Grow Your Own Limbs

Found on Wired on Saturday, 23 September 2006
Browse Science

In response to the hundreds of soldiers coming home from war with missing arms or legs, Darpa is spending millions of dollars to help scientists learn how people might one day regenerate their own limbs.

The two groups are sharing $7.6 million in grants for a year to find a way to give humans salamander-like abilities. According to Army Medical Command, 411 soldiers who fought in Iraq and 37 in Afghanistan are amputees as a result of combat wounds. If preliminary research is successful, the scientists could receive more funding for up to four years.

Mammals can't naturally regenerate limbs or digits beyond the fetal stage. Amphibians like salamanders and newts, however, can regrow limbs, eyes and even spinal cords. So the scientists are on a hunt for the molecular signals responsible for controlling that regenerative ability.

Now that would be wicked and could help thousands of people.

Publishers aim for some control of results

Found on Reuters on Friday, 22 September 2006
Browse Internet

Global publishers, fearing that Web search engines such as Google Inc. are encroaching on their ability to generate revenue, plan to launch an automated system for granting permission on how to use their content.

Buoyed by a Belgian court ruling this week that Google was infringing on the copyright of French and German language newspapers by reproducing article snippets in search results, the publishers said on Friday they plan to start testing the service before the end of the year.

"Since search engine operators rely on robotic 'spiders' to manage their automated processes, publishers' Web sites need to start speaking a language which the operators can teach their robots to understand," according to a document seen by Reuters that outlines the publishers' plans.

That "language" is called robots.txt and already in use. Serious search engines respect those restrictions. A new "language" won't change much here; if it can be understood, it can be rejected and the website can be spidered anyway by rogue robots. Apart from all that, is it really a good idea to lock out those who bring visitors to your site? People use search engines; they don't browse a few hundred random URLs until they find what they are looking for.

Chinese journalist to file US suit against Yahoo

Found on Infoworld on Thursday, 21 September 2006
Browse Legal-Issues

A Chinese journalist jailed in part due to e-mail evidence provided by a Yahoo subsidiary plans to file a lawsuit in the U.S. against the Internet company within the next few months.

A U.S. civil suit against Yahoo on behalf of Shi Tao, a Chinese journalist convicted of "divulging state secrets" by Beijing in part due to an e-mail Yahoo provided to Chinese authorities, will likely be filed in either New York or California, Ho said. Tao's e-mail, sent from a Yahoo account in April, 2004 to a pro-China democracy Web site in New York, contained a Beijing order for officials to be on guard for unrest and dissident activity ahead of the 15th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre.

The new lawsuit would come just months after Ho filed a complaint to Hong Kong authorities against Yahoo Holdings (Hong Kong) on behalf of Tao. It also comes at a time when international pressure is increasing on Internet companies to handle the private data of their users more carefully, particularly with respect to human rights.

Good luck to him; let's hope suits like this one show the big companies that they have to be careful with private data and can't hand them out to any government without really serious reasons.

Microsoft Media Player shreds your rights

Found on The Inquirer on Wednesday, 20 September 2006
Browse Censorship

One of the problems with WiMP11 is licensing and backing it up. If you buy media with DRM infections, you can't move the files from PC to PC, or at least you can't and have them play on the new box. If you want the grand privilege of moving that content, you need to get the approval of the content mafia, sign your life away, and use the tools they give you.

Yes, WiMP11 will no longer allow you the privilege of backing up your licenses, they are tied to a single device, and if you lose it, you are really SOL.

If you rip your own CDs, WiMP11 will take your rights away too. If the 'Copy protect music' option is turned on, well, I can't top their 1984 wording. "If the file is a song you ripped from a CD with the Copy protect music option turned on, you might be able to restore your usage rights by playing the file. You will be prompted to connect to a Microsoft Web page that explains how to restore your rights a limited number of times." This says to me it will keep track of your ripping externally, and remove your rights whether or not you ask it to. Can you think of a reason you would need to connect to MS for permission to play the songs you ripped from you own CDs?

Then when you go down on the page a bit, it goes on to show that it guts Tivo capabilities. After three days, it kills your recordings for you, how thoughtful of them. Going away for a week? Tough, your rights are inconvenient to their profits, so they have to go. "Recorded TV shows that are protected with media usage rights, such as some TV content recorded on premium channels, will not play back after 3 days when Windows Media Player 11 Beta 2 for Windows XP is installed on Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005. No known workaround to resolve this issue exists at this time."

I don't understand why anybody would like WMP10/11. I still have WMP6.4 running and it plays most videos (eventually after adding the required codec). For the rest, there's VLC which does a great job. And all the DRM crap that directs me to an "Update your WMP" site, trying to force me to upgrade to comply with usage restrictions? Meet the delete option.

PC Thief Takes Court Computers

Found on Forbes on Tuesday, 19 September 2006
Browse Pranks

A man was convicted of various theft charges, after prosecutors say he stole computers from the courthouse while he was on trial for computer theft.

"It just amazed me that someone could be in the middle of a jury trial for a burglary involving computers and immediately get involved in another burglary at the Civic Center," said sheriff's Sgt. Jerry Niess.

Jon Houston Eipp, 39, of Novato pleaded guilty Monday in three separate cases involving 10 different charges, including burglary, theft, drug possession, attempted auto theft and more.

In an interview Monday night at the county jail, Eipp said he stole the computers "for personal reasons."

How dumb can you be?

Unfinished Tolkien work to be published in '07

Found on CNN on Monday, 18 September 2006
Browse Various

An unfinished tale by J.R.R. Tolkien has been edited by his son into a completed work and will be released next spring, the U.S. and British publishers announced Monday.

Christopher Tolkien has spent the past 30 years working on "The Children of Hurin," an epic tale his father began in 1918 and later abandoned. Excerpts of "The Children of Hurin," which includes the elves and dwarves of Tolkien's "The Lord of the Rings" and other works, have been published before.

"It has seemed to me for a long time that there was a good case for presenting my father's long version of the legend of the 'Children of Hurin' as an independent work, between its own covers," Christopher Tolkien said in a statement.

The new book will be published by Houghton Mifflin in the United States and HarperCollins in England.

Sweet, more Middle Earth.

Google News Removes Belgian Newspaper

Found on Slashdot on Sunday, 17 September 2006
Browse Internet

Following a judicial action (link in French) by the 'French-speaking Belgian Association of the press,' Google.be has removed all the French-speaking press sites from its index, as can be seen by doing a search. The court order to Google is posted at Chilling Effects. In summary, the editors want a cut of the profit that Google News makes using their information. No such deal exists for the moment. Google has been ordered to remove all references, or pay one million Euros per day if it doesn't comply. Net effect: they removed all link to the sites, from Google News, but also from Google's search. Will Google become irrelevant in Belgian, and be replaced by MSN? Or will the newspapers, which gain from commercials, and thus net traffic, change their position when they'll see the drop in traffic that it is causing?

I doubt that what that association planned. After all, Google still brings most visitors to your page, so it's not the best idea to cut that off. On a side note: hasn't Google said once that there is no way they can control the database content? This has stopped many webmasters and big companies from asking for a push-up, but court orders showed that this statement was false. Well, court orders and Google's interest in China (which proves how good Google can censor its index).

Was the 2004 Election Stolen?

Found on Slashdot on Saturday, 16 September 2006
Browse Politics

"In June Rolling Stone ran an article by Robert F. Kennedy Jr. delving into the statistical improbability that Bush won the 2004 election based on massive amounts of evidence that support a Republican-sponsored election fraud across the country, particularly in Ohio. The GOP used a number of tactics in its fraudulent campaign including ballot-stuffing, denying newly registered voters (particularly in urban and minority precincts) their voting privileges via illegal mailings known as caging lists, inane voter registration requirements, preventing thousands of voters from receiving provisional ballots, under-providing Democrat-majority precincts with voting machines thus creating enormous queues of voters, faulty machines (particularly from Diebold) that skewed results in the GOP's favor, mostly unnoticed ballot-stuffing and fraud in rural areas, and a fixed recount that was paid for by the Green and Libertarian parties that essentially supported the initial fraudulent numbers."

I doubt there won't be presented much official evidence anytime soon. There are so many open questions which are unanswered; this is just another one. The US went to war and until today none of the reasons have been proven; hundreds of tons of steel were "vaporized", effectively letting planes from 9/11 disappear. There are so many phoney things going on and nobody seems to care.

Hacker Discovers Adobe PDF Back Doors

Found on eWEEK on Friday, 15 September 2006
Browse Software

A British security researcher has figured out a way to manipulate legitimate features in Adobe PDF files to open back doors for computer attacks.

David Kierznowski, a penetration testing expert specializing in Web application testing, has released proof-of-concept code and rigged PDF files to demonstrate how the Adobe Reader program could be used to launch attacks without any user action.

Kierznowski claims there are at least seven more points in PDF files where an attacker can launch malicious code. "[With] a bit more creativity, even simpler and/or more advanced attacks could be put together," he said, noting that Adobe Acrobat supports the use of "HTML forms" and "File system access."

"One of the other interesting finds was the fact that you can back-door all Adobe Acrobat files by loading a back-doored JavaScript file into [a local] directory," Kierznowski said in a blog entry that includes the proof-of-concept exploit code.

At least you can deactivate JavaScript in the preferences.

DRM cracks continue to thwart iTunes 7

Found on Ars Technica on Thursday, 14 September 2006
Browse Software

Apple's announcement of the newly revamped iTunes 7 during yesterday's "Showtime" event came with many new updates and features to both the software and the iTunes Store. One of those updates was an update to the FairPlay DRM encryption that Apple uses in the songs sold through iTunes 7, as it rendered DRM stripping software such as QTFairUse6 inoperable.

Well, it didn't take developers very long—just a few hours after the announcement, actually-to compile a new working version of QTFairUse6, version 2.3, that strips songs purchased through iTunes 7 of their DRM. Although the new release is a little shaky-"Experimental iTunes 7.0 support" is one of the changes in the version history-users report that it generally seems to be working.

More kinks need to be worked out before a more stable version of QTFairUse6 is released, but this proves that no matter how many times Apple tries to outsmart developers with the DRM encryption, more dedicated hackers will eventually outsmart Apple in return.

Why don't they just give up?