CNET Says CueCat Restrictions Are Bogus 98
Barondude writes: "Steve Fox at CNET Insider wrote The CueCat: When Free Isn't Worth the Price. Besides mentioning Slashdot, he brings to the general public many of the points that have been made here."
Re:what's the point? (Score:2)
And from a marketing company's standpoint, a cuecat code is definitely better than a url. They wanna track their traffic based on which ads people are reacting to and what publications they're from. The only way to do that is creating complicated URLs that contain ad/publication tracking infos, and people like you and I would just chop off everything after the top level domain name. So the codes are a definite plus for advertisement people.
The problem is that the cuecat reader is not that good to begin with. I've had the pleasure of playing with one, and basically it involved a lot of random waving back and forth, and turning the sucker at all the weird angles I could think of before the code went through. That does make it more hassle than it's worth.
If they made it good and accurate, it's sitting right there by the keyboard, heck, I'd use it if I found an ad with the code on it... Maybe the first few ads I'd even scan in if I wasn't interested in the product. Just for the sheer heck of it. Unfortunately for them, like I said, the scanner isn't too accurate.
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
Even worse... (Score:2)
~luge
Re:Request. (Score:1)
I wish I was joking....
The Cue Cat & I (Score:2)
It's cuet, but within seconds I was bored and decided to see what makes the fridge tick and now have a new hair style (Note: unplug first -- then tear apart compressor) I'm about to take apart my laptop computer, it sure is tiny and I'd love to see how they laid out all the parts in this thing!
IMHO Steve Fox didn't shed any new light here, nothing on the order of "violation of statute X" or "precedent Y" We're pretty much still left to our humble opinions, same as he is. Yes, it's absurd to think D:C will appear on my (Rod's) door step at 10:03 PM (PST^H^H^HEST) and demand the return of the Cat. Same as it's absurd that they are right now scavenging a landfill in Dayton, Ohio for a CueCat that was delivered to a non-forwarding address and got gratis ride on the trash trolley. So, where does that leave reverse engineering? Still laughing at D:C, but too chicken to release the code (c'mon, c'mon, I'm getting bored, I need a new toy), or emboldened, like Micron, which is going great guns at DDR while prepping to do the litigation waltz with Rambeaux?
Now where's that nibbling tool...
--
Re:Even worse... (Score:1)
-- flossie
http [2130706433] telnet [017700000001]
Do I lose the bonus karma... (Score:1)
-- flossie
http [2130706433] telnet [017700000001]
CueCats are Collectible! (Score:2)
Check out the CueCat Collector's Club [techsynthesis.com]! I know mine are gonna be worth millions some day!
Re:Good enough for me! (Score:2)
Pull that CueCat out from where the sun don't shine and check out the CueCat Collectors Club [techsynthesis.com]!
Re:CueCats are Collectible! (Score:1)
By the way I have a couple with the SER # 0000000000000000 and ----------------
Are they worth much?
Re:Even worse... (Score:1)
[flaunts his low userID]
Tech journalism howto... (Score:1)
Browse slashdot at +3 threshold, cut and paste into Word (or Emacs if you prefer), submit article.
I could make some good dough this way...
Moderator(s) on crack ? (Score:1)
THAT is a great idea! (Score:1)
--
Re:Good enough for me! (Score:2)
If you ever let me play with your cat, I could capture the serial# output and type it in by hand along with the code for the Dew.
I'm just not a big fan of using known information as a pw.
The best use for the cat that I've seen is This one [dashslot.org]. It actually serves a purpose!
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:1)
Kamikaze pilots wear helmets so that they don't bang their head on the canopy and become unconscious rendering them unable to fly their plane in such a manner as to impact upon a predetermined target.
Also, I wingless fly would be referred to in the scientific sense as a "creepy crawly thingie". I hope that I have been of assistance to you. :)
_____________
Re:The Actual URL (Score:1)
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:2)
wish
---
General Public??? (Score:2)
C|Net readers are the general public? I don't think so. C|Net is nearly as geeky as Slashdot, but far more commercial (As can be seen by its television shows, which sure as hell never garner mainstream timeslots). C|Net tries to report on other stuff, but in the long run C|Net is by techies for techies, and the general public doesn't have a clue that it exists.
Re:When free isn't worth the price (Score:1)
- Demagraphics
This is just another idea that some moron with an MBA said "Hey this company has a product that people will love, well screw them over for the product change the direction and vision of the company and at the same time let's do a little data mining".As most of us all ready know NOTHING IS FREE! Ok go ahead and say Open Source is free, no it is not. I know that my time is worth a lot more that $.00/h.
The Idea behind the scanner is kind of a cool novelty, but giving corperate america my underwear size is a little too much for me!
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:1)
Let's see:
This has all the makings of Slashdot story, covers privacy, hardware, Linux and cluelessness. I'd be happy with daily updates!
Hayduke out
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:1)
I'm quite glad to see that people outside
I don't believe D:C will last much longer, all this bad PR can't be good for business
Re:Would it have been so hard? (Score:1)
Re:He called you slashdot.com (-1 uninformative) (Score:1)
Domain names in the .com, .net, and .org domains can now be registered
with many different competing registrars. Go to http://www.internic.net
for detailed information.
Domain Name: SLASHDOT.COM
Registrar: NETWORK SOLUTIONS, INC.
Whois Server: whois.networksolutions.com
Referral URL: www.networksolutions.com
Name Server: NS1.ANDOVER.NET
Name Server: NS2.ANDOVER.NET
Updated Date: 11-apr-2000
-- flossie
http [2130706433] telnet [017700000001]
Re: (Score:1)
This *is* the media (Score:2)
/. reports on a story on cnet, who reports on a story at
What does that tell you?
Slashdot article summary (Score:2)
---
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:2)
Shouldn't the threat of legal action without followup be illegal in itself?
CueCat Usability (Score:2)
See September 15, 2000 [useit.com]
Jakob Nielsen is the world's foremost expert on software and web usability.
He links to this Scott Rosenberg Salon.com article [salon.com] for more.
Bad cat.
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
I've got 4 in my collection [techsynthesis.com]. So far.
Re:CueCat Infomercial (Score:2)
This is just ongoing fallout from the "good old days" when VCs would throw money at any idea with Internet in it. Just the other day, I got a T-shirt from Swapit.com, even though I have never used their service and have no intention of ever doing so.
A lot of silly stuff is still in the pipeline. Even though VC money isn't flowing as freely as it was, it will take a while for these things to stop because companies have already signed contracts and ordered things.
Reverse Engineering and DMC (Score:2)
From the article:
Third, the courts have found that reverse engineering is legal (as long as chunks of the original software code are not present in the resulting software).
Hasn't the DMCA effectively made reverse engineering illegal? (Or has the DMCA not yet really been tested in court? I thought the DeCSS case was an example of a judge indicating that we aren't going to get reasonable judgements about DMCA.) (A reasonable judgement meaning the trashing of the whole thing.)
-Rob
Re:Wireless CueCat? (Score:2)
Better yet, the wireless cuecat could have a little screen, so you didn't have to go to the computer. Wow! waddya know. We've just invented Handsprings and Pilots. Let's patent something and sue both of them.
Actually, a scanner module for the Handspring would be useful, if there isn't one already. A hearty handshake to the first hacker who grafts a Cue Cat onto a handspring.
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
Another type B sheds a warm red glow on my wall at night.
A type A was modified to be portable. Makes a great little flashlight.
Several are scattered in pieces on my desk and may one day get reassembled. All my computers have at least one, my main system has 3.
I also gave a neutered one to my mom for use in her retail store.
I shipped two (2) to a couple of poor souls in Canada that can't get them.
All the others are neatly stacked in their little plastic bags on top of my dresser. I haven't quite decided what to do with them yet.
_______
Slight flaw.... (Score:1)
Erhm, my morning is spent reading my linux [journal|mag] (if it has arrived in said month and I'm not done it) and eating cereal in front of my box, while surfing to /. first thing in the morning. A sad and depressing life to be sure, but still it proves that the author of the article has no clue. :)
Hmm... I want a cuecat now... I think I'll construct a security grid around the computer so that I don't even have to turn my head occasionally to see if my back is about to be attacked by one of the cats...
anarchy, the cuecat, and you (Score:2)
Who said that this product was useless? It has within its power to be the most destructive weapon that capitalism has in its arsenal.
Re:License Agreement? Maybe Radio Shack violated i (Score:1)
Also, I didn't even bother installing the software, so I didn't "agree" to any licensing.
Re:CueCats are Collectible! (Score:2)
And it was said: "So shall the Internet draw forth from the masses the humour impaired."
Duh. It's a joke.
Re:I don't understand their business model. (Score:2)
Um....swipe the monitor? Are you sure that's not a crackpipe you're waving around?
There's no "feature" to scan a barcode on a WEBSITE. The barcodes appear in print, or on products - not on webpages. You scan the product's UPC, or the print advertisement's barcode (Called a "cue"), and the software takes you to a relevant website. You don't scan your monitor.
Sheesh. Where the hell did you read that?
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:Good enough for me! (Score:2)
You're not very imaginative, are you?
And it was said: "So shall the Internet draw forth from the masses the humour impaired."
Duh. It's a joke.
poor corps (Score:1)
what's the point? (Score:1)
Re:I don't understand their business model. (Score:1)
This isn't a conspiracy theory, it's business. However, you're supplying them with the info.
For more info, refer to this [slashdot.org] or this [slashdot.org] or
Re:CueCats are Collectible! (Score:2)
The Home Page of 4:C [techsynthesis.com] has been updated with a message for a small portion of the Slashdot community. (Not YOU, of course. Oh, no. No way.)
"doesn't harm anyone" ??! (Score:2)
Like Hell it doesn't! You take their free product, use it in a way that prevents the profits they were expecting from its use, and claim that it hasn't hurt them? They're minus one barcode scanner with nothing to show for it.
Legal or not, ethical or unethical, you're still screwing them, and discouraging such products from being given away in the future.
I don't think it's a good example of what's wrong with the DMCA at all. It's something you'd never have given you if they'd have known you'd hack it, you didn't pay a fair price for it, and generally wouldn't have bothered buying if they didn't offer it.
I think it's a focus of discussion precisely because it's a marginal case. Cuecat tries to screw the consumer (by not being completely open and honest about why they're giving the things away and what data they're gathering), and the consumers screw Cuecat (by denying them the expected return on investment). Nobody's really holding the moral high ground, so there's plenty of room for argument.
--------
Damn I can't type. (Score:1)
Cheap enough for me?
But I'm having a moment of the stupids.
The Actual URL (Score:3)
Re:When free isn't worth the price (Score:1)
Good enough for me! (Score:5)
Bah, look at all the cool stuff you get..
A barcode scanner
A marital aid
A good time harassing the Radio Shack employee
Thousands of minutes spent thinking, "What can I waste my time doing with this thing?"
Hours of Slashdot stories updating the idiocy of DC and their marketing strategy
Being embraced by DC's approach of loving the linux hackers
heh.. I found that it just looked to ridiculous to use it myself.. but it has provided me with a lot of laughter.
Re:"doesn't harm anyone" ??! (Score:2)
The key word is "take". DC sends CueCats free to people who haven't requested them, and has Radio Shack handing them out to everyone, many people who don't really want one, but are willing to try some free electronic gizmo. I don't see how consumers are taking anything from DC.
Now maybe if it was the sort of thing where you sign-up on a webpage and agree to use it for a certain purpose, then change your mind when it arrives... But unless you ask for it, you're not taking anything from them.
The problem is that they want to take away people's rights to tinker with things they own. (And people *do* own the CCs, US postal regulations and laws governing gifts make this clear.)
For DC to say you can't tinker with a CueCat is like Compaq saying you can't tinker with your PC, or Ford saying you can't tinker with your car. Once you own it, you have the moral and legal right to do anything you want with it. DC is trying to take that away.
But, I predict they'll be bankrupt in less than a year. I've already seen links to scripts that send in fake CC scans with random user ids and barcodes from some huge list... When the companies that would pay DC for their ill-gotten demographics see how likely it is that the statistics are all fake, they won't pay a dime. And I'm glad, DC is another good-for-nothing company existing completely on lawyer power. Fuck them.
slashdot? (Score:3)
from the article:
(For an extensive, often impassioned discussion of the issues, check out Slashdot, at www.slashdot.com )
I know. It works, but still
Re:Good enough for me! (Score:1)
My CueCat is now my BookBoffin...I wrote a little VB app that catalogs my home library by scanning the ISBN's into a spreadsheet.
The only thing better than free hardware is free beer!
Congratulations! (Score:1)
Re:Good enough for me! (Score:1)
Since each device has its own special header code, you can set your root password by scanning a mountain dew, and no one will ever guess that your root pw is ".C3nZC3nZC3nYChbZDhb6CxnX.fHmg.C3jXC3T2CW."
-------
More info (Score:4)
If you're seeking more information, I have a lot of links to news stories, info on the hardware (including disabling and reprogramming the serial number), and software for Linux, Windows and the Mac at http://www.flyingbuttmonkeys.com/foocat/ [flyingbuttmonkeys.com]
________________________________________
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
-------
You Know You've Been Reading alt.tasteless too... (Score:4)
> a handheld scanner fetchingly shaped like a cat
When is Cue:Cat going to get its own subject logo? (Score:1)
I got mine, but I'm still waiting for someone to come up with a useful application for one, other than the flashlight [umsl.edu] suggestion.
Web Based (So OS Independent) Cue Work (Score:1)
Java Classes for CueCat (Score:3)
http://www.popbeads.org/Software [popbeads.org]
I don't understand their business model. (Score:2)
How would it benefit anyone to scan the barcode of the can of Coke that they are drinking to see a Coke advertisement. If I'm drinking a Coke I don't need to be advertised to. I don't do inferior drugs like Pepsi and I can't easily obtaint the good drugs like Jolt.
Preaching to the choir is not a very effective way to spend advertising dollars
Then there is the feature that allows you to scan a barcode on a website and go to a link. Can someone explain to me why I would take my hand off the mouse, then pick up the cat, then swipe the monitor. I could more easily have left my hand on the mouse and clicked on a link. They must be targeting the Ultra newbie.
For the record my entire argument is all based on hearsay evidence because I don't have a Colon:Cat and I haven't had someone run out of a Raidio Shack in Canada to give me one with a license agreement to laugh at.
I do have to admit, however, the ability to scan a bottle of water to find out which Ontario nuclear plant it was bottled downstream from would be an asset.
Its not so much the Cue:Cat (Score:3)
I think whats important here is what precedent gets set. If DC wins and is able to prevent us from investigating objects in our possession, it sets a legal precedent for another company to do the same thing.
Another reason why Slashdotters have latched onto this story is because it is a very good example for us. The ability to circumvent copy protection schemes to pirate movies is morally hazy. Hacking the cue:cat doesn't harm anyone, and is thus a prime example of situations where the DMCA and like legislation are a bad idea.
I'm relatively new to Slashdot, but I think I've captured the gist of it. Any veterans care to add / respond?
Captain_Frisk
D:C Infomercial (Score:1)
Ick... I caught some of that damn program... Sounded like an attempt at brainwashing if I ever heard one... kinda scary actually... these guys seem hell-bent on trying to take over at least part of the world or something... I sure hope they run themselves into the ground soon. I never did bother to get a
Re:He called you slashdot.com (Score:3)
At least the stuff that they add is so poorly edited that it's clear that it is not part of the true, professional Slashdot site.
"We will compete with anybody."
- Michael Risse, general manager at a company that complains that all antitrust complaints are instigated by competitors
Re:Reverse Engineering and DMC (Score:1)
Nevermind the fact that the judge was also Time Warner's Lawyer during their whole DVD fiasco.
Re:When free isn't worth the price (Score:1)
As opposed to closed source software, which is only free if neither your time nor your money has value.
Indiscriminate use of pipe symbols? (Score:1)
-- "On second thought, let's not go there. 'Tis a silly place."
Re:Method of exercising a cat (Score:1)
Can't get over the shape (Score:1)
Just look at it here [cuecat.com].
Why did they have to make it that shape? Did they collaborate with the net pr0n industry to prototype this thing??
Leave the cue cat where it belongs: in mom's underwear drawer.
Re:slashdot? (Score:1)
Re:I don't understand their business model. (Score:1)
How about:
- Scan this bar, win a million bucks! (AKA Scan the bar, get free stuff).
- Scan here to find out more about our great prizes...
- Scan here to be added to our free mailing list.
Admittedly, some of those require giving DC permission to share your personal information with advertisers, but as the various Coke Card, Pepsi stuff campaigns show, advertisers think there's enough suckers out there to make it work.
The key thing for DC is to make the reader and the barcode ubiquitous. When they can tell advertisers that over n% of the population has and uses a
c.
Re:ShooCat!! (Score:1)
Re:Its not so much the Cue:Cat (Score:1)
MeowPawjects new Internet Applience the NetCat includes a liccens agreement that compells the user to use free software (open source, public domain etc.. the MP deffenition of free) and never again use commertal software unless as part of continued employment or use of a commertal service.
When asked MP owner Felinoid simply said "We make our proffits from Internet traffic from people downloading our software.. as long as people use commertal alternitives we lose money".
Many software and hardware makers are said to be conserned about this move one industry analist called it "a rock and a hard place" many busnesses rely on exactly the same kind of liccens to protect themselfs and may now be on the side of having to sue against it.
Open source advocates are noted to be joyful at this event thow in the preplexing position of chearing Microsoft in suing Meow Pawjects saying "We'd rather Meow lost and get rid of this stupid legalistic nightmare than have them win and strong arm people into open source".
[I use MP as an example becouse it's my project.. and I don't have anything going so don't bother.. get your software from FreshMeat.. thats were all my announcments go]
pretty good summary (Score:3)
Cue Cat (Score:1)
Since I read the article on
My uncle also got one and as a test scanned in one of his sons Britney Spears CDs. Hopefully he won't be getting spam from Radio Shack about other Britney things.
As soon I heard about the unique bar code number I decided not to uninstall the software. Personally I think it was an interesting idea but not carried out the best way possible. I don't mind having a Cue Cat, but the only regret I have is having to put up with the guy at the store.
Andrew
PS: For the guy at radio shack. If you don't want me to touch a computer maybe you should put a DO NOT TOUCH sign on it!!!
Wow, a writer with a clue. (Score:1)
Yikes! Let's get real for a minute. The CueCat is free. D:C sent it out to magazine readers without them even requesting it. Consider a few analogies: If I send you a free microwave, can I then demand that you use it only to heat liquids? Can I force you to power it using only electricity from my favored energy utility? Could I prohibit you from sawing it in half and using it as a miniature golf obstacle? Similarly, if I mailed you a free, unsolicited PC, could I force you to install Windows on it, if you'd rather use Linux? My lawyer friends tell me no.
I only wish there was more reporting like this, and as Hemos notes, they do say that Slashdot is one of the better places for this kind of discussion. Now I only wish that I could get a cue cat here in Canada. I checked out www.getcuecat.com [getcuecat.com] and they are not avalible here. I asked at the local Radio Shack, and they are supposed to be coming here soon. I can't wait to get one and get the software for Linux for it. Bizzare licence agreements be dammned!
Re:Bravo! (Score:1)
My only hope is that this is still coherent even after my hangover
He called you slashdot.com (Score:5)
Re:what's the point? (Score:1)
Re:Would it have been so hard? (Score:2)
They only mentioned /. to draw page hits. Their servers can take it. Also: perhaps by your argument they should have included a barcode so those with :Colon:Cats could find /. without using their mouse and keyboard.
CueCat Infomercial (Score:1)
How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
I can have a Cue:Dog, but only if it weighs less than 20 pounds, doesn't byte the mailman, and if I pick up the bits it leaves in the grass.
Re:Mentioning Slashdot (Score:1)
Guys, unless it's the Secretary-General of the UN mentioning slashdot, it's not a big deal anymore. The Economist has mentioned Slashdot. You're important, get used to it.
Re:Cue Cat (Score:1)
or something...
eudas
Frankly (Score:2)
(-1, Spam) (Score:1)
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Address: [snip]
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: slashdot.org
Address: 64.28.67.48
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Server: [snip]
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eudas
Wireless CueCat? (Score:1)
Re:He called you slashdot.com (-1 uninformative) (Score:1)
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
Your landlord has a problem with cats. It's the :Land:Lord you should worry about.
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:2)
Re:How many :Cats do people have? (Score:1)
-David T. C.
Re:Wireless CueCat? (Score:2)
You haven't seen the scanner for the handspring only because you haven't looked!
So far, PalmGear's Springboard Module page [palmgear.com] hasn't listed a module for barcode scanning. Not saying that it doesn't exist yet, but PalmGear is the first place Handspring suggests you look for modules.
Re:Reverse Engineering and DMC (Score:1)
Would it have been so hard? (Score:1)
I think not. They did it for D:C, and for the other referenced articles.
Re:He called you slashdot.com (Score:1)
Request. (Score:1)
Anyway, if you or someone else could possible come up with a way to accomplish this (I promise I won't use it at theatres with my laptop for the purposes of patron-annoyance) and send details to the flyingbuttmonkeys to post, I would be very thankful.
Agradecimentos,
Ó
ShooCat!! (Score:2)
O P E N___S O U R C E___H U M O R [mikegallay.com]
License Agreement? Maybe Radio Shack violated it. (Score:1)
I have heard some people say that the license agreement was something that they had to sign when they picked up there's at Radio Shack, but I didn't sign anything.
Maybe there is a license agreement during the software installation process. I don't know. I have never installed their software, so I didn't "click" anything to agree.
None of the accompanying paperwork had anything that looked like a license agreement.
Looks like I got away scottfree.
Seriously, from what I understand, the Radio Shack employee is supposed to get you to sign some paperwork when you get your scanner. But they certainly didn't have me sign ANYTHING. Maybe "digital convergence" should be going after Radio Shack instead of hardware hackers.
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On a side note: Has anyone else seen that awful Digital Convergence "Infomercial" about the cuecat? You know, the one where the students and teachers (in our future) revel in the fact that the Cuecat and it's related technologies will be single-most important factor in labotomizing the Internet and the Information Age?