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The Courts

First Government Lawsuit Against a Patent Troll 88

Posted by samzenpus
from the when-the-man-comes-around dept.
walterbyrd writes "Late last year, a vigorous and secretive patent troll began sending out thousands of letters to small businesses all around the country, insisting that they owed between $900 and $1,200 per worker just for using scanners. The brazen patent-trolling scheme, carried out by a company called MPHJ technologies and dozens of shell companies with six-letter names, has caught the attention of politicians. MPHJ and its principals may have gone too far. They're now the subject of a government lawsuit targeting patent trolling—the first ever such case. Vermont Attorney General William Sorrell has filed suit in his home state, saying that MPHJ is violating Vermont consumer-protection laws."
Privacy

Why We Should Celebrate Snapchat and Encourage Ephemeral Communication 134

Posted by samzenpus
from the get-off-my-lawn dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Within a few months of launching, Snapchat has made an enormous and lasting impact on the culture of communication on the Internet – and we should all be grateful. They have simplified a security process enough to the point that anybody can use it, while validating the market of the next generation of privacy-preserving ephemeral communication. Most importantly, we may finally get a break from the forced permanence of the Facebook and Google world, where everything you do and share is a data point to be monetized and re-sold to the highest bidder."
Privacy

Teens, Social Media, and Privacy 101

Posted by samzenpus
from the open-book dept.
antdude writes "Pew Internet reports that: 'Teens are sharing more info about themselves on social media sites than they have in the past, but they are also taking a variety of technical and non-technical steps to manage the privacy of that information. Despite taking these privacy-protective actions, teen social media users do not express a high level of concern about third-parties (such as businesses or advertisers) accessing their data.'"
Science

Physicists Create Quantum Link Between Photons That Don't Exist At the Same Time 299

Posted by samzenpus
from the time-after-time dept.
sciencehabit writes "Physicists have long known that quantum mechanics allows for a subtle connection between quantum particles called entanglement, in which measuring one particle can instantly set the otherwise uncertain condition, or 'state,' of another particle—even if it's light years away. Now, experimenters in Israel have shown that they can entangle two photons that don't even exist at the same time. Anton Zeilinger, a physicist at the University of Vienna, says that the experiment demonstrates just how slippery the concepts of quantum mechanics are. 'It's really neat because it shows more or less that quantum events are outside our everyday notions of space and time.'"
The Military

Missile Test Creates Huge Expanding Halo of Light Over Hawaii 86

Posted by samzenpus
from the looks-like-progress dept.
The Bad Astronomer writes "A Minuteman III missile launch from California early Wednesday morning created a weird, expanding halo of light seen from the CFHT observatory on Hawaii's Mauna Kea. The third stage of the missile has ports that open and dump fuel into the near-vacuum. This cloud expands rapidly as a spherical shell, shock-exciting the air molecules and causing them to glow, creating the bizarre effect."
Technology

3D Printers For Peace Contest 258

Posted by samzenpus
from the peace-love-and-toner dept.
First time accepted submitter Bas_Wijnen writes "3D printing is being condemned in the media because of the potential for printing guns. Engineers at Michigan Tech believe there is far more potential for 3D printers to make our lives better rather than killing one another. To encourage thinking about constructive uses of 3D printing technology Michigan Tech Open Sustainability Technology (MOST) Lab and Type A Machines sponsor the first 3-D Printers for Peace Contest. Designers are encouraged to consider: If Mother Theresa of Ghandi had access to 3D printing what would they print? What kind of designs could help reduce military spending and conflict while making us all safer and more secure? Anyone in the United States may enter and there is no cost."
Intel

Intel's Linux OpenGL Driver Faster Than Apple's OS X Driver 218

Posted by samzenpus
from the greased-lightning dept.
An anonymous reader writes "The open-source Intel Linux graphics driver has hit a milestone of now being faster than Apple's own OpenGL stack on OS X. The Intel Linux driver on Ubuntu 13.04 is now clearly faster than Apple's internally-developed Intel OpenGL driver on OS X 10.8.3. when benchmarked from a 'Sandy Bridge' class Mac Mini. Only some months ago, Apple's GL driver was still trouncing the Intel Linux Mesa driver."

+ - 'The Chinese Are Not Going to Stop'

Submitted by Trailrunner7
Trailrunner7 writes "The news that the attack on Google in 2009 also compromised a database holding warrants for lawful intercept surveillance on users has raised fears about the security of national security data on private networks. Cyberspionage operations pose a serious threat to national security, and these attacks are increasing. Dennis Fisher spoke with Anup Ghosh of Invincea about the nature of the threat and what can be done to address it.

"A lot of people think of the military as living at the Pentagon, but a lot of this lives in the private sector. So the security of these networks is a matter of national security. The Chinese are not going to stop. Neither are the other groups. This is a treasure trove to be mined by anyone. At what point are we going to say, hey, we need to take this threat seriously and we need to innovate our way out of this problem. We can’t count on every user making the right decision on every email," Ghosh said."
Movies

Ask Neil Gaiman and Amber Benson About Their Kickstarter Vampire Movie 102

Posted by samzenpus
from the ask-what-you-will dept.
Writer and novelist Neil Gaiman and Amber Benson of Buffy the Vampire Slayer fame have teamed up to star in a new vampire movie called, Blood Kiss. Kickstarted by ST:TNG and Emmy-winning writer Michael Reaves, Blood Kiss is a film noir vampire movie set in Golden Age Hollywood. Of his acting debut Gaiman says, "I'm willing to pretend that the prospect of acting doesn't terrify me in order to help Michael Reaves make his film." The trio have agreed to take a break from the blood and answer any questions you have about the new project or their past work. As usual, ask as many as you'd like, but please, one per post.

+ - PhD student builds 32 node Raspberry Pi cluster ->

Submitted by JamieKitson
JamieKitson writes "The Register has a report of PhD student Joshua Kiepert's side project building a beowolf cluster of 32 Raspberry Pis. "Side project" because he built it purely to test his main thesis and wanted to avoid having to wait to use his university's 32 node xeon cluster. Cue "imagine a beowolf cluster of these" jokes."
Link to Original Source
Security

Reporters Threatened, Labeled Hackers For Finding Security Hole 120

Posted by samzenpus
from the keep-your-mouth-shut dept.
colinneagle writes "Scripps News reporters discovered 170,000 records online of customers of Lifeline, a government program offering affordable phone service for low-income citizens, that contained everything needed for identity theft . Last year, the FCC 'tightened' the rules for the program by requiring Lifeline phone carriers to document applicants' eligibility, which led to collecting more sensitive information from citizens. A Scripps News investigative team claims it 'Googled' the phone companies TerraCom Inc. and YourTel America Inc. to discover all of the files. A Scripps reporter asked for an on-camera interview with the COO of TerraCom and YourTel after explaining the files were freely available online. That did not happen, but shortly thereafter the customer records disappeared from the internet. Then, the blame-the-messenger hacker accusations and mudslinging began. Although the Scripps reporters videotaped the process showing how they found the documents, attorney Jonathon Lee for both telecoms threatened the 'Scripps Hackers' with violating the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA)."
The Courts

Judges Debate Patents and If New Software Makes a Computer a "New Machine" 246

Posted by samzenpus
from the computer-transubstantiation dept.
First time accepted submitter ectoman writes "A third party steps into a financial transaction to make sure all parties exchange funds at the same time and as expected. Can you patent this process? What if the third party is a computer? Rob Tiller, vice president and general counsel for Red Hat, details a recent court ruling on this very matter—one that has critical implications for the future of software patents, and one that divided the judges involved. Tiller writes that: 'The judges mostly agreed that the idea of managing settlement risk with a third party was abstract such that by itself it could not be patented. They differed, though, on whether using a general purpose computer for managing settlement risk meant that the patents avoided invalidity based on abstraction.' Interestingly, some judges suggested that a computer becomes a 'new machine' every time it loads different software."
Books

Book Review: Locked Down: Information Security For Lawyers 43

Posted by samzenpus
from the read-all-about-it dept.
benrothke writes "Had Locked Down: Information Security for Lawyers not been published by the American Bar Association (ABA) and 2 of its 3 authors not been attorneys; one would have thought the book is a reproach against attorneys for their obliviousness towards information security and privacy. In numerous places, the book notes that lawyers are often clueless when it comes to digital security. With that, the book is a long-overdue and valuable information security reference for anyone, not just lawyers." Read below for the rest of Ben's review.
Book Reviews

+ - Book Review - Makers: The New Industrial Revolution, by Chris Anderson

Submitted by chantzstrong
chantzstrong writes " Makers: The New Industrial Revolution

Chris Anderson, the author of “The Long Tail”, former editor-in-chief Wired Magazine, and current CEO/Founder of 3D Robotics, titled his new book “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution”. I ignored the title – I thought would be a primer for anyone interested in 3D Printing. Not really.

If you are interested in the technical specifications of a certain printer, this is not your book. Differences between stereolithography and fused deposition modelling? Not here. Roughly 5 pages deal with the technology of 3D printing itself. What this book is — a great read for anyone interested in how 3D printing could affect one of the core of the modern age – manufacturing.

Early on, the author quotes Marx “power belongs to those who control the means of production”. This is fitting as the book is more of manifesto of a new manufacturing ethos than anything else. It is a blueprint on the future of a crowd-funded, open-sourced, creative commons, and artisanal approach to the business of making stuff.

The writing is clear and engaging. The book covers a whole lot more ground than your typical “business and innovation” book. My general experience with these books is that they state an idea, re-state for the rest of the book, supported with anecdotes for why this idea is correct, useful and/or ground-breaking. Unlike those books – Anderson’s narrative arcs from the cottage industry that supported massive factories and warehouses of Manchester during the Industrial Revolution to desktop publishing enabled by the early Macs and PCs to the current global supply chains which bring us cheap, accessible goods. It completes the arc by bringing us to his vision of future of manufacturing where web-based technologies act as an enabler for a completely new way of manufacturing.

He starts by walking us through the trials of his grandfather — a tinkerer / inventor close who actually overcame the major hurdles facing an inventor on his way to becoming an entrepreneur. In Mr. Anderson’s view, the hurdles of convincing a manufacturer to make, then market and actively sell an item keep many great products from seeing the light of day. His core thesis is that now many of these barriers are lowered, or non-existent, which will lead to a sea-change in manufacturing – an industry already multiples bigger, more pervasive and impactful than the digital economy.

This change will be brought on by the “Maker Movement “- a movement that uses digital tools to create designs, has a culture to share these designs openly and freely, and uses a common file standard to allow anyone to make these designs. An open source community (à la Linux) geared towards making things in the real world – not in Minecraft. His claim is that this will change society as much as the Industrial Revolution. He argues that that Revolution was as much due to an increase in the number of inventions and the transformation of the process of invention itself as it was to cotton, steam and coal. By combining that inventor’s ethos with the advances and changes brought on by a much more recent revolution (the web) he sees the great opportunity of the Maker Movement is to be artisanal and innovative, small yet global.

The book is more about creating an open source manufacturing industry, and explaining how a business can thrive outside of current intellectual property regimes, supply chains of specialized, low cost mass producers, and big-box retailers (and their large scale marketing campaigns). He talks about being more agile than large companies, getting products to market faster use open source R&D, and a community of rabidly (my words – not his) loyal customers.

Along the way, he pulls insights from his knowledge of the web-based communities and technologies; the book itself is a goldmine of identifying interesting players in the field. He walks through how to fund and finance in this brave new open-source world (noting crowdfunders like KickStarter), how the web enables a small entrepreneur to hook into large manufacturing firms who will make what you want, in the amounts you want, and finally walks through some of the tools you will need to start your own open-source manufacturing firm.

For me, the most intriguing part of the book was the epilogue – where he finishes with a few scenarios of what this could look like in the big picture – essentially how could the majority use this technology.

It’s this piece that I wanted answers throughout the book – Is 3D Printing for real? Why will I need a 3D Printer in my living room to print out plastic tchochkes? (def: tchochke – “trinket”Yiddish) Should I go out and buy up stock in 3D Printing so I don’t miss out on an Apple-like bonanza? Is it the next Betamax? Or will it overthrow regimes and remake the world, like Twitter or the steam engine?

To be fair, he doesn’t pretend to be looking at these issues or presenting the potential dark side of a world where plastic do-dads are even easier to obtain and dispose. He does not go into what could derail the bright future he paints. He is unabashedly, and most of the time convincingly, selling a vision of a new approach to an old industry.

And it may be that this old industry is already dying – it just doesn’t know it yet. I’m sure the bicycle industry is feeling the heat.

Seriously. They can print a bikecomplete with chain and wheels, ball bearings already in.

http://www.eads.com/eads/int/en/news/press.20110307_eads_airbike.html

Maybe the future is already here.

`````````````````` Product Details

Hardcover: 272 pages

Publisher: Crown Business (October 2, 2012)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 9780307720955

ISBN-13: 978-0307720955

ASIN: 0307720950"
Science

Narrowing Down When Humans Began Hurling Spears 207

Posted by samzenpus
from the give-it-a-throw dept.
sciencehabit writes "Archaeologists have long debated when early humans began hurling stone-tipped spears and darts at large prey. By throwing a spear, instead of thrusting it, humans could hunt buffalo and other dangerous game from a safe distance, with less risk of a goring or mauling. But direct evidence of this hunting technique in early sites has been lacking. A new study of impact marks on the bones of ancient prey shows that such sophisticated killing techniques go back at least 90,000 years ago in Africa and offers a new method of determining how prehistoric hunters made their kills."

There has been a little distress selling on the stock exchange. -- Thomas W. Lamont, October 29, 1929 (Black Tuesday)

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