Hey Sony, Don’t Mess with Linux, Says PS3 Lawsuit – PCWorld

When Sony nerfed Linux support for the PS3 in early April, we knew it was only a matter of time before someone pulled a pack of lawyers out of their pocket.

Sure enough, a complaint (PDF courtesy IGN) filed in San Francisco federal court Tuesday is after class action status to wring compensation from Sony for yanking what some considered a quintessential feature of the company's flagship games console.

Unlike the Xbox 360 or Wii, the PS3 shipped in 2006 with an option to run alternative operating systems, including popular Linux distributions from Debian, Fedora, OpenSUSE and Ubuntu. The “slim” model refresh that appeared last September lost this feature, but Sony exempted older “fat” PS3s.

On April 1, PS3 firmware update 3.21 disabled the “Install Other OS” feature, ostensibly because Sony deemed it a hacker loophole. PS3 owners didn't have to install the update, but failing to do so locked them out of the PlayStation Network, playing newer gamers, viewing Blu-ray movies, and playing copyright-protected videos streamed off a media server. Not much of a choice, in other words.

The suit seeks to redress Sony’s downgrade, claiming that it’s “not only a breach of the sales contract…but it is also an unfair and deceptive business practice perpetrated on millions of unsuspecting consumers.”

“Sony knowingly and willingly accepted monetary benefits from Plaintiff and the Class, but Sony did not honor its obligations,” reads the complaint. “Rather, Sony benefited from the sales of PS3s with the Other OS function which it then forced purchasers to either disable or forgo other important PS3 functions.”

via Hey Sony, Don’t Mess with Linux, Says PS3 Lawsuit – PCWorld.

Facebook Will Allow Users to Share Location – Bits Blog – NYTimes.com

Starting next month, the more than 400 million Facebook users could begin seeing a new kind of status update flow through their news feed: the current locations of their friends.

Facebook plans to take the wraps off a new location-based feature in late April at f8, the company’s yearly developer conference, according to several people briefed on the project, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss unannounced services.

In preparation for the introduction, Facebook updated its privacy policy last November. The new policy states: “When you share your location with others or add a location to something you post, we treat that like any other content you post.”

At that time, the company also offered some foreshadowing of the new feature: “If we offer a service that supports this type of location sharing we will present you with an opt-in choice of whether you want to participate.”

Facebook has been working on a location-based tool for close to a year, but decided to wait until the product was completely ready for mainstream adoption before announcing it, said the people with knowledge of the project

via Facebook Will Allow Users to Share Location – Bits Blog – NYTimes.com.

A Litigation Boutique Grows in Manhattan

Regular readers of our Churn feature know there was no shortage of big firm litigators hanging out their own shingles last year. Our colleague Nate Raymond at sibling publication the New York Law Journal checked in with a group of five former Clifford Chance litigators who joined the boutique boom by setting up their own shop to handle international arbitration, reinsurance, and commercial litigation in Manhattan. Here's his profile of the boutique Chaffetz Lindsey.

Writes Raymond, “A recession may not seem like the perfect environment for starting a new law business, but with clients under pressure to manage costs and large firms favoring institutional clients in potential conflicts, dozens of boutiques have popped up offering sophisticated legal expertise at reasonable costs to clients large and small.”

via A Litigation Boutique Grows in Manhattan.

Future Legal Technology Tool? Similar Images graduates from Google Labs

Similar Images is graduating from Google Labs and becoming a permanent feature in Google Images. You can try it out by clicking on “Find similar images” below the most popular images in our search results. For example, if you search for jaguar, you can use the “Find similar images” link to find more pictures of the car or the animal.

via Official Google Blog: Similar Images graduates from Google Labs.