Over 23,000 IP addresses cited in BitTorrent suit | The Digital Home – CNET News

A BitTorrent file-sharing case could soon have more than 23,000 defendants.

Back in March, Judge Robert Wilkins of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia allowed Nu Image, a production company and the plaintiff in the case against “Does 1 to 6,500,” to start seeking out contact information, including full name and address, related to IP addresses it had already collected.

Those IP addresses, Nu Image said at the time, were “Doe Defendants” who had allegedly pirated copies of last year’s “The Expendables” using the BitTorrent protocol. Sylvester Stallone directed and starred in the film; LA-based Nu Image was involved in its production.

Last week, Nu Image filed another court document that included more than 23,000 IP addresses of people who allegedly pirated the film. If folks who use those IP addresses are sued as part of the case, it could become the biggest BitTorrent-related lawsuit thus far.

This case, filed earlier this year, is one of many that have been or are currently under way against alleged copyright infringers across the U.S.

via Over 23,000 IP addresses cited in BitTorrent suit | The Digital Home – CNET News.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

How to Fix (Or Kill) Web Data About You – NYTimes.com

s more of our social lives, shopping sprees and dating misadventures take place online, we leave behind, purposely or not, a growing supply of personal information.

Marketers, employers, suitors and even thieves and stalkers are piecing together mosaics of who we are. Even when it is accurate, it may not present a pretty picture.

For a glimpse of your mosaic, type your name into Spokeo.com. Prepare to see estimates of your age, home value, marital status, phone number and your home address, even a photo of your front door. Spokeo, one of several services like this online, will encourage you to pay $15 or more, for a full report with details on income, hobbies and online social networks.

Snoops who take the time to troll further online may also find in blog posts or Facebook comments evidence of your political views, health challenges, office tribulations and party indiscretions, any of which could hurt your chances of admission to school, getting or keeping a job or landing a date. Many privacy experts worry that companies will use this data against users, perhaps to deny insurance coverage or assign a higher interest rate on a loan.

The online aggregation of personal data is setting the stage for “a WikiLeaks for your life,” said Michael Fertik, the chief executive of Reputation.com, previously known as ReputationDefender, a company that charges to manage people’s online information and images. “The treasure trove of personal data about each of us is growing to unanticipated levels, and the leak of huge portions of those data can be personally devastating,” he said.

via How to Fix (Or Kill) Web Data About You – NYTimes.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Commodore 64 Goes on Sale. Amiga, VIC-20 Coming Soon | Gadget Lab | Wired.com

Just before Christmas, Commodore teased us with an Intel Atom based Commodore 64 — a regular all-in-one Ubuntu PC in the shape of the classic C64 home computer, which could also boot into a game-playing C64 emulation mode. Now, finally, you can buy one, and you’ll soon be able to get the C64’s little brother, the VIC-20, in the shape of the VIC Pro and VIC Slim.

The C64x can be had in five confusing configurations. The Barebones model is nothing more than the case and keyboard with a card-reader and costs $250. The cheapest working version is the C64x Basic at almost $600, and to get luxuries such as Wi-Fi and a DVD drive you’ll need to cough up $700. If you’re in for that much, then you may as well jump all the way and spend $900 on the Ultimate edition, which puts in a 1TB hard drive, a Blu-ray drive and 4GB RAM.

via Commodore 64 Goes on Sale. Amiga, VIC-20 Coming Soon | Gadget Lab | Wired.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Microsoft Files Comments with FTC & Commerce Department on Data Privacy – Microsoft on The Issues – Site Home – TechNet Blogs

Posted by Mike Hintze

Associate General Counsel, Legal & Corporate Affairs

Today, we submitted comments on the Federal Trade Commission’s preliminary staff report on consumer privacy, “Protecting Consumer Privacy in an Era of Rapid Change: A Proposed Framework for Businesses and Policymakers.”

These comments to the FTC follow the comments we submitted at the end of last month on the U.S. Department of Commerce’s privacy green paper, “Commercial Data Privacy and Innovation in the Internet Economy: A Dynamic Policy Framework.”

We commend both the FTC and Commerce for their thoughtful work on the important issue of protecting consumer privacy. Given our long-standing commitment to privacy and data security, Microsoft welcomes the opportunity to participate in these dialogues and to work with government, consumer advocates and others in industry to develop a robust privacy framework that will withstand rapid technological advances while fostering innovation.

As both agencies are developing privacy frameworks, our comments urge them to ensure that these frameworks foster:

• Flexibility in order to permit businesses to develop innovative privacy technologies and tools.

• Certainty about whether their privacy policies and practices comply with legal requirements, such as through government-recognized safe harbor programs.

• Simplified data flows in order to facilitate the data flows – including those across borders – necessary to enable more efficient, reliable and secure delivery of services to consumers at lower prices. A balanced approach will enable providers to meet users’ expectations in realizing the benefits of the Internet in ways that also protect privacy interests.

• Technology neutrality to avoid preferences for particular services, solutions or mechanisms to provide notice, obtain choice, or protect consumer data – which could chill innovation by deterring providers from developing alternative or improved approaches to protect consumer data.

via Microsoft Files Comments with FTC & Commerce Department on Data Privacy – Microsoft on The Issues – Site Home – TechNet Blogs.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Phone Cameras May Raise New Copyright Questions – NYTimes.com

MY wife and I sat cross-legged on the floor of a local Barnes & Noble store recently, surrounded by several large piles of books. We were searching for interior design ideas for a new home that we are planning to buy.

As we lobbed the books back and forth, sharing kitchen layouts and hardwood floor textures, we snapped a dozen pictures of book pages with our iPhones. We wanted to share them later with our contractor.

After a couple of hours of this, we placed the books back on the shelf and went home, without buying a thing. But the digital images came home with us in our smartphones.

Later that evening, I felt a few pangs of guilt. I asked my wife: Did we do anything wrong? And, I wondered, had we broken any laws by photographing those pages?

It’s not as if we had destroyed anything: We didn’t rip out any pages. But if we had wheeled a copier machine into the store, you can be sure the management would have soon wheeled us and the machine out of there.

via Phone Cameras May Raise New Copyright Questions – NYTimes.com.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

ASUS Unveils The Eee Slate EP121, The World’s Most Powerful Tablet – SlashGear

Today at its press conference in Las Vegas, ASUS has introduced a full windows tablet boasting a “No Compromise” solution for business users. The Eee Slate EP121 features an impressive 12-inch (1280×800) multi-touch display and will run full Windows 7 Home Premium.

ASUS wanted to provide users with multiple input options for the large device. You can use the Wacom pen, multi-touch, or a Bluetooth attached keyboard making it ultra-versitile. Text input from the stylus was flawless and very responsive and accurate.

From the demo, we saw the Eee Slate EP121 bring up a 1080p video with no lag while doing some extensive photo editing in Adobe Photoshop CS5. Initial impressions of the device was that it was incredibly powerful. Being described as “desktop-like speed” for the first time on a tablet, its being said to be the Worlds Most Powerful Tablet.

The device will be based on the Intel Core i5 and will run Windows 7 Home Premium. Shipping in January the EP121 will sell for $999-$1099.

via ASUS Unveils The Eee Slate EP121, The World’s Most Powerful Tablet – SlashGear.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

CES Show: Tablets, Televisions and 4G to Suck Up Your Data

While the C in CES (news, site) might stand for consumer, the E should stand for enterprise as all manner of executive gadgets are unveiled at this year’s show, helping free up users and data.

Bring on the Show

The Consumer Electronics Show is the Las Vegas-based event where all the big gadgets and home entertainment goodies are unveiled for 2011 (apart from Apple and a few others, who do their own thing). However, as home and office slide inexorably together, it is just as much about how workers and Web users will interact with devices and data in the very near future as it is the latest in 3D television.

via CES Show: Tablets, Televisions and 4G to Suck Up Your Data.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

LG Lets Smartphones, Tablets Talk to Home Appliances – PCWorld Business Center

LG Electronics’ Thinq technology will allow smartphones and tablets to control and communicate with some of the company’s home appliances, including ovens, refrigerators, washing machines and a robotic vacuum cleaner, the company announced on Monday.

The technology and compatible products will be unveiled at the International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), which takes place from Jan. 6 to 9 in Las Vegas.

Thanks to Thinq, users will be able to control washing machine cycles from the office, or change their refrigerator’s temperature while they’re at the gym, using a smartphone or a tablet PC, the company said. Users will also be able to tell their HOM-BOT robotic vacuum cleaner to start tidying up, feed their pet or use its “viewing function” to keep watch, LG said. More ways to control home appliances will be added in the future, the company said.

An LG illustration of how Thinq works shows an oven, a refrigerator, a washing machine and a vacuum cleaner talking to an access point using Wi-Fi, which then connects to a smartphone.

via LG Lets Smartphones, Tablets Talk to Home Appliances – PCWorld Business Center.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Google offering MSI to simplify Chrome enterprise deployment

In an effort to boost Chrome adoption among businesses, Google has been working to make the browser easier to manage and deploy in enterprise computing environments. This could help Chrome gain some marketshare at the expense of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer.

Google is publishing an official Chrome MSI package that administrators can easily roll out to their users. The browser has also gained support for management via Group Policy on Windows. Unlike the regular Chrome installer, which puts the browser in the user’s home directory and updates it invisibly in the background, the MSI package will install at the system level and allow administrators to have some control over the update process.

Administrators can bundle preinstalled Chrome extensions in the deployment and can also control which extensions users are allowed to add. Various settings—such as the default home page, password management options, proxy configuration, and whether data synchronization is enabled—can all be managed by the administrator. A complete policy reference is available on the Chromium developer website.

The MSI package is a big step forward when it comes to simplifying enterprise Chrome deployment, but Google aims to do more to help out system administrators. Easier support for cross-platform deployment is among the goals on the roadmap.

“We’ve been hearing a lot of feedback from IT administrators who want to manage and configure Google Chrome. Of course, we were eager to do what we could to help them get Chrome deployed inside their organizations,” wrote Chrome product manager Glenn Wilson and engineer Daniel Clifford in a blog post. “Today, after talking directly to administrators and testing the features extensively with other organizations, we believe the first set of features is ready for prime-time.”

via Google offering MSI to simplify Chrome enterprise deployment.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare

Wi-Fi, HomePlug Alliances Collaborate On Smart Grid Apps — InformationWeek

The Wi-Fi Alliance and the HomePlug Powerline Alliance have teamed up to promote their respective technologies in smart grid applications, the pair announced Tuesday.

An agreement between the organizations calls for them to review their specifications and standards that facilitate interoperability of smart grid apps while jointly researching the promotion of their technologies for smart grids.

The two take part in the Smart Grid Interoperability Panel Forum and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST); both organizations seek to accelerate and harmonize standards development for the smart grid. The U.S. Department of Energy and NIST have developed initial specifications for smart energy management of home area network devices. “Both Wi-Fi and HomePlug solutions will play key roles in energy management and connecting home systems and appliances to the smart grid,” Rob Ranck, president of the HomePlug Powerline Alliance, said in a statement. “HomePlug and Wi-Fi devices represent a large share of installed nodes worldwide, and ensuring seamless interoperability is critical for broad-scale smart grid deployment.”

via Wi-Fi, HomePlug Alliances Collaborate On Smart Grid Apps — InformationWeek.

LinkedInPinterestEvernoteWordPressBlogger PostEmailShare