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AOL sues alleged spammers

Author: JT Smith

Computer World reports that AOL is suing a Floridian company for millions of pornography-advertising unsolicited email messages sent to AOL users resulting in as many as a quarter million complaints in a single day.

Web Authoring and HTTP

Author: JT Smith

“This is the first of two articles by Joe Orton on WebDAV, the distributed authoring protocol for HTTP. The first article
explains what WebDAV is, and the current state of client and server support.” Article at ApacheWeek

Category:

  • Open Source

Using Certificate Revocation Lists with Apache

Author: JT Smith

From ApacheWeek: “Certificate Revocation Lists (CRL) increase the security of Client Authentication Realms by enabling server
administrators to block client certificates that have been revoked because they are known to have been
compromised.”

Category:

  • Linux

Review: Netscape 6 Suite for Linux

Author: JT Smith

“After Netscape claimed that this new version 6 has “the best standards support of any browser engine available. It supports more Web standards more deeply, more consistently across platforms and devices than any other browser engine in history.” We simply couldn’t resist giving this new release a try.” Read the full review at LinuxLookup-Anonymous Reader

Category:

  • Linux

U.S. launches 3G spectrum review

Author: JT Smith

EE Times reports: “The Federal Communications Commission said Thursday (Jan. 4) that it
will examine whether frequencies below 3 GHz can be utilized to help speed the
introduction of third-generation and other advanced wireless services.”

Philips to lose millions as CD patents expire

Author: JT Smith

Bloomberg via CNET News.com reports: “Royal Philips Electronics, Europe’s largest consumer-electronics maker, will bring in nearly $43 million less
annually when some of its CD patents expire in Asia and Europe this summer.”

Linus Torvalds: And oh, btw, 2.4.0 is out

Author: JT Smith

At Linux Today, from a post to the Kernel Mailing List: ” In a move unanimously hailed by the trade press and industry analysts as
being a sure sign of incipient braindamage, Linus Torvalds (also known as
the “father of Linux” or, more commonly, as “mush-for-brains”) decided
that enough is enough, and that things don’t get better from having the
same people test it over and over again. In short, 2.4.0 is out there.” Thanks to NewsForge reader tjhanson.

Category:

  • Linux

HP ships Superdome Server

Author: JT Smith

From Info World: “Hewlett-Packard has begun worldwide shipment of its HP 9000 Superdome Unix server, which combines support and services offerings normally reserved for mainframe customers with the option of multiple-choice CPUs and eventually multiple operating systems.”

Category:

  • Unix

‘Lousy’ demand spoils Pentium 4 debut

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports that sales of Intel’s new Pentium 4 processor accounted for around 1 percent of all new PCs sold in U.S. retail outlets during December. By comparison, the established Pentium III snagged 8 percent of total new system sales.

Category:

  • Unix

Conectiva Linux security announcement: slocate

Author: JT Smith

From LWN.net: “‘slocate’ is a program which catalogues existing files and allows for
a quick lookup later.
There is a vulnerability present in previous versions. By giving it a
crafted database, an attacker could make slocate execute arbitrary
code as the ‘slocate’ user.
Additionally, a bug which caused slocate to segfault with large
pathnames was fixed.”

Category:

  • Linux