Slashback: Lunacy, Cinema, Parliament 122
"That's not censorship, mate. This is censorship!" Carnage4Life writes: "After causing a murder trial to be aborted last month CrimeNet has been ordered by the attorney general of the Australian state of Victoria to be shut down. If the site operators refuse to shut down they will face jail time. The story can be found here. In news which can only be considered related, an anonymous kangaroo wrote: "Found a reference to this article on LISNews. Seems the Aussie Parliament pitched a hissy fit when their internet access got filtered. Oh gee, how the fsck do you think the rest of the country feels?" How indeed. That's what happens when you start introducing clashing premises, I guess. Geese, ganders, sauce.
To the moon, Alice -- To the moon! We've frequently linked to NASA photos from Slashdot; what if they said "(registration required)" after them like links to the New York Times? MousePotato writes: "NASA announced today that it has entered into an agreement with Dreamtime Holdings to provide multimedia coverage of astronaut activities. The press release details "creating a state-of-the-art multimedia portal, www.Dreamtime.com, that will, with the click of a mouse, open the door to thousands of images, sounds, documents, blueprints and plans from NASA's currently underused archives. " Interesting to note about it is the fact that they will be using HDTV to give us as well as NASA engineers high quality video." Interesting, too, that billions of space research tax dollars are being used "to create new market opportunities in the multimedia arena."
Does this mean I can watch my -- errr ... "classics" again? The DVD-under-Linux story continues, specifically with an update on LinDVD; soon, the MPAA's claims that there are legal DVD players for Linux users may hold at least a sprinking of water; johnnick writes: "Another update in the DeCSS saga. One of the arguments for DeCSS was that there was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes. CNET reports that InterVideo, a licensee of the software that enables DVD information to be decoded, plans to release beta software called LinDVD this month that allows people to watch DVDs on Linux machines."
Microsoft not making a run for the border: Calz writes: "Both Microsoft and B.C.'s Investment Minister have denied that Microsoft is considering moving, as reported in this Yahoo article."
In other news from planet Microsoft, the indefatigable Bruce Perens has this to say about mixed-case licensing:
"Microsoft has been caught in a trivial, easily remedied, GPL violation, which is detailed here. They have been contacted, and their response was, well, dumb.Why do companies get involved in trivial GPL violations? Because the company picks up Free Software as part of one of their products without making a commitment to do the simple, easy, inexpensive things that are required to comply with the Free Software license. Folks, if you can't comply with license requirements as easy as those in the GPL, find other software, please.
One of these examples comes up at least once a month, and I'm going to keep submitting these stories until the situation improves. Maybe that means forever. Today's wakeup call goes to Microsoft corporation, read the account from Tim Burlowski. "
As Bruce says, this looks like a relatively easy one to fix. It could be explained by the complexities of mergers and acquisitions, general confusion, alignment of planets etc, but eternal vigilance is the price of liberty, including as applied to software. Unless Microsoft would like to declare all EULAs null and void ...
MPAA? (Score:1)
So what.... so somebody reverse engineered there software, and found out there big secret... I'm sure theres been bigger things cracked in the past... If they don't want DVD's ripped, then why distribute them... Oh... wait... they *KNOW* theres no way they can stop it... but... *OOPS* somebody made it public... and now they're crying piracy. I'm sure that if somebody had cracked the CSS and kept it quite and amongst a few of there friends... nothing would have ever been said...
Synchis
The worlds most popular, famous, and loved super hero...
Just kidding
GPEULA: putting teeth in the GPL (Score:1)
include a thin layer of archive encryption and make it a violation of the DMCA to create versions without the EULA.
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Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:2)
Show me the source code for THOSE programs, and then they will no longer be in violation.
Many of the tools the license mentions are GNU tools; the source for the GNU system can be found at gnu.org or any Linux distro site.
Haiku (Score:1)
Aussies mired in censorship
NASA sells pictures
Re:I can't see you! (Score:1)
Absolutely. I mean the mac has been able to see and format dos floppies forever. But windows still acts like they are not formatted, even when there is a wonderful microsoft office file there.
Funny thing there, too. If you format a floppy dos and save office files as Word 6.0/95 format (the first word for windows) you can transfer them easily from one platform to the other. However I have had horrible luck getting Office to translate properly from Mac format on the PC.. usually results in garbage.
Re:Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:1)
Re:GPEULA: do we want those teeth? (Score:2)
However, if that were sufficient, then so would be Microsoft's easily-gettaroundable kerberos spec protected by just such a click license, wouldn't it?
And MS could say "well, we got the code using an unarchiver which never showed us this so-called license thing," which is what a lot of people are saying about kerberos.
I'd prefer unambiguous plaintext, I think. ("These are the terms. Read 'em and weep only if you choose not to follow them.")
timothy
Re:GPEULA: do we want those teeth? (Score:1)
Re:"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:2)
The purpose would be that this could be released without the MPAA being able to make any claim that it could be used for piracy. If it is ruled that this is legal, then the restrictions could be gradually removed.
Re:Haiku (Score:2)
Moderate moderation
For the posts are apt
Re:Is LinDVD Intel-only? (Score:1)
And this is an argument that would never end. Even the Amiga can be upgraded to use a G3 processor, so we need a DVD player for that too. So they produce one. Has anyone got a Sinclair QL with a stupidly fast processor? Or how about a player for people with slow machines but stupid quantities of fast storage. I want to be able to watch DVD movies reduced to 16 colours on my C64 connected to a raid system:)
Nice fantasy, but they would replace the code. (Score:2)
Then again, I would have never believed that Microsoft would pursue business as usual with the DOJ breathing down their neck. So who knows what they would really do?
-russ
Is LinDVD Intel-only? (Score:3)
I guess you can extend this argument to other operating systems, too. Is there a DVD player for BeOS, and *BSD? If not, DeCSS is necessary.
Take care,
Steve
========
Stephen C. VanDahm
Even if there is a DVD Player for Linux... (Score:1)
It's not open source. The way the MPAA is, it's almost certain there never will be an open-source liscenced DVD player. So, I'd rather used some nice, open, DeCSS based thing.
After all this stupidity, there is no way in hell I'm going to use some MPAA liscenced player.
Parliament? (Score:1)
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Zardoz has spoken!
Re:GPEULA: putting teeth in the GPL (Score:2)
The value of that depends on what your primary concern is -- protecting your code from misuse or encouraging others to work with it. If a clause like that were valid, and became standard for GPL software, it would certainly encourage companies to be cautious -- probably to the point of staying as far away from that code as possible.
I understand the need to protect freed code and to preserve the meaning of "free" or "open" but I can't help but think that a lot of the shouting that takes place is counterproductive. If companies keep getting publically flogged every time someone thinks they've violated a license or offer a license that isn't quite what the Slashdot mob is demanding, no sane company is going to want to get involved.
Re:Legal DVD (Score:1)
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Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
Yes. Almost every OS except Linux uses the BSD stack, rather than implementing their own. That's what the BSD project(s) excel at. The BSD code provides openly available 'reference designs' that anybody else can make use of. It has the positive effect that most of the Internet (Linux is one of the rare exceptions, btw) uses the same code base to talk. That's called enhanced operability and it's the kind of thing that used to be praised. Linux, with it's own stack, is the child that doesn't always 'play nice' with everyone else.
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:1)
I would say the burden of proof lies with you.
I've built some Linux and Unix code on Interix. Very little of it (if it's portable code, and not based in Linux-only functionality) required adapting to build.
Are you a paid Interix customer? If not, you don't belong in any discussion of 'breach of contract.'
Re:So what is this "Slashback" category? (Score:1)
It's like a little mini-Usenet built inside the
Re:Microsoft (Score:1)
Beat plows into ploughshares!?! (Score:1)
Re:that's what they said but it is wrong because.. (Score:1)
Sounds great. The problem is that when you tell others to "go back to gnu" you are costing gnu (well FSF) money in the terms of bandwidth and infrastructure required to provide source for your commercial product. This is why the GPL specifically prohibits doing that in a commercial product.
If Microsoft had included source on their CD's that would have been fine. Bt they didn't, hence they have to get source to the people who have already bought Interix.
True, the GPL provides for you to charge for that, and even provide it on a second CD. It's usually not done that way for PR purposes, and also because it is easier to distribute source with binaries usually.
However, most of this is moot because Microsoft specifically agrees in the license agreement that they will provide source at two specific URLS. Read the agreements.
Of course The Windows EULA says you can get a refund, and that has not been honoured, either, like most legal agreements Microsoft signs. Microsoft is a pirate in suit's clothing. Always has been, always will be, no matter how big they get.
Re:MPAA? (Score:1)
And of course their analogy is flawed for at least two reasons. One is that CSS does not stop you from copying the DVD (stealing what's in the house). Second, as has been pinted out before, with CSS the MPAA is actually putting a lock on your house, not theirs, since they are trying to keep you from watching the movie you paid for.
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:1)
But microsoft's modifications are not provided there. Also Bruce pointed out that according to GPL they are required to distribute source themselves, if anything at least with the binaries (they don't even need an ftp site, they just have to put it on the CD).
Another problem is that microsoft's own agreements agree to place the source at certain urls, at which teh source cannot be found. Breach of contract, mate.
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:3)
Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.) ( bold is mine )
They need to use sections 3(a) and 3(b) which to paraphrase state:
3a. Put the source code in the distrubution
3b. Make a written offer, good for a min. of 3 years saying you'll give them the source code, at a price no more then it takes to distribute, in a way commonly used for software interchange.
Linking to gnu.org's website falls under 3(c), which is invalid for them, putting source on their site follows 3(b) which is what they need to do. Specially since there is no gaurentee that they have not tampered with source code.
It's a common misconception.
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
Synchis
The worlds most popular, famous, and loved super hero...
Just kidding
Re:Legal DVD (Score:4)
It will never matter. The whole "there's no legal player for Linux" argument was irrelevant from the very beginning, probably created as a strawman by an MPAA sympathiser.
And either way, it's product-tying. They're tying the DVD purchase to the DVD-CCA's license fee. It doesn't matter if you're "forced" to buy a copy of MS Windows (and a Windows player) or "forced" to buy a copy of LinDVD, in order to play your DVDs. You're still having give additional money to DVD-CCA and establish their monopoly position. Making your own player or getting it from a totally unrelated organization should always be an option.
And since they insist that everyone pay that license fee (and agree to those atrocious license terms) and are suing people over it, I will always counter-insist that the player I use be unlicensed. If someone wants to make money selling a commercial DVD player for Linux, they should advetise it as being unlicensed. I bet they'd outsell LinDVD, because a lot of people really do care about this issue.
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Browser bombs... (Score:1)
Who's gonna visit that site?
DVD reverse engineering (Score:1)
What could the MPAA do about it? I don't own any DVD's, but with a player like this I'd get some. They can't tell me what player I can play my DVD's in since consumers don't license DVD disks, they own them.
A player like this could advertise itself as DVD compatible if "DVD" is trademarked (probably is) and I know that word of mouth would mark it for what it is even if it couldn't use the words "DVD".
Heck, I'd buy two of them if they were here today.
Re:MPAA? (Score:1)
Re:Legal DVD (Score:3)
However, exceptions must be made, if "persons who are users of a copyrighted work are... adversely affected by the prohibition... in their ability to make noninfringing uses... of a particular class of copyrighted works." If there are no legal DVD players for Linux, then that exception clearly applies... but if legal players appear, the argument loses a lot of its weight.
Personally, I think that the DMCA is an unconstitutional restriction of free speech (i.e. code.) But until we can get it overturned, that's where it stands.
Re:Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:4)
Fortunately, GNU Time Transporter 0.1 was just released, so the world will be saved by Richard M. "Danger" Stallman.
Re:DVD reverse engineering (Score:2)
Re:Fun with the GPL (Score:1)
... and the damages would at least be what Microsoft earned from selling the original author's code. I'm not so sure that faced with that they wouldn't just open the source.
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Damn resource fork (Score:2)
Re:GPEULA: do we want those teeth? (Score:1)
That's the point: a software publisher who used EULAs and copied GPLed source could't very well take the position that EULAs are not binding...
And MS could say "well, we got the code using an unarchiver which never showed us this so-called license thing
...especially if they were a publisher that also believed that the DMCA stopped the circumvention of copy-protection as you describe.
Or, to put it a different way, I'd love to see Microsoft win with your defense because it would entail total capitulation with regard to what they say about all of their own licenses. Ebay would become a huge software bazaar and the "microsoft" user would have to get it's negative evals back :)
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Re:Fun with the GPL (Score:1)
Re:Legal DVD (Score:1)
That's a praiseworthy qualification that so seldom is made here.
Microsoft (Score:1)
Regarding the EULA issue, the GPL is not a EULA in the same sense Microsoft's EULAs are. The GPL does not remove any rights that the end user would normally enjoy under copyright law. It strictly grants additional rights for the user who wishes to distribute the code.
Re:Time for a new direction? (Score:2)
IAAMOAC - so are you
Re:Time for a new direction? (Score:1)
I don't know if Hollywood is the best answer, maybe a part of it. Recently Disney announced some joint ventures which should help in the manner you referenced. I think the government should belly back up to the bar, cut massivly on the socialised support stuff, and put it right into NASA. I was born well before 1970 and grew up with the space race, boy I miss those days. All the technology advances, Prinde in the country etc.
Boy have we as a country lost focus.
Thanks again, BTW, what does IAAMOAC mean?
Re:Time for a new direction? (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
IIRC, the linux IP stack is different to make it less susceptible to DOS attacks. Differences in its stack include waiting for the ACK before completely dedicating a connection (to prevent SYN floods) and packet defragmentation logic.
You are correct that Linux's stack is different, but so is Microsoft's and Apple's I believe. Even if the stacks are different, there are some things, like DHCP for instance, that are implemented differently on different platforms because of grey areas in the design. the result is a lack of interoperability.
It did not seem to me that linux's "different IP stack" was designed in a way that would prevent interoperability, but then, Microsoft DHCP seemed to be mostly within spec, yet did not give Apple computers and IP address (isn't that nice?) because of the way it interpreted and expected certain signals. Apple ended up changing their design to allow it to work.
So can you point to a situation in which Linux breaks compatability with others? I thought interoperability was something Linux tried harder to have than anyone save BSD and co.
Re:Aussie Parliament censorship (Score:3)
Michael.
Re:Damn resource fork (Score:1)
Possibly. It has certainly been a gripe of developers in the past. I see it as a matter of semantics.
Nevertheless, there is no reason for Microsoft Office to be unable to read a Microsoft Office file. Even if it is Microsoft Office for Mac file. that was one of their big advantages over WordPerfect at the time of Word 6.0 (for win 3.11). At the time they were actually competing with the Mac and OS/2, and in the Office arena Lotus and Corel. Sure there were dirty tricks involved, but this was one thing they actually innovated. (notice the missing quotes.)
Regardless, if Office knows it is looking at a Mac file, it should be able to ignore/process the resource fork properly, period. No excuse.
but they have been doing this a long time (Score:1)
The problem is that large companies violate and take advantage of free software licenses all the time. they take code that is freely available and incorporate it into their proprietary, closed-source projects which they then use to flog open source projects. "Don't use BSD, it is open source and cannot be trusted. Use Windows which steals code from it!"
Re:More MPAA crap... (Score:1)
Especially since the MPAA has said in every press release that there were tons of legal Linux DVD players...
every time they said that I was like "Where?"
"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:1)
Fun with the GPL (Score:4)
"It's part of the operating system, so you have to open the entire operating system."
MS would then reply...
"No!!! It's not part of the operating system. Look, here's an uninstall for it. You can even take it off of your desktop. You can't have the entire source, just the source to Internet Exploder."
Nope. (Score:1)
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Re:GPEULA: putting teeth in the GPL (Score:1)
The value of that depends on what your primary concern is -- protecting your code from misuse or encouraging others to work with it.
I understand what you are saying, but I think that this issue is a little bit more subtle. "Punishing" a GPL violator would raise awareness of what the GPL is and would not deter anyone legit. There is no such thing as bad PR: awareness is always good. The only companies who would be deterred would be the ones who did not intend to release source, but they should be deterred, the license does not allow that. And as a said in my previous post, I think that the individual who copies the source is aware that it is against the rules. I don't think it is credible to believe that anybody is not aware of this essense of copyright law.
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Re:"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:2)
Because the decoding is done in hardware. All of this hub-bub is about software decoders. The Creative project (really code given to Creative) for the DXr2 card is nothing more than a device driver.
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Re: (Score:1)
More MPAA crap... (Score:2)
The point if not whether or not there is a legal DVD player for linux now, the point is whether or not there was a legal DVD player for linux when DeCSS was first published.
We all know the answer to that question.
Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:2)
Re:"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:2)
"huhuhuhh, go away. we're like closed or something"
Legal DVD (Score:3)
I don't think the presence or absence of a legal player should have too much bearing on the legal issues involved, in any case....
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Re:"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:1)
drivers yes. player, no.
Re:Nope. (Score:1)
wouldn't beating plows into ploughshares be considered abuse?
Kinda like saying the sword is mighter then the broadsword.
or that there is no spoon no spoon, etc
Re:More MPAA crap... (Score:1)
An Interesting Quandary (Score:2)
I don't know. To me this seems a little unfair. You can take someone else's code and sell it and not actually do any work yourself, but on the other hand, isn't that what it's all about?
Re:Legal DVD (Score:3)
It shouldn't matter whether there is an existing player or not. One case is being held under trade secret law: providing the `trade secret' was obtained legally, it is no longer protected. Reverse engineering for compatibility reasons is a guaranteed right in Europe (under the Decompilation Directive), meaning reverse engineering a DVD player to work out how to play DVDs is perfectly legal. Scratch one `trade secret'.
The DMCA case is more difficult; DeCSS can be used to copy DVDs, which could well make it illegal under the DMCA. It's the DMCA which is in the wrong here, not DeCSS, but the law doesn't (yet) take that view... :-(
I don't think the presence or absence of a legal player should have too much bearing on the legal issues involved, in any case....
Indeed - otherwise, the first `legal' player could secure a legally enforcable monopoly, at least on that platform. (Would the DVD CCA resist money and/or pressure from the members to refuse licenses to competing players? I wouldn't bank on it.) DMCA or not, we [should] have an absolute right to reverse-engineer any product in order to create a competiting product of our own.
Actually, I think a specific law to that effect could be good - absolutely prohibit the use of patents, the DMCA, `trade secrets' etc. to block competition.
Re:Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:2)
Re:An Interesting Quandary (Score:1)
Sort of. There is nothing to stop anyone taking a copy of the Linux kernel source, compiling it, and selling the resulting binary, with a note saying `the source code is on www.kernel.org/pub/kernel/v2.2/' or whatever. I don't really see anything wrong with that - why should you have to provide your own kernel mirror? If someone's prepared to pay for your pre-compiled kernel, why not let them?
However, you are not allowed to take the kernel, change it, then sell the resulting binary - if you do that, you have to make your (modified) source available - typically by submitting it on linux-kernel and/or putting it on your WWW site.
Parliament being filtered. (Score:2)
So.. if they think they have the right to chose what to see and read.. so does the rest of the country!
Time for a new direction? (Score:1)
However things like this:
The NASA-Dreamtime partnership will provide unprecedented public access to space exploration by creating a state-of-the-art multimedia portal, www.Dreamtime.com, that will, with the click of a mouse, open the door to thousands of images, sounds, documents, blueprints and plans from NASA's currently underused archives. Roll out of the in-depth portal site will begin within the next several months.
are confusing. I think the exposure is good, but the focus on what their core business is seems to be getting lost in the search for funding and public acceptance.
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
What, the ones that prominently display "Microsoft Telnet copyright Microsoft corp." when run? The point is that if you have to search the file for a string that is not prominently displaying the actual source (as in origin) of the program.
The funny thing is that Microsoft continues to say that free software cannot be trusted, whereas they have had to use it for anything mission-critical, like the TCP stack in general. Also the wonders of Hotmail [hotmail.com] not working with Exchange, only with qmail [qmail.org], and of course freebsd [freebsd.com].
That BSD software gets around, too. It forms the heart of the Sun Solaris [sun.com] networking stack, and I would imagine is used by Netware [novell.com] and MacOS [apple.com]. It is of course used by Mac OS X Server [apple.com] and its open source cousin, Darwin [apple.com].
Another interesting point... if you try to use Microsoft for your main DNS servers, your isp will laugh at you. Everyone knows some form of *nix or *bsd is required for anything so critical. Besides, they are free. ;).
Re:that's what they said but it is wrong because.. (Score:2)
I would venture to say that, if it is available from gnu, and it is totally unmodified, that is fine.
If GNU becomes unavailable, then MS would have to provide it themselves.
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
Re:Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:1)
First off, barring a couple exceptions, Microsoft never built anything from scratch. They mostly bought it, including DOS. Not to say all those thousands of programmers are doing nothing. they just put polish on the code MS buys.
NT was pretty much an MS product, but it was actually made by a team of VMS engineers microsoft lured away with cash and autonomy. As such it is the best thing MS ever made besides Office.
As for why people use their software, in my case i use it because my boss says I have to, and I have to have compatability with other people who use it because they don't know better. If I could, I would only use Linux. I think that pretty much sums it up for a lot of people.
People don't necessarily hate microsoft because their products suck. Win2000 and office, for instance have lots of good points. They hate them because they get the product crammed down their throats, where again i point to win2000 and office.
At one place I worked, which must remain anonymous, win2000 and office 2000 were banned because of their "viral" qualities. they tend to take over. For instance simply opening a database with Access2000 renders it incompatable with everything else because access does not have to save. Ditto for the other office apps if you do save. Win2000 clients and servers tend to take over a network if you don't control them properly.
Re:Legal DVD (Score:4)
DeCSS cannot be used to copy DVDs. Once you have decrypted the information stored on the disc, if you put the MPEG onto a disc, no DVD player will play it. DeCSS can, however, be used to get a digital copy of the MOVIE off of the disc. This can be done by other means, all of which lower the quality of the movie. However, since you must compress the movie to get it to fit on a VCD or to be downloaded, the quality is lost in that stage instead.
DeCSS does not make it easier to copy or pirate AT ALL.
Although this is a matter of semantics, I think that those of us that write about this need to make this clear in our writings. Don't forget that the press does occasionally read slashdot.
Re:DVD reverse engineering (Score:1)
Re:Legal DVD (Score:1)
From what I understand, the DMCA is unconstitutional anyway, even without the free speech argument. It extends copyright law in a matter which violates the US constitution. Not sure if its direct or indirect. But, IMHO, the best way to get rid of it is to stop the MPAA, RIAA, etc. from bribing the politicians. Read: stop corporate campaign contributions.
-RickHunter
Re:MPAA? (Score:1)
Re:Legal DVD (Score:2)
More importantly, Slashdot readers write to the press. DeCSS is being described as "a tool to break the encryption on a DVD" rather than "a tool which allows copying of a DVD" whuch suggests they got a bit fed up with us lot emailing corrections.
Re:More MPAA crap... (Score:2)
Not to mention there are still plenty of other platforms out there besides Linux. Then there's also the point that reverse engineering for compatibility is allowed. It doesn't say that it's only allowed to produce a proprietary program though. There's no legitimate reason why we shouldn't have an open-source DVD player.
Re:that's what they said but it is wrong because.. (Score:1)
Re:Damn resource fork (Score:1)
Sorry? What?
The resource fork, if you look carefully, is actually written as a seperate file, which is how it has always worked under MacOS. Each 'file' is actually 2 seperate files, Data fork and Resource fork. When the MacOS writes to a MSDOS formatted disk, it creates a new directory as a subdirectory of where the file is being copied. This subdirectory shows up in MSDOS/Windows as a directory called 'resource.frk'. You should *never* have to remove a resource fork from a data fork, as it was never there.
The Resource fork is one of the great advantages of the MacOS, as it allows things such as custom icons, stored image previews (quicktime) and most applications use it to store things like dialog box information and things. If you use a program like ResEdit, you'll discover just how completely cool the idea of the resource fork is.
(I am not trying to be a MacOS zealot, even though I do use them, I just think that the idea of seperate data and resource forks is one of the best things ever, and should be available to all operating systems)
On the subject of Windows not recognising MacOS disks, it doesn't recognise Linux (ext2fs) disks either, so don't feel too left out here. (There is a nifty freeware program called HFVExplorer which allows the reading and writing of MacOS disks under windows, but it's getting quite old now, and I don't think it supports HFS+).
Re:Is LinDVD Intel-only? (Score:1)
-james
Re:"was no legal DVD decoder for Linux boxes"?? (Score:1)
___
They have some BSD code (Score:2)
And as for how "integrated" IE really is, check it out under Wine [rr.com].
Re:Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:2)
___
The source IS on the interix site here: (Score:1)
Every rule has an exception, and this is the only rule with no exceptions! Huh? -- Spatch
Re:Microsoft should move, but to... (Score:2)
Fugitive Corporations (Score:2)
It's a good thing that Microsoft is staying put and facing the music. I would really hate to see Canada become the Mos Eisley of the corporate world with lawless excutives roaming the streets.
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:2)
A EULA, or shrinkwrap agreement, limits how one can use software. It doesn't limit how you can copy the software, because it doesn't have to. Copyright law itself limits how you can copy the software. Handing your CD to a friend to let them install it on their system is not so much a violation of the EULA as a violation of the vendor's copyright. There are a few tricks one can use to "get around" the EULA; I'm not sure how well any of them stand up in court.
The GPL does not attempt to limit how you can use the software. Arguably, it doesn't limit your ability to copy the software; in fact, it enhances it.
Any GPL software is copyrighted, either implicitly or explicitly. Either way, standard copyright rules apply--you can't just make copies and hand them to others. The GPL gives you rights to copy software for others, given that you take on certain responsibilities (such as shipping source with binary).
There is no getting around this. You are not required to agree to GPL terms. If you don't, you must follow standard copyright law. If you decide to ship GPL'd code, your only defense against a copyright violation charge is that you are shipping the code as allowed under the GPL. If you aren't shipping the code per the GPL license, you are shipping the code in violation of copyright laws. No shrinkwrap, no EULA, no DMCA--the law that keeps you from copying the software is the same law that keeps you from copying books or music for other people.
Re:Fugitive Corporations (Score:2)
If Canada is worried about becoming a Mos Eisley of US fugitives, the Mounties can ship them back to us. If Canada builds a big catapult, I'm sure we can put up a big net in Maine ;^>
Re: you missed the subtlety (Score:2)
Normally the saying is "beating swords into ploughshares." However in this case they are converting efforts from the government in the form of Nasa, to efforts in technology in the form of multimedia companies. Therefore beating ploughshares into ploughshares... get it?
Re:An Interesting Quandary (Score:3)
No - Section 3c of the GPL says:
"This alternative is allowed only for noncommercial distribution ..."
So - they can't just point to someone else's source and make them incur the bandwidth costs.
IIRC, LinuxOne tried this stunt when they were asked for the source - they pointed people to Red Hat's ftp server...
Microsoft has always violated free software (Score:3)
After all, how long is it since you have seen any acknowlegements to the origins of their *bsd-derived tcp software? Was it ever displayed prominently?
The only reason that microsoft got caught here is that they finally violated gpl rather than bsd, and got caught. Since gpl requires a source release, the violation is more obvious. BSD license does not require source release, just acknowlegement, and as such violations are harder to prove. (IIRC someone was able to find hidden bsd copyright strings in some of MS's tcp software at one point. Hidden, mind...)
It's very funny that microsoft can say you agreed to something you are bound to by opening the box to your computer, even if you turn it on and immediately boot to a linux cd therefore never seeing the agreement, but they are not bound by that agreement themselves (which says you can get a refund). You can also be bound by an agreement that only shows up if you use a certain procedure in windows to open a file, rather than using a cross-platform method. But microsoft is never ever bound by anything. In that they have always been consistent. When they ignored the agreements they made with the Justice department around 1995, when they violated their agreements with apple and almost every other company they have ever "partnered" with, they were just being consistent.
Microsoft has always been and will always be an outlaw company who takes advantage fo the fact that here in the US we are used to allowing wealthy corporations to be above the law.
Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:2)
Aussie Parliament censorship (Score:3)
According the the Australian EFF [efa.org.au], in the area of 'adult images' (one area which the parliament protested filtering). All 'R-rated' content must be subject to age-verification, no 'X-rated' sites are permitted in Australia, and all foreign 'X-rated' sites must be blocked regardless of the age of the viewer.
So basically, 'pornographic content' shouldn't be available to the Parliament (or anyone in Oz) in the first place. Blindness - a fine starting point for future reasoned debate!
A Real-World example of uninformed debate
-----------------------------------------
A friend recently returned from Costa Rica and said their War on Drugs is based on a survey that saud a quarter of voters 'felt drugs are a serious concern'. Concern, possibly, but not a problem, according to external public health agencies. Costa Rica has an extremely low drug usage rate -- about 1%.
Unfortunately, only in the past year has there been any real discussion of the facts (some local doctors held a public forum). Until now, 'drugs' were considered a 'dirty' subject that everyone just naturally opposed.
Costa Rica is a wonderful country, with a stable government, low cost of living, good medical care and a large expatriate USAn community - a great place to retire - but it has real infrastructure deficiencies that would benefit from the resources devoted to this misguided policy. I'd hate to be in an ambulance dodging their crater-sized potholes!)
I can't see you! (Score:4)
On the bright side, maybe this will form the kernel for that GPL test case we've all been waiting for. If MS really can get away with this, best that we find out soon...
- Michael Cohn
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:2)
Re:Microsoft/Interix Source Code (Score:3)
The license specifically reads:
The utilities bc, ci, co, cpio, csplit, dc,diff, diff3, gawk, gzip, gunzip, ident, merge, nl, rcs, rcsdiff, rcsmerge and rlog are covered under the GNU General Public License, here reproduced.
Show me the source code for THOSE programs, and then they will no longer be in violation.
that's what they said but it is wrong because... (Score:2)
They said "you can get source from gnu." However, the problem with that is threefold. The most important part is taht gnu necessarily does not have Microsoft's changes. Also the GPL says you must distribute source with binaries. It says nothing about having to use an ftp site to do that.
The other problem is that their agreement specifically states at which urls you can get source, and source is not provided there. IANAL, but I would say that constitutes breaking the agreement on Microsoft's part, since it basically says that they agree to provide source at those locations.
I am not a lawyer. The only legal advice I have is that if you need any you had better get one.
Click-through bureaucracy (Score:2)
Seems like digital bureaucracy is just as cumbersome as the paper kind. Whenever I read stories like this, the theme from Brazil starts playing in my head.
Microsoft is a HUGE company; I guess accreted layers of bureaucracy are an inevitable side effect of doing business on such a large scale. Or maybe just a side effect of clinging tenaciously to a closed-source proprietary business model.
Someday, if I ever own a megalithic corporation, I'm gonna automate all bureaucratic functions, so they're completely invisible to the user. And also I'm gonna drive a cool car.
Oh Oh! (Score:5)
state-of-the-art multimedia portal, www.Dreamtime.com, that will, with the click of a mouse, open the door to thousands of images, sounds, documents, blueprints and plans from NASA's currently underused archives.
Only one mouse click. Amazon is going to sue these guys.