Issue no. 34, 2003 Published: Sep 19, 2003 |
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Developer moves to neutralise VeriSign's web 'helper' |
Patent could force web change |
Internet body wins three-year extension from US |
SSH security glitch exposes networks |
UK, Australia crack down on spammers |
Paying spammers not to spam |
EU to help job hunters online |
Privacy technology blocks camera phone photos |
Glow shows individual DNA |
Bat echoes used as virtual reality guide |
Electron teams make bigger qubits |
Your life in a matchbox |
Making a video screen out of thin air |
Camera sunglasses take candid snaps |
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| Developer moves to neutralise VeriSign's web 'helper' |
The Internet Software Consortium, the nonprofit organisation that
develops BIND software for internet domain name directories, has
released an 'urgent patch' for internet service providers and others who
want to block customers from a new Site Finder service from VeriSign.
VeriSign, which keeps the master lists of names ending in '.com' and
'.net', launched Site Finder on Monday to steer users to likely
alternatives when they type addresses for which no website exists.
Though VeriSign gets unspecified revenues from search engine partners
whose technology powers Site Finder, company officials described the
service as primarily a navigation tool to help lost internet users.
Critics, however, say the service eliminates user choice, gives a
private company too much control over online commerce and could violate
longstanding internet standards. The BIND patch restores control by
identifying and then ignoring data from Site Finder. Meanwhile, US-based
Internet search company Popular Enterprises LLC on Thursday filed a $100
million antitrust lawsuit against VeriSign over the Site Finder service. |
| Yahoo / AP / ZDNet
Sep 16, 2003 |
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| Patent could force web change |
Web developers are anxiously waiting for a Microsoft announcement about
changes to its Internet Explorer browser after a US court found that it
infringes another company's software patent.
Last month the Chicago District Court awarded $521 million in damages to
Eolas, the small company which holds the patent, ordering Microsoft to
remove all infringing technology from its programs. Even though
Microsoft has said it will appeal the decision, the company has admitted
that it may take precautionary steps by making changes to the browser.
The patent concerned describes a way of 'automatically invoking an
external application' and 'providing interaction and display of embedded
objects' inside a 'hypermedia document'. There is a general consensus
within the web community that it would include clicking on a link to
load a Flash movie or a video player, controlling an external
application through a web interface and downloading and running programs
inside a webpage. This means web development tools and browsers would
have to be modified and many websites would have to be rewritten. |
| BBC News
Sep 15, 2003 |
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| Internet body wins three-year extension from US |
The International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
will continue to oversee the internet's domain-name system for another
three years, the US Department of Commerce said Wednesday.
ICANN was set up in 1998 to take control of the domain-name system from
the US government, but that has yet to happen as the controversial body
has been unable to formalise its authority over several groups that
control key parts of the online infrastructure.
The Commerce Department has temporarily renewed ICANN's authority
several times, although critics say it is poorly managed and does not
properly take the concerns of the internet's 500 million users into
account. Commerce said ICANN had taken important steps to reorganise
over the past year, and that the new agreement contained several
milestones to ensure that the organisation continues to improve. |
| Reuters
Sep 17, 2003 |
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| SSH security glitch exposes networks |
A critical security flaw in SSH has been revealed that threatens servers
worldwide. SSH is a widely used encrypted remote management shell for
Unix, Linux and BSD platforms. Experts say attackers have been
exploiting the vulnerability to gain access to systems illegally for
months.
What started as quiet mumblings and rumours turned into screaming
warnings this week as the security community slowly learned of the
threat. All versions of OpenSSH running on all distributions of Linux
and BSD are affected, excluding those that have patched to version
3.7.1.
Several security mailing lists are reporting that exploit code is being
traded in the wild. It is still unknown if an exploit could either crash
or enable remote code execution. Administrators are urged to upgrade
vulnerable systems to OpenSSH 3.7.1, which is available for download
from ftp.openbsd.org. Vendor-specific fixes are imminent. |
| ZDNet / SearchEnterpriseLinux.com
Sep 17, 2003 |
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| UK, Australia crack down on spammers |
Britain has become the second country in Europe to criminalise spam.
Under the new UK law, spammers face a 5,000 pound fine if convicted in a
magistrates court. The fine from a jury trial would be unlimited.
Spammers would not face prison, according to the new law, which was
introduced on Thursday.
Spam is defined under the UK law as any messages sent to consumers
without having first established a consensual customer relationship. The
UK law follows an EU directive passed last year. Earlier this month,
Italian lawmakers imposed tough new regulations to fine spammers up to
90,000 euros and impose a maximum prison term of three years.
New antispam legislation has also been introduced into Australia's House
of Representatives that allows for penalties of up to USD 733,000 per
day for sending spam. The spam bill would apply to spam that originates
in Australia and contains a flexible sanctions regime that includes
warnings, infringement notices and court-awarded penalties. |
| Yahoo / Reuters / ZDNet Australia
Sep 18, 2003 |
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| Paying spammers not to spam |
Founders of a new antispam service say they have developed a system to
convince spammers to remove specific e-mail addresses from their mailing
lists - by paying them.
The service, offered by US-based Global Removal, charges subscribers a
$5 lifetime fee to have their e-mail addresses put on a permanent
do-not-spam list. Addresses on the list are then compared with, and
removed from, mailing lists maintained by Global Removal's partnering
businesses - more than 50 known spammers and an equal number of
legitimate e-mail marketers.
Although businesses that sign up to partner with Global Removal agree to
remove addresses from their lists for free, they are enrolled in an
affiliate program that earns them $1 for every new subscriber that they
bring to the service. To keep internet users from being bombarded with
messages about Global Removal, the businesses are only allowed to send
out one message about the service to their cleansed mailing lists. |
| Wired News
Sep 15, 2003 |
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| EU to help job hunters online |
Looking for a job in Europe? It may just be a click away on a new EU
website set up to boost labour mobility across the bloc's sluggish
economy. The European Commission, will on Friday launch the website
advertising thousands of vacant jobs in sectors ranging from agriculture
to science and at all levels from senior management to the unskilled.
On Thursday there were already more than 11,000 vacancies across Europe
posted on the European Job Mobility Portal, also called EURES at
http://europa.eu.int/eures/index.jsp . The EURES website also offers
job-hunters the opportunity to post their curriculum vitae online and
find information about living and working in the bloc's member states.
The Commission says a lack of cross-border labour mobility is hampering
EU efforts to reach its goal of becoming the world's most competitive
economy by 2010. |
| Yahoo / Reuters
Sep 18, 2003 |
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| Privacy technology blocks camera phone photos |
Companies worried about staff or visitors using camera phones to
secretly take pictures in places like swimming pools and changing rooms
will soon be able to automatically disable the imaging system inside
certain handsets when they enter a designated wireless 'privacy zone'.
Iceberg Systems is beta-testing Safe Haven, a combination of hardware
transmitters and a small piece of control software that is loaded into a
camera phone handset. When the handset is taken into a room or building
containing the Safe Haven hardware, the phone is instructed to
deactivate the imaging systems. The systems are reactivated as soon as
the handset is out of range.
Although the technology is only designed for disabling the imaging
system, it could be adapted for a wide number of uses, such as blocking
loud or annoying ringtones in a bar or even disabling text messaging in
a school. Iceberg Systems said it is in talks with some well-known
handset manufacturers that are interested in testing the technology. |
| Silicon.com / ZDNet UK
Sep 12, 2003 |
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| Glow shows individual DNA |
Researchers from the University of Heidelberg in Germany and Florida
State University have made a type of artificial DNA of that glows when
it combines with a specific sequence of natural DNA. In principle, the
method could be used to develop DNA chips that directly sense individual
DNA molecules, according to the researchers.
DNA is made from four types of bases-adenine, cytosine, guanine, and
thymine-connected to a sugar-phosphate backbone. Double-stranded DNA
forms when complementary bases in the two rows match and connect. A
single strand of DNA can form a hairpin shape when matching segments
along a single strand of DNA connect.
The researchers' used DNA strand that contains a fluorescent dye. It
loses its glow when the molecule folds into a hairpin shape to bring the
dye into contact with guanosine. When the DNA combines with another
strand, for example, from a bacteria, the hairpin opens and exposes the
fluorescent dye. The researchers are working to develop DNA chips that
can quickly detect small amounts of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. |
| Technology Review / TRN
Sep 15, 2003 |
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| Bat echoes used as virtual reality guide |
A bat echolocation system, adapted for human ears, has been used allow
people to locate objects in a virtual reality environment. Researchers
at the University of Leeds, UK, hope that a similar system in the
cockpit of fighter planes could allow pilots to track some controls
using their hearing, freeing up their eyes for other tasks.
The researchers created a virtual system that sends out bat echolocation
sounds and returns echoes that are slowed into the human range of
hearing. Volunteers were asked to hunt down a virtual insect, using only
the echolocation sounds. People were better at finding their target
using bat sounds than they were when trying to find a source of sound.
That is because bat calls are particularly good for making auditory maps
of space. The calls are short, so the echo comes back sharply. They also
have a broadband structure - containing information in both high and low
frequencies - which allows the animals to better localise sound.
Finally, bats also dynamically change their calls when approaching their
target, using shorter calls when they get closer to an object. |
| Yahoo / New Scientist
Sep 15, 2003 |
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| Electron teams make bigger qubits |
One of the biggest challenges in building quantum computers is making
quantum bits, or qubits, that are small enough to have the requisite
quantum behaviour, yet large enough to be reliably controlled by
electronic circuits.
Researchers from the University of Basel in Switzerland and the
University of Pittsburgh have come up with a candidate qubit made from
groups of electrons. An electron's two directions, spin up and spin
down, can represent the 1s and 0s of digital information.
The electron group can be controlled as one unit; as long as it contains
an odd number of electrons a group behaves like a single electron.
Electron spins can be built into computer chips, are relatively well
insulated from environmental disturbances, and existing techniques allow
electron-spin qubits to be controlled by magnetic and electric fields.
Controlling magnetic and electric fields at the scale of individual
electrons is extremely challenging, however. The new method eases the
burden by widening the focus to a set of electrons rather than just one. |
| Technology Review / TRN
Sep 18, 2003 |
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| Your life in a matchbox |
Within 10 years we could be carrying personal computing devices that
store our every word and deed, according to chip giant Intel. Speaking
at the Intel Developer Forum in San Jose, senior Intel researcher Roy
Want unveiled a prototype device which the company calls a Personal
Server.
He explained that the matchbox-sized PC could be used to store a wide
variety of personal information that could be accessed by many different
devices. The Personal Server would consist of a high capacity storage
unit with a powerful processor and wireless communications. It could be
controlled with a unit built into a watch, and would interface with
whichever PC or mobile device the user happened to be working on.
Prices, timetables and news could be downloaded from billboards and
other public access points and then printed out on wireless printers.
Security would be a major concern with such a device, and Want proposed
a new system of access control based not on passwords but on what the
user can do uniquely. |
| VNUnet UK
Sep 16, 2003 |
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| Making a video screen out of thin air |
Two companies, IO2 Technology in California, and FogScreen in Seinäjoki
Technology Center, Finland, have working prototypes for systems that
broadcast two-dimensional images into thin air. Both FogScreen and IO2
Technology say they have patents pending on the technology.
IO2 Technology's Heliodisplay projects images onto a cloud of water
vapour diffused into the air rather than on a screen. Observers can
control the virtual characters as they would on a computer screen, but
instead of using a mouse, they use their hands. No special glove is
needed, said the company, which was inundated with requests for more
information following news reports about the prototype on Wednesday.
FogScreen also sees possible entertainment and business applications for
its walk-through FogScreen. The FogScreen made a splash at the Siggraph
Emerging Technologies conference in August, where it was used to display
a walk-through virtual image of the Mona Lisa. A museum in Tampere,
Finland, is now exhibiting the same image. |
| Wired News
Sep 16, 2003 |
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| Camera sunglasses take candid snaps |
Soon your sunglasses could help you capture all the important moments of
your life. A prototype pair of sunglasses with a camera built in to them
has been created by Hewlett Packard researchers.
The sunglasses developed at the HP labs in the UK sport a camera that
constantly takes images of what a wearer sees. The camera also has an
off-switch to preserve privacy. To tackle image overload, the HP system
captures information about images, called metadata, too. This extra data
keeps track of how and where a picture was taken and can spot if a
subject was walking or turning.
The system also inspects images to see if people are smiling or looking
directly at the camera lens to help judge whether the picture is good in
terms of composition, framing and timing. The images can be processed in
a handheld computer attached to the sunglasses or on a conventional home
computer. |
| BBC News
Sep 18, 2003 |
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