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Rumored iTunes Music Subscription: $130 Per Year [21 Aug 2008|01:08pm]
An anonymous tipster seems to have contacted several Mac rumor publications with speculation about an unlimited music subscription within iTunes. According to the e-mail, Apple will charge U.S.-based customers $130 per year ($100 for MobileMe subscribers) for an "iTunes Unlimited" subscription that will include the ability to download about half of the songs in the iTunes store in a 256-Kbps format.
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Storming Sweden in the World's Wildest Prius [21 Aug 2008|08:00am]
Three Swedish gearheads spend eight weeks and $184,275 building the most radical hybrid on the planet to prove anything can be customized.
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US Company Sues Nintendo in Wii Wand Patent Suit [21 Aug 2008|06:51am]
A U.S company has filed a number of patent suits against Nintendo, accusing the Japanese gamer's hit Wii of infringing on its technology for a handheld three-dimensional pointing device and a display interface system for organizing graphic content on a TV.
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US Company Sues Nintendo in Wii Wand Patent Suit [21 Aug 2008|06:51am]
A U.S company has filed a number of patent suits against Nintendo, accusing the Japanese gamer's hit Wii of infringing on its technology for a handheld three-dimensional pointing device and a display interface system for organizing graphic content on a TV.
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US Company Sues Nintendo in Wii Wand Patent Suit [21 Aug 2008|06:51am]
A U.S company has filed a number of patent suits against Nintendo, accusing the Japanese gamer's hit Wii of infringing on its technology for a handheld three-dimensional pointing device and a display interface system for organizing graphic content on a TV.
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Boston Court's Meddling With 'Full Disclosure' Is Unwelcome [21 Aug 2008|04:00am]

In eerily similar cases in the Netherlands and the United States, courts have recently grappled with the computer-security norm of "full disclosure," asking whether researchers should be permitted to disclose details of a fare-card vulnerability that allows people to ride the subway for free.

The "Oyster card" used on the London Tube was at issue in the Dutch case, and a similar fare card used on the Boston "T" was the center of the U.S. case. The Dutch court got it right, and the American court, in Boston, got it wrong from the start -- despite facing an open-and-shut case of First Amendment prior restraint.

The U.S. court has since seen the error of its ways -- but the damage is done. The MIT security researchers who were prepared to discuss their Boston findings at the DefCon security conference were prevented from giving their talk.

The ethics of full disclosure are intimately familiar to those of us in the computer-security field. Before full disclosure became the norm, researchers would quietly disclose vulnerabilities to the vendors -- who would routinely ignore them. Sometimes vendors would even threaten researchers with legal action if they disclosed the vulnerabilities.

Later on, researchers started disclosing the existence of a vulnerability but not the details. Vendors responded by denying the security holes' existence, or calling them just theoretical. It wasn't until full disclosure became the norm that vendors began consistently fixing vulnerabilities quickly. Now that vendors routinely patch vulnerabilities, researchers generally give them advance notice to allow them to patch their systems before the vulnerability is published. But even with this "responsible disclosure" protocol, it's the threat of disclosure that motivates them to patch their systems. Full disclosure is the mechanism (.pdf) by which computer security improves.

Outside of computer security, secrecy is much more the norm. Some security communities, like locksmiths, behave much like medieval guilds, divulging the secrets of their profession only to those within it. These communities hate open research, and have responded with surprising vitriol to researchers who have found serious vulnerabilities in bicycle locks, combination safes (.pdf), master-key systems and many other security devices.

Researchers have received a similar reaction from other communities more used to secrecy than openness. Researchers -- sometimes young students -- who discovered and published flaws in copyright-protection schemes, voting-machine security and now wireless access cards have all suffered recriminations and sometimes lawsuits for not keeping the vulnerabilities secret. When Christopher Soghoian created a website allowing people to print fake airline boarding passes, he got several unpleasant visits from the FBI.

This preference for secrecy comes from confusing a vulnerability with information about that vulnerability. Using secrecy as a security measure is fundamentally fragile. It assumes that the bad guys don't do their own security research. It assumes that no one else will find the same vulnerability. It assumes that information won't leak out even if the research results are suppressed. These assumptions are all incorrect.

The problem isn't the researchers; it's the products themselves. Companies will only design security as good as what their customers know to ask for. Full disclosure helps customers evaluate the security of the products they buy, and educates them in how to ask for better security. The Dutch court got it exactly right when it wrote: "Damage to NXP is not the result of the publication of the article but of the production and sale of a chip that appears to have shortcomings."

In a world of forced secrecy, vendors make inflated claims about their products, vulnerabilities don't get fixed, and customers are no wiser. Security research is stifled, and security technology doesn't improve. The only beneficiaries are the bad guys.

If you'll forgive the analogy, the ethics of full disclosure parallel the ethics of not paying kidnapping ransoms. We all know why we don't pay kidnappers: It encourages more kidnappings. Yet in every kidnapping case, there's someone -- a spouse, a parent, an employer -- with a good reason why, in this one case, we should make an exception.

The reason we want researchers to publish vulnerabilities is because that's how security improves. But in every case there's someone -- the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority, the locksmiths, an election machine manufacturer -- who argues that, in this one case, we should make an exception.

We shouldn't. The benefits of responsibly publishing attacks greatly outweigh the potential harm. Disclosure encourages companies to build security properly rather than relying on shoddy design and secrecy, and discourages them from promising security based on their ability to threaten researchers. It's how we learn about security, and how we improve future security.

---

Bruce Schneier is Chief Security Technology Officer of BT Global Services and author of Beyond Fear: Thinking Sensibly About Security in an Uncertain World. You can read more of his writings on his website.


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Aug. 21, 1986: Volcanic Lake Explodes, Killing Thousands [21 Aug 2008|04:00am]

1986: A deadly cloud of carbon dioxide sweeps down the slopes of an African volcano, smothering more than 1,700 people.

Volcanoes can kill in many ways, but this one is pretty weird. A volcanic lake in the West African nation of Cameroon degassed violently (you could say it burped, or worse) in the middle of the night. Carbon dioxide is odorless and heavier than air. Most of the victims died in their sleep.

Lake Nyos sits in the crater of a volcano that hadn't erupted in centuries ... and probably didn't actually erupt the night of Aug. 21, 1986.

Magma deep underneath the lake releases carbon dioxide into its depths. Lake Nyos is 690-feet deep, enough for the water pressure to keep the CO2 dissolved in the lake water, rather than letting it bubble up and escape to the surface. And the crater rim towers above the lake, blocking winds which could otherwise stir the surface and create convection currents that would circulate the deep, CO2-saturated water upward to areas of lower pressure. The lack of seasonal variation less than seven degrees north of the equator also contributes to the lake's placidity.

Volcanic rumbling or other seismic activity could have triggered the sudden release of the gas that deadly night, but there's no record of any tremors and no evidence that anything shook off the shelves of homes in nearby villages. It's possible the gas at the lake's bottom just got so concentrated that even under pressure it came out of solution and formed bubbles. Once the bubbles started rising, a "chimney effect" would have rapidly siphoned huge amounts of gas to the surface.

The gas burst through the surface with a rumble, generating a giant wave that scoured vegetation from the shores. The CO2 cloud was at least 300-feet high, because it suffocated cattle on hillsides that far above lake level. Iron from the deep water oxidized and stained the lake waters with rust.

Then the gas crept down the mountain valleys, invading homes. It extinguished oil lamps and suffocated people in their sleep. Some who were awakened by the loud gas bubble stood up and lived, because their heads were above the invisible gas near the ground. But many who went outside paid with their lives.

Few survived. Those from neighboring villages who discovered the devastation recalled with terror the legends about evil demons living in mountain lakes.

Had this happened before? Yes, at least on a smaller scale. A CO2 cloud released by Lake Monoun, about 60 miles south, killed 37 people two years earlier. (The much larger Lake Kivu -- on the Congo-Rwanda border -- harbors not only carbon dioxide, but methane, in its depths.) And Cameroonians frequently find frogs suffocated by CO2 in low-lying mud puddles.

Engineers hope to prevent a recurrence of the tragedy by continuously degassing Lake Nyos. They've sunk a pipe from a floating platform into the depths of the lake. It shoots a geyser of carbonated water high into the air.

Source: Google Earth; National Geographic, September 1987


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Review: Fashioning Technology Explains Knitting, LEDs [21 Aug 2008|12:00am]
The latest book from O'Reilly and Make Magazine explores the fertile intersection of crafting and hardware hacking: Think knitting, plus circuit boards and LEDs.
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How to Administer an Epinephrine Shot [20 Aug 2008|08:52pm]
The worst time to find out you're highly allergic to something is when your throat suddenly starts to swell shut. Slow the onset of anaphylactic shock by delivering a quick injection of epinephrine as a first aid measure. Modern devices make it easy, but it's best to be prepared, so learn the basics now by following our guide.
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Design Ahead of the Curve With CSS 3 [20 Aug 2008|11:00pm]
The CSS 3 specification is not yet complete, but today's browsers aren't waiting by the sidelines to embed its rich features. Safari, Opera and Firefox are on board, so why aren't you? Start using the cool new CSS 3 features, like rounded corners, today. We'll show you how.
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Flash Creators Jump Into Energy-Savings Game [20 Aug 2008|10:12pm]
Greenbox, a startup founded by the creators of Flash, announce the roll-out of its power-consumption-monitoring application. Installed along with networked electrical meters to a limited number of homes by Oklahoma Gas and Electric, the new trial is Greenbox's first move into a market that's quickly become crowded with competitors like Tendril, Agilewaves and DIY Kyoto.
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Judge: Copyright Owners Must Consider 'Fair Use' Before Sending Takedown Notice [20 Aug 2008|10:21pm]
A federal judge rules that copyright owners must first consider "fair use" before sending takedown notices to online video-sharing sites like YouTube requiring removal of clips. Universal Music argued it could send a takedown notice even if a posting qualified as a fair use of a copyright.
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Facebook Ads to Turn Friends Into Marketers [20 Aug 2008|08:38pm]
Facebook's new social ads could put friends in the uncomfortable position of marketing products that they may not even be aware they're selling.
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Techies Open Up Fantasy Sports Field [20 Aug 2008|08:38pm]
Open source is coming to a fantasy football field near you. A slew of tech veterans think fantasy sports could be the next killer app for sports online, driven by open APIs.
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Could Satellite TV Get Creamed by Cable? [20 Aug 2008|08:30pm]
Satellite-TV providers are in a sticky position. At a time when pay-TV services are supposed to be growing, Dish Network is losing subscribers. The company faces several industry-wide challenges, including heightened competition from cable operators.
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Two Wheels, Zero Emissions and Loads of Fun [20 Aug 2008|08:07pm]
Zero Motorcycles has built an all-electric motocrosser that looks and rides like a real bike, even if it costs a whole lot more. Next up? A street version.
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Palm Needs a Savior, and Treo Pro Won't Cut It [20 Aug 2008|07:55pm]
Palm's just-announced Treo Pro is an attractive device -- but it's just a stopgap measure; Palm is placing its big bet on a revolutionary product still to come. It better work: The company is running out of chances, an analyst says.
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The Fat That Can Make You Thin [20 Aug 2008|07:05pm]
Scientists discovered two different genes that can turn white fat into brown fat, which helps burn calories. The discovery could lead to a new way to stay thin.
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Copy and Paste on iPhone Here at Last [20 Aug 2008|07:30pm]
According to the gripes of iPhone users, if there's anything missing from the basic functionality of Apple's mobile OS, it's the lack of copy and paste. Luckily, developer Zac White has programmed around Apple restrictions and provided a technically legal framework for iPhone developers and enabled copy and paste at last. Now, we wait until we hear what Apple has to say about it.
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Analysis: FCC Comcast Order is Open Invitation to Internet Filtering [20 Aug 2008|07:53pm]
The Federal Communications Commission officially sanctions Comcast for throttling BitTorrent traffick, which the internet service provider denies. The 67-page order, however, is a clear endorsement of internet filtering so long as it is does not single out a user protocols.
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