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- Volume 14, Issue 16 Atari Online News, Etc. April 20, 2012
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2012
- 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:
-
- Fred Horvat
-
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- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
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- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #1416 04/20/12
-
- ~ Pentagon Sees Progress ~ People Are Talking! ~ The My Tablet 7!
- ~ Courtroom Tweets Battle ~ ICANN Glitch Festers! ~ FCC Fines Google!
- ~ "Different" Win 8 Users ~ 20% Adults, No Web Use ~ Smaller iPad Rumors!
- ~ You May Lose Internet! ~ US Slams the Aussies! ~ New Mexico Must Pay!
-
- -* UK's War on Internet Freedom *-
- -* Week of Action Against CISPA Begins *-
- -* China Internet Censorship Futile: Ai Weiwei *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- The work continues to try and get things a bit more stabilized with our
- family matters. Nothing is simple any more - red tape mixed with even more
- red tape! One step forward, three steps backward, it seems. But, we're
- trying to stay on top of things here as best as possible.
-
- I wish that I had more time and mindset to talk about various current
- affairs, but my mind is elsewhere; and "free" time just isn't there. So,
- typically, it seems lately, I'll just move on to this week's issue.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Pentagon Sees Progress, Challenges in Cyber Warfare
-
-
- The Pentagon says it is making progress in developing weapons for its
- newest battleground - cyberspace - but still faces funding, technology
- and policy challenges.
-
- U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Michael Basla, vice commander of Air
- Force Space Command, told industry officials on Monday the service was
- approaching its work on cyber capability as it would any other major
- weapons system.
-
- "We have made measurable progress in defensive and offensive capabilities"
- in the past year, Basla said at a space conference.
-
- He talked about teams of cyber "hunters" and listed several new programs -
- all part of the Pentagon's new drive to be more transparent about its work
- on cyber warfare and push back against daily attacks on its computer
- systems.
-
- A watershed U.S. intelligence report in November said China and Russia are
- using cyber espionage to steal U.S. trade and technology secrets. Last
- week, the head of intelligence at U.S. Cyber Command described what he
- called an accelerating "global cyber arms race."
-
- Basla said Washington was keeping a close eye on cyber skills being
- developed by Russia and China, and the U.S. government has made it clear
- that it reserved the right to protect itself from cyber attacks, just like
- other attacks.
-
- He said those countries had clearly penetrated U.S. networks.
-
- Basla said escalating threats meant the cyber area was one of few that
- might see a slight increase in funding in coming years even as projected
- U.S. military spending is due to decline by $487 billion over the next 10
- years.
-
- But he said military leaders would have trouble meeting all their cyber
- mission priorities if U.S. lawmakers don't avert an extra $500 billion in
- defense spending cuts, or sequestration.
-
- "The Air Force or the department may have to make some hard choices about
- giving up resources in other areas," if spending is cut further, Basla
- told reporters. The Air Force's primary mission - to safeguard the
- country's nuclear weapons - would be protected from the cuts, he said.
-
- Basla said U.S. computer networks were under constant attack, and the
- military's dependence on those networks for every aspect of war fighting
- was recognized by the country's adversaries, who saw it as the country's
- "soft underbelly."
-
- "This is a journey versus a short sprint here," he said. "This is a
- marathon that we'll continue to work."
-
- He described technical stumbling blocks in Air Force efforts to create a
- single, more defensible computer work environment - it had to replace
- brand-new computer servers to handle it - and said service members needed
- to take precautions using the Internet, even away from work.
-
- The Defense Department announced a new cyber strategy last year and each
- of the armed services has a cyber division.
-
- Madelyn Creedon, assistant secretary of defense for global strategic
- affairs, told the Space Foundation conference the United States viewed
- efforts by other countries to sneak into its computer networks and steal
- U.S. weapons development plans "one of the most serious long term threats"
- it faces.
-
-
-
- Week of Action Against CISPA Begins, But Don't Expect Web Blackouts
-
-
- Internet advocacy groups have launched a "Week of Action" to raise
- awareness of the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) and
- other cybersecurity bills which they believe pose a dire threat to the
- privacy and security of web users.
-
- The organizations leading the protests include many of the same groups
- that fiercely opposed the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), such as the
- Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Center for Democracy and Technology
- and the American Civil Liberties Union.
-
- The week of action will feature an informational campaign aiming to teach
- people about cybersecurity bills currently in Congress as well as the
- promotion of tools which citizens can use to contact lawmakers about those
- bills. There are no SOPA-style blackouts of any major sites being planned.
- Instead, the groups involved are sticking to social media outreach,
- petitions and other techniques that proved effective when the battle over
- SOPA came to a head.
-
- CISPA, introduced by Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.), is intended to allow
- private businesses and the government to share information about potential
- cybersecurity threats to prevent theft of intellectual property and
- bolster national security.
-
- However, groups such as ACLU believe that CISPA's language is dangerously
- broad and would allow the government to spy on private emails, text
- messages and social media messages.
-
- "H.R. 3523, the Cybersecurity Information Sharing and Protection Act
- (CISPA), promoted as a measure to counter cyber attacks, would allow the
- NSA to collect the internet records of people who are not suspected of
- doing anything wrong," says a petition hosted by the ACLU.
-
- The EFF also considers CISPA to be a threat to privacy.
-
- "We want Congress to reject legislation that uses dangerously vague
- language to define the breadth of data that can be shared with the
- government, hands the reins of AmericaÆs cybersecurity defenses to the
- NSA - an agency with no transparency and little accountability - and
- allows data shared with the government to be used for purposes unrelated
- to cybersecurity," says Rebecca Jeschke, media relations director at the
- EFF.
-
- When major websites such as Wikipedia and Reddit shut their digital doors
- and Google hosted an anti-SOPA petition on Jan. 18, they generated tens
- of thousands of calls, tweets and emails to lawmakers. However, Brock
- Meeks of the Center for Democracy and Technology says that the planners
- are currently focused on spreading information about the bill without
- blacking out websites that could be used to foster conversation about
- cybersecurity and privacy.
-
- "We're doing it to raise awareness of the serious civil liberties and
- privacy concerns that are still present in CISPA," says Meeks.
-
- Meeks added that the planners are aware that CISPA is a draft under
- discussion - the goal, he says, is to get their concerns about the bill
- into that conversation by raising awareness and encouraging people to make
- calls to Congress.
-
- "We know that there is a lot of discussion, people up on the Hill are open
- to exploring additional changes in their bill and that's certainly
- welcome," says Meeks. "The aim of this week is to raise awareness and have
- people call members of Congress to tell them that they want certain
- provisions taken out of the bill and have the language narrowed to make
- sure it's used only for cybersecurity."
-
- The House Intelligence Committee released an updated discussion draft of
- CISPA on Friday. Susan Phalen, communications director of that committee,
- says that posting was part of a continuing effort to increase
- transparency around the bill. The committee recently opened a Twitter
- account, @HouseIntelComm, which has been tweeting almost exclusively about
- CISPA.
-
-
-
- China Internet Censorship Futile: Ai Weiwei
-
-
- Dissident artist Ai Weiwei warned the Chinese government that its attempts
- to censor the internet would inevitably fail, in an article published in
- Monday's Guardian newspaper.
-
- Ai, who was held for 81 days last year as police rounded up dissidents
- amid online calls for Arab-style protests in China, wrote in the British
- newspaper that new "real identity" rules to curb troublesome microbloggers
- would only "push the problem to the next generation".
-
- "In the long run, they (the government) must understand it's not possible
- for them to control the internet unless they shut it off - and they can't
- live with the consequences of that," he wrote.
-
- "The people will always have the last word - even if someone has a very
- weak, quiet voice. Such power will collapse because of a whisper.
-
- "The internet is uncontrollable. And if the internet is uncontrollable,
- freedom will win. It's as simple as that," he added.
-
- Separately, Google co-founder Sergey Brin told the paper that online
- freedom was under severe threat from governments and giant internet firms
- like Facebook.
-
- "I am more worried than I have been in the past," he said. "It's scary."
-
- He cited "powerful forces", including countries eager to control the
- communication channels of their citizens, the entertainment industry's
- keenness to stamp out piracy and the software constraints imposed by firms
- such as Facebook and Apple.
-
- The 38-year-old billionaire, who was reported to be behind Google's
- partial withdrawal from China in 2010, disagreed with Ai's belief that
- China would have to loosen its censorship laws.
-
- "I thought there was no way to put the genie back in the bottle, but now
- it seems in certain areas the genie has been put back in the bottle," he
- told the Guardian.
-
- Brin also claimed that Google would not have survived in today's climate
- due to the control that Facebook, which is due for a mammoth stock market
- flotation, exerts over the internet.
-
-
-
- FCC Fines Google $25,000 for Unauthorized Data Collection
- and Impeding Investigation
-
-
- The Federal Communications Commission has fined Google $25,000 for impeding
- a U.S. investigation into the data collection scandal surrounding its
- Street View project, in which the Internet giant allegedly accessed
- unsecured networks and collected personal information without usersÆ
- permission. The FCC said the Mountain View-based company did not cooperate
- with the investigation and refused to reveal the names of its engineers
- associated with the project. "Google refused to identify any employees or
- produce any e-mails. The company could not supply compliant declarations
- without identifying employees it preferred not to identify," the FCC said.
- "Misconduct of this nature threatens to compromise the commissionÆs
- ability to effectively investigate possible violations of the
- Communications Act and the commissionÆs rules."
-
- In a statement provided to Reuters, Google challenged the agencyÆs
- findings and claimed it turned over the proper information. "As the FCC
- notes in their report, we provided all the materials the regulators felt
- they needed to conclude their investigation and we were not found to have
- violated any laws," the company said. "We disagree with the FCCÆs
- characterization of our cooperation in their investigation and will be
- filing a response."
-
-
-
- The UK Government's War on Internet Freedom
-
-
- Last summer in the wake of the London riots, British Prime Minister David
- Cameron insisted that the government should have the power to censor
- social media and "stop [alleged rioters] from communicating via these
- websites". But after Cameron's plan was widely compared to the tactics of
- former Egypt President Hosni Mubarak - not to mention the same social
- media services were instrumental in helping organise post-riot cleanup -
- the proposal never materialised.
-
- Unfortunately, Cameron's declaration that the "free flow of information"
- can sometimes be a problem, then an aberration, seems to have turned into
- a pillar of the UK government's 2012 agenda. Despite declaring early on
- in his term that internet freedom should be respected "in Tahrir Square
- as much as Trafalgar Square", his government is now considering a series
- of laws that would dramatically restrict online privacy and freedom of
- speech.
-
- The most controversial plan, strongly defended by Cameron last week, would
- allow the government to monitor every email, text message and phone call
- flowing throughout the country. Internet service providers (ISPs) would be
- forced to install hardware that would give law enforcement real time,
- on-demand access to every internet user's IP address, email address books,
- when and to whom emails are sent and how frequently - as well as the same
- type of data for phone calls and text messages.
-
- Because many popular services - like Google and Facebook - encrypt the
- transmission of user data, the government also would force social media
- sites and other online service providers to comply with any data request.
- Currently, according to their most recent Transparency Report, Google
- refused to comply with 37 per cent of user data requests they received
- from UK authorities in the first six months of 2011, because they didn't
- comport with "the spirit or letter of the law", likely indicating overly
- broad requests or that the authorities provided no reasonable suspicion
- of a crime occurred. Under the new proposal, Google could not refuse any
- requests - regardless of their validity - and would be forced to hand
- over all data.
-
- Cameron said his proposal was meant "to keep our country safe from serious
- and organised crime and also from terrorist threats that - that we still
- face in this country". But as Privacy International explained: "In a
- terrorism investigation, the police will already have access to all the
- data they could want. This is about other investigations." The information
- gathered in this new programme would be available to local law enforcement
- for use in any investigation and would be available without any judicial
- oversight.
-
- Parliament has also targeted Google and Facebook on the censorship front
- in recent weeks. As the Guardian reported, "A cross-party committee of
- MPs and peers has urged the government to consider introducing
- legislation that would force Google to censor its search results to
- block material that a court has found to be in breach of someone's
- privacy." By "privacy", the committee meant so-called "super-injunctions"
- - censorship orders, usually taken out by celebrities or wealthy
- individuals, which ban a publisher from mentioning a topic or even the
- injunction.
-
- In the last year, users on Twitter and Google have broken several
- super-injunctions. For example, a Scottish oil company obtained a
- super-injunction against Greenpeace to keep photographs of the
- environmental group's protest off social media sites. Within hours,
- unaffiliated users posted hundreds of the pictures, effectively
- nullifying the order. If the recommendation by the MPs were followed,
- Google, Facebook and Twitter would have to proactively monitor and remove
- such results from their webpages.
-
- Another bill, known as the Online Safety Act, would force ISPs and mobile
- network providers to automatically block porn by default. As the Daily
- Tech reported, "In order to gain access to pornographic material, a user
- that is over 18 years of age must call their provider and ask for it
- directly." And if the site doesn't build in its own age verification
- policy, users over 18 could still be denied access even if they've opted
- in.
-
- The Prime Minister is also reportedly considering rules requiring websites
- playing music videos to install age verification systems, because some
- music videos produced by popular artists like Rihanna, BeyoncΘ and Madonna
- are allegedly "highly suggestive".
-
- And if the government gets its way with its new copyright proposal, the
- only music video sites users would able to access at all would be those
- sanctioned by record-companies. Despite the enormous backlash over the
- Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in the US, the UK government is reportedly
- trying to broker a backroom deal between ISPs and content companies in
- which search engines would start "voluntarily" censoring sites accused of
- copyright infringement. The deal would force search engines to blacklist
- entire websites from search results merely upon an allegation of
- infringement, and artificially promote "approved" websites.
-
- Unfortunately, laws already on the books in the UK are notorious for
- restricting free speech as well. Their strict libel laws attract "libel
- tourism", where citizens from other countries go to sue for libel with
- cases they could never sue for in their home country. Just recently, one
- man was forced to pay 90,000 pounds (plus costs) because of two tweets
- that were seen by an estimated 65 people in England and Wales.
-
- Libel cases in the UK cost an average of 140 times of those in the rest
- of Europe, according to a Cambridge University study, so people often
- settle out of fear of extraordinary cost of defence, even if innocent. The
- UN Committee on Human Rights warned that the current system "served to
- discourage critical media reporting on matters of serious public interest,
- adversely affecting the ability of scholars and journalists to publish
- their work". Thankfully, the government has indicated they wish to reform
- the law and The Hindu reported that a Defamation Bill may be announced
- this year.
-
- A UK judge recently sentenced a 21-year-old college student to 56 days in
- jail for a series of "racially offensive comments" written in series of
- tweets referring to a popular football player. The judge in the case
- noted, the comments were "vile and abhorrent", but "In my view, there is
- no alternative to an immediate prison sentence." The case, which made
- national and international headlines surely gave the racist remarks a far
- higher audience than if they had been ignored.
-
- Beyond the domestic free speech issues, Britain is home to many of the
- companies exporting high tech surveillance equipment to authoritarian
- countries in the Middle East, where it is used to track journalists and
- democratic activists. The technology, which can be used to monitor a
- country's emails and phone calls, is similar to what the UK government
- will have to install to implement its own mass surveillance programme.
-
- The British government claims it is "actively looking at this issue" and
- "working within the EU to introduce new controls on surveillance", but
- given its domestic censorship and surveillance proposals, maybe they
- should also exert some control at home as well.
-
-
-
- US Slams AustraliaÆs On-Shore Cloud Fixation
-
-
- The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR), recently
- released "The 2012 National Trade Estimate Report on Foreign Trade
- Barriers (NTE)," that surveys significant foreign barriers to US exports.
- The issue of cloud computing was a major barrier, it was felt.
-
- A number of US companies had expressed concerns that various departments
- in the Australian Government, namely, the Department of Defence, The
- National Archives of Australia, the Department of Finance and
- Deregulation, the Australian Government Information Management Office
- (AGIMO) and the State of VictoriaÆs Privacy Commissioner had been sending
- negative messages about cloud providers based outside the country,
- implying that "hosting data overseas, including in the United States, by
- definition entails greater risk and unduly exposes consumers to their
- data being scrutinised by foreign governments."
-
- The cloud issue is not a new one. In August 2011, the global head of CSCÆs
- cloud business, Siki Giunta who was present in Australia to launch
- BizCloud commented that she felt that there was a lack of collaboration
- between the Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) industry and
- the Government in Australia. However, Glenn Archer, First Assistant
- Secretary at AGIMO, said the AGIMO had, in fact, been working very closely
- with industry for many months through the Australian Information Industry
- Association (AIIA) Cloud Task Force.
-
- Recently, Acting Victorian Privacy Commissioner Anthony Bendall
- highlighted some of the privacy concerns with cloud computing,
- particularly in its use by the local government. He said the main
- problems were the lack of control over stored data and privacy, in
- overseas cloud service providers. He felt that data security;
- accountability for data breach; and differing privacy laws were concerns
- that needed to be addressed, when considering storing information and
- data, especially relating to the government, in a cloud.
-
- On the issue of privacy concerns, the report stated that there seemed to
- be a misinterpretation of the applicable US law including the US Patriot
- Act and regulatory requirements. In November last year, draft legislation
- had been introduced in Parliament, banning the overseas storing of
- Australian electronic health records. The report claimed this to be a
- significant trade barrier for US information technology companies with
- data centres in the US and other countries. US industry sources have
- appealed asking for a risk-based approach to ensure the security of
- sensitive data as against a geographical one.
-
- In the telecom section, the report stated that the structure of the
- National Broadband Network Company, NBN Co, (responsible for implementing
- wholesale broadband services in Australia) could enhance
- non-discriminatory access to network services for overseas companies
- including US companies, as the NBN would not compete in retail markets.
- The United States expressed concern that foreign equity limits in Telstra,
- were still capped at 35 percent, and the individual foreign investors
- could own only up to 5 per cent of the company. The report stated that the
- US Government would monitor the development of the NBN to ensure that
- competitors obtained fair access to services and customers.
-
-
-
- Judges, Journalists Clash Over Courtroom Tweets
-
-
- Getting news from a big trial once took days, moving at the speed of a
- carrier pigeon or an express pony. The telegraph and telephone cut that
- time dramatically, as did live television broadcasts.
-
- Now comes Twitter with more changes, breaking up courtroom journalism into
- bite-size reports that take shape as fast as a reporter can tap 140
- characters into a smartphone. But the micro-blogging site is increasingly
- putting reporters on a collision course with judges who fear it could
- threaten a defendant's right to a fair trial.
-
- The tension was highlighted recently by a Chicago court's decision to ban
- anyone from tweeting or using other social media at the upcoming trial of
- a man accused of killing Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson's family. Reporters
- and their advocates insist the practice is essential to providing a
- play-by-play for the public as justice unfolds.
-
- "We're troubled by this ban," said Ed Yohnka, Chicago spokesman for the
- American Civil Liberties Union. Tweeting and social media are "merely the
- 21st century version of what reporters have always done - gather
- information and disseminate it."
-
- Judges, he said, should embrace Twitter as a way to shed light on the
- judicial process, which, for many Americans, remains shrouded in
- mysterious ritual.
-
- The judge in the Illinois case fears that feverish tweeting on
- smartphones could distract jurors and witnesses when testimony begins
- April 23.
-
- "Tweeting takes away from the dignity of a courtroom," said Irv Miller,
- media liaison for Cook County Judge Charles Burns. "The judge doesn't
- want the trial to turn into a circus."
-
- Burns is allowing reporters to bring cellphones and to send e-mails
- periodically, a notable concession in a state that has only recently
- announced it will begin experimenting with cameras in court and where
- cellphones are often barred from courtrooms altogether.
-
- There's also an overflow courtroom where reporters can tweet freely. But
- there will be no audio or video of proceedings in the room, just live
- transcripts scrolling across a screen.
-
- The issue extends beyond journalists to jurors, whose tweets have raised
- issues of their own across the country.
-
- Last year, the Arkansas Supreme Court threw out a death row inmate's
- murder conviction after one juror tweeted during proceedings and another
- slept. Juror Randy Franco's tweets ranged from the philosophical to the
- mundane. One read, "The coffee sucks here." Less than an hour before the
- jury returned with a verdict, he tweeted, "It's all over."
-
- There's little gray area regarding jurors tweeting. The Arkansas trial
- judge had warned jurors, "Don't Twitter anybody" about the case. Burns was
- similarly explicit during jury selection in Chicago.
-
- But there's no consensus among either state or federal judges about the
- propriety of in-court tweets, so individual judges are often left to
- craft their own rules.
-
- For instance, the judge in the child sexual abuse case of former Penn
- State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky has allowed reporters to
- tweet from pretrial hearings but not to transmit verbatim accounts or to
- take photographs. Judge John Cleland hasn't indicated whether he will
- change that policy for the June trial.
-
- In some ways, Judge Burns has gone further than others.
-
- To ensure his ban is respected, he's assigned a member of the sheriff's
- department to track reporters' Twitter accounts while court is in session.
- To get accreditation to cover the trial, reporters had to disclose their
- Twitter handles.
-
- If there appears to be a tweet from inside the courtroom, Penny Mateck
- will report it to the judge. "He'll decide what action to take," she said.
- Penalties could include contempt-of-court sanctions.
-
- Peter Scheer, director of the California-based First Amendment Coalition,
- said having a sheriff's employee monitor tweets makes him uneasy, but it
- doesn't seem to violate anyone's rights because most Twitter feeds are
- already open for anyone to see.
-
- Still, some observers are puzzled why e-mails would be OK, but tweets are
- out of order.
-
- The judge, Miller explained, believes that having reporters constantly
- hunched over their phones pecking out tweets is more disruptive than
- sending an email every 10 or 15 minutes.
-
- "We have been dealing with this issue of tweeting in court a lot these
- days - but this is an approach I have never heard of before. It's weird,"
- said Lucy Dalglish, director of the Virginia-based Reporters Committee for
- Freedom of the Press.
-
- She wondered if there wasn't a greater risk of inaccuracies when reporters
- at the scene e-mailed colleagues at news bureaus, who then put their own
- interpretation on emailed text and published it on websites or their own
- Twitter accounts.
-
- Radio journalist Jennifer Fuller is equally perplexed.
-
- "We've been taking notes in courts for years," said Fuller, president of
- the Illinois News Broadcasters Association. "If a dozen reporters put their
- heads down to start writing at the same time, couldn't you say that's as
- disruptive as tweeting?"
-
- It's not just Twitter's potential to distract. Other judges worry that
- tweets about evidence could pop up uninvited on jurors' cellphones,
- possibly tainting the panel.
-
- In their request for a new trial, attorneys for Texas financier R. Allen
- Stanford, who was convicted of fraud last month, argued that tweeting by
- reporters distracted jurors and created other risks. The federal judge
- denied the request without explanation.
-
- And a Kansas judge last week declared a mistrial after a Topeka
- Capital-Journal reporter tweeted a photo that included the grainy profile
- of a juror hearing a murder case. The judge had permitted camera phones
- in court but said no photos were to be taken of jurors.
-
- Reporter Ann Marie Bush hadn't realized one juror was in view, Publisher
- Gregg Ireland said, adding that the company "regrets the error and loss
- of the court's time."
-
- Journalists understand judges' concerns, Dalglish said. But the better
- solution is for courts to do what they have done for decades - tell jurors
- not to follow news on their case, including by switching off their Twitter
- feeds.
-
- One obstacle to reaching a consensus is that no one can agree on just what
- Twitter is or does. Some judges say it's broadcasting, like TV, which is
- banned from courtrooms in some states. Fuller says tweets are more like
- notes that get shared.
-
- Because Twitter has become the medium through which some consumers get most
- of their news, it's all the more urgent for judges and journalists to come
- to an accommodation, Fuller said.
-
- And her association's policy on tweeting in court?
-
- "We don't have one yet," she said. "We're working at it. Finding a middle
- ground will take time."
-
-
-
- $150 Ice Cream Sandwich-Powered Tablet Takes Aim at Kindle Fire
-
-
- AmazonÆs affordable Kindle Fire tablet shook up the industry when it
- launched last year. Tablet vendors were already having serious
- difficulties competing against AppleÆs iPad, and these companies would now
- have to find a way to cut costs as well. While Samsung announced last week
- that it will soon launch lower-priced Galaxy tablets, a new off-brand
- device has the potential to make waves if the firm behind it can manage to
- successfully fight for attention in an increasingly crowded market.
-
- The 'My Tablet 7,' a new effort from New York-based software and hardware
- developer Xtex, is one of the most affordable tablets available in the
- United States. The entry-level 7-inch slate is already available for order
- direct from Xtex, and it costs just $149.99 despite specs that, in some
- areas, compete with several devices currently available at much higher
- price points.
-
- XtexÆs My Tablet 7 features a 7-inch 800 x 480-pixel display, a 1.5GHz
- processor, 16GB of internal storage, up to 32GB of additional SD storage,
- 1GB of RAM, a 2-megapixel front-facing webcam, an HDMI-out port that
- supports 1080p video playback, a full USB port, a miniUSB port and Android
- 4.0.3 Ice Cream Sandwich.
-
- The low-resolution display is the biggest down-side here, and it remains to
- be seen how Ice Cream Sandwich will perform with a 1.5GHz single-core
- chipset running the show. At $150, however, this affordable device has the
- potential to appeal to a number of budget-conscious consumers on the
- lookout for a cheap tablet.
-
- The companyÆs press release follows below.
-
- MY TABLET, 7-INCH HIGH PERFORMANCE AND AFFORDABLE ANDROID TABLET LAUNCHES
-
- The $150, 7-Inch My Tablet combines portability with connectivity and
- up to 48GB memory
-
- NEW YORK - April 13, 2012 - XTEX announces My Tablet, a 7-inch WiFi
- enabled tablet device that combines affordability with connectivity,
- courtesy of the powerful and stable Android Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0.3 OS -
- all at a manufacturerÆs suggested retail price of $150.
-
- "Everyone is walking around with a tablet device under their arms,"
- said XTEX VP Allen Kiehl. "The 10-inch tabletÆs become a fashion
- accessory, like not so long ago when everybody wore cell phones clipped
- to their belt." Eventually, the smartphone was made small enough to fit
- in a pocket, and itÆs time we did the same for tablets. 10-inch tablets
- are too big, while 5-inch models are too small, like squinting at a
- smartphone screen. The My Tablet 7-inch is just right. Not only is it
- about the size of a paperback book and ultra-slim to slip easily into a
- jacket or back pocket, but also itÆs loaded with features for convenience
- and on-the-go connectivity.
-
- "But just in case fashion and accessorizing are important, My Tablet
- is available in three colors at the time of its launch: black, white, and
- pink."
-
- Lightweight and less than half an inch thick, the 7-inch My Tablet
- fits in a pocket but comes loaded with features, including a 1.5MHz
- Processor, 1GB of RAM, a 16GB internal hard drive, expandable to 48GB of
- storage with a 32GB MiniSD card, a brilliant 800X480 7-inch capacitive
- screen, and a front facing 2MP webcam.
-
- My Tablet features Wi-Fi as well as USB Mini, USB Ports, a TF Card
- Slot (supporting up to 32GB), and HDMI 1080P output, maximizing
- connectivity to the internet, printers, high density TVs, or any number
- of external devices for easy and reliable on-the-go access to email,
- movies, videos, music, and photos. Surf, browse, blog, text, email,
- stream, download, upload or Tweet - take care of business on the fly and
- stay in touch with friends and family with an affordably priced tablet
- that fits in your pocket. Download video and musicfrom the internet or
- carry them separately on 32GB MiniSD cards. The choice is up to the user.
-
- "I can attest that the My Tablet was extremely snappy and handled all
- the apps I threw at it," writes Stormy Beach of the influential blog,
- AndroidSPIN.com. "I donÆt think there is a tablet out there that can offer
- this much goods for such a small price tag."
-
- With its full list of features, including blisteringly fast 1.5GHz
- processor, 1GB of RAM, and 16GB of internal storage, AndroidSPIN also
- declared My Tablet "quite a powerful little device for $50 less than a
- Kindle Fire."
-
- Power. Portability. Affordability. My Tablet. The whole world in your
- pocket!
-
- Key product Information:
-
- 7" Capacitive screen (800X480)
- 1.5 MHz Processor
- Android 4.0 OS
- 1GB RAM
- 16GB HD (storage)
- 2.0MP Front Facing Webcam
- USB port
- Mini USB Port
- HDMI 1080P output
- TF card slot (support 32GB)
- Headset port
-
-
-
- Rumors Swirl of Smaller iPad, Which Jobs Detested
-
-
- Apple generates more gossip than the Kardashians.
-
- There's a constantly spinning mill of rumors about Apple products, most of
- which turn out to be untrue. What's unusual this week is that talk has
- revived of a smaller iPad model, an idea company founder Steve Jobs
- derided publicly a year before he died.
-
- Apple and its suppliers aren't commenting. Rumors of a smaller iPad, or
- "iPad mini" have percolated ever since the first iPad was launched two
- years ago. This time around, they're fed by media reports from South
- Korea, China and Taiwan, saying Apple has ordered Samsung screens that
- are 7.86 inches measured on the diagonal. That would make the screen about
- two-thirds the size of the current iPad, which has a diagonal measurement
- of 9.7 inches.
-
- "From a competitive standpoint, we believe an iPad mini with a lower price
- point would be the competition's worst nightmare, says Shaw Wu, an analyst
- at Sterne Agee. "Most (competitors) already have a tough enough time
- competing against the iPad 2, as well as the new iPad."
-
- Apple has successfully fended off competitors who have tried to sell
- tablets in iPad's size range. But last year, Amazon.com Inc. figured out
- how to crack Apple's stranglehold on tablets by making a half-size,
- no-frills tablet. The result was the Kindle Fire, which sells for $199 -
- basically, the cost of production. Amazon has sold millions of them.
-
- Apple sells the iPod Touch for $199, but its screen is about a quarter of
- the size of the Kindle Fire - a big disadvantage for people who want to
- enjoy books, movies and games. It also sells the older iPad model for
- $399. It has nothing in between.
-
- Price isn't the only reason customers might prefer a smaller tablet. A
- 7-inch model would fit in many handbags, unlike the current iPad.
-
- Wu says he's seen evidence of Apple experimenting with both smaller and
- larger tablet screens since 2009, and doesn't sense that the release of
- an iPad mini is "imminent."
-
- It could be hard for Apple to make money from an iPad-quality 7-inch
- tablet that sells for $299. Analysts at IHS iSuppli estimate that a
- smaller tablet would cost around $250 to produce, a figure that doesn't
- include development costs, packaging or patent royalties. That suggests
- Apple would price it at $329 or $349.
-
- "The first thing you always have to keep in mind is: Apple is not going to
- sell an unprofitable product," says Rhoda Alexander at iSuppli.
-
- "Going to a different screen size ends up being a ton of work," says Nate
- Weiner, the creator of Pocket, an application that stores Web pages and
- other material for later reading.
-
- "If you take, for an example, an interface built for the iPad and try to
- cram it into the Kindle Fire, it just doesn't fit," he says.
-
- However, developers who have already adapted their programs to the Kindle
- Fire or other 7-inch tablets wouldn't face a big hurdle in adapting to a
- third Apple screen size, Weiner says.
-
- Apple's late CEO made a rare appearance on an October 2010 earnings
- conference call to launch a tirade against the 7-inch tablet Samsung
- Electronics Inc. was set to launch as the first major challenger to the
- iPad.
-
- "The reason we wouldn't make a 7-inch tablet isn't because we don't want
- to hit a price point, it's because we don't think you can make a great
- tablet with a 7-inch screen," Jobs said. "The 7-inch tablets are tweeners,
- too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete with an
- iPad."
-
- He said the resolution of the display could be increased to make up for
- the smaller size, but that would be "meaningless, unless your tablet also
- includes sandpaper, so that the user can sand down their fingers to
- around one quarter of the present size."
-
- "There are clear limits of how close you can physically place elements on
- a touch screen before users cannot reliably tap, flick or pinch them. This
- is one of the key reasons we think the 10-inch screen size is the minimum
- size required to create great tablet apps," he said.
-
- Jobs failed to mention Apple's success developing apps that use taps,
- flicks and pinches on the iPhone, with its 3.5-inch screen.
-
-
-
- What Kind of Windows 8 User Will You Be?
-
-
- Last night Microsoft announced three cuts of its much anticipated new
- operating system: Windows 8, Windows 8 Pro and Windows RT. Unlike previous
- incarnations of its operating systems, Microsoft pared the options down to
- three. But, even with just a few choices, like a pair of jeans, there's a
- right fit for each person.
-
- The Windows maker didn't give any indication of the OS release date, or
- prices - important factors for buyers -- looking at the features, we bet
- we can help find the right choice for your needs.
-
- This standard version, akin to the consumer preview, will work for almost
- any type of Windows user. "For many consumers, Windows 8 will be the right
- choice," writes Brandon LeBlanc on the Microsoft Windows blog. This
- version will have all the features Microsoft announced at the Mobile World
- Conference, including the new Metro influenced interface, navigability
- between gadgets, an app store and all sorts of navigation options.
- Microsoft has the full breakdown on that blog post. It's the simplest,
- most basic version of the new OS, that will fit most people's needs. For
- those not breathlessly following the Windows 8 hype, here's a little tour
- of your future OS.
-
- As the "pro" tag indicates, this is for the more serious computing folks,
- like "tech enthusiasts and business/technical professionals," explains
- LeBlanc. It has all the same jazz as Windows 8, but dressed up a bit. It's
- for the type of person that wants to build things on their computer. It
- includes, as the post explains "features for encryption, virtualization,
- PC management and domain connectivity," writes LeBlanc. "Windows Media
- Center will be available as an economical 'media pack' add-on to Windows 8
- Pro. If you are an enthusiast or you want to use your PC in a business
- environment, you will want Windows 8 Pro," he continues. It has the type
- of security and IT features that one might need in a business setting.
-
- Though the commenters are hating on the "RT" name for its vagueness, it
- sounds like just the right amount of obscurity for the most
- forward-thinking of our three cuts. Like a skinny jean, this will only fit
- a certain body or fashion type, as it only runs on ARM. Microsoft has a
- whole long post about what ARM means, but basically, it's the technology
- that enables tablets and smartphones. The cool part: RT comes with
- Microsoft office. But unlike the other two Windows 8 systems, no other
- desktop apps will run on it, instead focusing on Metro based apps. So,
- it's a bit different.
-
-
-
- Delay in Internet Name Expansion Continues
-
-
- There's still no word on when applications will continue for new Internet
- address suffixes to join ".com" and others in use.
-
- Last week, a technical glitch forced the Internet Corporation for Assigned
- Names and Numbers, which is in charge of domain names, to abruptly shut
- down a system for letting companies and organizations apply for new names.
-
- The system was supposed to have reopened Tuesday, but ICANN said then
- that it needed more time to inform applicants that may have been affected
- by the glitch.
-
- ICANN now says it's still testing the fix and sifting through the data to
- determine which applicants were affected. It gave no target date this
- time. ICANN says it has ruled out hacking as the cause.
-
-
-
- Hundreds of Thousands May Lose Internet in July
-
-
- For computer users, a few mouse clicks could mean the difference between
- staying online and losing Internet connections this summer.
-
- Unknown to most of them, their problem began when international hackers ran
- an online advertising scam to take control of infected computers around the
- world. In a highly unusual response, the FBI set up a safety net months ago
- using government computers to prevent Internet disruptions for those
- infected users. But that system is to be shut down.
-
- The FBI is encouraging users to visit a website run by its security
- partner, http://www.dcwg.org , that will inform them whether they're
- infected and explain how to fix the problem. After July 9, infected users
- won't be able to connect to the Internet.
-
- Most victims don't even know their computers have been infected, although
- the malicious software probably has slowed their web surfing and disabled
- their antivirus software, making their machines more vulnerable to other
- problems.
-
- Last November, the FBI and other authorities were preparing to take down a
- hacker ring that had been running an Internet ad scam on a massive network
- of infected computers.
-
- "We started to realize that we might have a little bit of a problem on our
- hands because ... if we just pulled the plug on their criminal
- infrastructure and threw everybody in jail, the victims of this were going
- to be without Internet service," said Tom Grasso, an FBI supervisory
- special agent. "The average user would open up Internet Explorer and get
- 'page not found' and think the Internet is broken."
-
- On the night of the arrests, the agency brought in Paul Vixie, chairman and
- founder of Internet Systems Consortium, to install two Internet servers to
- take the place of the truckload of impounded rogue servers that infected
- computers were using. Federal officials planned to keep their servers
- online until March, giving everyone opportunity to clean their computers.
- But it wasn't enough time. A federal judge in New York extended the
- deadline until July.
-
- Now, said Grasso, "the full court press is on to get people to address this
- problem." And it's up to computer users to check their PCs.
-
- This is what happened:
-
- Hackers infected a network of probably more than 570,000 computers
- worldwide. They took advantage of vulnerabilities in the Microsoft Windows
- operating system to install malicious software on the victim computers.
- This turned off antivirus updates and changed the way the computers
- reconcile website addresses behind the scenes on the Internet's domain
- name system.
-
- The DNS system is a network of servers that translates a web address -
- such as www.ap.org - into the numerical addresses that computers use.
- Victim computers were reprogrammed to use rogue DNS servers owned by the
- attackers. This allowed the attackers to redirect computers to fraudulent
- versions of any website.
-
- The hackers earned profits from advertisements that appeared on websites
- that victims were tricked into visiting. The scam netted the hackers at
- least $14 million, according to the FBI. It also made thousands of
- computers reliant on the rogue servers for their Internet browsing.
-
- When the FBI and others arrested six Estonians last November, the agency
- replaced the rogue servers with Vixie's clean ones. Installing and running
- the two substitute servers for eight months is costing the federal
- government about $87,000.
-
- The number of victims is hard to pinpoint, but the FBI believes that on
- the day of the arrests, at least 568,000 unique Internet addresses were
- using the rogue servers. Five months later, FBI estimates that the number
- is down to at least 360,000. The U.S. has the most, about 85,000, federal
- authorities said. Other countries with more than 20,000 each include
- Italy, India, England and Germany. Smaller numbers are online in Spain,
- France, Canada, China and Mexico.
-
- Vixie said most of the victims are probably individual home users, rather
- than corporations that have technology staffs who routinely check the
- computers.
-
- FBI officials said they organized an unusual system to avoid any
- appearance of government intrusion into the Internet or private computers.
- And while this is the first time the FBI used it, it won't be the last.
-
- "This is the future of what we will be doing," said Eric Strom, a unit
- chief in the FBI's Cyber Division. "Until there is a change in legal
- system, both inside and outside the United States, to get up to speed with
- the cyber problem, we will have to go down these paths, trail-blazing if
- you will, on these types of investigations."
-
- Now, he said, every time the agency gets near the end of a cyber case,
- "we get to the point where we say, how are we going to do this, how are we
- going to clean the system" without creating a bigger mess than before.
-
-
-
- Court: Online Bookseller Owes New Mexico Sales Tax
-
-
- A nationally known online bookseller must pay more than a half million
- dollars in taxes for books, music and movies bought by customers in New
- Mexico, the state Court of Appeals has ruled in a dispute over the
- state's power to tax corporate chains and Internet shopping.
-
- The court's decision came Wednesday in a case involving an out-of-state
- online business, Barnes&nobles.com, LLC, which was part of the corporate
- family of bookseller Barnes & Noble Inc.
-
- The online retailer was assessed gross receipts taxes in 2006 of $534,563
- for sales from 1998 to 2005. The company protested and a state agency
- hearing officer agreed with the company that it wasn't required to collect
- and pay the tax because it had no presence in the state or what is known
- as a "substantial nexus" with New Mexico.
-
- The online retailer was organized under Delaware laws and it had no
- employees or offices in the state. However, a separate Barnes and Noble
- company operates three bookstores in New Mexico, with the first of those
- started in Albuquerque in 1996 and the most recent in Las Cruces in 2003.
-
- Traditionally, online retailers have been required to collect taxes on
- sales to customers in New Mexico if the company has a physical store, a
- warehouse or other facilities in the state.
-
- The Department of Taxation and Revenue contended that activities at the
- in-state stores, including gift cards that could be redeemed online and a
- membership plan that offered online discounts, created the necessary
- connection to New Mexico to require the Internet retailer to collect and
- pay the state's tax. Books purchased online also could be returned for
- credit at the Barnes & Noble stores in New Mexico.
-
- The Court of Appeals said those activities alone weren't enough to
- justify taxing the online sales, but it concluded the "in-state use of the
- Barnes & Noble's trademarks was sufficient to meet the constitutional
- standard" to permit the New Mexico tax.
-
- Because the trademarks were licensed to the online retailer and the
- company with in-state stores, Barnes & Noble "was in effect telling
- customers to consider taxpayers (the online retailer) and booksellers to
- be one and the same," the court said.
-
- "The goodwill developed both directly, by in-store activities promoting
- taxpayer's website, and indirectly, by consumers' increased awareness of
- Barnes & Noble due to the presence of in-state stores, helped to establish
- and maintain a market in New Mexico for taxpayer," the court said.
-
- Attorneys for Barnes & Noble did not immediately return telephone and
- email messages on Thursday seeking comment on the court ruling and whether
- their client plans to appeal the decision to the state Supreme Court.
-
- A spokesman for New Mexico's tax agency declined comment because the
- agency expects the case to end up before the state's highest court.
-
- The New Mexico tax currently is being collected for online sales because
- Barnes & Nobles has revamped the business structure of its online and
- in-store operations, according to court filings by company lawyers.
-
-
-
- One in Five U.S. Adults Still DoesnÆt Use The Internet
-
-
- The Pew Internet & American Life ProjectÆs latest poll indicates that one
- in five adults in the United States still doesnÆt use the Internet.
- "Senior citizens, those who prefer to take our interviews in Spanish
- rather than English, adults with less than a high school education, and
- those living in households earning less than $30,000 per year are the
- least likely adults to have Internet access," Pew Internet said. Almost
- half of those adults who donÆt use the Internet found the technology
- irrelevant to them, with most having never used it before. About one in
- five adults claimed they didnÆt know enough about technology to start
- using the Internet on their own, and only 10% were interested in using
- the Internet or email in the future. Overall Internet adoption rates have
- leveled off, however adults already online are using the Web more often
- than ever before. PewÆs study also showed that 88% of American adults
- have a cell phone, 57% have a laptop, 19% own an eReader, 19% have a
- tablet and 63% access the Internet wirelessly with one of these devices.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
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