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(old news - 05:22AM Friday Jun 02 2006)
Around the Industry:
Net Neutrality alternative proposed
FCC mulls taxing VoIP calls
California Assembly votes bill easing cable rules
E-Mail addresses to steer snail mail?
Pirate Bay P2P raid starting to blow up in faces of politicians that organised it
Commentary: Ad-supported municipal wireless networks: three issues missing from the debate
ISPs offer faster speeds, why don't we get them?

SecurityBits:
Extortion virus code gets cracked
Flaw discovered in Snort Intrusion Prevention technology
F-Secure patches Web Console bug
Virus returns to Hewlett-Packard web site

TidBytes:
Google Adds Chat To Gmail
Ogo is the Blackberry-killer
Microsoft is "as aggressive as hell", says Red Hat chief
CIO Jury: Do mobile technologies make us too connected?

More news from around the industry, SecurityBits, and interesting Tidbytes inside!....

Around The Industry:
Net Neutrality alternative proposed:
The Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF) has published a report that addresses the increasingly controversial issue of net neutrality currently making waves on Capitol Hill, in order to offer up an alternative solution. ITIF aims to appeal to both sides of the debate with its new "third way" model. Under that model, if network providers agree to offer a basic amount of open and non-discriminatory data pipe access, they would also be allowed to provide managed services where they would be able to charge for content that goes across their networks.FCC mulls taxing VoIP calls:
FCC Chairman Kevin Martin proposed recently that VoIP service providers such as Vonage, Skype and others begin paying 10.9 percent of 65 percent of their revenues into the USF. The fund, which overall collects about $7 billion from interstate and international calls, is used to subsidize the cost of providing phone services to poor and rural customers. It will lose as much as $350 million starting in August when DSL and other broadband Internet access services become exempt from having to contribute to the fund.
California Assembly votes bill easing cable rules:
California's Democratic-dominated Assembly passed a bill that could increase competition among cable television providers and make it easier for telephone companies to enter the market. The bill by Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez would eliminate city-by-city franchises, which he said made it nearly impossible for rivals with new technologies to enter California's market for television entertainment services. It passed by a rare unanimous vote of 70-0 in the often-divided Legislature.
E-Mail addresses to steer snail mail?:
The U.S. Postal Service was recently asked to start delivering packages and letters based on someone's e-mail rather than street address. The request is from Inventerprise LLC, which wants to conduct a trial run of its so-called Shelmail e-mail-to-snail addressing system sometime in 2008. The Shelmail proposal is noteworthy because it suggests that e-mail addresses are a better means of delivering snail mail than what the USPS uses now. Put another way, Shelmail questions just what constitutes someone's "address" nowadays.
Pirate Bay P2P raid starting to blow up in faces of politicians that organised it:The raids on the P2P outfit The Pirate Bay is starting to blow up in the faces of the politicians that organised it. Police carrying out the raid have been slammed for also shutting down dozens of small internet businesses which were not connected with the Pirate Bay but had the misfortune of using the same ISP Rix|Port80. There is also considerable support in Sweden for ThePirateBay, if only because the country does not like foreign companies telling its government what to do.
Commentary: Ad-supported municipal wireless networks: three issues missing from the debate:
"IFTF’s research has identified several areas where insufficient energy is being devoted to explore the long-term consequences of design and implementation decisions. While the working life of today’s Wi-Fi technologies may only be five to ten years, the infrastructure and governance models put in place today are likely to shape a whole generation’s worth of urban wireless networks. If cities fail to think ahead, they may find it more challenging to leverage wireless infrastructure for digital inclusion, economic development and public safety in the future."
ISPs offer faster speeds, why don't we get them?:
Via Slashdot: "Ron Williams asks: "I'm infuriated every time I see that companies are raising their speeds when they can't maintain their current speeds. So, how about instead of companies constantly claiming to increase their speeds, they get their actual speeds correct. With all these speed increases, why is my Internet not getting faster?" Slashdot adds that one thing to note is that you'll never get the top speed advertised for any connection due to transmission overhead; even so, you should be able to get close (within about 10-20%). Also, ISPs oversell their bandwidth, so if you run your speed tests when other customers are using their connection, you will notice the performance hit.
Sprint to deliver broadband BlackBerry:
Sprint Nextel has begun shipping a new version of RIM's BlackBerry, designed to take advantage of its Power Vision mobile broadband network. The company will also upgrade an earlier version of the BlackBerry to take advantage of the network later in 2006. The BlackBerry 7130e will be able to download at average speeds of 400 to 700K bps, with speeds as high as 2M bps possible in some areas. The new device will come with software support for a variety of graphical file types. In addition, the 7130e will support Bluetooth, and it will act as a modem for laptop computers. The 7130e sells for $199.99 after all discounts and promotions.
Vapps, Skype plan to upend conference calling market:
A New Jersey start-up that offers conference-calling services to businesses aims to upend the market by offering free conference calls to Skype's 100 million users worldwide, the company said. Vapps co-founder Ben Lilienthal said in a phone interview that Vapps is seeking to displace traditional conference call providers by combining low-cost computers, Linux software, offshore development and free transport via the Internet.
AOL suffers e-mail outage:
AOL's e-mail experienced a major glitch Thursday. Users trying to send and receive e-mail were impacted starting at around 11 a.m. EDT. The service was back up about 4 p.m., a spokesman for the company said Thursday afternoon. An AOL spokesman contested the use of the term "massive internal system failure" and instead attributed the problem to a 'software glitch'. Users with aol.com and AIM.com addresses were affected as were netscape.com and compuserve.com users.
Commentary: The time has come to ditch email as it is and start from scratch:
"Email will never be secure, because it was never designed to be secure. The only solution is to start from scratch. Develop a new email system and make it secure. Use existing, proven technologies and a few new and novel ideas – starting with the latest encoding mechanisms, a reliable hashing algorithm, fast compression, strong encryption and signatures. Build an electronic identity. Encode, hash, encrypt, compress, sign, and provide a novel way to share keys when needed, for example. A completely new, secure email system would be the internet's next big critical application."
Telstra, Aussie competition watchdog fiber row coming to head:
Australia's competition regulator gave its strongest indication yet that telecomms incumbent Telstra could scrap its proposed next-gen broadband network by the end of this month. Telstra is currently in talks with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission as the pair seek to come to an agreement on the conditions under which Telstra would build the network. But ACCC commissioner Ed Willett yesterday said Telstra could decide to scrap the idea altogether. "That might be a decision they make because at this time they can't get the regulatory environment that they (wanted), to invest in that technology."

SecurityBits:
Extortion virus code gets cracked:
Poor programming has allowed AV companies to discover the password to retrieve the hijacked data inside a virus. Analysis of Archiveus has revealed that the password to unlock the file containing all the hijacked files is contained within the code of the virus itself. The virus is the latest example of so-called ransomware that tries to extort cash from victims. This virus swaps files found in the My Documents folder with a single file protected by a 30-digit password. Victims are only told the password if they buy drugs from one of three online pharmacies.
Flaw discovered in Snort Intrusion Prevention technology:
A recently discovered security issue in Snort, the open source intrusion prevention and detection technology used in government agencies and many large corporations, could allow attackers to bypass security on compromised machines. Researchers from Demarc discovered the flaw May 17 and released a patch earlier this week. Although the flaw makes it possible to evade Snort detection, it doesn't enable other types of attacks to be launched, and only applies to a particular subset of Snort rules and protected Apache web servers.
F-Secure patches Web Console bug:
Security vendor F-Secure has patched a vulnerability that could possibly be exploited to run unauthorized code on its e-mail and Internet gateway server software. Two of the company's products are affected by the flaw, which was patched Thursday: Secure's Anti-Virus for Microsoft Exchange 6.40 and Internet Gatekeeper, versions 6.40, 6.41, 6.42 and 6.50. The bug affects the Web-based management console software used by these servers. By sending specially crafted messages to the Web console, a hacker could crash it.
Virus returns to Hewlett-Packard web site:
A virus that first appeared on HP's Web site six years ago was recently detected in a device driver being distributed to HP customers over the Internet. The Funlove virus was discovered in a driver available through HP's FTP servers, BitDefender said. The security company notified HP and the app was removed from the Web site. The virus attempts to gain admin rights on Windows NT, giving a remote computer the ability to read and modify files when a user logs in, BitDefender said. The malware can also infect Windows 9x/ME/2000.
Microsoft probes Windows DoS flaw in WinXP and Windows Server 2003:
MS is looking into a report of a Windows flaw that could cause certain apps to crash. The potential flaw affects WinXP and Windows Server 2003. The bug could cause certain apps, including IE, to crash after a user is tricked to click on an overly long Web link, Secunia said in an alert. The flaw might also allow malicious code to run on a vulnerable system. However, that has not been proven, so the issue is so far deemed to be a DoS problem only, Secunia said. The company deems the issue "less critical," one notch above its lowest possible rating.

Hardware, Software, and other TidBytes:
Google Adds Chat To Gmail
Ogo is the Blackberry-killer
Microsoft is "as aggressive as hell", says Red Hat chief
CIO Jury: Do mobile technologies make us too connected?
iPod Nano code still a bit dodgy
Online jobs index rises to record high
Red Hat Creates Social-Networking Site
Government Says RFID Human Tracking Is A Bad Idea

Forums » Morning Broadband Bytes
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Post a:
SD6

join:2005-03-26

Ogo is the Blackberry-killer

I don't think so...

The article is a little unclear about what is required on the server side to accomplish SyncML.

1st post!
jsouth
Jsouth

join:2000-12-12
Wichita, KS

Use email address to send snail mail

IN other words start using this idea so that we can start charging you for your email address. FU Inventerprise.
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BTK is guilty!!!!

Rob
In Deo speramus, God Bless the USA
Premium
join:2001-08-25
Kendall, FL
·Comcast

Re: Use email address to send snail mail

said by jsouth See Profile :

IN other words start using this idea so that we can start charging you for your email address. FU Inventerprise.
.. or so they can start collecting e-mail addresses! Can you imagine how many they'd have by ends day?!
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YourIP.US - Quickly Locate Your IP!
TripmasterG

join:2004-01-01
Centreville, VA

Re: Use email address to send snail mail

And in the reverse every time someone catches your email address online they could mail you tons of brochures and that crap waste of trees we all love. At least with spam you just have to click delete.
sweepy

join:2003-12-12
Apex, NC

PirateBay comming back

2-3 Day...Yipppieeeeeeeeeeeee

Pirates 3 MPAA 0

Just shows that American Corporations cannot force another soverin nation into doing their dirtywork....Yippieeeeeee
Necronomikro

join:2005-09-01

Re: PirateBay comming back

Heh. What the swedish police did is, by swedish law, much more illegal than what ThePirateBay was doing (ThePirateBay actually wasn't breaking laws. Pointing someone to pirated materials [bittorrent streams] isn't illegal in sweden, just giving it to them is. They don't give it to them, they show them how to get it from someone else [bittorrents].) Irony at its finest, boys.

Sabre
Di relung hatiku bernyanyi bidadari

join:2005-05-17
·Comcast

The time has come to ditch email as it is

This is all a nice idea, but it's still a system created by humans. Any system designed by humans can be broken by humans. "They" will still find a way to blast out spam, virus packages, scams, and miscellaneous junk over a new secure platform. It's just another Red Queen race.

I think a new system isn't a bad idea, but it's a long way off and shouldn't be touted as a panacea to all our email problems. We'll still have them.
--
With all its sham, drudgery, and broken dreams, it is still a beautiful world.

guitarzan
Premium
join:2004-05-04
Skytop, PA
·epix


1 edit

DHS report faults use of RFID for human identification

While most people are concerned over privacy issues surrounding illegal wiretapping of all Americans.It's even more worrisome the government has been considering this.

quote:
June 01, 2006 (Computerworld) -- A committee of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security next week will consider a report that criticizes the use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology for security authentication

That's so fu*king terrific.

quote:
The report, now in draft form (PDF), was prepared by the DHS’s Emerging Applications and Technology subcommittee. A final version is to be presented Wednesday at a meeting of the DHS’s Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee, which advises the secretary of DHS and his chief privacy officer

Howard Beales, the committee chairman, noted that the report has garnered more public response than usual. The report remains a work in progress, he said, and after being discussed next week, it will probably be returned to the subcommittee for more revisions

Any formal recommendation to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff will probably wait until September or December, when the committee holds its quarterly meeting. "I think RFID in general is a very interesting technology," Beales said


The time is NOW for all Americans to wake from their slumber and stop this bullshit.
--
Bass....the glue of rhythm and harmony...the heartbeat of the band.! Shaking the earth with deep,sonorous vibrations.The dark ominous thunder of an approching storm.

damm devil

@qwest.net

Re: DHS report faults use of RFID for human identification

isn't that like what the bible describes as the mark of the beast I though our presedent was a religious man on the good side of it. I guess not he is on the bad side of it

PunkGod

join:2003-02-02


1 edit
said by guitarzan See Profile :

While most people are concerned over privacy issues surrounding illegal wiretapping of all Americans.It's even more worrisome the government has been considering this.

quote:
June 01, 2006 (Computerworld) -- A committee of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security next week will consider a report that criticizes the use of radio frequency identification (RFID) technology for security authentication

That's so fu*king terrific.

quote:
The report, now in draft form (PDF), was prepared by the DHS’s Emerging Applications and Technology subcommittee. A final version is to be presented Wednesday at a meeting of the DHS’s Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee, which advises the secretary of DHS and his chief privacy officer

Howard Beales, the committee chairman, noted that the report has garnered more public response than usual. The report remains a work in progress, he said, and after being discussed next week, it will probably be returned to the subcommittee for more revisions

Any formal recommendation to Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff will probably wait until September or December, when the committee holds its quarterly meeting. "I think RFID in general is a very interesting technology," Beales said


The time is NOW for all Americans to wake from their slumber and stop this bullshit.
Where are you getting this from.

From this link, " http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20060601/2359255.shtml " the government is saying its a bad idea not a good idea.

guitarzan
Premium
join:2004-05-04
Skytop, PA
·epix

Re: DHS report faults use of RFID for human identification

Did you read page two of that article? If so then one would have read this.
quote:
Despite its criticism, the report provided a set of best practices to be followed if such a system is used. The recommendations include encrypting the data being transmitted to prevent outside access and using a kill switch function to turn off the chip. It also recognized that RFID technology could be useful in identifying personnel in dangerous situations, such as firefighters and miners
You are being misled if one believes they are concerned about our privacy, Recent news events prove otherwise.That this is being considered is scary enough,They are looking to improve such a system before it becomes mandatory.Just you wait watch and see,I hope I'm wrong though.
--
Bass....the glue of rhythm and harmony...the heartbeat of the band.! Shaking the earth with deep,sonorous vibrations.The dark ominous thunder of an approching storm.

major marco
Res Firma Mitescere Nescit
Premium
join:2003-02-13
Stepford, CA
clubs:

Meet the new "third" plan, Same as the old plan

The objective is to shaft consumers and any Joe Sixpack companies that can't pay the freight the telcos demand for "high quality" broadband.

Those calling for a net neutrality law--including online services companies Yahoo and Google--fail to recognize that broadband providers need new business plans to build out next-generation networks, he said. Net neutrality laws could also limit providers' ability to manage their networks...
This is what's known as a red herring, boys & girls. The Net and infrastructure has been coming along unimpeded just fine.

Someone else said it better elsewhere:

The industry says it needs a tiered system because all those little video clips people send to each other are hogging bandwidth. The next time you see an ad for Time Warner’s Road Runner broadband service, notice that streaming video is part of the lure of paying $44.95 a month. An Associated Press story earlier this week quoted Verizon and BellSouth spokesmen warning that as the video trend continues, the Internet could choke—like an overbooked flight, an ISP would be overcapacity if all of its subscribers downloaded high-quality video at the same time. But as the story points out, Internet traffic doesn’t work that way. It grows along with the capacity, not ahead of it.

We wouldn’t be watching YouTube videos over a 64K modem, because it wouldn’t be worth the aggravation. The industry says all that innovation will cost money, and that they will have no choice but to pass that cost on to consumers. Oh, we consumers would suffer, they warn us, even those of us who just want to check e-mail.

The fact is, ISPs have been whining about multimedia content since RealAudio first launched its streaming sounds in 1995. Not only has the Internet survived, but ISPs have raked in billions in profits as a result. The video franchising piece of the new telecom bills, remember, would let phone companies set their own terms for launching nationwide video services.

Public-interest groups are afraid that telcos would use their gatekeeping power to block access to the sites of their competitors and critics. Poppycock, the telcos say. We would never do anything like that. The FCC wouldn’t let us get away with it! And anyway, we wouldn’t want to. We believe in all this net neutrality stuff. Cross our hearts. Pinky swear. No need to make it part of the law, now is there?

And we should believe them why? Remember, AT&T, BellSouth and Verizon willingly sold the private phone records of American citizens to the Bush administration’s illegal domestic spying operation.

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Choose Net Neutrality or Lose It
21st C TechnoBarons.
Why Care About Media?
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