rss: slashdot

  • Google Adds Licensing Server DRM To Android Market
    eldavojohn writes "According to AfterDawn, Google has given app makers the option to use a license server as DRM to ensure the user has paid for an app before they can download it. Reportedly, the Market app will communicate with a Google license server using RSA encryption. It is important to note this is only available for non-free apps (built with SDK 1.5 and later), and it was instituted to provide a better solution to the old and widely criticized copy protection scheme that was susceptible to Android app piracy (like sideloading). For better or for worse, Android's Marketplace appears to now have an optional, phone-home form of DRM." Following news of the new licensing service, Hexage Ltd, makers of a popular Android game called Radiant, released the data they had collected on piracy of Radiant over a 10-month period beginning last October. A series of charts shows total users, paid users and the piracy rate, by region.

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  • Tribalism Is the Enemy Within, Says Shuttleworth
    climenole points out a post from Canonical founder Mark Shuttleworth about internal strife in the free software community. He wrote, "Tribalism is when one group of people start to think people from another group are 'wrong by default.' It's the great-granddaddy of racism and sexism. And the most dangerous kind of tribalism is completely invisible: it has nothing to do with someone's 'birth tribe' and everything to do with their affiliations: where they work, which sports team they support, which Linux distribution they love. ... Right now, for a number of reasons, there is a fever pitch of tribalism in plain sight in the free software world. It's sad. It's not constructive. It's ultimately going to be embarrassing for the people involved, because the Internet doesn't forget. It's certainly not helping us lift free software to the forefront of public expectations of what software can be."

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  • What's Wrong With the American University System
    ideonexus writes "The Atlantic has an excellent interview with Andrew Hacker — co-author with Claudia Dreifus of a book titled Higher Education? — covering everything that's wrong with the American university system. The discussion ranges from entrenched tenured professors more concerned with publishing and parking spaces than quality teaching; to 22-year-old students with unrealistic expectations that some company will put them in a management position after graduating with six-figures of debt; to football teams siphoning money away from academic programs so that student tuitions must increase to compensate. It really lays out the farce of university culture and reminds me of everything I absolutely despised about my college life. Dreifus is active in the comments section of the article as well, lending to a fantastic discussion on the subject."

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  • New Mars Rover Rolls For the First Time
    wooferhound writes "Like proud parents savoring their baby's very first steps, mission team members gathered in a gallery above a clean room at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory to watch the Mars Curiosity rover roll for the first time. Engineers and technicians wore bunny suits while guiding Curiosity through its first steps, or more precisely, its first roll on the clean room floor. The rover moved forward and backward about 1 meter (3.3 feet). Mars Science Laboratory (aka Curiosity) is scheduled to launch in fall 2011 and land on the Red Planet in August 2012. Curiosity is the largest rover ever sent to Mars. It will carry 10 instruments that will help search an intriguing region of the Red Planet for two things: environments where life might have existed, and the capacity of those environments to preserve evidence of past life."

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  • An iPhone App Store That Apple Doesn't Control
    waderoush writes "Princeton's Ed Felten has criticized the iPhone and iPad as Disneyland-like 'walled gardens' and says there's no way the iTunes App Store can 'offer the scope and variety of apps that a less controlled environment can provide.' Now there's a central marketplace where developers can sell iPhone-optimized apps without going through Apple's gatekeepers. Launched today, it's called OpenAppMkt and it's a showcase for mobile Web apps — not just the type seen back in 2007-2008, before the advent of the App Store, but also for new games and other apps developed using HTML5/CSS/JavaScript (in some cases, the same apps compiled and sold as native iPhone apps). Xconomy has a behind-the-scenes interview with OpenAppMkt's creators, who say they're not out to compete with the native App Store, but that developers deserve new ways to reach users."

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  • Woman's Nude Pics End Up Online After Call To Tech Support
    Tara Fitzgerald couldn't find the nude pictures she planned on sending to her boyfriend, but instead of just taking more, she decided to see if a Dell tech support call could fix her problem. Apparently the tech support guy found them. Unfortunately, he then put them up on a site called "bitchtara."

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  • Dell and HP To Sell Oracle Operating Systems
    angry tapir writes "Oracle has announced that rival hardware vendors Dell and Hewlett-Packard intend to certify and resell its Solaris and Enterprise Linux operating systems as well as Oracle VM on their x86 servers. The announcement 'demonstrates Oracle's commitment to openness,' company co-president Charles Phillips said in a statement."

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  • The Science of Caddyshack
    astroengine writes "Thirty years after the release of the cult classic comedy Caddyshack, Discovery News has geeked out and gone on the hunt for any trace amount of science they can find in the movie (video). From gopher territoriality to seismic deformation, from pool poop bacteria to the color of lightning, it turns out there's quite a lot of science to talk about..."

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  • Copyright Troll USCG Violates Copyright
    omarlittle writes "The US Copyright Group — a company owned by intellectual property lawyers, which has been in the news for threatening downloaders of the movie Hurt Locker — has apparently stolen their site from a competitor. At one point, even the competitor's phone number and copyright statement were copied word for word on USCG's 'settlement' website. The competitor is reportedly going to send a Cease & Desist."

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  • China's Firewall Stymies Google; Users Confused
    eldavojohn writes "Massive confusion occurred last night for Google's Chinese search engine and ad services when Google's automated reporting system claimed that everything was blocked in China. The problem was that most users experienced no outage despite Google's reports and Google has backpedaled on those reports. Google explained that their tool for detecting blockage is not 'real-time': 'Because of the way we measure accessibility in China, it's possible that our machines could overestimate the level of blockage. That seems to be what happened last night when there was a relatively small blockage. It appears now that users in China are accessing our properties normally.' The WSJ blogger notes, 'Beijing may not need to cancel Google's license. Death by a thousand disruptions could be just as effective.'"

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rss: digg

  • Ansel Adams Photo Mystery Now Solved?
    Miriam I. Walton has come forward with evidence that the images in question were actually taken by her not-quite-so-famous late relative, Earl Brooks.




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  • They Rapin' E'rybody Out Heah [video]
    Antoine Dodson's inadvertent reality TV audition.




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  • Police filmed dragging women and babies during protest
    A video has emerged showing French police evicting African immigrants with babies and children during a housing protest in a Paris suburb.




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  • Report: RIM unveiling 9.7 inch Blackpad in November
    Apparently, RIM is gearing up to unveil a tablet sometime in November and guess what? It actually will be called the Blackpad.




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  • Oregon Considers Plastic Bag Ban
    The Oregon Legislature may impose a plastic bag ban statewide next year.




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  • 400 Killed in Flooding in Pakistan, Officials Say
    Hundreds of thousands of people were believed to be unable to evacuate to safer ground.




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  • 3 Teens Charged in Videotaped Immigrant Death
    A deadly attack on a 47 year-old father of four has left a town in New Jersey shaken....




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  • Time to scrap BP brand? Gas-station owners divided
    BP gas station owners across the country are divided over whether the oil giant stained by its handling of the Gulf spill should rebrand U.S. outlets as Amoco or another name as part of its effort to repair the company's badly damaged reputation.




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  • Flickr Creator Spins Addictive New Web Service
    Connecting people to one another is not just Fake?s hobby ? she has made it her career. As the cofounder of Flickr, the landmark photography site, Fake provided a place for shutterbugs to share their work; they have uploaded more than 4 billion pictures. It was a seminal service that helped launch the era of user-generated content, spurring...




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  • The Science of Baseball
    MIT outreach program uses America's pastime to hook boys on math and physics




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rss: the register

  • AMD, GlobalFoundries, and the Intel gap

    Gate not closing

    When AMD spin-off GlobalFoundries broke ground on its fab in upstate New York last year, the chip manufacturer boasted it was "closing the gap" on Intel. "We were a year behind Intel at the 45nm node, and that difference will be cut significantly at the 32nm generation," said vice president of manufacturing systems technology Tom Sonderman. "By 22nm, there will be no difference. It will be in the noise level."?



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  • Boffins authenticate Apple 'Antennagate'

    Judas Phone 'death grip' proven fatal

    More evidence has surfaced that Apple's beleaguered Judas Phone does, indeed, have serious reception challenges ? and today's facts and figures come from a sophisticated source.?



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  • MS preps emergency patch for Windows shortcut peril

    Attacks on rise

    Warning of an uptick in attacks, Microsoft plans to issue an emergency update to patch a critical Windows vulnerability that hackers are exploiting to seize control of PCs.?



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  • Microsoft cries foul on Yahoo!-Google Japan deal

    Hunts down Japanese FTC

    Microsoft will try to stop Yahoo! from hooking up with Google in Japan.?

    Free On-Demand Webcast - Virtualizing the Hard Stuff



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  • Microsoft Street Slide: Street View done properly

    Take a peep

    Leaving aside the creepy privacy aspects, Street View is one of Google's most valuable services. The ability to familiarise yourself with somewhere strange, before you arrive, is genuinely useful.?



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  • Futurologist defends 'malevolent dust' warning

    Dust up over supposed evil particles

    A futurologist has defended his controversial warning that "smart dust" is liable to become a future information stealing threat.?



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  • Unisys floats mainframe cloud

    A ClearPath to the development skies

    A mainframe cloud may seem oxymoronic like a lead Zeppelin ("a" included on purpose), or intuitively obvious (given the virtualization and metering capabilities that have been in mainframes for decades). But Unisys has nonetheless fluffed up a mainframe cloud for its ClearPath mainframe customers.?



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  • BlueArc gets extra greenbacks

    $20 million

    BlueArc, the hardware-accelerated NAS array supplier startup, has pocketed another $20m in a seventh funding round, taking total funding to around $225m.?



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  • US law to neuter libel tourism

    Render foreign beatdowns unenforceable

    The US House of Representatives has passed a law which will render libel rulings from the English courts unenforceable there. The bill has already been passed by the Senate and will go to US President Barack Obama to be signed into law.?

    Free On-Demand Webcast - Virtualizing the Hard Stuff



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  • UK supermarket starts contactless payments

    No touching

    Spar is going contactless, attracted by the four pence per transaction the company could save by not asking shoppers for their PINs.?



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