through such
- strong-arm tactics.
-
- "This Trojan writer just wants to clean up the Internet, which is unique
- for a worm creator," noted Cluley. "But despite what they might see as the
- best of intentions, this isn't the way to do it."
-
- Because the Trojan is adept at blocking several porn sites, Cluley believes
- that some companies or individuals might be tempted to download the Trojan
- knowingly. However, he advises against such a strategy.
-
- "There are legitimate Web-filtering programs that let you control which
- sites your employees or your kids visit," said Cluley. "The idea of putting
- controls into the hands of a Trojan is a bad one."
-
-
-
- NerdTV Available by Free Internet Download
-
-
- NerdTV identifies its target audience with its very name and with its
- format: It's not available over the air but rather via a free Internet
- download.
-
- The tech-focused interview show, created by pundit and PBS host Robert X.
- Cringely, is meant to be unlike anything on regular TV or elsewhere on the
- Internet, where video tends to come in short clips.
-
- Instead, this is a "Charlie Rose"-style chat, about an hour, with "some
- incredibly smart person you always wanted to meet," Cringely says.
-
- Among the names lined up for coming weeks are former Sun Microsystems Inc.
- guru Bill Joy, Apple Computer Inc. co-founder Steve Wozniak, computing
- pioneer Doug Engelbart and Google Inc. CEO Eric Schmidt.
-
- This week's debut offering was a talk with Andy Hertzfeld, who is described
- with a sort of nerdish breathlessness as "the first Macintosh
- programmer ... ever."
-
- At one point, Hertzfeld recalls his amazement at discovering how Wozniak
- had designed the Apple II's display screen: "He used a very clever trick of
- clocking the basic machine synchronous with color microburst, so
- effectively you could micro-program the NTSC signal."
-
- You can't say you weren't warned.
-
-
-
- Did Yahoo Help Send a Chinese Journalist to Jail?
-
-
- A media watch group alleged this week that Yahoo gave the Chinese
- government access to e-mails sent from a journalist's personal Web account,
- helping land him a 10-year jail sentence.
-
- Shi Tao, an editorial department head at the Contemporary Business News in
- China's Hunan Province, was convicted of divulging state secrets by a court
- in the provincial capital, Changsha, last April, according to Reporters
- Without Borders, a French press freedom organization.
-
- The Yahoo e-mails were used as material evidence in the conviction,
- according to information provided by the group.
-
- "We already knew that Yahoo collaborates enthusiastically with the Chinese
- regime in questions of censorship, and now we know it is a Chinese police
- informant as well," the group says.
-
- Yahoo was not immediately ready to respond to the allegations, and a
- representative in the company's Hong Kong office said it might issue a
- statement late Wednesday or early Thursday morning.
-
- The media watch group says that while Internet companies like Yahoo and
- Google face a dilemma of complying with the laws of the countries in which
- they operate - leading them to censor certain information in China, and
- apparently hand over personal emails--they need to consider the cost of
- their efforts.
-
- "Does the fact that [Yahoo] operates under Chinese law free it from all
- ethical considerations? How far will it go to please Beijing?" the group
- asks.
-
- Tao pled guilty to the charges, according to materials related to the case
- provided by Reporters Without Borders, in the hope that doing so would
- reduce the penalty. The incriminating e-mail, sent on April 20, 2004,
- contained information regarding a Chinese government warning for its
- commissars to be vigilant ahead of the 15th anniversary of the Tiananmen
- Square massacre and watch out for dissident activity.
-
- The journalist sent the information via e-mail to a pro-China democracy Web
- site based in New York, www.asiadem.org, and it was published under the
- alias 198964, the date Beijing crushed the student-led democracy movement,
- June 4, 1989.
-
- U.S. Internet companies have been scrambling to build their presence in
- China's growing Web market. In recent months, EBay and Yahoo have inked
- deals to further their presence in the country. In a high profile deal
- announced last month, Yahoo agreed to pay $1 billion and turn over its
- China operations to Alibaba.com, in return for a 40 percent stake in the
- Chinese company.
-
-
-
- Angry Women Sue NY Doctor for Online Dating Lies
-
-
- A Manhattan fertility specialist has been sued by two women who say he
- broke their hearts after meeting them through an online dating site on
- which he pretended to be single.
-
- In their lawsuits the two women, Tiffany Wang and Jing Huang, accused Dr.
- Khaled Zeitoun, 46, of pretending to be single and using mind games to
- entice them into sexual relationships with tales of past lives.
-
- According to court papers filed in Manhattan Supreme Court and made public
- this week, Zeitoun is married with three children. Wang said she met him
- in March 2001 through a Web site on which he said he was single and had
- never married.
-
- "Zeitoun claimed he and Wang had been married to each other in previous
- lives," Wang's lawsuit said, adding that the doctor told her he had
- mistreated her in that life and "searched for her in this lifetime to
- correct his past mistakes."
-
- Wang says that in May 2002, he asked her to marry him but only proposed "to
- see the look of joy on her face."
-
- In a separate suit filed earlier this year, Huang said she met the
- reproductive endocrinologist in October 2003 through an online dating
- service. He fed her a similar line about being single and having been
- married to her in a previous life.
-
- Huang eventually realized he was cheating on her and the relationship
- ended in July 2004.
-
- Both women are seeking unspecified money damages for infliction of severe
- emotional distress "outside the boundaries of human decency and social
- norms."
-
- In a written response to the court papers filed by Huang, Zeitoun admitted
- that he told her he was single and had relationships with other women he
- met on the Internet.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
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