Slashback: Indy, Kaneko, Swindling
Can good money drive out bad at least sometimes? News for nerds writes "Following the earlier news about the arrest of the Winny P2P app creator, KANEKO Isamu, researcher at the U-Tokyo and well-known hacker in the 3-D physics simulation scene in Japan (His first public Winny demo by his anonymous alias '47' was the graphic simulation of the network topology), the group of software technicians separate from Kaneko's lawyers has raised over 10 million yen ($88,347) in 10 days for the lawyers. It claims "The situation of the activities that technicians usually carry out being deemed a crime all of a sudden and arrests being made is seriously shrinking software research and development.""
A minor setback to the oligarchy of lawyers. Ellis D. Tripp writes "The SCOTUS has refused to hear an appeal of a 5th circuit court decision declaring that building codes such as the National Electrical Code lose all copyright protection once they are adopted into municipal law. Under this ruling, such codes can be freely posted on the internet or otherwise distributed for free, rather than requiring contractors or other interested parties to purchase them at often exorbitant prices each time they are revised. The original defendant, Peter Veeck, was sued by Southern Building Code Congress International for making their "Intellectual Property" available on his website."
Why does it have to be snakes? ChrisHanel writes "A follow-up to a story ran on Slashdot last year: The legendary shot-for-shot remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark is screening next month at the first ever large scale Fan Film convention in Worcester, Mass. Tons of fanfilms and filmmaking workshops, and to get past the legal snafus, the fanfilms themselves are free to the public. A rare chance to check out this gem of a film."
Speaking of unconventional media origins, koa writes "This may be an Internet first: a mainstream television show spawned from a genuine internet phenomenon. Odd Todd will be piloting his own animated series on Comedy Central sometime early 2005 based off of his hit website. Press release here. Are we noticing an emergence of a new trend of media to look for original plot ideas from wilds the 'net?"
There is power in a union, evidently. XopherMV writes with the upshot (via Yahoo! News) of last weekend's strike at SBC: "The union wanted access to positions in SBC's emerging sectors, including Internet support and wireless data service. That work is now handled largely by lesser-paid contract workers, many of them in India and the Philippines. The tentative contract calls for SBC and the union to work together to bring the technical support jobs back to the United States when the current contract expires in two years.""
Trust me, ma'am, I was hired to fool you. Cold Drink writes "Part two of a previously Slashdotted story tells the tale of how social engineer Isreal was thwarted. When employees follow proper procedures, social engineers can be stopped dead in their tracks. Read on to find out how one person protected tens of thousands of dollars."
IWILL try to get one of these. We mentioned a few days ago a small dual-Opteron system promised from IWILL; many readers expressed skepticism about its internal configuration, memory slot allocation, power requirements, etc. An anonymous reader writes "it appears a lot of the questions have been answered in regards to the board and cooling configuration over at Hexus. They appear to have snapped some pics of this little beast."
That's awfully enterprising of Claria. gbulmash writes "Nordstrom Corporate Communications has composed an official response to complaints about L.L. Bean's allegations and is e-mailing it to customers.
I received the following letter:
'Thank you for taking the time to email Nordstrom with your concerns. We were disappointed that L.L. Bean did not contact us and allow us the opportunity to investigate this matter before they filed a lawsuit against us.
I would like to address your inquiry about Claria specifically. Nordstrom currently has no relationship with Claria and hasn't had a relationship with them since late 2001 when we tested their services for a 4-month period and concluded we and Claria were not an acceptable fit. To our knowledge, Nordstrom does not engage in the form of advertising described by L.L. Bean in the press. We have worked very hard to earn our customers' trust. We understand how important privacy is to our customers and we do not look to partner with advertisers that violate their privacy in any way.
Marketing on the Internet is a complex process and if our ads are in fact appearing on L.L. Bean's website, it is without our knowledge or consent. Please know that we are looking into this and will take appropriate action if we find the practice is in fact occurring.
Please know that we appreciate you as a customer and hope we will have the opportunity to serve you and your wife in the future.
Thank you again for your feedback.
Sincerely,
Deniz Anders
Corporate Communications
Nordstrom, Inc.'"
Meaning: Didn't do it, can't prove a thing, and it was all his fault anyway.
Well, at least if Lucas and Spielberg reshoot "Raiders of the Lost Ark" with the entire central cast replaced by ewoks, and destroy the original negative.
It's WinNY (based off WinMX), not Winny.
"There is no time, sir, at which ties do not matter," Jeeves, (Jeeves and the Impending Doom)
As it has passed the legal mess to get shown at this film convention, then I hope that bodes well for some sort of wider release (perhaps in some non-profit form?) Otherwise I don't think I'll ever get a chance to see it, being over in the UK.
Trust me, I'm a doctor.
I notice the lawyers have no trouble understanding that a law cannot be anyone's property. Now if they'd just apply that logic to patents on software ideas, mathematical methods and aggregations of facts.
Are we noticing an emergence of a new trend of media to look for original plot ideas from wilds the 'net?"
Yeah but the really good stuff just wont get shown by the pussy US networks. Can you imagine Trey Parker and Matt Stones "Princess" cartoon even being looked at by the tv execs? When macromedia saw it they were pretty pissed off (they had made a deal for a new cartoon). do a google for it its brilliant!
This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
Some might argue South Park beat them to it. Sure, it wasn't originally made for the Internet, but its popularity once it hit the net surely was a big part of them getting a show.
But if you don't think that counts, Tripping the Rift definately should.
First off, if the first theft of merchandise had been an actual theft, and not a test. They would have not known about for at least a couple of hours, if ever. Leaving plenty of time for him to complete a second or third attempt.
The thing to look at here is that without that phonecall (which in all likelyhood would not have occured if this wasn't a test) the second attempt would have likely succeed. Also another point to know is not all stores have loss prevention people working at them all the time. In fact i could name several stores in my area that do not have them present at all.
Anybody with enough brain power and the ability to think on their feet can accomplish feats like this. In most stores the incompentence of the employees makes me laugh. There have been many instances where i have stopped attempts like this in my previous jobs, and unfortunately some where procedure prevented me from doing so.
A Fatal OE Exception has occurred, Sig will now reboot.
This may be an Internet first: a mainstream television show spawned from a genuine internet phenomenon.
Nope. The popularity of the short film "The Spirit of Christmas" once it spread across the Internet was what led to Comedy Central asking the creators to make South Park. Without the Internet, they'd be languishing in obscurity.
If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
Being a former Worcester resident, I found this odd for three reasons:
Oh, and before you ask, it's pronounced "Wuss-tah" not "Whore-sesster".
That being said, please come! It'll be a hoot if lots of /. readers show up!
Show me on the doll where his noodly appendage touched you.
If you get a chance to see the Raiders of the Lost Ark remake, you must do it. I saw it earlier this year at a film festival in Mississippi. Everyone in it is between around 12 and 16. Not just everyone in it, but everyone involved with it! These kids were resourceful in a way only kids can be and dangerously so. They literally set their parents' basement on fire and dragged each other behind a truck, all for love of a movie. The movie itself came out great, but there's this excellent metatheater aspect to it, where you set away and think "how the hell did 13 year olds DO that?!" They also (slightly) visibly age through the movie, which is funny when you notice it. This was one of the most fun movies I've ever seen, don't miss it!
Also, they revealed that Paramount bought their story and plans to make a movie about the kids making this movie!
So the fellow from Nordstrom says that they are not buying the pop-up ads on the LL Bean site. OK.
A quick Google search for "nordstrom affiliate" shows that Nordstrom has a 5% affiliate program.
So perhaps all the "affiliate sites" are the ones buying the pop-up ads?
"Affiliate programs" seem to be a common ways for companies to launch spam/spyware/etc without dirtying their own hands these days...
Princess
How dare slashdot legitimize criminal deception as 'social engineering'? Enginneers build stuff, and this scum only cares about breaking stuff! Unlike real engineers, this fiend has absolutely no regard to public safety!! Slashdot editors should describe this fraudulent criminal exactly the way it is instead of using PERVERTED TERMS INVENTED BY CON ARTISTS to justify deceit and treachery!!!
Does anyone know how to see the fanfilms being played at fanzillacon without going to Worcester? They are being played for free...but no recording is allowed. It's unethical and illegal to sell these films...but are electronic copies being given away somewhere? I didn't see any downloads on the fanzillacon website.
does this mean we'll also soon get a badger badger badger show?
with julia roberts as the snake?
Commodore 64, Loading up the dance floor!
http://www.legalbits.com/thornton-CITATION-comment s.htm
Can anyone shed any light as to how this might perform?
Either way it's a cool achievement, and the little "fin" on top is a wifi antenna, which is cool.
Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
What,
The world needs is a DMCA compliant method to copyright something that lawyers/politicians need real bad. Or maybe a patent...
Access to prescriptions or something similar would work.
Then they would see the craziness that IP law is evolving into and want to do something about it.
Hopefully they would do something that would prove to be discriminatory against the general populace and the whole blooming IP mess could be stricken down by the Supreme Court.
Any ideas?
Caution: Contents under pressure
Shows what you can do if you play fair, but tough. They are apparently taking a raise that is under inflation rate-good for the econony, inflation must slow down to keep a strong buck. If everyone did that, we could completely beat inflation. They made an issue of outsourcing and won, good. We already have a 50 state common economic market, it's called the "united" states, every buck saved and spent here gets recirculated many times, another plus for the economy as a whole and maintaining a strong middle class. And SBC re looked at the figures and realised by golly they could still stay in business, and not play follow the leader to some globalism miasma-con that is only believed in by international mega-profit skimmers. I hope many other unions follow suit, and I keep hoping for an ever larger uber-union that would possibly include almost all IT-type workers, nation wide. You CAN win, just takes strength in numbers and being realistic in your negotiations. Ask for only what's fair, and work hard once you get what you want. win/win overall.
"This may be an Internet first: a mainstream television show spawned from a genuine internet phenomenon"
I don't know how much it takes to be a "phenomenon", but Tripping the Rift certainly had a large number of people see the "FCC-Unfriendly" first episode (the one with the actual bared breasts, not just all the references to them).
And the guy with the sword will shoot first. Oh, the Humanity!
the rest of the world calls it "wus-ter." Hear the lovely lady at Webster say it here.
Unfortunately, at least one attorney at Thelen Reid & Priest hasn't completely figured this out, yet. Mr. Patry lays out both sides of the argument, but IMO fails to draw the logical conclusion. As Patry sees it, the facts are these:
Governments are outsourcing to cut costs.
Rather than charge government huge flat fee to write boilerplate regs, private authors are opting to charge citizens for copies, asserting their copyright.
If government asserts the power to punish those who do not obey the law, ready and free access to that law is essential.
Governments can't seize copyright except in bankruptcy (ed: or national security).
Mr. Patry concludes copyright holders shouldn't get screwed by the quaint 19th century notion that "the law is free", and should be allowed compesation, thereby making the crafting of laws cheaper for the tax payer.
My conclusion would be that public access to it's own laws trumps other interests, and the consequenses should flow from there. If it's expensive to write a boat load of regs, then either 1) a government should pay the going rate to rate 'em, 2) governments can go in together to buy rights to the regs they need, or 3) if it's that fscking expensive, maybe they're introducing too many regs... do without!
Luke, help me take this mask off
it's pronounced "Wuss-tah" not "Whore-sesster".
Yes, as in Worcestershire sauce. However, which city is whore-sesster? Where can I get some of that action?
If you didn't find it funny its because you've never been married. Frickin' dead-on.
.. patents created on the governments nickle, both in house and via sub contractors? Who actually owns them, and who can use them, and when?
Depends. Uncle Sam can keep the rights (doesn't happen that often), or give it to who makes it- but Uncle Sam gets a free license to use it. Verbage needs to be included in the patent application: "This invention was made with government support under (grant/contract number) awarded by (institute, agency). The Government has certain rights in the invention." Uncle Sam would be able to retain worldwide patent rights as well. Could this perhaps be a nice way to generate some revenue to cover our deficit? (source: NIH)
It is fscking incredible that anyone would think it reasonable to be governed by laws that you have to pay to see. It's bad enough to have that idiotic phrase floating around, "Ignorance of the law is no excuse" when there are so many convoluted twisted laws added every day that you have little hope of understanding without a paying a lawyer, and even then it's a crapshoot who wins, but to add to that the idea that you have to pay even to see the law at all, that is just beyond belief.
Infuriate left and right
Are we noticing an emergence of a new trend of media to look for original plot ideas from wilds the 'net?"
Nothing new here, Masjanja is a russian flash cartoon that ran (or maybe is still running) on Russian MTV instead of Beavis & Butthead, that was like two years ago.
More info on Masjanja here:
http://www.mult.ru , its in russian, though : ]
> from wilds the 'net?"
Show business needs to look somewhere for original plot ideas. They most definitely have none in Hollywood nor with the studio Exec's in NY and FL. There is so very little decent, quality programming on TV. And in movies it's almost not worth owning a VCR/DVD player, or a TV for that matter.
I have the fortune of having a 7 year old son. It's just him and me picking our own entertaimment. For that reason I tend to watch a number of cartoons on Nick and the Cartoon Network. He loves "Spounge Bob" & "Kids Next Door." I can watch them with him but I don't get the same enjoyment from them as he does. However, there is a block on the Cartoon Network now called "Migusi" which airs from 1700 to 1900. We watch "Totally Spies", "Code Lyoko", "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" and "Teen Titans". Code Lyoko is really fun and out there. The Turtles have always been a hoot and the Teen Titans are just plane cool. Not to mention their theme song is by Puffy AmiYumi.
As for moview, we have the majority of the Godzilla collection and the first three Tremmors movies (still need the 4th one). Got a number of Pokemon and assorted cartoons (not to mention the virtually manditory Disney movies). My personal movie collection, i.e. the ones daddy gets to watch, are about half F&SF and half Kurosawa/Mifune/Shimura films and their like (CT/HD & The Last Samuri being the most recently made). We'll just skip over the videos in the box on the top shelf of my bedroom closet for now. ;-)
What was I talking about?!? Oh, yeah! That the "entertainment industry" is full of brainless idiots who wouldn't know a good story or show if it hit them in the head.
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If I actually could spell I'd have spelled it right in the first place.
Maybe it's a browser thing?
Just one paragraph before this you are willing to admit that you bought tremors 2 and 3 and now you're complaining about the quality of product being produced by hollywood in this day and age?
Here's a hint, if you keep slurping down what they throw in the trough, the recipe ain't going to change.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
Lysander Spooner?
something like 70% of federal laws have been created in the last 30 years!
are you really bound to the tax code? has or can any single person really read and understand the full thing? sure.
there are a few flaws in our republican gov't. one of the biggest ones is that many laws should have expiration dates. this may only seem apparent as of late since so many laws are written to undo bad effect of previous laws.
The USPTO charges decent size fees for filings, responding, etc. They money goes into the general Treasury fund, and then Congress reallocates it back to the USPTO. Most often, the USPTO gets back a lot less money than they actually take in- a real source of contention.
is this the same 47 who made that video with DJ Spooky (that subliminal kid!)
Does anyone know where I can download the Indy movie? /JO
Bittorrent?
username: slashdot
password: slashdot
It's really fucking horrible. Sheeeyat!
It is fscking incredible that anyone would think it reasonable to be governed by laws that you have to pay to see.
On the flip side, wouldn't this make it a lot easier to claim ignorance? Right now if you go to court and say "Sorry, your honor - I didn't know that the thing I did was not allowed", your honor is going to put your butt in jail where you will have plenty of time to study that law. On the other hand, if you say "Sorry, your honor, but I do not have the funds to buy access to all laws that may or may not apply to my daily activities. Hence, I had no way of knowing that I was violating the law. My ignorance of the law is not my choice but rather the result of a deliberate withholding of the text of law from me, so ultimately the one who withholds the law is the one who is responsible for my miscondict.", then you may stand a chance.
Sounds absurd, isn't it? Well, maybe not so absurd as one would think. Think of your cable modem provider.
- Sir, you've exceeded your reasonable bandwidth usage this month. If this repeats, we'll terminate your account
- I thought the access was unlimited...
- It is unlimited, but you've used that unlimited service a lot more than anyone else in your neighborhood, and thus are over your limit.
- What is my my monthly limit?
- We can't tell you, because there is no limit, but if you go over it again, your account will be terminated. So make sure not to do that again.
Jobs? Which jobs?
The only reason I have the first three Tremors movies is because my son loves them. So do my two nieces, for that matter. Burt Gummer is a hero as far as they are concerned. Hey, if it were just me I'd have stopped at the first one. But a 7 year old tends to trump a 41 year old on matters like this.
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If I actually could spell I'd have spelled it right in the first place.