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  1. arithmetic bugs? on Linux Has Fewer Bugs Than Rivals · · Score: 1
    According to the article:

    Of the 985 bugs identified, 627 were in critical parts of the kernel. Another 569 could cause a system crash...

    627 and another 569 is 1196, which is already more than 985.

  2. Re:OT: Apostrophe rant on Amazon Sued For Recommending Books · · Score: 1

    Your grammar and spelling may be 'contructs of based', but I prefer to make myself clear.

  3. Re:what exactly is the problem witb ID cards? on Supermarket Loyalty Cards Vs National ID Cards · · Score: 1

    IANAL, but I've read that technically you're not allowed to bring anything 'indecent' into the country. This is a very broad term that covers even mildly titillating and salacious works, such as the saucy postcards openly displayed at British seaside resorts, or Lady Chatterly's Lover. The law is much less strict (but even less clear) about what you can possess and distribute, but if you want to know, have a look round a sex shop next time you're here and see what's on offer.

  4. Re:Is smaller really what you want? on Affordable, Compact Keyboards? · · Score: 1
    According to the "JWZ's experiences" link:

    The kiosks are set up with a three-button trackball as a pointing device.

  5. data protection directive on Censoring The Net With A Hotmail Account · · Score: 1

    The EU data protection directive is the basis of much of the privacy law in Ireland.

  6. Re:Censorship, or just cautious commercial entitie on Censoring The Net With A Hotmail Account · · Score: 1
    You have a frickin legal staff and you're hosting with one of these low-end budget companies, huh? And instead of just moving to a high-end hosting provider where you won't get dropped with no warning, you're going to have an entire legal staff sue one of these rinky dink companies.

    Tiscali, Wanadoo, Planet Internet, Demon... not tiny companies.

  7. Re:It shouldn't be that easy on Censoring The Net With A Hotmail Account · · Score: 1

    The data don't confirm your speculation: 2 of the 3 free providers pulled the content, compared to 5 of the 7 paid ones.

    IANAL, but I wouldn't be surprised if an ISP has more liabilities to worry about if it accepts money for hosting illegal/disputed material. You could sue them in either case, but how much do you expect in damages?

  8. more than a little wary on Submit and Moderate Questions for Bush and Kerry · · Score: 1

    Saddam was terrified of pissing off the US. He didn't dare invade Kuwait until he had the all-clear from the American ambassador, and ten years later when the US threatened another war, he submitted swiftly to the UN weapons inspectors. No doubt the next strong Iraqi government (if any) will take these precedents to heart when choosing its friends.

  9. Re:A few quotes from the article - on MPAA Sends Linux Australia Dubious Takedown Notice · · Score: 1

    But it's only Australian lawyers who are exempt. If this was sent from America...

  10. release the Phantom! on Infinium Labs to Miss Release Date · · Score: 1

    The Phantom is innocent, I tell you! Some villain has framed the Phantom - I don't know who it was, but once he's free, the Phantom won't rest until he has uncovered the devious plot and cleared his name. You must release the Phantom!

  11. Re:PPPL Family Fun Day on Fermilab Antimatter Lab to Hold Limited Tours · · Score: 1

    My family went to the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab Family Fun Day, and all I got was this stupid anti-shirt.

  12. Re:Emir is underhanded, Connolly is dense on Mambo Users Threatened · · Score: 1
    There seem to be a lot of misunderstandings. I bothered to read the article...

    If there's one thing I can't stand, it's when a poster boasts of having 'bothered to read' the article but has casually skip-read it at best. Sakic says seven times that the Mambo core code is not derived from the 9 lines he wrote for Connolly. He also says (twice) that Connolly distributed the modification under the GPL. And by the way, I think most of us know that barring a severe attack of amnesia, you can't write a clean-room reimplementation of your own code. [End of bad-tempered rant.]

    The response bearing Connolly's name is ominously entitled 'Only Looking for a Mutually Beneficial Resolution'. Connolly denies having distributed (under GPL or otherwise) the customised source, and claims they did have a contract that transferred copyright to Miro (Sakic said there was no contract but that the modifications were copyright Miro). I'm inclined to believe Connolly about the contract, but others here have confirmed that Furthermore distributed the software. The crucial point, though, is the evidence of copying, which is limited to the following selective quotations:

    2. We have a written correspondence from Sakic 10/3/03 where he admits having "implemented" our code and IP "to official Mambo"... "Hope you don't mind." We immediate responded that we did mind. Sakic's response then was "Hehe I was afraid you would feel like that;" And "I understand."

    The whole basis of Connolly's claim, then, is that to 'implement' the same function infringes copyright. This, and the way Connolly vaguely bandies around terms like 'IP', suggests he hasn't yet consulted a lawyer. I'm not one myself, and my opinions below are based on what I read on Groklaw. Conveniently, this issue seems to be very like SCO's cases writ little.

    And it really is different and better, but it's built right off what he had already done for Connolly. I don't know what to think about this part -- there is no law I know of that would address this clearly.

    The same issue is central to the SCO-IBM case (which of course is in the USA, not Australia). As Groklaw readers will know, the test there for a derivative work in software is 'substantial similarity', as determined by 'abstraction, filtration and comparison'. Connolly's allegations are unclear, but he'd probably agree with your claim that Sakic started with the code he wrote for Furthermore and modified it until it was completely different. This would not be illegal, at least in America. (See for example Sony vs. Connectix.)

    Sakic claims, however, that he started afresh with the official Mambo module, which seems plausible given the much larger size of that project and the lack of any evidence to the contrary. The end result is the same, though: if the code is substantially similar, it infringes. Substantial similarity can be a tricky issue to address, thus to avoid litigation (justified or not), clean-room reimplementation is safer. But as far as I know Connolly has found no similarity whatsoever, and if he does, it will be very easy for Mambo to change the offending few lines.

    Behind the intellectual property rant, Connolly has only three possible grievances:

    1. He employed Sakic to write some software shortly before a similar product was released, free of charge, to everyone. Thus his competitive advantage failed to last as long as expected. This is simply bad luck or bad commercial judgement on his part, and such mistakes are hardly uncommon in the industry. At the worst, Sakic would have been acting in bad faith if he already knew he was about to implement the same functionality for the Mambo core, but failed to mention this to Connolly.
    2. While he was marketing his modified Mambo that displayed headlines in this way, the official Mambo project decided to do the same thing (but better). Again, this is qu
  13. Re:Really, really no. on SHA-0 Broken, MD5 Rumored Broken · · Score: 1
    There is still considerable debate in the cryptographic community about whether 3des is actually any stronger than des. Many people feel that if an attack is found to be effective against the des algorithm, the extra layers of stirring the bits around will not make the plaintext any more secure.
    I have never heard any member of the cryptographic community claim that triple DES is no stronger than DES, except in a very theoretical sense. At least one attack has already been found to be effective against DES (exhaustive search of the keyspace), but it is not currently feasible against 3DES. A cryptographic attack that could crack DES faster than brute force would quite likely work against 3DES too, but that doesn't mean it will necessarily be computationally feasible.
  14. not just illegal files on Professor and Student Thwart P2P File Sharing · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The article says that this technique can be used to thwart illegal file sharing, but it will work equally against legally shared files. The technology could be used to suppress a rival's freely-distributed music (a subtler trick would be to flood the network with plausible-sounding but inferior copies).

    This threat isnt going to keep me awake at night if it's confined to music, but as the article says,
    Hale said the technology could be applied to protect all sorts of sensitive or confidential material.

    This means we won't be able to trust the current generation of P2P networks for authentic news, commentary from reputable sources, free (as in either) software, accurate documentation for same, or any data that some powerful organisation doesn't want us to share. In many cases such forgeries would be illegal under copyright, trademark, defamation or competition laws, but proving which cuckoo laid the egg could be very difficult.

  15. Re: RFID is good tech with great abuse potential on Senator Leahy Calls for RFID Technology Hearings · · Score: 1

    That's absurd. RFIDs are passive, meaning they have very, very short range (a few inches, couple feet at most).
    Western spies (I think it was the CIA) used passive RF devices for audio eavesdropping in the 1980s, enabling them to hear officials' conversations from down the street. (The advantages of passive devices were the lack of incriminating wires, and of radiation when they weren't in use.) I imagine technology has improved since then.

    To "scan" a house from the street, you'd need an enormous transmitter/receiver combo, which would generate a tremendous amount of RF noise that would be sure to be noticed in a neighborhood.
    I'd be surprised if RFIDs operated in the same frequency band as, say, television, but even if they did, a few seconds of interference is not going to make everyone assume there are burglars on the prowl. And if you're trying to smear someone, why hide the fact that you've gathered information about them?

    I suppose its possible that some of the digits in there would designate a publicly-available manufacturer (so you'd know that whatever you just scanned, it's a "Toshiba" something-or-other), but you wouldn't know whether it was a bigscreen plasma TV, or an alarm clock, unless you had access to Toshiba's private database, which you would not.
    You would if you borrow, stole, or politely requested a copy of the catalogue Toshiba would have to distribute to all its retailers if they're going to get any use out of the system. Or you could just scan some Toshiba products. The code would almost certainly share most of its digits with other TVs of the same batch, not quite so many with the same model, the same product line, and then with audiovisual equipment in general.

    OK, if you're rich enough to drive around a neighborhood with a massive, expensive RFID transmitter/receiver...
    Even a relatively long-range scanner used for stocktaking in warehouses shouldn't cost more than a few hundred dollars. I can't think of any expensive components that it would require. If (as you imply) it's rather more expensive than a car, it wouldn't be marketable in the first place.

  16. Re:Report on SCO Ordered to Produce Evidence · · Score: 1
    the statement is based on their own opinion.
    Quite.

  17. 32 million pounds says you're wrong on Gerrymandering by Computer · · Score: 1
    Nope. Do you have any evidence there is?

    Have you forgotten Westminster City Council? Dame Shirley Porter is still refusing to repay a penny of the 30 million or so she spent evicting poor people from marginal wards [Hansard (page down if you find juicy scandals more entertaining than the Fishery Limits amendment they were supposed to be debating)]. Not that that was the Electoral Commission's doing, mind you.

  18. sort order on US House, Senate Agree on Anti-Spam Bill · · Score: 1

    You sort both lists, and we're talking about an O(1,000,000) job, not an O(450,000,000,000) job.

    That's assuming your sort is O(n), of course. But you can get pretty close to that with an index-based sort on pseudorandom data.

  19. salt on US House, Senate Agree on Anti-Spam Bill · · Score: 1

    The FTC can harden the list against dictionary attacks by using a salt value: each entry is the hash of the address plus a unique pseudorandom string published with the entry. Then you need to re-hash for each address you're trying to brute-force, instead of comparing one hash to all the addresses.

  20. Re:um...useless? on California to Require Paper Voter Receipt · · Score: 1

    And they will NEVER, EVER allow voters to vote by post. Or by proxy. Or let anyone in the building without strip-searching them for hidden cameras. These days cameras in mobile phones are preferred, but 19th-century technology is perfectly adequate for the purpose.

  21. Rome before Caesar (unashamedly offtopic) on California to Require Paper Voter Receipt · · Score: 1

    Before the Social War, only those born in the city of Rome or its environs were eligible to vote - and given the speed of transport in those days, ordinary people could not spare the time and expense of travelling to Rome just to cast their vote. None of the other cities had any representation in central politics. Even after other Italians became citizens, Rome still had the bulk of the authority - and by this time the most effective route to power was to march an army into Rome, regardless of the opinions of the senate and people.

    It's worth noting too that the tribe-based voting system was highly skewed in favour of the patricians and other hereditary nobles. Only when the ruling classes were about evenly divided did the mass of the population have any significance. An exception was the election of the tribune of the Plebs, an ombudsman with significant power, but not one of the most important officials.

    The Roman republic was highly centralised by the standards of its time, aguably more so than the other states of comparable size (China, Parthia and Mauryan India). Where decisions were taken locally, they were made by Roman appointees. Generally speaking, governors in the Republic did not need or try to gain the support of the local population; they just pocketed as much money for themselves as possible. The aggrieved populace could petition Rome for redress, so it was important to ensure you extorted enough money in fines to be able to pay your own fine if you were caught. There were however one or two special cases (such as Genua IIRC) where the local elites were allowed a say in their own region's affairs.

  22. magic items on Dungeons and Dragons Knowledge Compendium · · Score: 1

    After reading an enjoyable list of Spells Not Worth Memorising (Tenser's Formatted Disk, Bigby's Insulting Hand, etc.), I was inspired to create the following list of magic items not worth collecting, based heavily on the AD&D 2nd Edition Dungeon Master's Guide.

    Armor of Origami
    Beads of Sweat
    Beard of Disguise
    Belt of Tightness
    Book of Sticky Pages
    Boots of Strolling
    Boots of the Mermaid
    Carpet of Fraying
    Chain Mail G-String +4
    Dust of Dirtiness
    Elven Chain Letter
    Eyes of the Worm
    Flooding Boat
    Gem of Glinting
    Gin Bottle
    Hammock of the Titans
    Horn at Awkward Moment
    Compulsive Lyre
    Philter of Lameness
    Potion of Belching
    Potion of Gargling
    Potion of Hedonism
    Potion of Water Drinking
    Racket of Protection
    Robe of Useless Items
    Rod of Fishing
    Scarab Versus Mecha-Scarab
    Scroll of Curing Blindness and Dyslexia (self only)
    Slippers of Spider Squashing
    Unionised Staff of Striking
    Stare of Withering
    Stone of Kidney
    Sword +-1
    Ultimate Solute
    Vorpal Guillotine

    But I'm sure the rest of you have much funnier suggestions to share.

  23. Re:DMCA! on Interview with DMCA-challenger · · Score: 1
  24. Re:so US security has a bit of a clue on U.S. Computer Security Advisor Encourages Hackers · · Score: 1

    But you manufactured the device, which is illegal. Note also that the DMCA defines 'device' much more broadly than the English language does. For example, a procedure (e.g. clicking the wrong button) counts as a device.

    However, this only applies if uncovering the bug is a case of, or leads to, unauthorised access to copyrighted material.

  25. Re:Would this be a good way to attack the DMCA? on Interview with DMCA-challenger · · Score: 1

    Yes, this point was made quite forcefully to Judge Kaplan. Who completely ignored it, AFAICR.