Home Blog Page 8822

Users peeved over HP server cancellation

Author: JT Smith

ZDNet reports: “When Hewlett-Packard canceled its venerable 3000 server line Wednesday, it began aggressive programs to keep customers from fleeing the company altogether. But keeping customer loyalty in an environment where some customers feel betrayed will be a challenge for the computing giant.”

Category:

  • Open Source

KDE 3.0 screenshots released

Author: JT Smith

Dot.KDE.org has a link to the screenshots at KDE.org. It features featuring “(1) the cool dotNet style
(my personal favorite after Liquid) (large SS), (2) KOnCD, now a part of the KDE
base distribution (large SS), (3) a desktop shot with the really cool iKons icon set
(large SS), and (4) the Media Peach color theme and Quartz window decorations
(large SS).”

Category:

  • Open Source

Netscape Communicator 4.79 released

Author: JT Smith

MozillaQuest Magazine (MozillaQuest.com) reports: “Netscape 4.79 is out! The . . . 4.79 browser-suite upgrade for the Linux, Unix, Macintosh, and Microsoft Windows platforms is on AOL-Time-Warner´s Netscape division FTP servers . . . Netscape . . . continues to develop it´s older Netscape 4.x product even though it has a newer (Netscape 6.x) product . . . a significant number of Netscape Communicator users appear to prefer the older Netscape 4 product to the newer Netscape 6 product. Also, Netscape 4.7x is included with many Linux distributions. So, AOL-Time-Warner´ Netscape division continues to make minor updates to its older Netscape 4 product in order to accommodate its Netscape 4.7x users. Check this MozillaQuest.com story for details, what´s new release notes & download links.

Intellectual property conference: Copyright law has gone too far

Author: JT Smith

By Grant Gross

The recording industry and the Business Software Alliance squared off against the Electronic Frontier Foundation and U.S. Rep. Rick Boucher Wednesday in a debate over laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act aimed at protecting large copyright holders, with the hearts and minds of a crowd of Washington, D.C., decision-makers as the prize.

John Perry Barlow, former Wyoming cattle rancher, Grateful Dead lyricist and co-founder of the EFF, told a Washington suit-and-tie crowd of lobbyists and congressional staffers that he can predict the history of this century after the recent terrorists attacks on the United States.

“I think I can safely say that history of the 21st century is going to be about the struggle between open systems and closed systems, which was what you saw engaged on Sept. 11 in a very pointed way,” Barlow said. “This is going to be an interesting and complex struggle, because it is in the nature of open systems to breed closed systems, since for example, an open system like a free-market economy tends to gravitate toward a natural monopoly, which is a closed system. “

In the day-long conference, “The Future of Intellectual Property in the Information Age,” at Libertarian think tank The Cato Institute, the phrase “Open Source” only came up a handful of times–but the impact of copyright protection schemes on Open Source, Free Software and ordinary consumers of online music, movies and written materials was never far away from the debate.

The conference was put on by a Libertarian group that’s internally divided over whether government protection of copyrights and patents is a good thing. Two of the three keynotes featured critics of expanded copyright protections: Boucher, a Virginia Democrat, and Barlow, whose organization has defended people who’ve run afoul of the DMCA’s provision outlawing technologies that circumvent copy controls.

Small group controls much information

Barlow noted that since the Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996, the concentration of media companies has caused the majority of copyrighted entertainment to fall into the hands of a handful of companies. “I think that what we are doing with acts like the DMCA is to give them an enormous additional amount of control at a time when they don’t need it,” he said. “We are putting tools in their hands that are far more powerful than have been put in the hands of any kind of medium before, and they are in a position to control information like it’s never been controlled by anyone but the Soviets.

“If we’re not going to regulate the media monsters, we at least need to be thoughtful about putting these additional tools in their hands.”

While Barlow talked about the philosophy of information freedom — how information becomes more valuable when it’s shared, unlike physical goods — Boucher took the more pragmatic approach by talking about what’s going on in Washington and what changes he believes need to happen.

Boucher outlined two bills he’s sponsoring, the Music Online Competition Act, which would encourage competition for online music services beyond services owned by the large music companies, and the Business Method Patent Improvement Act, which would reform the way business method patents are obtained. Both bills, he said, would help turn the tide back to consumers and against the trend toward protecting the large industries that hold most copyrights and patents.

Boucher told the crowd of a couple hundred D.C. insiders that laws such as the DMCA aim to restrict consumers’ fair use rights on copyrighted works, to do such things as make their own personal copies or sample the works to critique them. “[The DMCA] is, in my humble opinion, a broad overreach that severely limits fair use rights,” he said. “Free speech doesn’t mean much if you have to get prior permission of an intellectual property owner” to use the work for your own purposes.

But the other side was well represented, with apologists for large patent and copyright holders arguing that such protections are needed in order to fuel the creation of new content and new ideas.

During one panel discussion, Greg Aharonian, editor of the Internet Patent News Service, argued that Boucher was being insincere for focusing on the ease of getting business method patents, such as the famed Amazon.com one-click ordering patent and the Priceline “name your own price” patent, because the quality of all patents has been a problem for decades.

RIAA vs. EFF

During a panel on whether music and movie companies should be able to employ their own digital rights management techniques, Mitch Glazier, legislative counsel for the Recording Industry Association of America, and Robin Gross, staff attorney for the EFF, sat next to each other as they argued over what kind of locks should be put on digital content.

Glazier said consumers will ultimately be responsible for determining how music is delivered on the Internet, although he didn’t address why his organization has felt it necessary to sue customers of services such as Napster to get them to comply with the RIAA’s way of doing business.

“There’s only one huge question nobody knows: what the consumer wants, what will succeed,” Glazier said. “At the end of the day, I think consumers will be pretty happy with the number of competing services out there.” Gross seemed to roll her eyes at that comment.

Gross and others argued that laws such as the DMCA destroy the delicate balance between content owners’ rights to be paid and consumers’ rights to circulate the ideas and copy and repackage that content as long as its for personal use. She and others pointed to other examples of new technology that copyright holders fought — such as the VCR — that later became a boon to the industries originally fighting it.

The Internet is helping to create a world that’s moving from information scarcity to abundance, she said, and by walling off information behind stringent copyright law, “we risk creating an artificial scarcity of ideas where none needs to exist.”

Break anti-copy code, go to jail

While the DMCA and its anti-circumvention provisions caught most of the flak, several critics of copyright expansion warned of the proposed Security Systems Standards and Certification Act, which would ultimately require copy-protection controls on all kinds of digital devices and software.

In a panel called “Technology vs. Technology: Should Code Breakers Go to Jail?” Emery Simon, special counsel for the large tech-company dominated Business Software Alliance, said he was puzzled how the opponents of the DMCA can frame it as an “evil” law that’s unconstitutional and limits free speech. Instead of good vs. evil, he said, the DMCA should be seen as part of an ongoing adjustment of how copyrighted works will be distributed on the Internet.

But even Simon and a lobbyist for the generally conservative U.S. Chamber of Commerce acknowledged between panel discussions that the SSSCA would create problems of compliance for their memberships. About the only person at the conference who had anything good to say about the SSSCA was the RIAA’s Glazier, who said his organization doesn’t have an official position on it, but it might an interesting approach.

The “go to jail” panel addressed issues close to the hearts of many in the Open Source community, including the DMCA-inspired lawsuits against webmasters who posted the DeCSS code that allows Linux users to decode and play DVDS, and the arrest in the United States of visiting Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov for creating a program that strips copy controls from e-books.

Mike Godwin, a technology author and policy fellow at the Center for Democracy and Technology, said a certain amount of authorized copying is assumed in the old balance of copyright law. He said the DMCA outlaws circumvention of copy controls, whether or not the circumvention is intended for illegal uses.

Godwin said the DMCA could be used to for “absurd results,” such as to prosecute author Stephen King for breaking the Windows-proprietary e-book format to read one of his own e-books on his Macintosh laptop.

“When we say that it doesn’t matter whether you’re an infringer or not; it doesn’t matter whether you’re a bad actor or not; if you engage in this technology development at all, or if you distribute this technology development at all, you’re going be criminally or civilly liable–that has unmoored the copyright enforcement framework from its original policy foundation,” he said.

Julie Cohen, a Georgetown University law professor, suggested that the DMCA is especially problematic for Open Source developers because although it allows some reverse engineering and encryption research, it requires those developers to be “sufficiently credentialed,” but that doesn’t protect the 15-year-old developing Open Source software in his bedroom from a DMCA prosecution or lawsuit.

“Even if you think the Open Source movement is only an interesting experiment, that’s something to be troubled about,” she said.

Generational struggle

The EFF’s Barlow suggested the current copyright struggle is a generational dispute, with the old guard industrialists, who own the entertainment copyrights, against young people who see nothing wrong with trading information. The recording industry doesn’t understand that a certain amount of free distribution of its product helps create a buzz for it, he said. The Grateful Dead learned this by allowing fans to tape their concerts and witnessing the resulting growth in popularity of their music.

“{The RIAA is] so trapped in the industrial paradigm, they can’t see it,” he said. “On the other hand, there is an entire younger generation of people who do get it, all those people who find nothing morally repugnant about lifting software from one another. There is no ethical dilemma for a 21-year-old college kid when they go get some piece of information or entertainment.

“If you’re going to criminalize that activity to the extent it has now been criminalized … you’re creating a system that naturally breeds contempt for the law. I don’t think it’s a great idea to have laws that young people feel are wrong and systematically abuse, because it actually damages the validity of all the other laws that have a good reason for being there.”

The Cato Institute is planning a book based on the conference.

Microsoft finally offers patch for cookie hole

Author: JT Smith

CNet reports that “Microsoft has issued a patch almost a week after a vulnerability was revealed in Internet
Explorer that would allow hackers to gain access to someone’s cookies and expose the
sensitive information they contain.”

Category:

  • Linux

WinXP: log on as admin if you want to play games, MP3s?

Author: JT Smith

From The Register: “Home users seem to be coming badly unstuck when tangling with the new security
features of Windows XP. Now it’s possible for them to set up one account on their
machine with administrator rights, and lesser accounts for the kids, less significant
other, cat and so forth – but setting things so that the right people get access to the
right programs? Hmm, tricky…

The Windows XP Public Newsgroups are currently peppered with pleas for help on
the subject (and indeed with messages from people who just don’t get WPA, but
that’s another story). If they’re used to any kind of security at all, in many cases it’s
the Win9x system that does precious little beyond getting you used to the idea of
pointless multiple logins and passwords.”

Novell to cut staff, restructure

Author: JT Smith

Reuters on CNet has a story saying that networking software maker Novell will
slash about 1,400 jobs, or 19 percent of its work force, as it struggles to regain
profitability.

“Novell’s market share has ebbed in the face of the Microsoft onslaught
and the growth of alternatives such as Linux.”

Category:

  • Open Source

Recording artists file brief against RIAA

Author: JT Smith

Slashdotters discuss a brief filed by The Recording Artists’ Coalition urging the court in the Napster case “accept the RIAA’s copyright registration documents as
proof of ownership, because accepting the documents would allow the music cartel to
sneakily destroy artists’ claims to the music they recorded.”

Microcross GNU X-Tools v2.0 offered in custom builds

Author: JT Smith

James Calvin writes, “Microcross offers interim releases of GNU X-Tools v2.0 in custom builds that feature gcc 2.95.2 C/C++ cross-compilers, gdb 5.0 debugger, binutils 2.10, newlib 1.8.1, and libstdc++ 2.8.1 for each target toolchain. Custom builds are available for ARC, ARM, ARM Thumb, Strong ARM, H8, M32R, MIPS, MIPS64, MCORE, PPC, SH, SPARC, and V850 — each offering the popular elf object build format. Embedded development with commercially supported GNU cross-tools has never been easier or lower in cost. GNU X-Tools starts at $199.95 and custom builds of v2.0 are being offered at $499.95 for a limited time.
Microcross is becoming a leading global provider of embedded system development tools and support services. GNU X-Tools? is a high quality, low cost embedded software developer solution for over 21 of the most popular embedded 16, 32 and 64-bit microprocessors. GNU X-Tools enhanced tool suites, with cross-compilers, assemblers, debuggers, libraries, utilities, and more, include a comprehensive graphical IDE framework comprising code editors, source browsers, and debug features. GNU X-Tools provides all source code and is distributed under the General Public License of the Free Software Foundation. Microcross is the first to package the popular GNU cross-tools for mass distribution with enhanced features, documentation, a wide selection of host and target microprocessors, and optional software support maintenance plans.

New ‘Petition Against Software Patents’ available

Author: JT Smith

There is a new “Petition Against Software Patents” started by Gregory
Casamento available at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/pasp01/petition.html.

Please sign it, if you are from the US. If you are not from the US, you
can
use it for creating one for your own country. If you are from Europe
please
sign:
http://www.noepatents.org.

Tony Stanco, Esq.
Senior Policy Analyst
Cyberspace Policy Institute
George Washington University

Category:

  • Migration