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PRS Wants ISPs To Pay For Pirating Customers PDF Print E-mail
Torrents
Wednesday, 14 July 2010 21:24

The Performing Rights Society, the UK outfit collecting royalties for the music industry, wants to charge Internet providers for the amount of illegal downloading that happens via their networks. ISPs should monitor the traffic of their users and compensate the music industry for its claimed losses, PRS economist Will Page argues in a paper published today.

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Huge Security Flaw Makes VPNs Useless for BitTorrent PDF Print E-mail
Torrents
Thursday, 17 June 2010 21:05

Millions of BitTorrent users who have chosen to hide their identities through a VPN service may not be as anonymous as they would like to be. Due to a huge security flaw, those who use IPv6 in combination with a PPTP-based VPN such as Ipredator are broadcasting information linking to their real IP-address on BitTorrent.

As pressure from anti-piracy outfits on governments to implement stricter copyright laws increases, millions of file-sharers have decided to protect their privacy by going anonymous. In Sweden alone an estimated 500,000 Internet subscribers are hiding their identities. Many of these use PPTP-based VPNs such as The Pirate Bay’s Ipredator or Relakks.

Thus far, these services were believed to adequately hide a user’s IP-address from people they connect to in BitTorrent swarms, but this is not always the case. At the Telecomix Cipher conference a security flaw was revealed that allows third parties to find the true IP-address of someone connected through a VPN.

The security risk is caused by a lethal combination of IPv6 and PPTP-based VPN services, which are very common. IPv6 is the Internet protocol that will succeed IPv4. The protocol is promoted by Windows 7 and Vista, among others, and most people are using it without even realizing it.

The technical details of the vulnerability, explained in this talk (see below), reveal that the true IP-address of users using IPv6 can be easily traced. Even worse, it seems that the Swedish Anti-piracy Bureau may already be using this flaw to gather data on ‘anonymous’ BitTorrent users.

The vulnerability is not limited to BitTorrent either. It can expose people who believe that they are hiding their real IP-address through nearly every connection.

In addition to this gaping hole in VPNs such as Ipredator and Relakks, the talk exposes several other weaknesses from a privacy point of view. Among other things, it is fairly easy to find MAC-addresses and computer names of people who use the same VPN.

The people who run Ipredator are aware of the issue, and TorrentFreak was informed that their users will be notified about the problem. Other VPNs using the same system may want to do the same. From our understanding of the issue, turning IPv6 off should alleviate the threat and make users fully anonymous again.

 

Source: http://torrentfreak.com/huge-security-flaw-makes-vpns-useless-for-bittorrent-100617/

 
Pentagon Zombie-Maker’s New Project: Suffocate, Freeze, Reanimate PDF Print E-mail
Other & Bizzare
Thursday, 17 June 2010 20:55

The scientist responsible for some of the Pentagon’s wildest research has devised a method that could one day save trauma patients, and even extend the shelf life of transplant organs. Step one: Suffocate the wounded. Step two: Put ‘em on ice.

Mark Roth, a biochemist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, has been working on suspended animation — inspired by the processes of animal hibernation — for years now. In 2005, with funding from Pentagon far-out research arm Darpa, Roth managed to reanimate rats suffering from massive blood loss, using hydrogen sulfide to knock them out and curb their oxygen consumption.

Since then, Roth has made significant progress. His hydrogen sulfide procedure has completed phase 1 of the three clinical trials required before FDA approval. And he’s moved onto a new, related method that could boost trauma survival even more effectively.

“A lot of animals hibernate through the winter, and they share two key features: They get really cold, and they use very little oxygen,” he tells Danger Room. “So we wanted to know ‘what’s the relationship between those two features’”?

By studying brewer’s yeast and nematode worm embryos, Roth and his team determined that “a coordination of life processes,” reacted in sync — and kept the organism alive — after oxygen was reduced and their temperatures were lowered. In his tests, 66 percent of the yeast and 97 percent of the nematodes outlasted the cold exposure — and were good as new, once reheated and exposed to oxygen.

Though the precise mechanism by which the process works hasn’t been pinpointed, the team observed that “certain sub-cellular processes are going on, but really shouldn’t be,” Roth says.

Roth’s Darpa-funded research might come in handy as he works out the kinks in this new procedure. Since hydrogen sulfide reduces an organism’s consumption of oxygen, it might be just the compound to use prior to putting people, or organs, into the deep freeze.

Once mastered, the method would buy time for trauma patients, including heart attack victims and those suffering massive blood loss. Of course, that’s where the Pentagon’s interest lies: keeping injured troops alive until they can get adequate medical treatment.

It could also help doctors make the most of therapeutic hypothermia, the process of cooling down patients with the intent of improving their odds of survival and preventing brain and organ damage. Roth foresees a drug that could combine the right sequence of oxygen deprivation and hypothermia, without dangerous side effects that can accompany the procedure.

Not only could Roth’s research save lives and revolutionize organ transplant surgeries, but it also pares survival down to its smallest iota. “The underlying relationship between living and dying,” Roth says, “really has to do with this proper order of these cellular relationships.”



Read More http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/06/pentagon-zombie-makers-new-project-suffocate-freeze-reanimate/#ixzz0r97hWIX3
Last Updated on Thursday, 17 June 2010 21:05
 
Getty taps into Flickr snappers PDF Print E-mail
Technology
Thursday, 17 June 2010 21:01

Flickr's 40 million registered users are being given the chance to make money out of their snaps.

For the last year, Getty Images has tapped into more than 100,000 photos taken by professional and semi-pro photographers who post on the site.

Now the doors are being opened to all Flickr users as Getty takes advantage of a library of four billion pictures.

"Flickr users are the eyes of the world," Douglas Alexander, Flickr's general manager, told BBC news.

"We have contributors from over 100 counties and images are coming in from every corner of the globe. This deal broadens the horizons and the global marketplace for commercial photography and gives our users the chance to make some money."

Neither Getty nor Flickr were forthcoming about actual rates saying they vary from job to job but are industry standard. It is generally thought the average rate for an image is between $150-$240 (£100-£160).

'Eclectic'

The agreement extends one that has been in place for the last year with photo library Getty.

Under that deal, Getty built up its stock or archive photography base with pictures taken by pros or semi-pros posting on Flickr. These were then sold on to the firm's commercial clients and photographers were paid the industry commission rate when their images were used.

Getty's chief operating officer Nick Evans-Lombe said Flickr had been a great resource and inspiration.

"One of the great benefits of the Flickr collection is that it is truly eclectic and has this fantastic broad reach across the globe."

Bart station, Hal Bergman
Hal Bergman has managed to turn a hobby into a job

Mr Evans-Lombe said the strength and diversity of what Flickr could offer was apparent during one call for photographs portraying the concept of families.

"We got over 17,000 pictures back from around the world very quickly. That gave us a very broad and deep illustration of the concepts to do with family and will resonate in countries around the world.

"In the past, one of the criticisms of the stock photography market is that it has been a mostly North American and European aesthetically dominated industry."

Mr Evans-Lombe also said another great asset of the collection was that it was "more gritty" because the photographs are not shot for commercial services and therefore have more authenticity.

"The extension of this partnership is a testament to the talent of our Flickr community and we want to provide a platform for our members so they can get their work out there to the largest possible audience," said Mr Alexander.

'Floodgates'

Hal Bergman dreamt for years of turning his passion from a side-line into a full-time career. He started posting his photos on Flickr in 2006 and said this partnership has been a fruitful one for him.

"I have been doing this for six years on the side and a year and a half ago I gave up my day job in website development."

And while staying mum about how much he actually earns, Mr Bergman told BBC News he makes a good living from photography.

"I am working as a freelance and getting a lot of commission work and I would say this deal brings in about a third of my income which is pretty good when you consider I have 200 images on the Getty site and a further 2,500 on another site."

This week he has been shooting photos at a frat house in Los Angeles and a Hollywood party.

Mr Bergman said while he is managing to get himself established, he is concerned about how the opening up of this partnership will affect him.

"This deal helped me get my foot in the door with Getty, something I had been trying to do for years. And while I am concerned about opening up the floodgates, I am going to take it as a challenge. But I am really not worried because I like to think I am good at what I do," said Mr Bergman.

Users wanting to take part in the project will be asked to opt-in to the scheme.

 

Source:  http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8744817.stm

 
Nintendo unveils 3DS handheld games console PDF Print E-mail
Games Software & Hardware
Wednesday, 16 June 2010 12:26

Nintendo has unveiled its new 3D handheld gaming system at a briefing in Los Angeles at the E3 games show.

Called 3DS, the system has two screens and can display 3D images that can be seen without using special glasses.

Nintendo said the novel handheld is designed to replace the existing DS and is scheduled to be on shop shelves in late 2010.

The gaming giant said it had overhauled the graphics system on the DS to bring it into the 21st Century.

Playing Mickey

The 3DS handheld has two camera lenses which enables owners to take and view photographs in 3D.

One difficulty Nintendo faced in creating the gadget was the incompatibility between creating a 3D screen and a usable touch-screen interface.

Consequently on the 3DS only the top screen displays 3D while the lower screen is a functional touch screen.

Artwork from Donkey Kong Country Returns

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