Blaktron's Favorite Techdirt Posts Of The Week
from the with-a-tribute-thrown-in dept
When Mike asked me to write this weeks favorites post, it was a week like any other. The TSA was harassing the innocent over something ridiculous, another patent troll was suing over using WiFi, and another collection society unilaterally raising fees simply because they can.
It wasn't all bad news at the start of the week, with the US Supreme Court refusing to hear ASCAP's golden case, and let stand that downloading music does not require an extra fee, just to them. Brazil drafted a fairly decent looking framework for internet rights, although who knows if that will go anywhere. And a former MPAA PI spilled the beans on a bunch of stuff we all know is happening, but cant do anything about.
Wednesday started out with Princeton University fighting back against the academic journal monopoly on what should be freely available human knowledge, but went downhill from there with the reports on the Hadopi program going into full swing, the RIAA pissing on the 4th amendment, and the MPAA revelling in the theft of content from the public.
But then, everything changed and the unthinkable happened. The tech industry lost our first genuine hero. I know everyone is probably sick of the reflections on all the ways Steve Jobs changed our world, but Mike gave me the soapbox, and now I'm going to use this opportunity to highlight some important lessons the last 36 years have taught us. Brilliant innovation comes in many forms, only a few genuine geniuses can ever predict what the future can hold, and even that genius is going to be working 90 hours a week for years and years before he can change the world. But change the world he can and, love him or hate him, when Steve spoke, history shook. No one in my lifetime has changed the world over and over again like Steven P. Jobs. I sit here using a product that exists because even after he was laughed out of every bank and VC in northern California, he still knew that every man, woman and child on planet earth deserved a computer, and we owe so much to him. I'm a Windows/Android 'fanboy' personally, but even if you hate iPhones and patent suits, I would like you to take a moment to think about what your life would have been without the Apple II and the Macintosh. I promise you it would be dimmer.
Since that fateful moment Wednesday evening, which I believe I will remember as my parents remembered Kennedy's assassination, there have been more stories on the ridiculousness of our "Intellectual Property" situation here, with a judge doubling the royalties in a patent case for "lack of respect" for the patent system. I mean, how could you not respect such unilateral, undemocratic decision making in the courts? Even stupider is Astrolabe (no name jokes, even though they write themselves) claiming it owns the copyright on Timezone data. Really? I wonder what the Royal Observatory has to say about that, seeing as if you can copyright that data, a lot of folks owe them about 350 years of royalties.
The week capped off with the news that France had outlawed mod chips. Which made me wonder: "People still use mod chips? So many better ways to pirate games today…" Then the controversial charitable donation by Microsoft, where they can give away a billion dollars and people STILL criticize them for that. Unbelievable. But anyway, still more unbelievable is that someone thinks it is possible to copyright a 500 year old painting (or a picture of that, and nothing else). Also, politicians in Norway thinking that censorship is the answer to entertaining their people. Really? Because people have traditionally always loved censored art. I just don't understand why taking things away from your customers is a good way to sell them something. I'm no salesman, but when I buy a car, the shifty stranger trying to get my money doesn't try to take it by telling me all the things he refuses to give me. Maybe they need more used car salesmen and less lawyers down there in California, but that's not for me to say.
It's been a hell of a week in the tech world, and the world seems a little less bright without Jobs in it, but at least his innovative spirit lives on, in the computers we type on and the phones we swipe on. Rest differently, Mr Jobs, since we all live differently because of your touch. Thank you for the PC, the GUI, the computer-animated feature film and the idea that being a geek can be cool.

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I don't think you're wrong, I just think that while the media talks about "defacing websites" they forget what it means to control a domain that is in the trusted sites list of government employees and what it could potentially mean for IT security. This time anonymous is really claiming to have stolen the motherload, which is not new for them, but they are describing a plausible situation where they may have actually done it.
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Biggest problem is that it doesn't take a lot for script kiddies to get truly powerful information as long as someone who knows what to look for is directing them.
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They would have full admin to any machine that connects to that website and allows a java applet run. Which would be all of them, since its likely in the Trusted Sites list of DOJ machines. With admin access they would setup a key logger or just pull the outlook .ost. The severity of that Java 0 day cannot be understated, combine that with the amount of Java the public sector uses (standard install on all government machines, and web app platform of choice), unless they are totally making it up they have everything from most DOJ employees. Potentially much much more.
I think they are taking advantage of the panic over that java bug, but if not then this will be very interesting as they make everything electronic from all the judges and prosecutors in the US public.
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Basically they aren't taking down websites, but using compromised sites to steal documents and emails. And if they used the Java 0 day then they likely have succeeded.
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Sorry Tim, normally you are spot on, but this time you have fundamentally misunderstood what Anonymous has claimed to do. They are claiming that they installed browser exploits and stole secrets from the DOJ employees that visited those sites, likely all of them as that website hosts the current version of the Minimum Sentencing Guidelines, which all prosecutors use. If their claims are correct, then they likely have completely compromised both the professional and personal accounts of all visitors to the site.
The theory currently being discussed by real security pros (like me) is that the reason that Homeland Security asked all government employees to remove the JavaVM is that they caught them in the act, but due to the nature off the exploit could not stop it. This is the first time ever that Anonymous may have actually gotten real incriminating info.
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OR you could just map a drive over the internet and present it as local storage to your OS... this really isn't an issue from a technological perspective...
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Umm, easy solution: Play them out of the cloud and bring no music into the club. Its so obvious that it invalidates this entire argument.
Also shows how ridiculous the idea of charging people for bringing in supposedly legal tools in order to do their job.
Its like a union somewhere charging me for every script i take to a client site that i might possibly run.
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The fact that this wasn't up and operational during the primaries should have been a giant warning sign for the high-level Romney strategists.
I'm also not sure why a regular BI system couldnt easily handle this problem.
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At least someone will look at these ones... what about the thousands of other voting machines across your country that will not be inspected? It really only takes 1 tabulator per swing state to potentially throw an election. The only really good way to ensure a high enough level of trust in the results is the time honored tradition of electoral volunteers counting votes.
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This suggests that the author of this study was able to find 12% MORE illicit homemade porn than the creeps actually sifting through photobucket for them. Thats actually more improbable than the 88% figure itself.
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Where was he outed as a google shill? Did I miss something?
(heres a hint: i didnt)
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Headline should read "Kanye West steals tune from Daft Punk. Unknown rapper not associated with anyone sues."
Also, Daft Punk loved the fact that Kanye sampled them, because they arent douches.
Re: Re: Re: Sell your own innovations
Hmm I had a lot more in here, which upon thinking about, probably looked a SQL attack to the posting service... Just assume it was funny and move on.
Re: Re: Sell your own innovations
(.)
(untitled comment)
Ummm, the Apple store is just a blatant rip off of Bose stores which were a blatant rip off of Sony Style stores...... So why were there no news articles about this 6 years ago when that copying happened?
Re: Re: Duh!
Canadians are a lot more likely to attack the US than Muslims are. They have an iron-hard code of ethics that forbids violence under any circumstances.
We have hockey.
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MPAA / RIAA execs should be required to read aloud a list of all their customers at the start of every meeting.
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Wasn't that the famous problem that MS had while building Win1.0 that Apple had to help them with?
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Funny how the guy making baseless assertions is back asking for sourced rebuttals. In the last few minutes I did a bit of refreshing, and you're correct, it wasnt Xerox that licensed MS's use of the GUI tech, but Apple re-licensed it all right back to MS.
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Microsoft has already announced that it will be possible to install Metro apps from other sources, just using the same Windows Store front end app. Youre reading rumours as fact.