How You’re Breaking the Law Every Day (and What You Can Do About It) [Know Your Rights]

You share music, rip DVDs, make Hitler whine about your first world problems, and much more in the course of your regular online activities—and more often than not, you do these things without giving a thought to the fact that you’re actually breaking the law. Here’s a look at how you’re inevitably circumventing copyright law and what you can do to protect yourself. More »


See the article here:
How You’re Breaking the Law Every Day (and What You Can Do About It) [Know Your Rights]

Google: 450,000 Android Apps now available to 300 million devices

If you hadn’t noticed, it’s Mobile World Congress this week and Google’s showing off its enormous booth packed to the gills with smiling green Androids. Andy Rubin insouciantly added that the Android Marketplace has reached its latest milestone: there are now 450,000 apps available for the platform. Other pertinent stats are that over a billion apps are downloaded every month and that 850,000 Android devices are activated each day — meaning that there’s more than 300 million of them worldwide. Of course, that’s not the real story here at MWC, it’s that the company have brought along a bedazzling booth for guests to glue as many false jewels to their Galaxy Nexus back-plate as their self-respect can handle.

Google: 450,000 Android Apps now available to 300 million devices originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 27 Feb 2012 05:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | sourceGoogle | Email this | Comments

View article:
Google: 450,000 Android Apps now available to 300 million devices

IBM Researchers Image Electrical Charge Distribution In a Single Molecule


alphadogg writes with this selection from Network World:”IBM researchers for the first time have succeeded in imaging how charge is distributed inside a single molecule, which is a fundamental research breakthrough as scientists try to miniaturize circuitry to the nanometer scale. IBM is studying molecular structures when put on artificial surfaces so functional molecules in the future can be used as switches or transistors, said Fabian Mohn, an IBM researcher. IBM used advanced microscopy tools and techniques to image how charge is redistributed and arranged when chemical bonds are formed between atoms and molecules on surfaces.”


Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Excerpt from:
IBM Researchers Image Electrical Charge Distribution In a Single Molecule

WikiLeaks Begins Releasing Stratfor Internal Emails


owenferguson writes “WikiLeaks has begun leaking a cache of over 5 million internal emails from the the Texas-headquartered ‘global intelligence’ company Stratfor. The emails date from between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal’s Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Marines and the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency. The Associated Press release can be found on pastebin.”


Share on Google+

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

View the original here:
WikiLeaks Begins Releasing Stratfor Internal Emails

Feature: Gigabit Internet for $70: the unlikely success of California’s Sonic.net



SEBASTOPOL, CALIFORNIA—Two things set a one-block stretch of Florence Avenue apart from other American streets. One is the quirky metal sculptures planted in front of most homes; the other is the Internet traffic coursing through recently-strung fiber-optic cables on the block’s utility poles. They offer each house up to one gigabit per second in bandwidth, making this one of the fastest streets in America.

While some other cities can also brag about gigabit access, in this Sonoma County town it costs only $69.95 a month.

The service comes courtesy of Sonic.net, the18-year-old Internet provider based in the neighboring city of Santa Rosa. And Sonic even throws in two phone lines with unlimited long-distance calling when you sign up.

Read the rest of this article...

Read the comments on this post


Link:
Feature: Gigabit Internet for $70: the unlikely success of California’s Sonic.net

Feature: Gigabit Internet for $80: the unlikely success of California’s Sonic.net



SEBASTOPOL, CALIFORNIA—Two things set a one-block stretch of Florence Avenue apart from other American streets. One is the quirky metal sculptures planted in front of most homes; the other is the Internet traffic coursing through recently-strung fiber-optic cables on the block’s utility poles. They offer each house up to one gigabit per second in bandwidth, making this one of the fastest streets in America.

While some other cities can also brag about gigabit access, in this Sonoma County town it costs only $79.99 a month.

The service comes courtesy of Sonic.net, the18-year-old Internet provider based in the neighboring city of Santa Rosa. And Sonic even throws in two phone lines with unlimited long-distance calling when you sign up.

Read the rest of this article...

Read the comments on this post

Continued here:
Feature: Gigabit Internet for $80: the unlikely success of California’s Sonic.net

The Everything is a Remix theory of creativity

Kirby Ferguson, creator of the absolutely outstanding Everything is a Remix series, explains his theory of creative inspiration, remix, and cultural commons, citing some of history’s best-loved “individual” creators and explaining how what they did was a remix, an extension and a part of the work that came before them.

2011/08 Kirby Ferguson

(Thanks, Avi!)


See the original article here:
The Everything is a Remix theory of creativity

SSL fix aims to mend huge cracks in ‘Net’s foundation of trust



Open-source software developer Kai Engert has proposed an overhaul to the Internet’s SSL authentication system, aiming to minimize the damage that would result from the compromise of one of the authorities trusted by major browsers.

Under version 2 (PDF) of Engert’s Mutually Endorsing CA Infrastructure proposal, people connecting to Google Mail, Twitter and other sites protected by SSL would draw on one of three randomly selected notaries to verify that the digital credential being presented is valid. By comparing the SSL certificate’s contents to data contained in the voucher returned by the notary, the person’s Web browser or e-mail program could quickly spot credentials that have been forged, even when they’ve been signed using the private key of a legitimate certificate authority. The notaries—or “voucher authorities” as they’re called—would be made up of existing CAs.

Read the rest of this article...

Read the comments on this post

View article:
SSL fix aims to mend huge cracks in ‘Net’s foundation of trust