Slashback: Legislation, Samplification, Knaves
Wouldn't be be nice if this didn't need to be a surprise? dklon writes: "I just got off the phone with Senate Warner's Office (R-VA). Senator Warner, and his compadre, Senator George Allen, both sit on the High Tech Committee, of which Senator Allen is the chairman. After sending them a strongly-worded letter yesterday, Mr. Warner's office was kind enough to call me back and let me know that the likelihood of Coble-Berman becoming law is slim-to-none. It is committee at the moment, and has only 1 sponsor at the moment in the Senate."
Make a joyful noise, and keep repeating it.
mrspin writes "stage4 has an interview with Daniel Gomez-Ibanez a graduate from Stanford University who has designed and produced a 'Digital Turntable' that allows DJs to mix and scratch digital music using what looks like a conventional record player.
Daniel recently posted a short piece on Slashdot about his 'Digital Turntable'. In an email interview with stage4 he talks about what makes it different from other such products and the inspiration behind this hardware hack.
stage4 is a community site dedicated to creative uses of technology and features a weekly music webcast via PirateTV"
Daniel also says (by email) that if "anyone would want a very unique sampling turntable I would sell more of them for around the cost of the parts because it would be fun to get them out there and get people playing with them." Even those parts aren't cheap (totaling around a thousand dollars) but handcrafted audio tools rarely are. Check his site for email address ;)
Please keep your Gator away from my eyeballs. EyesWideOpen writes "The New York Times is reporting that a preliminary injunction will be issued against Gator Corporation as a result of the company being sued by 10 web site publishers last month because they felt that the company's use of online pop-up ads violated copyright and trademark laws. 'In court Friday, Judge Hilton said that he found enough evidence to support the plaintiffs' claim that Gator's advertisements violated trademark laws in particular...he indicated that one issue was the proximity of Gator's pop-up ads to the publishers' trademarks.'"
You may already have won! We've had to run a number of pieces on unsavory renewal practices among the various registrars competing for your name-claiming business, but domain name scamming is sadly not confined to the U.S. kungfuftr writes: "I'm currently registering all my domains names through a company in the uk called 123reg who are very reasonable and run a good company. Today i got a letter from a company called "Domain Registry of Europe" saying that my domain name "kungfuftr.com" must be renewed. The form they sent looks like a bill and for someone who doesn't know too much about the DNS process it looks like something that should be filled in if they want to keep their domain. Of course if they do this their control of their domain will be transferred to a new registrar. Giving the company an official name as if they are the 'only' registrar in europe is pretty shady. Are companies reaching a new low?"
For when I get a larger hard drive ... TheRedHorse writes "The Yellow Dog Linux 2.3 ISO's have been released . Slashdot did a story about it YDL 2.3 before. Please remember to use the mirrors. Have fun."
You knew this would happen, right? JUSTONEMORELATTE writes "LightReading is reporting today that the EBone portion of KPNQwest's network has been bought for pennies on the dollar (or is that cents on the Euro?) by U.K.-based service provider Interoute Telecommunications. EBone had been valued at EU645 million back in March, today's deal is rumoured to be at about EU15 million, or about a 98% loss of value. Slashdot has covered the heroic efforts to keep the network alive, and talked about the shutdown of the same."
Genetics is never having to say "Am I your type, baby?" Teluial writes "Slashdot's previous story about ColonelPanic's genetic keyboard layout is taking an interesting development. *cue Spidey music* When we last left PMK he was trying his latest layout. Having found it "usable," he is now collecting Dvorak keystroke data and requesting volunteers of the QWERTY breed to also collect data to compare interesting findings against. Details near bottom of project page."
I was wondering what the hell we were talking about here until I found this discussion of the Coble-Berman bill that would restrict fair use...
Anti-Spam Legislation Opposed By Powerful Penis-Enlargement Lobby
Classic, classic onion.
In an era where billions of dollars are misreported to show a profit, where companies trade our personal data as commodities, where advertising has become universally prevalent (let us not forget TV pop-ups), where predatory business practices are the norm and "moral" is a bad word.... is this truly a low? It seems to me that it is par for the course.
We've had to run a number of pieces on unsavory renewal practices among the various registrars competing for your name-claiming business, but domain name scamming is sadly not confined to the U.S
.org domain and not .ca). I couldn't believe I would receive such a thing after the big Verisign hoopla. I wrote them back stating that they had just ensured that I will never use their services for any of my domains (5 in all, all .org, .com or .net).
What I found even more ironic is that the particular domain in question isn't due for another year and some months! What are these people thinking?
This isn't just happening in the US or the UK. I received what looked like a bill from the Domain Registry Institute of Canada for one of my domains (which incidentally is a
It's better to burn out than to fade away
More and more in regular usage, I need easy access to numbers. Most of my passwords are number/letter combos, and I'm constantly having to type addresses (often my own for online registration). More importantly, it's nice to be able to quickly type 'l4m3r' into a console while gaming.
Does anyone know of experiments being done to better incorporate numbers into regular type?
Can I bum a sig?
A similar thing happened in Canada. A while back I got a renewal notice from "The domain registry of Canada". It was printed on letterhead deviously designed to look like stationery of the federal government. I'm sure many people got sucked in by the presentation alone.
I got a notice similar to this one from my registrar. I'm sure a lot of those had to go out.
Sending targeted junk mail is one thing; trying to appear to be a government service is another. I find the practice repugnant.
dlek.
I saw something like this quite a while ago at CompUSA. Only $1300!
Then it went away, never to be seen again...
http://obsess.com/junk/onion/
How come it's so easy for someone to transfer a domain registrar via social engineering and yet it's so hard to do it legitimately?
My recent attempt to move a domain from Verisign to Namesecure ended up taking the domain off the air for over a month... Namesecure has completely dropped telephone support -- their email support being consistently unhelpful and clueless I ended up moving the domain to Register.com instead.
HA ! This in most certainly not a new low... Shady companies are not a new thing in the world...
Im not sure if they still exist,
but there used to be several phone companies that named themselves things like: "Idontcare", "Whatever", "Itdoesntmatter" so that when collect callers were asked what carrier they wished to use and they answer "I dont care" they would be put through "Idontcare" and charged exorbetant(sp?) amounts of money...
Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
You must be some sort of anti-capitalist, communist, Linux hippy who wants a free "speech" ride for free WareZZZ.
The addresses were harvested from whois records against the terms and conditions of using the whois records as far as I can see.
Naturally I reported this to the registry we use, OpenSRS/Tucows, so they can handle it. UKReg also use OpenSRS/Tucows IIRC, so hopefully they are also reporting these letters their customers get.
I got a piece of snall mail telling me to renew my domain name. It had all my info, but it was from Verisign... I don't use Verisign. I was not very pleased..
Rob
Anybody with a bit of sense will contact their registrar, and try to pay next period with time. That's what means to me, a reminder, but the funny part is that a third party paid the paper. Did I commented my current registrar reminds me with time each time? OK, this year I get two reminders. :) Maybe they should have tried if I had not already renewed in the past, but I know my current registrar is fine, because they are demostrating it, and because I got it because friends told me it was fine.
I just hope not to see a Michellin guy telling me to go buy new tires, because my Firestone'll be old soon. Yeah! Get a double price Michellin set, instead of going for the already planned Firestone change, great idea!
...Senate Warner's Office (R-VA). Senator Warner, and his compadre, Senator George Allen, both sit on the High Tech Committee, of which Senator Allen is the chairman...
Short answer: Um, no.
Long answer: Senate Republicans have a para-legislative policy committee, which recommends "The Republican" positions on issues in the Senate. George Allen chairs a subunit of that organization, the high-tech task force. The Democrats have a comparable organization, but they don't publicize it right now because they hold a majority in the Senate.
In fairness, Allen is labelled the ranking member of the Science, Technology, and Space subcommittee. This, however, is misleading because Allen is only a freshman Senator, and all the other Republicans on that subcommittee are actually more senior than he.
Gator may be unsavory, but it looks to me like this lawsuit is yet another display of cluelessness by the Powers That Be. It ranks up there with deep linking in my sight.
Displaying pop up ads over web sites without publisher's permission...
So when I'm browsing in multiple windows, and a background page pops up an ad over top of someone else's page, that could be a violation of trademark law? (this is a far fetched analogy, but:)
At best, it(Gator) is one program watching and responding to the actions of a separate program.
I agree the trading of personal data sucks, not sure I agree with the advertising statement, but
predatory buisness practices are not the norm.
Name me 50 companies that have predatory buisness practices and I will name you 50,000 that dont. This is the norm? I agree those that dont play by the rules need to be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And you show me one person that says "moral" is a bad word and I can show you ~30 million.
Buisness!=Evil, as much as some wish it was the case.
I ended up moving the domain to Register.com [register.com] instead.
... no wait, that would make things worse ....
Which will promptly spam the crap out of *@yourdomain.com, forcing you to move to another registrar, thus continuing the cycle of registrar stupidity. If only ICANN would do something
again: "nobody says moral is a bad word", not what I previously said in the parent...
too late now... I think my slip up was funny though...
CNet reports on this with the Headline: House OKs life sentences for hackers
This seems to have almost no opposition, passing in the House passed 385-3 on Monday evening.
features include new and improved (Tougher! Stronger!) survelliance provisions.
It is very strange which bills get attention in tech forums, and which slipp through with barely a whisper.
not that I care all that much any more.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
The genetic keyboard layout's author says he doesn't want to go back and re-learn QWERTY.
My observation is that in his attempt to pursue personal efficiency, he has effectively isolated himself from 99+% of the keyboards/layouts in the English speaking world.
The irony is that when this guy leaves the safety of his office, his typing skills are reduced to those of a lowbrow backwoods hunt-and-pecker. That means chicks will laugh at him and won't reproduce with him, which puts him in the penalty box of natural selection. How do you feel about toying with genetics now, Brainiac?
QWERTY isn't popular because it's pretty or efficient, but because of its popularity.
Baudtender
My opinions reflect those of the company I work for,
because I own the goddamn company I work for.
I've been using Dvorak for awhile, and though it did help with my RSI (yey), I still feel there could be a layout more improved for programmers. (especially C programmers).
{ } ( ) all require shifting, then again, there isn't really any place you could move them down from. everything that isn't shifted is important to coding C.
I'd be tempted to design a new keyboard layout using his program, but put in 4 extra keys, maybe between the backspace/enter/shift column and the rest of the board.
It would atleast mean my pinky doesn't get stretched on almost every line of code. (how many C lines don't have a ( or { on them?
I think the best solution other than 4 new keys would be moving the shift key on the left to the home row (switch with capslock).
I use to have a funny sig, but slash cut it off, and I forgot what the punchline was.
As I break from America's Army Shooting Range (Try number 39 to qualify), I wonder:
it seems that if I have a wierd (non QWERTY) keyboard layout, I'd have to remap
the controls on all those games that use keyboard layout for controls (W == forward,
S== back, A/D for left/right)
That would get annoying and possibly would eliminate the time savings gained by
normal typing. Just no way to win.
http://www.forbes.com/forbes500/
The information about the companies being named "whatever" and so forth was told to me via word of mouth. I did not experience it myself. The person who told me this lived in Texas and said that it only happend where they live and not here(Pennsylvania). The companies may not have been actual carriers, but just purchasing time on the phone networks and reselling it via collect calls. But then again maybe this person was only repeating a rumor. I dont know... I couldnt find any info about it via google, so I dont know what to think.
Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
I've registered various domains with Register.Com over the years and always given them unique contact emails. I have NEVER gotten spam on any of them. Are you sure you're not talking about some other registrar?
:)
FYI, it took me three months and a total of 7 faxes, 12 phone calls and an ungodly number of emails to get Verisign to turn loose of a domain awhile back. By the end of it I was ready to sic our legal eagle on them. God those bastards pissed me off!
(But I never got spam from them either... Maybe I just lead a charmed life.
And this is why Nominets decision to require the names and addresses of domain holders, so that they can publish the information is so wrong.
See No to Nominet
It would be cent on the euro - there is no plural, which is a bit unusual at first - 1 cent, 2 cent, 1 euro, 2 euro.
Doesn't matter anymore, since 1$=1E now!
On your comment about wanting four extra keys - I have a Kinesis ergonomic keyboard at home, and the layout gives you about 19 extra keys to use - eight in an extra row below the convention bottom row, and a full, useful keypad for each thumb with six each.
This keyboard is sweet-looking, comfortable, and great for any game with key remapping and heavy mouse use, since you can actually get more commands under one hand than you can on a standard keyboard.
You could probably find most of the same features in another keyboard called the Maltron, but I wasn't exactly inspired by either its industrial british look, or the $350 price - I can get another Kinesis for about $180.
It definitely has a nice look deployed in a geek environment. My roommate has had one for years as well, and he's also quite pleased with it.
I used to use Register.com, since it had what I thought was a good interface, and free DNS. Then I found out about directNIC, transferred all my domains without problems and have never looked back. directNIC has an awesome interface (great if you have lots of domains), is less than half the price ($15) and a lot of optional extras (free hosting, free email forwarding, free parking and redirection, DNS, POP3 accounts).
check out finalscratch.com!!!!!!!!
~insert tech sarcasm here~
"if anyone would want a very unique sampling turntable I would sell more of them for around the cost of the parts"
Damn, I want a unique turntable, but it has to be only a little bit unique...
directNIC is down as I type. Pretty lame.
sent in guise of an invoice is illegal.
link at state
Check with your local AG, get some nastly letters
sent, get them to get in touch with the powers
that be where the registrar operates. Maybe get
them shut down in your state.
That will be the day, when a domain scammer gets :-)
busted on facial recognition software at your
local airport.
STOP DOMAIN NAME TERRORISTS
I was the original poster of the line starting "Your thoughtful gift of....". This is the second 'identity' I've seen that seems to be a bot that harvests lines from other posters\. Is this the next level - capable of finding linked articles from a slashback and harvesting there? Just needs some work on the flow of the language. Also maybe throw in a "Sorry about me Hunglish" at the end and people will start to give it the benefit of the doubt.
It should be up to the end user what the experience of the content provided by a web site. If you want your style sheet to override theirs, it should. If you want to block the pop-ups, you should be able to. If you want to see Gator's ads instead of the sites' ads, you should be able to. Now the question of whether people want to see Gators' ads instead is a valid one, and the answer is probably no. But if asked whether they would be willing to do so in exchange for a free form-filler-outer, many would say yes. Ad supported freeware has a decently long tradition - as do hacks to then prevent the ads from actually being seen. I support those as well, while obviously there the ad supported freeware people don't. The test to apply is always "Does this increase the ability of the end user to control what's on their desktop?", and while Gator does very little on that front, this lawsuit against Gator could potentially do a lot to hurt that goal.
One person in my office uses a Dvork keyboard. Nobody can sit down at his desk and interface with his computer, nor can he do the same at anyone else's computer. Dvorak is a much better interface, but anytime you're in a social situation you choose the most universal solution, not the optimal solution.
From the genetic keyboard word frequency table:
: ; .
37358
17483
11985
Is this just 'cause of all the C code he fed in? In that case, that suggests that the resulting keyboard is rather specialized.