Archive for February, 2009

Privacy In the Age of Persistence

Bruce Schneier recently wrote another essay on privacy for the BBC concentrating on how data seems to be the “pollution of the information age” and where this seems to be leading. “We’re not going to stop the march of technology, just as we cannot un-invent the automobile or the coal furnace. We spent the industrial […]

Tabula Rasa Going Out With A Bang

Mytob notes that sci-fi MMO Tabula Rasa is set to close down tomorrow, and the development team has something special planned for the game’s final hours. The decision to close the game was made in November, and it went free-to-play a month later, while the developers continued to roll out the new content they had […]

Face Recognition — Clever Or Just Plain Creepy?

Simson writes “Beth Rosenberg and I published a fun story today about our experiences with the new face recognition that’s built into both iPhoto ‘09 and Google’s new Picasa system. The skinny: iPhoto is fun, Google is creepy. The real difference, we think, is that iPhoto runs on your system and has you name people […]

Book Publishers Making the Same Mistakes as Record Labels?

Techdirt points out an interesting query in Slate asking why book publishers appear to be making the same mistake that record labels did with the iTunes service with DRM, and single-vendor lock-in. “Back in 2005, we noted that Apple’s dominance over the online music space, which upset the record labels tremendously, was actually the record […]

How To Hijack an EU Open Source Strategy Paper

Glyn Moody writes “Thanks to the indispensable Wikileaks, we have the opportunity to see how an organization close to Microsoft is attempting to re-write — and hijack — an important European Union open source strategy paper, currently being drawn up. Analyzing before and after versions visible in the document demonstrates how the Association for Competitive […]

Open Source In Public K-12 Schools?

MissMachine writes “I’m a computer science major who has been recently getting involved in local grassroots politics in my county and state. I’ve been discussing the idea with some of my state legislatures of submitting a couple of resolutions, opening up to the idea of switching to open source software in our state’s K-12 schools. […]

Florida Lab Gets Pregnant

Synthetic Biology, a relatively new field, is seeking to find out what happened to a bunch of chemicals to make them capable of supporting a metabolism, replicating, and evolution. A Florida lab is showing some of the most promising advancements in this direction with their AEGIS (Artificially Expanded Genetic Information System) experiment. “AEGIS is not […]

Hope For Multi-Language Programming?

chthonicdaemon writes “I have been using Linux as my primary environment for more than ten years. In this time, I have absorbed all the lore surrounding the Unix Way — small programs doing one thing well, communicating via text and all that. I have found the command line a productive environment for doing many of […]

RIAA About to Transform?

It has been reported for a while that the RIAA was suffering some cutbacks and dwindling support, but techdirt is reporting that the cuts may be even deeper than most originally suspected. Who knew suing potential customers would ruin your business? “I’m sure some will somehow ‘blame piracy’ for this turn of events, but it’s […]

Cable Companies Want Bigger Share of Online TV Market

commodore64_love writes with news that a number of cable companies, such as Time-Warner, Comcast, and Cox, are trying to establish themselves as content providers on the web in addition to television. They are currently negotiating with HBO, TNT, CNN, and a number of other channels to bring their programming online exclusively for cable TV subscribers. […]