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- Volume 9, Issue 21 Atari Online News, Etc. May 25, 2007
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2007
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
- Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
- Rob Mahlert -- Web site
- Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
-
-
- With Contributions by:
-
- Kevin Savetz
-
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphiforums.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0921 05/25/07
-
- ~ Code Green, Red Light! ~ People Are Talking! ~ CDLab Update Released!
- ~ Indian Dealers Strike! ~ Cross-Platform Worm! ~ Spam Up, Angst Down!
- ~ Philly Wi-Fi Network! ~ Is CAN-SPAM Working? ~ OLPC In Crossfire!
- ~ China Blog Rules Abate ~ Spyware Bill to Senate ~ 80GB PlayStation 3!
-
- -* Caution On Internet Tax Ban! *-
- -* Less-Stringent Anti-Spyware Bill? *-
- -* New Bills Add E-Mail To Sex Offender Lists *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, here we are, at the beginning of the unofficial start of summer.
- Yep, it's Memorial Day weekend again. Get those barbecues fired up, the
- beer chilled, and the hammock tied up. I like this time of year. The
- lawn is looking good, having been mowed a few times already. Time to
- start planning my annual gardens - flowers and veggies. I better start
- up the tiller because the soil will need to be turned first! Then it
- will be time to order and spread some mulch. And yes, we'll probably get
- the pool opened up this weekend also.
-
- The weather has finally started to improve some more. The days of rain
- and cold have passed us; the sun and heat has returned - over 90 degrees
- here today! I've been on the golf course a few times the past couple of
- weeks, but my game isn't improving too much! Must be getting old because
- the aches and kinks just don't seem to go away these days!
-
- Well, I don't know about the rest of you, but I still need to finish up
- making plans for the long holiday weekend. The food is bought, plenty of
- gas for the grill - oops, need more beer! So, so far, the weekend
- projects are scheduled - now just have to make sure I plan my time
- effectively!
-
- And please remember, it's a long holiday weekend, so party appropriately.
- Designated drivers are a wonderful thing! Be safe, and enjoy!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- CDLab 0.91 Released
-
-
- CDLab 0.91 is available.
- http://doyeuxyvan.free.fr/cdlab/v0.91/CDLAB091.ZIP
- A CD-R burning tool for Atari-compatible computers.
-
- -------------
- New features
- -------------
- - New audio formats for audio extraction. ( AU/SND, AIFF, AIFF Cubase
- Audio ).
- - Filenames mask for audio extraction.
- - Interface improvement in Monochrome.
-
- --------------
- Main features
- --------------
- - Audio track extraction.
- - CD-RW blanking function.
- - DAO (Disc-At-Once) copy for any single-session discs. ( But it doesn't
- work with my MMC compliant drive )
- - TAO (Track-At-Once) multisession mode.
-
- You need the SCSIDRV interface. ( already included in HDDriver )
- You can also run this program before CDLab.
- http://doyeuxyvan.free.fr/scsidrv/SCSIDRV.PRG
-
- CDLab is now released under terms of the GNU General Public License.
- The source code can be retrieved here:
- http://doyeuxyvan.free.fr/cdlab/v0.91/
-
- Original Francois GALEA website:
- http://fgalea.free.fr/cdlab/
-
- Yvan Doyeux
- URL: http://doyeuxyvan.free.fr/cdlab/v0.91/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Due to the sparseness of messages in the Atari newsgroups the past couple
- of weeks, there will be no People Are Talking column this week.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - 80GB PlayStation 3 Due!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" StarCraft 2 Announced!
- Super Paper Mario!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony Launching 80GB PlayStation 3
-
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. (SCEI) plans to launch a version of its
- PlayStation 3 console with an 80G-byte, hard-disk drive in June, it said
- Monday.
-
- The new PlayStation 3 model will go on sale first in South Korea when
- Sony kicks off PlayStation 3 sales there on June 16. It will cost 518,000
- won (US$581).
-
- The console, which launched in late 2006 in the U.S. and Japan, typically
- comes with a 60G-byte, hard-disk drive. In some markets SCEI offers a
- second version with a 20G-byte drive although sales are being discontinued
- in favor of the higher capacity model, which has sold considerably better.
-
- The 80G-byte model could appear in other markets.
-
- "At this time there are no concrete plans [to sell the model in other
- markets] however it could be an option to introduce it in other regions
- but it needs to be decided by each region," said Satoshi Fukuoka, a
- spokesman for SCEI in Tokyo. The machine otherwise has a similar
- specification to the existing PlayStation 3 model with a 60G-byte drive,
- he said.
-
- The company decided to put a higher capacity hard-disk drive in the model
- sold in South Korea because of the nation's pervasive broadband Internet
- network, said Fukuoka. Sony is keen to see the PlayStation 3 used for
- entertainment beyond games and South Koreans are already used to a wide
- variety of online multimedia.
-
- News that Sony was planning an 80G-byte model of the console first came in
- a U.S. regulatory filing with the Federal Communications Commission in
- March. At the time the company declined to comment on product plans.
-
-
-
- Blizzard Officially Announces StarCraft 2
-
-
- Yes, StarCraft 2 is real. Beyond what we've already communicated to you
- about the sequel (and what you can see in the trailer), Blizzard released
- a press release to put a little more info out there to digest.
-
- Here are the promises Blizzard is making with StarCraft 2:
-
- o Races will be further distinguished from one another through new
- gameplay mechanics and new units.
-
- o Some of the original units will also be receiving new abilities, but
- it is unclear which ones are included at present.
-
- o Uses a 3D engine that "realistic physics and the ability to render
- several large, highly detailed units and massive armies on-screen
- simultaneously."
-
- o The map editor is returning - huzzah!
-
- o And - shocker - there will be both a single player and multiplayer
- version of the game.
-
- o It will be released for both the Mac and PC.
-
- o No release date currently exists.
-
- "With StarCraft II, we'll be able to do everything we wanted to do with
- the original StarCraft and more," stated Mike Morhaime, president and
- cofounder of Blizzard Entertainment. "We recognize that expectations are
- high following the long-running popularity of the original game, but we
- plan to meet those expectations and deliver an engaging, action-packed,
- competitive experience that StarCraft players and strategy gamers
- worldwide will enjoy."
-
- The wait for this day is over. Now the wait until the game's release
- begins.
-
-
-
- Xbox Alive With "Heroes"
-
-
- Universal Studios Consumer Products Group has released content based on
- the NBC hit series "Heroes" on Xbox Live.
-
- For the first time, fans of the series can customize their Xbox 360
- experience with theme packs and gamer pictures downloaded from the Xbox
- Live Marketplace. Gamers will be able to decorate their Xbox Live portal
- with rendered paintings from the series, as well as photos featuring
- "Heroes" characters as avatars.
-
- Despite the connection with gamers, the show itself has not yet been made
- available for digital distribution through the Xbox Live Marketplace. The
- only NBC series available on the popular service, which is second only to
- Apple's iTunes, is "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip."
-
-
-
- 'Super Paper Mario' Is Super
-
-
- Just when you thought the beloved plumber Mario might be nearing the
- twilight of his more-than quarter-century career, Nintendo comes out with
- a game for the Wii that pumps new life into two retro video game genres.
-
- "Super Paper Mario" (Rated E, $49.99) combines the charm and action of an
- '80s side-scroller with the depth and creativity of a solid role-playing
- game.
-
- This hybrid of sorts of "Super Mario Bros." and "Paper Mario" features an
- elaborate and well-written back story that's explained in detail during a
- rather long opening sequence.
-
- Here's the quick version: The villainous Count Bleck captures Princess
- Peach and forces her to marry the spiked-shell turtle Bowser, which
- creates a rift of dark energy. Mario and his friends must gather eight
- "pure hearts" to restore the universe to its normal state.
-
- Mario begins his quest in the town of Flipside, which seems a bit sparse at
- first glance but grows dramatically in size and usefulness as the game
- progresses. This is base camp, where you can explore the different shops,
- chat with residents and buy items between quests.
-
- Dialogue comes in the form of scrolling text - which is usually clever and
- downright funny at times - but, unlike turn-based adventures, all of the
- game's action and battles are real-time.
-
- "Super Paper Mario" embraces its retro roots from the start.
-
- Control comes from the standard Wii remote rotated 90 degrees to the left,
- which emulates a rectangular NES-style game pad with a four-directional
- stick and three buttons.
-
- The game follows the well-worn formula of four levels per chapter, with
- each chapter culminating with a boss battle that features one of Count
- Bleck's cronies.
-
- But by the end of the opening level - which begins as a two-dimensional
- tribute to Level 1-1 of the original "Super Mario Bros." - the game starts
- to how its depth.
-
- Mario embarks on his journey with the help of Tippi, one of an assortment
- of fairy-like "pixls" that give the characters special abilities. If it
- seems you've exhausted your options, point the Wii remote at the screen
- and Tippi will reveal secret doors, blocks or staircases to help you move
- on.
-
- Mario soon learns how to flip worlds into three dimensions, and this is
- where the game really sets itself apart. Levels take on entirely
- different looks, as some objects and bad guys remain as paper-thin 2-D
- sprites while others take on a 3-D form. It's an odd concept at first, but
- it becomes second nature within a couple of levels.
-
- This power is limited, allowing Mario to flip to avoid a large rolling bad
- guy or get around a tall pipe, then return to 2-D before the meter runs
- out.
-
- As the game progresses, Mario is joined by friends who each boast their
- own special ability. Luigi can jump higher than his brother, Princess
- Peach uses an umbrella to float to higher destinations and Bowser can
- inflict heavier damage on opponents.
-
- The ability to flip between dimensions is limited to Mario, but other
- "pixls" allow all the game's characters to grab enemies and throw them,
- become paper thin or place bombs.
-
- The role-playing side of "Super Paper Mario" moves the plot forward, but
- having to continually press buttons to scroll through text when you're
- itching to do battle can grow tedious at times.
-
- But that's about the only gripe.
-
- "Super Paper Mario" seamlessly blends two genres and splashes in enough
- humor and obscure references to provide hours of fun.
-
- Three and a half stars out of four.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- U.S. House Approves Less Stringent Anti-Spyware Bill
-
-
- The U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation on Tuesday that would
- impose specific penalties for the fraudulent use of spyware but would not
- impose new requirements on software makers.
-
- House lawmakers approved a bill providing for up to five years in jail for
- those who use spyware to commit fraud but stops short of regulatory
- requirements sought by some lawmakers.
-
- "It targets the worst forms of spyware without unduly burdening
- technological innovation," said Democratic Rep. Zoe Lofgren of
- California, chief sponsor of the bill which passed on a voice vote.
-
- Spyware has emerged as a major headache for computer users. It can end up
- on users' computers through a virus or through downloaded games or other
- free programs off the Internet.
-
- Spyware can sap computing power, crash machines and bury users under a
- blizzard of unwanted ads. Scam artists can use spyware to capture
- passwords, account numbers and other sensitive personal data.
-
- The bill passed by the House on Tuesday is supported by the software
- industry. It omits provisions in competing legislation endorsed by the
- House Energy and Commerce Committee that would require software
- distributors and advertisers to clearly notify and obtain consent from
- consumers before programs can be loaded onto a computer.
-
- Lofgren said those types of requirements could hurt innovation and
- technology investment.
-
- "Focusing on bad actors and criminal conduct is preferable to an approach
- that criminalizes technology or imposes notice- or consent-type
- requirements," Lofgren said.
-
- There is currently no similar legislation in the Senate.
-
-
-
- Spyware Bill's Chances Uncertain in Senate
-
-
- An antispyware bill that the U.S. House of Representatives passed this
- week earned praise from cybersecurity groups, but faces an uncertain
- future in the Senate.
-
- The bill, which would create penalties of up to five years in prison for
- some spyware-like behavior, is a "needed piece of legislation in order to
- protect consumers," said Kevin Richards, federal government relations
- manager for Symantec Corp. Many online identity theft schemes start with
- spyware on a victim's computer, he said.
-
- Though versions of the Internet Spyware Prevention Act (I-SPY) have passed
- through the House in the last two sessions of Congress, they stalled in
- the Senate. The House passed I-SPY and a second spyware bill in May 2005.
- But the Senate failed to act, partly because of concerns that the second
- proposal, called the Securely Protect Yourself Against Cyber Trespass Act
- or SPY Act, too broadly defined spyware.
-
- The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee also became hung
- up on what approach to take for a spyware bill - a criminal penalties
- approach similar to I-SPY or a broader approach attempting to define
- spyware technologies similar to the second House bill.
-
- Concerns over the SPY Act remain. Last month, the Electronic Frontier
- Foundation issued an alert about the SPY Act, saying it opposes the bill
- because it would preempt tougher state laws against spyware and hacking.
- "In fact, having been massaged by lobbyists for the software and adware
- industries, the bill would actually make things worse, insulating adware
- vendors from more stringent state laws and private lawsuits," wrote EFF
- lawyer Fred von Lohmann.
-
- Any bills that have not passed through the House and Senate during their
- two-year session must be reintroduced. This year the SPY Act has been
- approved by the House Energy and Commerce Committee but has not faced a
- vote on the House floor.
-
- On the other hand, there seems to be less opposition to I-SPY. I-SPY has
- "broad support from the industry," said Geoff Gray, legislative consultant
- for the Cyber Security Industry Alliance, a trade group. "It concentrates
- on bad actions as opposed to bad technologies."
-
- I-SPY now goes to the Senate for consideration. Two champions of
- antispyware legislation in the Senate, Republicans George Allen of
- Virginia and Conrad Burns of Montana, were defeated in last November's
- elections.
-
- Meanwhile, supporters of the I-SPY Act say they will push for passage in
- the Senate. Symantec is engaging senators about the need for a spyware bill
- and other cybersecurity measures, Richards said. Several senators seem open
- to cybersecurity legislation, he said.
-
- "I think there's interest there," he said. "But senators are focused on a
- big plate of issues."
-
- Although Burns and Allen are gone, I-SPY has a "decent" chance of passing
- the Senate, added Gray. The House may have given it a better shot by not
- passing the more controversial SPY Act at the same time, he said.
-
- "A little steam has gone out of it on the Senate side, but maybe some of
- the conflict as well," Gray said.
-
- A spokesman for Representative Zoe Lofgren, one of the primary sponsors of
- I-SPY, said it's early to gauge the bill's chances in the Senate. The
- California Democrat will begin pushing for the bill in the Senate soon,
- the spokesman said.
-
- Representatives of tech-focused senators said their bosses are looking at
- antispyware legislation. "It's one of our priorities," said a spokesman
- for Senator John Ensign, a Nevada Republican and cosponsor of an
- antispyware bill in the last session of Congress.
-
- Senator Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, is also looking into the issue, a
- spokeswoman said. Wyden, cosponsor of the broader antispyware bill in the
- Senate last Congress, is "looking into what he feels the correct course
- should be legislatively... based on the way the spyware issue has evolved
- over the last two years," said spokeswoman Melissa Merz.
-
-
-
- Local Governments Urge Caution On Internet Tax Ban
-
-
- The U.S. Congress should think twice about making a temporary moratorium on
- Internet access taxes permanent, groups representing local governments said
- Tuesday.
-
- Representatives of the National Governors Association, the AFSCME (American
- Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees) and the Oklahoma Tax
- Commission said they could support another temporary extension to the ban
- on Internet access taxes and other taxes unique to the Internet.
-
- "We would urge this committee to use extreme caution whenever you take
- action that infringes upon the rights of states to set their own tax
- policy," Jerry Johnson, vice chairman of the Oklahoma Tax Commission, told
- the House of Representatives Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on
- Commercial and Administrative Law.
-
- Many states face difficulties in raising other taxes to pay for services,
- Johnson said. Congressional bans on certain taxes impede state
- governments' abilities to keep their tax systems "fair and broad," he
- said.
-
- Three bills in Congress would permanently extend the ban on Internet-only
- taxes. The current moratorium expires Nov. 1.
-
- Congress shouldn't take away the ability of local and state governments
- to raise taxes and pay for essential services like police and
- firefighters, said Mark Murphy, a fiscal policy analyst with AFSCME. Two
- recent studies, including one by the U.S. Government Accountability
- Office, suggested that the tax moratorium has no real effect on the number
- of people buying broadband access, even though congressional supporters
- say broadband adoption is a major eason for the ban, he said.
-
- Others at a hearing on the Internet tax moratorium disagreed, saying
- higher broadband costs would hurt adoption.
-
- The average U.S. family already pays $250 a year in taxes on
- communications services, said John Rutledge, senior fellow at The
- Heartland Institute, a Chicago-based free market think tank. "If you
- release the moratorium, I think you're going to have very major tax
- increases," he said. "That's something that would be detrimental to
- productivity and [economic] growth."
-
- Scott Mackey, an economist at government relations and consulting firm
- Kimbell Sherman Ellis, agreed. "As an economist, I have to believe taxes
- do matter," he said. "Clearly, taxes and prices do matter to consumers."
-
- If Congress does extend the moratorium, it should make clear that other
- communications bundled with Internet access, such as VoIP service are not
- exempt from taxes, said Oklahoma's Johnson.
-
- Murphy and David Quam, director of federal relations for the National
- Governors Association, said their organizations would support temporary
- moratoriums of two to four years.
-
- But Representative William Delahunt, a Massachusetts Democrat, and other
- subcommittee members said they support a permanent ban. Internet access
- taxes would hit poor people the hardest, several subcommittee members
- suggested.
-
- Delahunt also questioned numbers from state governments suggesting the ban
- costs them billions of dollars a year. "What we're talking here is chump
- change when we're talking about the revenue sources of the states," he
- said.
-
-
-
- Is The CAN-SPAM Act Working?
-
-
- In December 2003, with a great deal of fanfare, Congress passed the
- Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act,
- which is far better known by its acronym, the CAN-SPAM Act.
-
- Speaking on the floor of the Senate, Ron Wyden (D-Or.) said at the time of
- its passage that the CAN-SPAM legislation would not be a silver bullet.
-
- "But when this bill takes effect," he said, "the big-time spammers who up
- to this point faced no consequences, for all practical purposes, will
- suddenly be at risk for criminal prosecution, Federal Trade Commission
- enforcement, and million-dollar lawsuits by State attorneys general and
- Internet service providers."
-
- The intervening four years have shown mixed results for Senator Wyden's
- prediction.
-
- According to a new survey released Wednesday by the Pew Internet and
- American Life Project, more e-mail users today report an increase in spam
- (37 percent) than did so in February 2004 (24 percent), which is just
- after the CAN-SPAM Act went into effect.
-
- On the other hand, over the same time period, there has been a significant
- drop in the number of people (52 percent, down from 71) who report
- receiving pornographic spam, which was obviously one of the main
- legislative targets of the CAN-SPAM Act.
-
- The author of the Pew study, Deborah Fallows, said in an e-mail interview
- that she felt that the CAN-SPAM Act has had a positive effect on the spam
- problem. "The CAN-SPAM Act has gone a long way toward giving teeth to
- legal efforts," she said. "The law makes it riskier to be a spammer."
-
- Mark Rotenberg, the Executive Director of the Electronic Privacy
- Information Center, said that in his view, the results of the Pew survey
- show that antispam filters have improved over the last few years. "It is
- much less likely that offensive text messages will make it through filters
- today than in the past," Rotenberg said.
-
- Fallows agreed. "Spam filters go a long way toward keeping spam out of
- inboxes," she said. "But everyone needs to use them, and they aren't
- perfect." As Rotenberg pointed out, for instance, many spam filters have
- problems identifying and blocking image-based spam.
-
- The other point that Fallows made, both in her report and in her e-mail,
- is that spam will remain a problem as long as it is an economically viable
- advertising tool. "As long as people continue ordering products or
- services from spam, or responding to queries in spam for personal
- information," Fallows noted, "it will be worth someone's while to be a
- spammer."
-
- And according to the Pew report, that's still a problem. Just under
- one-quarter (23 percent) of e-mail users admit having knowingly clicked on
- a spam message for more information, and 4 percent have contributed to the
- life-blood of the spam industry by ordering a product or agreeing to
- process Nigerian bank funds. Caveat lector - let the reader beware.
-
-
-
- Code Green Gives Red Light to Data Leaks
-
-
- Reports of corporate data leaks, lost laptops, and misplaced backup tapes
- are so commonplace that many no longer warrant a mention in the press. So
- common are corporate data leaks of one form or another that only the
- multimegaton events - TJX, the Veterans Administration, or DuPont - get
- covered.
-
- But the data leak problem sure has gotten the attention of corporate
- boardrooms, even if the media has moved on. For proof of that, look no
- further than the gaggle of data leak prevention companies that has popped
- up in recent years. We've already heard this month about startup Provilla,
- as well as Varonis. Code Green Networks is another aspiring startup that
- hopes to bring high-end data leak prevention technology to smaller and
- midsize corporations.
-
- Founded in late 2004, Code Green is the brainchild of Shreekampt and
- Sudhakar Ravi, both co-founders of security appliance maker Sonicwall.
- Started with seed money from its two founders, the company has taken in
- $32 million in venture funding to date and now has 65 employees, says Chip
- Hay, senior vice president for marketing and customer care at Code Green.
-
- Data leaks aren't just bad publicity for companies, they're also
- expensive, Hay says. Citing a recent study by the Ponemon Institute, Hay
- says that lost customer records can cost as much as $182 each to
- remediate, not counting penalties and legal ramifications from the growing
- matrix of state and federal data protection and consumer privacy laws.
- Those factors have stoked enterprise interest in data protection products.
-
- "The big change for us in the last nine months is that we've gone from
- talking to companies who want to get educated, and now they've decided
- that [they] want to put data leak prevention in place," Hay says.
-
- Companies - especially in fields such as high technology - are also paying
- attention to protecting their core intellectual property, especially with
- outsourcing and complex business partner relationships exposing more and
- more data, he says.
-
- Code Green's flagship product is a content inspection appliance that's
- installed at egress points on customer networks. The device can inspect
- SMTP, e-mail, FTP, and IM traffic, among others, and can run in-line to
- block suspicious traffic or in asynchronous mode to monitor actions and
- policy enforcement, Hay says.
-
- At the heart of Code Green's technology are algorithms that were
- originally designed to spot plagiarism in different samples of writing,
- Hay says. That technology, which analyzes content bit patterns, allows
- Code Green to spot sensitive information without relying on fallible
- dictionaries of terms, and without regard to the language used to express
- the sensitive information. That, and the product's support for more than
- 400 document formats, allows Code Green to sell into markets like Japan
- and China, Hay says.
-
- That's increasingly important, amid concern about rampant intellectual
- property theft - some of it state sponsored. For example, one Code Green
- customer recently reported finding proprietary manufacturing process
- documents published in a Chinese language publication, Hay says.
-
- The company also prides itself on its product's capability to parse
- message traffic from the sea of Web-based e-mail providers, where no
- standard message formats are used. Code Green has also forged strategic
- partnerships with vendors such as Voltage Security for e-mail encryption
- and with Centennial Software to reach the SMB market.
-
- A new version of the Code Green appliance due out soon will offer enhanced
- data fingerprinting for reading data in relational databases, and
- structured and flat files - as well as better content discovery features.
- The product already sports connectors to Oracle and Microsoft SQL server
- and EMC's Documentum content management platform.
-
-
-
- Laptop for Poor Kids Caught in Crossfire
-
-
- The nonprofit initiative to provide a low-cost laptop to the world's
- poorest children might have sparked a new market - and harsh competition.
- On Sunday's 60 Minutes show on CBS, One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) head
- Nicholas Negroponte accused Intel of being "predatory" in its efforts to
- compete in that market.
-
- Intel's is "dumping" another low-cost laptop at less than cost, the MIT
- professor said in the CBS report. "Intel," he added, "should be ashamed of
- itself." He also contended that, because OLPC uses a microprocessor made
- by Intel's archrival, AMD, the OLPC effort is caught in the crossfire.
-
- "Intel has hurt the mission enormously," he said.
-
- Craig Barrett, Intel's chairman of the board, said on the show that there
- are "lots of opportunities" for Intel and OLPC to work together. "That's
- why when you say this is competition, we're tying to drive him out of
- business - this is crazy."
-
- Intel's low-cost computer, the Classmate, is shown in the report being
- used in a classroom in Malinalco, Mexico. Information on Intel's Web site
- indicates the company is targeting such markets as Brazil, Mexico, and
- India with the Classmate.
-
- Later in the story, CBS correspondent Lesley Stahl showed Barrett several
- Intel marketing documents used to sell the Classmate to Nigeria. At least
- one showed a chart comparing the Classmate favorably against the OLPC
- device. Barrett responded that "someone at Intel was comparing the
- Classmate PC with another device being offered in the marketplace. That's
- the way our business works."
-
- Intel is but one company looking to developing nations as a new market
- opportunity. Quanta Computer, which will manufacture the OLPC machines,
- is reported to be working with Microsoft to develop a low-cost Windows
- laptop for those countries. And Microsoft has announced that it is
- selling a Windows package of XP Starter Edition and several applications
- for $3 in developing countries. In addition, Thailand and Malaysia have
- sponsored projects to develop laptops that can be sold for less than
- $400.
-
- The highly visible CBS report has caused people to focus on the war of
- words between Negroponte and Barrett, said Samir Bhavnani, research
- director at Current Analysis West, and "taken the focus off the main
- goal" of providing low-cost laptops in emerging economies.
-
- Bhavnani said he has read reports where Intel has acknowledged that it
- is selling the Classmate "below cost," because Intel wants "to get a
- piece of what's happening." But he said this strategy isn't necessarily
- unusual. "Sony sells the PlayStation below cost," he noted, as it tries
- to make its profit on software.
-
- At the very least, he said, the OLPC effort has sparked the market in
- developing nations for very low-cost computers, and some of the technical
- advancements might eventually benefit the entire computer ecosystem.
-
- But Bhavnani also said there are no indications it would drive similar
- efforts in the U.S. and other developed countries, because the $100 to
- $200 laptops are "not as powerful, not as full-featured" as what markets
- here require. Besides, he said, on occasion one already can find a laptop
- in the U.S. for $399 or less.
-
- The OLPC effort, founded two years ago, originally sought a price-point of
- $100 for the laptops, but has since said that the initial price will be
- about $175. The price might drop to $100 with volume, the nonprofit
- organization has said. There are also reports that OLPC expects to begin
- shipping the units in October.
-
- The CBS report did indicate that the laptops could become available in the
- U.S. at some point, although purchasers would have to buy two - one for
- themselves and one as a donated laptop for a poor child.
-
-
-
- EarthLink to Build Out Full Philadelphia Wi-Fi Network
-
-
- The sun came out for EarthLink's Philadelphia Wi-Fi network on Thursday
- even as prospects for its San Francisco project remain shrouded in fog.
-
- Wireless Philadelphia, a nonprofit group formed by the city of
- Philadelphia, has approved the 15-square-mile Wi-Fi test network EarthLink
- Inc. built, opening the door for the operator to finish building out a
- 135-square-mile network covering the city.
-
- The approval comes just a month after EarthLink announced it would scale
- back its city Wi-Fi initiative, focusing on existing and large cities for
- the rest of the year. The company has seven or eight cities under contract
- now and is negotiating with five more, Vice President of Product Strategy
- and Marketing Cole Reinwand said last week. It decided to stagger its
- Wi-Fi expansion to conserve resources, he said.
-
- Residents can already use the 15-square-mile network in Philadelphia. The
- full network is expected to be complete in the third quarter. EarthLink is
- financing, building and managing the network and will share revenue with
- Wireless Philadelphia, which will offer cut-rate access for low-income
- people.
-
- For six months, customers of a 1M bps (bits per second service) will pay
- an introductory rate of US$6.95 per month, which bumps up to $19.95
- thereafter. A faster 3M bps service is available for $9.95 for the first
- six months and $21.95 after that.
-
- City parks will have free access, and low-income residents can sign up for
- service at $9.95 per month, before promotions. Customers can also pay for
- service on an hourly, daily or three-day basis.
-
- The Philadelphia Wi-Fi network is notable because when announced, it set
- off a storm of controversy that resulted in a Pennsylvania law requiring
- municipalities to receive approval from incumbent telecommunications
- operators before building Wi-Fi networks. The law was created after
- incumbents complained that by financing Wi-Fi networks, cities were
- building networks that would compete with their businesses.
-
- The San Francisco project, which has drawn attention partly because of
- Google Inc.'s planned involvement as provider of a free citywide service,
- has run into fierce opposition from activists as well as some local
- elected officials. The proposed contract is scheduled for a vote by the
- city and county's board of supervisors in July.
-
-
-
- Spam Volume Up, Angst Down
-
-
- A study by Senior Research Fellow Deborah Fallows of the Pew Internet and
- American Life Project, which studies the impact of the Internet on
- society, indicates that users are reporting an increase in the amount of
- spam they are seeing. But a combination of increasing user sophistication
- and moderation of pornographic spam, considered the most offensive form,
- makes them less bothered by it.
-
- A slight majority of users are seeing the same amount of spam in their
- home and work accounts, but 37 percent are seeing more spam in their
- personal account and 29 percent are seeing more in their work account,
- while much lower numbers of users are seeing less (10 percent for home,
- 8 percent for work).
-
- The number of users who consider spam a big problem or one that made
- e-mail unpleasant has gone down over the last few years of this survey.
-
- Users are also getting more savvy about spam, recognizing it more readily
- and not clicking on things as much. They are also more likely to be
- running spam filtering software.
-
-
-
- 'Harmless' Worm Hops Past OpenOffice Security
-
-
- The first cross-platform worm specifically tailored for the open-source
- OpenOffice.org and StarOffice productivity suites has raised a few hackles
- in open source circles, since it appears to tarnish the suite's reputation
- for security.
-
- In some ways, the worm, which Sophos calls SB/Badbunny-A, is insignificant
- - it is not very well written, and is so unlikely to spread that the virus
- writers emailed it to Sophos themselves, the company said.
-
- What has open source fans riled, however, is the fact that a functional
- worm exists at all that can exploit OpenOffice's scripting features to
- carry out potentially malicious actions and to spread over the internet.
-
- Macro viruses have been around for decades and are a well-known problem
- for Microsoft Office. That makes it all the more perplexing, some
- industry commentators said, that a proof-of-concept worm has been put
- together that can exploit the relatively new, open source OpenOffice suite
- in exactly the same way.
-
- Badbunny executes when a user opens a file called badbunny.odg. It
- attempts to download and display an indecent picture of a man in a bunny
- suit performing a sexual act in the woods, according to Sophos.
-
- The worm carries out different actions depending on the operating system,
- working on Mac OS X, Linux and Windows, the company said. On Linux it
- attempts to spread via XChat or mIRC scripts.
-
- Sophos director Mark Harris said the worm appeared to have been written
- solely to prove that OpenOffice and StarOffice can easily support such
- malware.
-
- "This harks back to the old days of malware when it was written to show
- off computer prowess," Harris said in a blog post. "The focus has changed
- over the years and is now about making money."
-
- Some in the open source community said it was absurd that no mechanism
- has been put in place, even in modern, open source applications, to do
- away with such dangers as macro viruses.
-
- "We've known about macro viruses for 20 years, and the danger of putting
- executable code in documents for about the same, and yet, in 2007, an
- open-source application, backed by a major Unix vendor is released with
- this vulnerability?" wrote one reader on the Slashdot discussion site.
- "Apparently many eyes do not make bugs shallow."
-
-
-
- Bills Add E-mail to Sex Offender Lists
-
-
- Connecticut and at least a dozen other states are considering whether to
- require convicted sex offenders to register their e-mail addresses as part
- of efforts to combat online sexual predators.
-
- Three states - Virginia, Arizona and Kentucky - already require sex
- offenders to provide law enforcement with their e-mail addresses, as well
- as their home addresses.
-
- The bills have support from the popular social networking site
- MySpace.com, which has been under increasing pressure to ferret out
- convicted child molesters and stop them from creating online profiles.
-
- Connecticut's proposal would require sex offenders to register any e-mail
- addresses, instant message addresses or other Internet identifiers with
- the state police. Those who don't report the information would face up to
- five years in prison.
-
- It also makes it a felony for any person to misrepresent his or her age on
- the Internet to entice a minor to engage in sexual activity.
-
- The bill passed the state House on a vote of 149-0 on Thursday and awaits
- action in the Senate. It would be part of the state's version of Megan's
- Law, named after a 7-year-old New Jersey girl who was raped and murdered
- in 1994 by a sex offender who lived across the street.
-
- "Megan's Law is based on keeping track of where sex offenders reside. So
- it makes sense to track their location in cyberspace," said Connecticut
- House Speaker James Amann. "The Internet represents a new frontier of sex
- predators."
-
- MySpace says 13 other states are considering similar bills and is
- lobbying for similar legislation on the national level.
-
- "Our laws need to change with the times," said the company's chief
- security officer, Hemanshu Nigam. "We can no longer unwittingly provide an
- advantage to predators online."
-
- Typical MySpace profiles include photos, music and personal information,
- including hometowns and education. Users can send messages to one another
- and browse other profiles.
-
- The company said Thursday that it has removed 7,000 registered sex
- offenders' profiles from its site after hiring a software company to
- identify them.
-
- "Mandatory sex offender e-mail registration legislation would
- significantly expedite this process and help keep sex offenders off our
- sites," Nigam said.
-
- Myspace balked last week when the attorneys general of eight states asked
- that the company share information on sex offenders, saying the
- information was protected under federal privacy laws. It agreed to release
- the data Monday after some of the officials filed subpoenas, which Myspace
- said was required under the Electronic Communications Privacy Act.
-
-
-
- Indian PC Dealers Strike Against Microsoft
-
-
- Computer dealers in India are growing increasingly agitated at Microsoft
- Corp.'s attempts to clamp down on the use of pirated software in the
- country.
-
- Dealers in the western state of Gujarat went on strike last week to
- protest notices served by Microsoft to 13 dealers, accusing them of
- shipping pirated copies of Windows with their computers. They now hope to
- extend the action to other states.
-
- Bharat Randeri, president of the South Gujarat Information Technologists
- Association (SITA), said it is never a policy at computer dealers in the
- state to install pirated software. "We are not installing pirated software
- on the computers we sell," he said on Monday.
-
- However, he admitted that individual staff sometimes install pirated
- software at the request of customers. Some customers want to use pirated
- software because the price of legal software is too high for them, Randeri
- said.
-
- SITA hopes to extend its strike action to other states and is prepared to
- try and pressure Microsoft into withdrawing its complaint notices.
-
- "We have been approached by dealers in other states who are also being
- harassed by Microsoft," Randeri said. "If Microsoft does not cooperate,
- we will tell our dealers to migrate to Linux."
-
- Seven of the notices from Microsoft were served last year, followed by a
- further six this year, he said.
-
- PC vendors in India, particularly those selling unbranded PCs, are known
- to install Windows and other software for free on their computers at the
- request of customers.
-
- "We support the use of legal software, but we cannot do anything if the
- customer does not want it because it is too costly," Randeri said.
-
- Besides the established PC dealers, a number of "out-of-garage"
- operations exist in India that offer customers a full menu of pirated
- software.
-
- "Microsoft should bring down the price of its software and offer better
- support," Randeri said. In Surat, a major city in Gujarat, Microsoft
- does not have a support office, he said, and dealers there must support
- customers themselves.
-
- Microsoft representatives in India were not available to comment. In a
- statement last week it said it was "committed to working with the
- channel to help them understand the benefits of original software" and
- that it expected dealers to "support us in further spreading the message
- of the value of original software among the end consumers."
-
- Microsoft offers Starter Editions of its OS in some markets, which are
- priced lower than full-featured versions. They have been bundled with
- PCs from some key Indian vendors, although they come with limitations,
- such as the number of applications that users can run simultaneously.
-
-
-
- China To Back Down From "Real Name" Blog Rules
-
-
- China is to back down from a plan to require bloggers to use their real
- names when they register Web logs, following an outcry over the proposal
- from the Internet industry, official media reported on Tuesday.
-
- Instead, the government would promote a 'self-discipline code' that would
- encourage, but not mandate, bloggers to register under their own names,
- the report said, citing draft guidelines published by the Internet
- Society of China.
-
- "The ISC, with the backing of the Ministry of Information Industry, is
- trying to rally industry players to sign up to the self-discipline code
- for the promotion of a less rigorous real-name system," state-run Xinhua
- news agency reported.
-
- China, the world's second-largest Web market with some 140 million
- Internet users, has already imposed some controls.
-
- The 'real-name' blog proposal was seen as another attempt to regulate
- free-wheeling Web content, but it triggered protests from the Internet
- industry and users, Xinhua said.
-
- Some government departments had advocated the use of real names as a way
- to stop slander, pornography and the spread of what the ruling Communist
- Party sees as "harmful information."
-
- China already routinely blocks Web sites for political content that runs
- counter to the government's views, and restricts participation in some
- on-line discussion groups.
-
- It also imposes controls on Internet chatter about politically sensitive
- subjects, although postings on the country's more than 20 million blogs
- often go far beyond what is permissible in traditional state-run media.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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