Issue no. 29, 2003 Published: Jul 25, 2003 |
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Europe to push for open source |
SCO gains copyrights to license Linux |
French police smash key piracy ring |
US colleges fight 'pirate' subpoenas |
US passports to carry digitally signed images |
Scientists developing mind-controlled wheelchair |
Laser bursts pierce fog |
Researchers develop transparent, durable magnets |
Amazon working on book search database |
Computer program detects author gender |
Deutsche Telekom applies to trademark 'hotspot' |
Poetry website goes from bad to verse |
E-mail? The French beg to differ |
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| Europe to push for open source |
The European Commission is placing open standards and open-source
software at the centre of its efforts to promote interoperable
e-government services with a new working paper introduced this month.
The Commission argues in the report that open standards, and to an
extent open source, are crucial to making new e-government services work
with each other and with enterprise systems. The paper, which will be
used as a reference point for policy and decision-makers around Europe,
is the latest document pushing forward the far-reaching eEurope
initiative on e-government services.
The document calls for 'open interfaces and specifications' for
components of e-government services including 'open and non-proprietary
document formats' and 'the means of communicating with supporting
back-office processes'. It also notes that the eTEN program, which
promotes trans-European e-services deployment, will ask for 'the use of
open standards and where applicable, the use of open source' when
funding projects. |
| ZDNet
Jul 21, 2003 |
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| SCO gains copyrights to license Linux |
SCO Group, the company that says Linux infringes on its Unix
intellectual property, announced on Monday that it has been granted key
Unix copyrights and will start a program to let companies that run Linux
avoid litigation by paying licensing fees. The company said it plans to
offer licenses that will support run-time, binary use of Linux to all
companies that use Linux kernel versions 2.4 and later.
SCO sparked a major controversy in the Linux world in March, when it
sued IBM, saying the company had incorporated SCO's Unix code into Linux
and seeking $1 billion in damages. SCO then updated its demands in June,
saying IBM owed it $3 billion. In the meantime, it sent out letters to
about 1,500 Linux customers, warning them that their use of Linux could
infringe on SCO's intellectual property.
SCO said prices for licensing its Unix System V source code would be
announced in coming weeks. Pricing will be based on the cost of UnixWare
7.13, the company's current Unix product. SCO said, at least initially,
it is not directly targeting home users of Linux. |
| ZDNet
Jul 21, 2003 |
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| French police smash key piracy ring |
The French police have smashed a significant network selling and
exchanging pirated films over the internet. More than 36,000 films were
seized and 110 individuals were taken in for questioning.
The police identified a total of 156 web users who had put online a list
of the pirated films they wanted to swap. A small percentage of users
were also offering material for sale. In order to identify the culprits,
the police questioned ISPs about the email addresses the pirates had
left on the site. As a result, 110 of them have been arrested in France.
The site owner has been arrested and the site is no longer live. Those
site users who have been charged are facing up to two years in prison
and a fine of €150,000 for piracy. The total value of the pirated films
seized is around €1m, according to police estimates. |
| Silcion.com / ZDNet France
Jul 22, 2003 |
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| US colleges fight 'pirate' subpoenas |
Two colleges in the US are challenging legal requests to hand over the
names of students who have been accused of illegally downloading music.
But Boston College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
say they are not trying to protect students. They are trying to quash
the subpoenas - which mean they must hand over information by law -
because they say the requests were not properly filed.
The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) issued the
subpoenas. The RIAA has already filed a total of 871 subpoenas, with
more than 75 subpoenas granted every day, US courts said on Friday. The
association has said it would go after the most active downloaders, but
some subpoenas related to users who had accessed as few as five songs.
Users charged with piracy could face lawsuits for damages from $750 to
$150,000 under US copyright law. Music fans are reacting with a new
generation of file-sharing software to prevent monitoring. A version of
'Kazaa-lite' says it can stop outside parties scanning email addresses
and listing songs on individuals' hard drives. |
| BBC News
Jul 23, 2003 |
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| US passports to carry digitally signed images |
US citizens will be issued with 'smart' passports carrying a digitally
signed photograph by late 2004. The new passports will include an
embedded microchip that stores a compressed image of its owner's face.
These microchips will be designed to prevent tampering and each digital
image will be cryptographically signed to guarantee its authenticity.
European travellers may also soon be required to carry passports
containing biometric information. In June 2003 the European Union agreed
to spend €140m on the development of an interoperable biometric system.
European passports are expected to carry both fingerprint and iris scan
biometric data.
Fingerprints and iris scans are much easier to cross-reference on
computer than photographs, for which varying hairstyles and facial hair
add complications. Cross-referencing could determine if someone were
using multiple passports, for example. No date has been set for the
introduction of biometric European passports but European countries are
likely to be under pressure to comply with US standards. |
| New Scientist
Jul 23, 2003 |
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| Scientists developing mind-controlled wheelchair |
Swiss and Spanish scientists are developing a mind-controlled wheelchair
that could one day give severely paralysed patients new independence.
The system will use electrodes embedded in a skullcap worn by the
patient to transmit messages from the brain to a computer which passes
them on to the chair through a wireless link.
The system has been designed by researchers at the Dalle Molle Institute
for Perceptual Artificial Intelligence in Martigny, Switzerland, the
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne and the Centre for
Biomedical Engineering Research in Barcelona.
Early trials using a robot indicate that with just two days' training it
is as easy to control the robot with the human mind as it is manually.
The scientists are testing the system with a simple, wheeled robot using
commands to turn left, right or go forward. It also includes in-built
intelligence to ensure the robot does not collide with anything. |
| Yahoo / Reuters / New Scientist
Jul 23, 2003 |
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| Laser bursts pierce fog |
Researchers from Claude Bernard Lyon University in France have shown
that it is possible to fire laser beams through otherwise impenetrable
clouds, haze and fog. This means it could be possible to transmit data
through these opaque media and remotely sense objects or chemicals
within clouds, haze or fog. The findings could lead to more reliable
free-space laser communications and new ways to monitor pollution.
Water droplets usually scatter laser signals. The researchers used
intense, very short laser pulses to form light filaments that were only
150 microns wide and hundreds of metres long, and showed that the
filaments could cut through water droplets as large as 95 microns
without losing much energy.
When the filament strikes a water droplet, much of the filament's energy
is transferred to surrounding photons. However, this energy is
transferred back to the filament on the other side of the droplet. The
researchers' next step is to check the phenomenon in the field using a
mobile femtosecond laser system. |
| Technology Review / TRN
Jul 23, 2003 |
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| Researchers develop transparent, durable magnets |
Researchers from the Independent University of Barcelona (UAB) and the
University of Zaragoza in Spain have found a way to form transparent,
durable, lightweight magnets that maintain their magnetism in magnetic
fields and high temperatures.
The combination of magnetism and transparency makes it possible to use
the material to control light, making it potentially useful for
modulating lasers and controlling holograms. The material is also an
electrical insulator and could eventually be used in sensors, actuators
and for recording, according to the researchers.
To produce the material, the researchers dispersed magnetic
neodymium-iron-boron particles in silica aerogel, aligned the particles
using a magnetic field, then dried the gel. Aerogels are highly porous,
which makes them lightweight. The magnetic particles were less than five
microns in diameter. The material differs from existing magnetic
aerogels because it does not lose its magnetic orientation in the
presence of a magnetic field. |
| Technology Review / TRN
Jul 21, 2003 |
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| Amazon working on book search database |
Amazon.com executives are working with several large book publishers to
develop an expansive online archive that would let users search the
texts of tens of thousands of books, The New York Times has reported.
The plan, being negotiated by Amazon and the publishers, would build a
program called Look Inside the Book II, through which browsers could
pull up a list of books mentioning certain search words or terms. Users
who register could then see several pages around the result of the
search, but the total amount anyone could view from a single book would
be limited, the report said.
The plan could help Amazon counter competition from Google and Yahoo,
which pull potential shoppers away from its site, and broaden Amazon's
appeal as an authoritative information source, the report said. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Jul 21, 2003 |
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| Computer program detects author gender |
A new computer program can tell whether a book was written by a man or a
woman. The simple scan of key words and syntax is around 80 per cent
accurate on both fiction and non-fiction.
Female writers use more pronouns (I, you, she, their, myself), say the
program's developers from Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Males prefer words that identify or determine nouns (a, the, that) and
words that quantify them (one, two, more). The researchers trained their
algorithm on a few test cases to identify the most prevalent
fingerprints of gender and of fiction and non-fiction. They then set it
searching for these fingerprints in 566 English-language works.
Strikingly, the distinctions between male and female writers are much
the same as those that differentiate non-fiction and fiction. The
programme can tell these two genres apart with 98 per cent accuracy.
This is perhaps unsurprising, given that non-fiction is more
informational and fiction more involved. |
| Nature
Jul 18, 2003 |
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| Deutsche Telekom applies to trademark 'hotspot' |
Deutsche Telekom has applied to trademark the word 'hotspot', the
popular way to describe public wireless connectivity points. Spanish
telco Telefonica has also joined in the fiesta by putting in a rival
claim for the two-word alternative, 'hot spot'.
Both claims will come as a shock to the wireless industry, which has
always struggled to translate what it does into user-friendly English.
The applications have been made through the World Intellectual Property
Organisation, which deals with international trademark applications, and
the European Community system, the Office for Harmonisation in the
Internal Market. The UK Patent Office will make the final ruling. |
| VNUNet UK
Jul 24, 2003 |
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| Poetry website goes from bad to verse |
Vogons, fans of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy will recall, wrote
poetry so bad it could kill. Now an experiment to create poems on the
web looks likely to automate the awfulness of Vogon verse.
David Rea of Greenwich, Connecticut, has written a program that allows a
poem to evolve, to see if people with diverse tastes in poetry can work
together to create attractive verse. Rea's program starts off with 1,000
'poems', each comprising four lines of five randomly chosen words.
People visiting the website choose between two randomly selected verses
from the population. The bad ones are killed off and the fittest - those
with the most positive votes - undergo further evolution.
Each word within a verse is thought of as a poetic gene. There are a
possible 30,000 words, and as people vote, some genomes will prove more
popular than others as they form semi-meaningful phrases. So the fittest
verses are 'mated' to form new verses, and the offspring again put to
the public vote. See: http://www.codeasart.com/poetry/darwin.html |
| New Scientist
Jul 23, 2003 |
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| E-mail? The French beg to differ |
The latest Anglicism to fall out of favour in France is the word
'e-mail', now banned from use by government employees. The word 'e-mail'
can now no longer be used in French official communication, including
documents, memos, the internet and even e-mails themselves.
The General Commission on Terminology and Neology, part of the French
Culture Ministry and affiliated to the Academie Francaise - which
outlawed the word 'Walkman' in favour of 'baladeur' some years ago -
prefers the French alternative 'courriel'.
The edict on 'courriel', a shortened version of the phrase 'courrier
electronique', or electronic mail, is not expected to make a lot of
difference to the common parlance of French technophiles. 'E-mail' has
been in use in Europe for years, and the commission's decision will be
largely arbitrary to French speakers. The word 'courriel' is French
Canadian in origin, a French dialect considered a bastardisation of the
language by traditionalists in France. |
| ZDNet
Jul 18, 2003 |
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