Verizon Accused of Intentionally Slowing Netflix Video Streaming

colinneagle writes “A recent GigaOm report discusses Verizon’s ‘peering’ practices, which involves the exchange of traffic between two bandwidth providers. When peering with bandwidth provider Cogent starts to reach capacity, Verizon reportedly isn’t adding any ports to meet the demand, Cogent CEO Dave Schaffer told GigaOm. ‘They are allowing the peer connections to degrade,’ Schaffer said. ‘Today some of the ports are at 100 percent capacity.’ Why would Verizon intentionally disrupt Netflix video streaming for its customers? One possible reason is that Verizon owns a 50% stake in Redbox, the video rental service that contributed to the demise of Blockbuster (and more recently, a direct competitor to Netflix in online streaming). If anything threatens the future of Redbox, whose business model requires customers to visit its vending machines to rent and return DVDs, it’s Netflix’s instant streaming service, which delivers the same content directly to their screens.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Verizon Accused of Intentionally Slowing Netflix Video Streaming

Public Resource wants to liberate tax records for US nonprofits – converting 100lbs of scanned bitmaps on DVDs into searchable data on $1.5T worth…

Rogue archivist Carl Malamud sez, On November 1, Public.Resource.Org released a new service which put 6,461,326 US nonprofit tax returns on the net for bulk download, developers, and search engines to access. We offered to give the working system to the government, and also sent them a few suggestions on ways they could better meet their mission and save themselves a boatload of money. Since then, we’ve been frantically trying to get the government’s attention to take decisive action, but to no avail. The way the government makes the nonprofit tax returns available to the public is broken in many ways. The IRS insists on selling the tax returns as a monthly feed of DVDs costing $2,580 per year. Each month, I get a stack of a dozen DVDs, each one has 60,000 1-page TIFF files on it. This is just so lacking in clue, and even simple suggestions like using Dropbox instead of mailing us DVDs have been ignored. In terms of breakage though, the truly big problem is the deliberate dumbing down of tax returns for large nonprofits in order to avoid what an IRS official actually said to us would be “too much transparency.” All the big nonprofits have to e-file their tax returns. E-filing means they submit actual machine-processable data encoded in XML. The way the IRS releases that information is mind-boggling. They image the data onto tax forms and then release them as 200 dot per inch TIFF files. So, instead of having a computer program extract the gross revenue, or the CEO salaries, or whether or not the nonprofit operates a tanning salon on premises (an actual question on the form!), you get something that is so bad that OCR is difficult. Nonprofits are a $1.5 trillion chunk of the U.S. economy, yet we’re deliberately dumbing down data that could make that sector more efficient and more vibrant. That’s dumb. Since November, we’ve been trying to get the IRS and the Obama Administration to release this information, but they’ve refused. We’ve met with all sorts of IRS officials such as Lois Lerner and Joseph Grant of Tea Party fame, and we’ve also met with a ton of boldface names in the White House, such as Todd Park (the President’s CTO) and Steve VanRoekel (the Federal CIO). Nobody will release the data. The IRS is worried the big nonprofits will be upset if information such as multimillion-dollar CEO salaries is more readily available. Since discussion hasn’t worked so far, we’ve retained the services of Thomas R. Burke, an eminent First Amendment attorney at Davis Wright Tremaine and he’s been working with our own counselor David Halperin. Today, they filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California. One reason we picked the Northern District because they have a requirement that the parties try and work out their problems out of court using what is known as Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), which includes techniques such as mediation and arbitration. The ADR rules in this District Court require each party to bring to the mediation an official who has the authority to resolve this issue. So, I’m reaching out to my good friends Todd Park and Steve VanRoekel, the architects of the President’s great new machine-processable data directive, and I’m personally asking them to help us resolve this dispute with the administration. We’re all on the same side here, let’s work this out and get on with the real job at hand! Links: Our complaint in district court Copies of our letters back and forth to the White House and the IRS Sunlight Foundation: Nonprofit E-file Data Should Be Open Think Progress: How the IRS Could Make it Easier to Track Dark Money, Right Now Forbes: IRS: Turn Over a New Leaf, Open Up Data        

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Public Resource wants to liberate tax records for US nonprofits – converting 100lbs of scanned bitmaps on DVDs into searchable data on $1.5T worth…

This virtual dissection table is incredible [potentially NSFW]

When it comes to hands-on learning, I can think of no classroom more compelling than a gross anatomy lab , where students of the human form dissect actual bodies from head-to-toe with their own hands. That being said, this virtual dissection table is an awfully impressive stand-in for the real thing. Read more…        

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This virtual dissection table is incredible [potentially NSFW]

FlowReader Combines Your RSS Feeds and Social Feeds into One Webapp

Whether you’ve found a replacement for Google Reader or you’re still looking, you probably spend part of your time reading news feeds, and part of your time reading the links and stories your friends share on Twitter or Facebook. FlowReader combines all of those articles into one interface for easy reading. Read more…        

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FlowReader Combines Your RSS Feeds and Social Feeds into One Webapp

Scores of Vulnerable SAP Deployments Uncovered

mask.of.sanity writes “Hundreds of organizations have been detected running dangerously vulnerable versions of SAP that were more than seven years old and thousands more have placed their critical data at risk by exposing SAP applications to the public Internet. The new research found the SAP services were inadvertently made accessible thanks to a common misconception that SAP systems were not publicly-facing and remotely-accessible. The SAP services contained dangerous vulnerabilities which were since patched by the vendor but had not been applied.” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Scores of Vulnerable SAP Deployments Uncovered