Issue no. 43, 2002 Published: Nov 22, 2002 |
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Microsoft bug exposes millions to attack |
Japanese mobile phone firms to study health risks |
2002 will be worst-year ever for high-tech - survey |
'New EU antitrust case against Microsoft in the making' |
SuSE makes bold move on Linux desktop |
Japan studies switch to open-source software |
Software aims to put your life on a disk |
South Korea addresses internet addiction |
One person in 10 expected to be online in 2002 |
Teenage smoking 'cut by mobile phones' |
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| Microsoft bug exposes millions to attack |
A software bug in a common component of Microsoft web servers and
Internet Explorer could leave millions of servers and home PCs open to
attack, security researchers said Wednesday. The vulnerability could
allow an internet attacker to take over a web server, spread an e-mail
virus or create a fast-spreading network worm.
The flaw, in a component of Windows that allows web servers and browsers
to communicate with online databases, could be as widespread as the
flaws that allowed the Code Red and Nimda worms to spread. It likely
affects the majority of the more than 4.1 million sites hosted on
Microsoft's Internet Information Service (IIS) software. In addition,
Windows 95, 98, Me and 2000 PCs could also be vulnerable to the bug.
Microsoft rated the flaw as critical under its new vulnerability
evaluation system that is intended to lessen the number of flaws that
receive a 'critical' rating to help administrators identify the most
important vulnerabilities to patch. |
| ZDNet
Nov 20, 2002 |
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| Japanese mobile phone firms to study health risks |
Japan's four mobile phone companies, responding to growing concerns
about cell phone use on health, have agreed to team up to study the
possible biological effects of exposure to radio waves.
The firms - market leader NTT DoCoMo, J-Phone, KDDI and Tu-ka Cellular
Tokyo - said that as a first step they would collaborate on a study to
examine the effects of radio waves both at the cell and genetic levels.
The research, already being carried out by DoCoMo, is expected to take
about four years to produce any conclusive results, DoCoMo said. The
actual experiments have been commissioned to Mitsubishi Chemical Safety
Institute to ensure objectivity.
Explosive growth in global mobile phone use has increased the public
debate over possible health risks linked to the devices. Last year an
official at the World Health Organisation said a link between mobile
phone use and cancer could not be dismissed without further research. |
| New York Times / Reuters
Nov 21, 2002 |
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| 2002 will be worst-year ever for high-tech - survey |
The bad news: 2002 is expected to be the worst year ever for the
worldwide IT industry, which is expected to show a 2.3 per cent slump.
The good news, according to a survey by IDC: the worst is over and
high-tech industries will grow by more than five per cent in 2003.
However, IDC cautioned that the industry is not yet out of the woods and
cautioned against unrealistic expectations. It said software spending
will remain weak while price competition will inhibit revenue growth in
the hardware sector. Beyond 2003, IDC expects growth rates to improve
for several years followed by slower growth later in the decade.
The hardest-hit segments were the systems market, which slid 9.3 per
cent. The worldwide network equipment market experienced a 7.6 per cent
decline as sales to telecom service providers dropped sharply. And the
services market, which represents more than one-third of total worldwide
tech revenues, also underwent a dramatic decline as the average contract
value fell to a three-year low, IDC said. |
| Yahoo / AFP
Nov 21, 2002 |
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| 'New EU antitrust case against Microsoft in the making' |
A new EU antitrust case against Microsoft could be in the making, some
sources close to the European Commission have revealed. Microsoft’s
leverage in mobile phone software from its dominant market share of PC
operating systems would be the basis for the new case.
Through this leveraging, Microsoft could make mobile phones mere
distribution channels for its software, in a similar way competitors
claim it has done with PCs.
It is unlikely that the new case would be added to the ongoing
investigation. The Commission investigates whether Microsoft has abused
its dominant position into the PC Operating Systems market and whether
the company illegally bundled its Media Player software into Windows
2000. A preliminary ruling is expected by the end of the year. |
| Europemedia.net
Nov 18, 2002 |
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| SuSE makes bold move on Linux desktop |
SuSE plans to announce in January an effort to bring the Linux operating
system to desktop computers, an attack on Microsoft that will be bolder
than similar initiatives from Red Hat and Sun Microsystems.
For its desktop Linux product, SuSE will enlist the aid of CodeWeavers,
whose CrossOver Office software lets Microsoft Windows-based programs
run on Intel-based Linux computers, SuSE announced. The product also
will include Sun's StarOffice package, a competitor to Microsoft Office.
Linux's commercial success to date has largely been on servers, on which
Linux's parent, Unix, is a comfortable fit. Desktop computers have
remained the stronghold of Microsoft, despite ill-fated Linux efforts by
some companies. But Linux advocates are starting to get optimistic
again, spurred by disgruntlement with Microsoft's license fees, coupled
with improvements to Linux and an argument that, through the open-source
OS, corporations will be able to save money in tough economic times. |
| ZDNet
Nov 19, 2002 |
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| Japan studies switch to open-source software |
Eager to catch up with nations switching to computer systems other than
Microsoft's Windows, Japan will study the possibility of using
open-source software such as Linux at the government level.
The public management ministry is earmarking 50 million yen (€410,000)
for a panel of scholars and computer experts, including Microsoft
officials, to finish the study by March 2004.
Japan lags behind Germany, the US, China and other nations looking into
or using open-source software such as Linux, which can be used and
modified for free. Although Tokyo does not disclose a breakdown,
government computer systems mostly use Microsoft Windows. |
| Nando Times / AP
Nov 20, 2002 |
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| Software aims to put your life on a disk |
Engineers are working on software to load every photo you take, every
letter you write - in fact your every memory and experience - into a
surrogate brain that never forgets anything. Microsoft's MyLifeBits
project aims to build multimedia databases that chronicle people's life
events and make them searchable.
Everything from official documents, letters and photos to home videos
and work documents can be posted. All email can be automatically saved
on the system, as well as anything that is read or bought online. Phone
conversations can be recorded and meetings stored as audio files.
Each media file saved in MyLifeBits can be tagged with a written or
spoken commentary and linked to other files. The system can also be used
to build narratives involving other people, events or places. Searching
for the name of a friend would bring together a chronological set of
files describing when you both did things together, for instance. |
| New Scientist
Nov 20, 2002 |
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| South Korea addresses internet addiction |
South Korea is one of the most wired societies in the world. More than
half the population has access to the internet, and there are more than
25,000 cyber cafes which are open 24 hours a day across the country.
But the more negative impacts of over-reliance on the web have only been
recently acknowledged and are starting to be addressed. An extreme case
of internet obsession hit the news headlines last month when a young man
died after playing computer games non-stop for 86 hours. In April, the
first government-funded organisation - the Centre for Internet Addiction
Prevention and Counselling - began operating to try to tackle the
growing problem. The centre is carrying out research on cyber addiction.
Addicts typically spend more than four hours a day of non-work-related
time on the net. But experts say the definition of an addict is more
about the central role computers and the internet can play in someone's
life. Some symptoms are: Preoccupation with the internet, unable to
perform normal tasks, feeling nervous and anxious when offline. |
| BBC News
Nov 22, 2002 |
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| One person in 10 expected to be online in 2002 |
The number of people using the internet around the world is booming with
near 30 per cent growth expected in 2002. The United Nations Conference
on Trade and Development (Unctad) predicts the number of users will
reach 655 million this year, or one-tenth of the world's population,
compared to 500 million in 2001.
The annual E-Commerce and Development Report estimates trade in goods
and services over the internet could reach $2.3bn this year, a 50 per
cent jump on last year, and could hit $3.9bn by the end of 2003. The
reported is considered a key indicator of the development of e-commerce,
which is notoriously difficult to quantify.
About a third of new users were from developing countries in 2001 but
the percentage of the population using the internet was still far higher
in rich nations, the report said. The US had the most users, with nearly
143 million people online, followed by China with some 56.6 million. |
| BBC News
Nov 18, 2002 |
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| Teenage smoking 'cut by mobile phones' |
Teenagers are smoking less because mobile phones give them something
else to do with their hands, a new report suggests. Researchers believe
the popularity of mobile phones with young people could be a factor in
the falling number of 15-year-old smokers.
The number of 15-year-old boys in the UK who smoke regularly has dropped
from 28 per cent in 1996 to 19 per cent, while the number of girls
smoking has fallen from a third to a quarter. Over the same period, the
number of 15-year-olds owning mobile phones has gone from a handful to
73 per cent. |
| Ananova / the Times
Nov 20, 2002 |
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