Monday, January 31, 2005

FM 34-40-2 Basic Cryptanalysis

FM 34-40-2 Basic Cryptanalysis: "FIELD MANUAL NO 34-40-2 HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY Washington, DC, 13 September 1990 " WOW!!!

2005 Coachella Valley Music Festival

2005 Coachella Valley Music Festival: its that time of year again! heres the line up! "Saturday April 30:
Coldplay
Cocteau Twins
Weezer
The Chemical Brothers
Wilco
Cafe Tacuba
Keane
Rilo Kiley
Doves
Armin Van Buuren
The Raveonettes
Bloc Party
Hernan Cattaneo
DJ Peretz
Zap Mama
Amp Fiddler
M83
Ambulance LTD
Fantomas
Four Tet
MF Doom
Josh Wink
The Secret Machines
Tiga
Spoon
The Kills
Sage Francis
Boom Bip
Katie Melua
Shout Out Louds
Donavon Frankenreiter
DJ Marky
Immortal Technique
Jean Grae
Razorlight
Swayzak
k-os
Buck 65
Eisley
The Sexy Magazines

Sunday May 1st:
Nine Inch Nails
New Order
Gang of Four
Bright Eyes
Prodigy
Black Star
The Faint
Snow Patrol
The Arcade Fire
Roni Size
Roots Manuva
DJ Krush
Junkie XL
M.I.A.
British Sea Power
The Dresden Dolls
Miss Kitten
The Fiery Furnaces
The Perceptionists
Jem
Matthew Dear
Sixtoo
Tegan and Sara
Diplo
Subtle
Aesop Rock
Stereophonics
Matmos
Beans
The Bravery
The Futureheads
Wolf Eyes
The Blood Brothers
Kasabian
Radio 4
Sloan
Autolux
Gram Rabbit
Zion I"

anyone up for it???

Sunday, January 30, 2005

Saturday, January 29, 2005

MGM DVD Hits Visual Controversy (January 27th, 2005)

MGM DVD Hits Visual Controversy (January 27th, 2005): "A major legal controversy is swirling around MGM DVD copies with over 300 titles being affected by an aspect ratio problem. According to CHUD, claims have gone up that state MGM Home Video has been misleading about the films they're marketing as widescreen, rather cutting the top and bottom off of pan and scan transfers and billing it as widescreen, as the aspect ratio is still correct. Amongst the titles that may have been affected are '1984', '24 Hour Party People', 'The Amityville Horror', 'Annie Hall', 'Barbershop', 'The Birdcage', 'City Slickers', 'The Dark Half', 'Dead Man Walking', 'Desperately Seeking Susan', 'Dirty Rotten Scoundrels', 'Dr. No', 'Four Weddings & A Funeral', 'From Russia With Love', 'Goldfinger', 'Gorky Park', 'Hannibal', 'The Hound of the Baskervilles', 'Invasion of the Body Snatchers', 'The Island of Dr. Moreau', 'Jeepers Creepers', 'Mannequin', 'Man in the Moon', 'The Man with the Golden Gun', 'Midnight Cowboy', 'Mississippi Burning', 'Mystic Pizza', 'Phantasm', 'Platoon', 'Raging Bull', 'Rain Man', 'Scanners', 'Shallow Grave', 'Some Like it Hot', 'Spaceballs', 'The Terminator', 'Wargames' and 'Y Tu Mama Tambien'."

wow the first class action i will join! fuck you mgm, i want compensation for my 24 hour party people, last american virgin, cq, and sfw!!! gota check the rest of the list!!!

Senators seek to close copyright gaps

Senators seek to close copyright gaps : "A bipartisan coalition of senators this week reintroduced legislation that would make it a federal crime to camcord a movie and indemnifies from liability the makers of a video player that edits movies for 'objectionable' content. The legislation was dropped into the Senate hopper late Tuesday by such lawmakers as Sens. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, John Cornyn, R-Texas, Diane Feinstein, D-Calif., and Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. 'The Family Entertainment and Copyright Act of 2005 will give parents more say over what their children see,' Hatch said. 'It also closes some significant gaps in our copyright laws that are feeding some of the piracy so rampant on the Internet.'"

The Mac Media Center Project

Turning Mac Mini into a Media Center: "This projects plans to develop a free Media Center application for the Apple Macintosh, bringing togther the power and intuitiveness of the Macs' built in applications under a simple interface, for use as part of a Home Theatre system."

Cracking iTunes' DRM with JHymn

Cracking iTunes' DRM with JHymn: "Howard Wen has interviewed 'FutureProof' of the JHymn project, a DRM removal application for iTunes song files laden, or 'crippled' as some say, to prevent filesharing. FutureProof tells us how Apple's DRM works, how to rip it out using JHymn, how they build on the work of 'DVD' Jon Johansen, and how to upgrade to that brand new iShuffle safely."

Saturday, January 22, 2005

Opening Salvo Filed In MGM v. Grokster

Opening Salvo Filed In MGM v. Grokster: "'The first brief on the merits before the Supreme Court in MGM Studios v. Grokster was filed Friday (January 21, 2004) by the Video Software Dealers Association. The brief suggests that while p2p systems may be used for infringing and noninfringing uses, courts should consider whether technologies may be used to reduce infringing uses without over-burdening the system provider, freedom of speech for non-infringing uses (including by copyright owners who want p2p systems to be used to reach their audiences) or freedom of competition (including first sale doctrine principles, and competition in providing all intermediate software and services). Bringing a retailer perspective, it strikes a balance of respect for copyright and respect for the limits of those copyrights. The brief is available here (in PDF).'"

BloggingSundance.com - sundance.weblogsinc.com

BloggingSundance.com - sundance.weblogsinc.com: "Weblogs, Inc. is Blogging Sundance."

a portable cellular rotary phone

a portable cellular rotary phone: "this goes down as one of the coolest things i have seen in a long time. i must have one for my car!!!

Friday, January 21, 2005

Coachella festival details announced

Coachella festival details announced: "The first confirmed details have been announced for this year’s COACHELLA FESTIVAL. The Californian event will return for its sixth instalment between April 30 – May 1, it was announced last night (January 20). The annual event will again take place at the Empire Polo Field in the desert city of Indio, two hours outside of Los Angeles. Last year’s event, which boasted headlining sets from a reunited Pixies, Radiohead and The Cure, helped the festival sell out for the first time in its history, drawing over 50,000 patrons each day. Though the 2005 line up is still under wraps, Coldplay are rumoured to be headlining on one night of the event. NME.COM has also learned Franz Ferdinand are also expected to play. 'I would really like to just having spoken to people who’ve been to it before, it sounds amazing. I’d love to do it,' singer Alex Kapranos told NME.COM in December. Bassist Bob Hardy added, 'It’ll probably be one of our first shows of the year.' Current ShockWaves NME Awards Tour 2005 headliners The Killers, will head back to the desert for the second time, hoping to make up for their show last year according to frontman Brandon Flowers. 'I had a terrible experience last year at Coachella,' he told NME.COM. 'It wasn’t something in particular. It was the last gig of an eight week tour, we hadn’t been home and it was 113 degrees and the crowd just wasn’t into it so I’m looking forward to redeeming our Coachella experience this year.' Other who’ve told NME.COM they have been asked to play are The Futureheads, Snow Patrol, Keane and Bloc Party. Rumoured acts also include Secret Machines, Hot Hot Heat, Phoenix, The Bravery and Radio 4."

MGM v. Grokster Date Set

MGM v. Grokster Date Set: "'The Supreme Court has set March 29th as the date for oral arguments to begin in the Grokster trial. As we all know the final ruling will have ramifications on the tech world well beyond P2P. A decision is expected by end of July.'"

Hurtubise says invention sees through walls

Hurtubise says invention sees through walls: "Troy Hurtubise has done the seemingly impossible with his newest invention and defied all known rules of physics, he says. The Angel Light—Hurtubise claims the concept came to him in a recurring dream—can reportedly see through walls, as if there was no barrier at all."

Thursday, January 20, 2005

Monday, January 24th to be Worst Day of the Year

Monday, January 24th to be Worst Day of the Year: "'Dr. Arnalls from Cardiff University has crunched the numbers and has precisely determined that Monday, January 24th will be the worst day of the year. For those of you who might be wondering, the formula to use when deciding what day to stay in bed is 1/8W (D-d) 3/8xTQ MxNA. The fact that the 24th happens to land on a Monday is purely coincidental.'"

Wednesday, January 19, 2005

Recording industry sees growth in legal downloads

Recording industry sees growth in legal downloads: "More than 200 million music tracks were downloaded legally in the United States and Europe in 2004, up from 20 million the year before, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry said Wednesday. Releasing its second annual IFPI Digital Music Report in London, the trade body said that legal music sites had quadrupled to more than 230 in 2004, bringing record companies their first significant revenues from the digital format. The IFPI said that analysts Jupiter estimated 2004 digital revenues at $330 million and predicted they would exceed double that in 2005."

Xanadu: The Forgotten Hypertext

Xanadu: The Forgotten Hypertext: "'Xanadu, a project started in the 1960s to create a deep-linked hypertext infrastructure with xanalogical structures, is still alive, although largely forgotten due to the emergence of the Web.'"

Do You Want to Live Forever?

Do You Want to Live Forever?: "'In 1918, Gunnery Sergeant Daniel Daly inspired his weary men to attack by yelling, 'come on, you sons of bitches, do you want to live forever?' But how would the world change if we could? This month's Technology Review introduces us to the computer scientist, and self-taught biologist, Aubrey de Grey, who thinks immortality could be within our grasp by 2030. Thinking like an engineer, he's broken aging down into seven specific problems, like cell atrophy and mitochondrial mutation, which he believes can all, in principle, be solved. And he has good reason to think those seven are the only 'bugs' standing in the way of a thousand-year lifespan. De Grey is clearly both a genius and a little nuts, but I'm not sure in what proportion...'"

Mailinator

Mailinator: "Get enough SPAM lately? Have you ever gone to a website that asks for your email address for no reason (other than they are going to sell it to the highest bidder so you get spam forever)? Welcome to Mailinator(tm) - Its no signup, instant anti-spam service. Here is how it works: You are on the web, at a party, or talking to your favorite insurance salesman. Wherever you are, someone (or some webpage) asks for your email. You know if you give it, you're gambling with your privacy. On the other hand, you do want at least one message from that person. The answer is to give them a mailinator address. You don't need to sign-up. You just make it up on the spot. Pick jonesy@mailinator.com or bipster@mailinator.com - pick anything you want (up to 15 characters before the @ sign). Later, come to this site and check that account. Its that easy. Mailinator accounts are created when mail arrives for them. No signup, no personal information, and when you're done - you can walk away - an instant solution to one way spammers get your address. Its an anti-spam solution for everyone. The messages are automatically deleted for you after a few hours. "

German Library Allowed To Crack Copy Protection

German Library Allowed To Crack Copy Protection: "'The EU Directive 2001/29/EU (also known as the European Copyright Directive) has made it 'a criminal offence to break or attempt to break the copy protection or access control systems on digital content such as music, videos, eBooks, and software'. Since today, at least in Germany there is one notable exception: The Deutsche Bibliothek, Germany's national library and bibliographic information center, has received a 'license to copy', i.e. the official authorization to crack and duplicate DRM-protected e-books and other digital media such as CD-Audio and CD-Roms. The Deutsche Bibliothek achieved an agreement with the German Federation of the Phonographic Industry and the German Booksellers and Publishers Association after it became obvious that copy protections would not only annoy teenage school boys, but also prohibit the library from fulling its legal mandate to collect, process and bibliographic index important German and German-language based works.'"

Legal download sales soar in 2004

Legal download sales soar in 2004: "Sales of legally downloaded songs have increased more than tenfold in 2004, with the US and Europe buying 200 million tracks online."

Jail Time For P2P Developers?

Jail Time For P2P Developers?: "'A Califorian bill introduced last week would, if passed, expose file-swapping software developers to fines of up to $2,500 per charge, or a year in jail, if they don't take 'reasonable care' to prevent their software from being used to commit crime. C|Net has the story, as well as a link to the actual bill. By the overly broad definition of P2P software, almost any piece of internet software could be liable. This browser is certainly able to download and upload files ('Save as ...' and upload forms). Are Microsoft, Opera and Mozilla.org taking 'reasonable care' to prevent me from exchanging anything illegal? Of course, I never go there, but a friend of my uncle's third cousin's brother told me warez download sites work just fine ...'"

The Portable Mac OS X Geek

The Portable Mac OS X Geek: "Who says you can't run Mac OS X on a Pocket PC?" vnc makes it possible to access a mac from your handheld!!!

Tuesday, January 18, 2005

Bollywood New Releases Available via Video-On-Demand

Bollywood New Releases Available via Video-On-Demand: "'There's an announcement of a secure, DivX video-on-demand service for first-run movies, but only for Bollywood movies. 'Each new Bollywood film is released on the public Internet a day before or on the same day of its theatrical release, through piracy on multiple illegal movie download web sites,' said Al Mason, CEO of Cinema on Web. 'Our partnership with DivXNetworks represents the future of entertainment on the Internet. Soon virtually all new major Bollywood and Hollywood movies, including entertainment will be distributed digitally with secure VOD solutions like the one created by DivXNetworks, simultaneously defeating piracy and generating additional revenue for film studios and producers.''
"

Happy Mondays and The Farm team up for special London shows

Happy Mondays and The Farm team up for special London shows: "HAPPY MONDAYS and THE FARM have announced plans to play two special shows at LONDON CARLING BRIXTON ACADEMY in March. The ‘48 Hour Party People’ gigs will also feature DJ slots from Primal Scream’s Mani and Inspiral Carpets’ Clint Boon. The dates are The Farm’s first in 10 years and Happy Mondays’s second and third UK shows since 2000, following their one-off Get Loaded In The Park appearance last summer. At the time both Mondays frontman Shaun Ryder and his dancing sidekick Bez, who is currently appearing in Channel 4’s 'Celebrity Big Brother', both hinted that they may play again. Both bands will be headlining the Brixton shows on March 25-26 with support coming from Stone Roses tribute band The Clone Roses on the second date."

glad i got to see a bit of this over the summer! strange too just saw the farm on "the alternative" thanks to b for the recommendation. a great show on vh1 classics. first vid i saw when i tuned in was "only shallow"! that was enough, i am hooked!!!

Monday, January 17, 2005

P2P Manifesto:Peer To Peer Study/Project

P2P Manifesto:Peer To Peer Study/Project: "' P2P Manifesto is a P2P study that I've done and also a project, released under CC license. This study (30 pages, available on a dedicated blog, in pdf format or in .torrent/blogtorrent) explain why: - P2P is unstoppable - P2P is positive for Companies - P2P is positive for the market - P2P is good for users All the readers can create their own P2P Manifesto, free to edit this original P2P manifesto. The idea is to then collect on the blog all the different P2P Manifesto's releases, to create a good knowledge base point about P2P issues.'"

Sunday, January 16, 2005

Build Your Own MP3 Player

Build Your Own MP3 Player: "'Here's something for the DIY people, a home made mp3 player built into a mint case. Total (minimum) cost for parts: ~50$. At least it's something different.'"

Saturday, January 15, 2005

About PodcastAlley.com -- The place to find Podcasts

About PodcastAlley.com -- The place to find Podcasts: "Welcome to the best place to find all information relating to podcasts and podcasting. We are striving to develop the biggest and best directory of podcasts available on the internet. Podcasting is a great way for professionals and individuals alike to create audio news files (podcasts) that people can download to their iPods and listen to when they are away from their computers."

TheScout.Net

TheScout.Net: indie rock news mp3s and podcasts!!!

We Landed On Titan

We Landed On Titan: check out the images and sounds from the other world!!!

Crazy not before seen fish

Crazy not before seen fish: from the tsunami have pop up!!!

Friday, January 14, 2005

Forbes.com: When IPod Sales Run Out Of Steam

Forbes.com: When IPod Sales Run Out Of Steam: "But let's say Apple has a good year and sells a million units of the iPod shuffle"

i really just wanted to be able to find this quote and these figures so when i hear the next appl conference call i know were to look. 1 mil, what are you insane!!!

Wired 13.01: VIEW: They're Not Worthy

Wired 13.01: VIEW: They're Not Worthy: "They're Not Worthy Why extend the copyright on works that no longer have commercial value?" Lawrence Lessig has a go at term extension!!!

Mark Vidler aka Go Home Productions

Mark Vidler aka Go Home Productions: "Producer / Remixer / DJ Based in Watford, UK has spent the best part of 2 and a half years producing Bootleg Mash-Ups and Remixes that have achieved a fair degree of worldwide notoriety."

Thursday, January 13, 2005

CC Mixter - The remix family tree


CC Mixter - The remix family tree
: "The Fine Art of Sampling Contests, Win a chance to be featured on the Creative Commons release THE WIRED CD: Ripped. Sampled. Mashed. Shared. Sample The Beastie Boys, David Byrne, DJ Danger Mouse, and many others to win! Or, win a chance to be on the next Fine Arts Militia album featuring Chuck D."

Factory Records founder starts new label

Factory Records founder starts new label: "British music entrepreneur Tony Wilson, whose noted and notorious post-punk indie label Factory Records was the subject of the 2002 feature '24 Hour Party People,' has started up a new imprint, F4 Records. Based in Manchester, England, F4 is launching with the Jan. 31 release of 'Where We Live,' a single by the local hip-hop/garage collective Raw-T. An album from the group, 'Realise and Witness,' will be issued in March. Pinnacle is distributing F4 in the United Kingdom. F4 is also mounting a download site with Pinnacle, with initial Web-only offerings by guitarist Vini Reilly (of the original Factory group the Durutti Column) and the Manchester group Young Offenders Institute."

Wednesday, January 12, 2005

iPod Altoids battery pack v2

iPod Altoids battery pack v2: "I got some new Altoids tins, borrowed a Dremel tool from Mitchell, and purchased brand new firewire connectors from NTC. Here's my second, cleaner, tighter, much nicer attempt at a sweet external battery pack for iPod. Once, again, credit goes to Drew Perry for the design and inspiration. His is made inside a deck of cards, mine is in an Altoids can. This one is way better than the first one I tried, and my soldering is getting better - not really."

Videos Quick, Easy and Automatic

Videos Quick, Easy and Automatic: "Locating video content on the web can be cumbersome and time-consuming, especially for the not-too-tech-savvy tinkerer. But a new application combining BitTorrent and RSS could make it easy for video fans to automatically locate files and download them to their computers."

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

The Centralization of BitTorrent Networks

The Centralization of BitTorrent Networks: "'A group of graduate students from the University of Washington have posted a a new independent report about the extent of centralization in regards to BitTorrent communities. The report indicates that irrespective of the recent damage dealt to global torrent sites, the communities are still very active, even despite their large degree of centralization (and perhaps exposure/liability). Furthermore, the report attempts to determine if the torrent communities follow the 80/20 rule, by measuring the Long Tail of torrent distribution.'"

Sunday, January 09, 2005

the birth of <img>

the birth of img From: Marc Andreessen Subject: proposed new tag: IMG, the 5 characters that arguably changed the world, causing us all to go online!!!

Google's 20-Year Usenet Timeline

Google's 20-Year Usenet Timeline: "'Google just released its 20-Year Usenet Timeline. Among the highlights: First Mac rumor, first 'me too' post, Tim Berners-Lee's announcement of the Web, and Linus' announcement of Linux.'"

Google exposes web surveillance cams


Google exposes web surveillance cams
: "Blogs and message forums buzzed this week with the discovery that a pair of simple Google searches permits access to well over 1,000 unprotected surveillance cameras around the world - apparently without their owners' knowledge."

Friday, January 07, 2005

Berkman Center Releases Digital Media Policy Paper

Berkman Center Releases Digital Media Policy Paper: "'Last year marked another messy chapter in the music and movie industries' transitions online. Legitimate offerings multiplied while the RIAA and MPAA continued their lawsuits against P2P systems and users, even as P2P traffic reached new heights. How -- if at all -- should policymakers attempt to resolve emerging digital media conflicts? The Berkman Center's Digital Media Project today released a new research study examining options for government action and how it could affect four different business models for the distribution of digital media. The authors caution that government intervention is currently premature because it is unlikely to strike an appropriate balance between the many competing interests at stake.'"

Thursday, January 06, 2005

holographic storage

holographic storage: "InPhase today said that it has developed the world's first prototypes of holographic storage drives."

World's Shortest P2P App: 15 Lines

World's Shortest P2P App: 15 Lines: "'The New Scientist has an article about TinyP2P, the world's smallest P2P app. It's 15 lines of Python code brought to us by Edward Felten, CS Professor at Princeton and outspoken supporter of the digital rights the Slashdot community holds so dear. He wrote the program as a proof-of-concept that P2P apps are really easy to write, don't have to be complicated, and thus banning them (a la the INDUCE Act) is pointless and silly.'"


# tinyp2p.py 1.0 (documentation at http://freedom-to-tinker.com/tinyp2p.html)
import sys, os, SimpleXMLRPCServer, xmlrpclib, re, hmac # (C) 2004, E.W. Felten
ar,pw,res = (sys.argv,lambda u:hmac.new(sys.argv[1],u).hexdigest(),re.search)
pxy,xs = (xmlrpclib.ServerProxy,SimpleXMLRPCServer.SimpleXMLRPCServer)
def ls(p=""):return filter(lambda n:(p=="")or res(p,n),os.listdir(os.getcwd()))
if ar[2]!="client": # license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0
myU,prs,srv = ("http://"+ar[3]+":"+ar[4], ar[5:],lambda x:x.serve_forever())
def pr(x=[]): return ([(y in prs) or prs.append(y) for y in x] or 1) and prs
def c(n): return ((lambda f: (f.read(), f.close()))(file(n)))[0]
f=lambda p,n,a:(p==pw(myU))and(((n==0)and pr(a))or((n==1)and [ls(a)])or c(a))
def aug(u): return ((u==myU) and pr()) or pr(pxy(u).f(pw(u),0,pr([myU])))
pr() and [aug(s) for s in aug(pr()[0])]
(lambda sv:sv.register_function(f,"f") or srv(sv))(xs((ar[3],int(ar[4]))))
for url in pxy(ar[3]).f(pw(ar[3]),0,[]):
for fn in filter(lambda n:not n in ls(), (pxy(url).f(pw(url),1,ar[4]))[0]):
(lambda fi:fi.write(pxy(url).f(pw(url),2,fn)) or fi.close())(file(fn,"wc"))

Wednesday, January 05, 2005

zork1 at forkexec.com

zork1 at forkexec.com: "zork server", geek heaven! a zork machine in java. never played before but what a history lesson!!!

iPod - restore and maximize battery life

iPod - restore and maximize battery life, this guy went from 3/4 of an hour to 8 hours on a g1 ipod!!!

Play Tetris in Terminal via emacs

Play Tetris in Terminal via emacs: "Open up a Terminal window. Type in emacs and press Enter. Once it's loaded, press and release Escape, and then type x. At the bottom of the screen, you'll see M-x; type tetris and press Enter. You're now playing Tetris within emacs. Use the arrow keys and space bar (to drop blocks) to play. When you are done, a highscore will be generated at /tmp. You can then exit emacs by pressing Control-X followed by Control-C."

THE WORLD QUESTION CENTER 2005

THE WORLD QUESTION CENTER 2005: "Great minds can sometimes guess the truth before they have either the evidence or arguments for it (Diderot called it having the 'esprit de divination'). What do you believe is true even though you cannot prove it?"

Folklore.org: Macintosh Stories

Folklore.org: Macintosh Stories: "Anecdotes about the development of Apple's original Macintosh computer, and the people who created it."

Building the AACS Next-Gen Copy Protection Scheme

Building the AACS Next-Gen Copy Protection Scheme: "'The IEEE Spectrum has a piece that discusses the proposed encryption scheme for the upcoming HD-DVD standard. 'The key to the spirit of compromise is an agreement that the AACS specification will allow consumers to move the data on an optical disc to the various devices they own, including video servers and portable video players, either directly or via a home network.' AACS will use a so-called strong key, the 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard approved by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology.'"

RIAA Loses DMCA Subpoena Case Against Charter

RIAA Loses DMCA Subpoena Case Against Charter: "'According to an opinion published today (PDF), the RIAA has lost its case against Charter Communications regarding subpoenas for the cable ISP's users to be identified for copyright infringement in the Eastern District of Missouri. You may remember that Charter Communications filed a motion to block the RIAA's subpoena back in late 2003. Now Charter has prevailed. Here's the blurb from the Court 'Civil case - Digital Millennium Copyright Act. District court erred in issuing subpoenas on internet providers to obtain personal information about the providers' subscribers who were alleged to be transmitting copyrighted works via the internet through peer-to-peer programs; the internet providers' function was limited to acting as a conduit for the allegedly copyrighted material, and Section 512(h) of the Act does not authorize subpoenas in such circumstances; case remanded with directions. Dissent by Judge Murphy. [PUBLISHED] [Bye, Author, with Murphy and Bright, Circuit Judges]''"

Monday, January 03, 2005

Moonstone Yells BANZAI

Moonstone Yells BANZAI: "According to SciFi Wire, comics publisher Moonstone has acquired the rights to the BUCKAROO BANZAI franchise, best known from the 1984 film starring Peter Weller. Moonstone announced it would publish a new book written by BANZAI creator Earl Mac Rauch. Stephen Thompson (Star Wars comics) will draft the interior illustrations. As yet, no publishing date has been announ"

Jesusonic - Effects for the enlightend

Jesusonic: "The Jesusonic is a fully programmable effects processor for guitar, bass, vocal and general use. NOW AVAILABLE: Jesusonic Software Preview for Windows, Linux, and MacOS X. The Jesusonic CrusFX 1000 is designed to offer all of the flexibility of a general purpose computer for its effects, without the traditional computer side effects (The CrusFX has (nearly) no moving parts, short boot times, rock solid stability and minimal latency for live performances)"

Sunday, January 02, 2005

California Sets Fines for Spyware

California Sets Fines for Spyware: "'The BBC has the story that California is introducing new laws to help eradicate spyware. The bill bans the installation of software that can be used to take over another computer and allows customers to seek $1000 in damages if they've fallen victim to this kind of malicious software. Can this really help cut down spyware or will it just be another fatally flawed piece of legislation?'"

Safecracking for the Computer Scientist

Safecracking for the Computer Scientist: "'It looks like Matt Blaze (the University of Pennsylvania CS professor best known for finding security flaws in the NSA Clipper Chip and in master keyed locks) is still causing trouble in physical security circles. There's a draft paper (dated December '04) on his web site entitled Safecracking for the Computer Scientist, which is a pretty in-depth look at what computer security can learn from safes (and vaults). The interesting thing is that it describes in detail the different ways that safes are cracked, probably revealing techniques that locksmiths would rather you didn't know about (there's a lot of security-by-obscurity there). The conclusion seems to be that while safes can fail, at least they do so in better ways than computer systems do. Warning: it's a 2.5 meg pdf file with lots of pretty pictures.'"

Comparing Codecs for 2004

Comparing Codecs for 2004: "'Popular encoding/guide/news site doom9.org has just put up its codec shoot-out for 2004, comparing 3ivx 5.0, Divx Fusion 5.9 (prerelease 6.0), Nero Digital Main Profile and High Profile, RealVideo 10, On2 VP6, VideoSoft's VSS, Xvid 1.0, MS's WMV9 and, last, newcomer Jomingo's HDX4. The comparison covers the speed, accuracy, target-file-size-adherence and other aspects of the codecs -- but also lets you compare yourself via high- and low-bandwidth framegrabs of each codec with a nice zoomable image-swap script.'"

mark's back

back from vegas and new years excursions...