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Reporter Dan Simmons from the BBC’s technology show Click managed to break a mobile phone marketed as “unbreakable”, during a demonstration at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Original Article with Courtesy of: news.bbc.co.uk

Original Article with Courtesy of : news.bbc.co.uk

file sharing crackdown The move could have implications across Europe

The Irish Republic has begun a piracy crackdown which could see customers cut off from the net for a year.

The country’s biggest net firm Eircom has begun sending letters to those identified as illegal file-sharers.

It is the first nation to implement such a system. France is also planning to introduce a similar policy.

UK watchdog Ofcom is due to publish its code of conduct for how UK ISPs should deal with net pirates later this week.

 
Educational campaign

Eircom is the Republic’s largest internet service provider (ISP), accounting for around 40% of the market.

The Irish Recorded Music Association (Irma) has begun supplying Eircom with "thousands of IP addresses", from which the ISP will initially cross-reference about 50 per week to extract the physical address of identified net pirates.

Irma is employing net monitoring firm Dtecnet to trawl file-sharing sites and identify pirates.

It will look specifically for people who are sharing, rather than just downloading, content illegally.

Initially they will be sent a letter and a follow-up phone call from a new unit set up by Eircom to deal with the issue. They may also get a pop-up warning on their screen.

If they are identified a third time they will have their service withdrawn for a week and, if a fourth infringement occurs, will be cut off for a year.

"There is a strong educational element, it could be that customers have a security issue with their home wi-fi or they might not know what kids are doing online," said Eircom spokesman Paul Bradley.

The unit will also direct customers to legal alternatives.

"We are launching an online music service later this year," he added.

Court action

After three months the effect of the campaign will be assessed and, if necessary, tougher measures including permanent disconnection could be introduced.

"We don’t expect many people to get to phase 3 and we are a long way from looking at suspensions," said Dick Doyle, the director general of Irma.

The pilot scheme is the conclusion of a long-running dispute between Eircom and Irma.

It took the ISP to court in January 2009, saying it was not doing enough to protect the intellectual property of its members.

These include EMI, Sony, Universal and Warner.

The High Court ruled in Irma’s favour and a challenge, issued by the Irish Data Protection Commissioner, was also over-ruled earlier this year.

Irma plans to take other Irish ISPs to court. UPC, the country’s second largest ISP will be in court on 17 June and two smaller ISPs will receive summons later this week.

Mr Doyle believes the tough stance taken by Irma will have implications across Europe.

"The European Parliament has been talking about internet access as a basic human right. It absolutely is not. Intellectual property protection is a right," he said.

Article with Courtesy of: news.bbc.co.uk

The new smart watch and phone (sWaP) device which also records audio and video has a certain touch of James Bond about it.

At a UK retail price of £300, the watch is marketed as more of a gadget than a handset replacement.

Dan Simmons finds out the sWaP is versatile and has a good battery life, but asks if its double life is practical.

Atomic transistor, AFP Prof Simmons and her colleagues have swapped silicon atoms for phosphorusResearchers have shown off a transistor made from just seven atoms that could be used to create smaller, more powerful computers.

Transistors are tiny switches used as the building blocks of silicon chips.

If the new atomic transistor can be made in large numbers it could mean chips with components up to 100 times smaller than on existing processors.

The Australian creators of the transistor hope it is also a step towards a solid-state quantum computer.

The transistor is not the smallest ever created as two research groups have previously managed to produce working single-atom transistors.

However, the device is many times smaller than the components found in chips in contemporary computers. On chips where components are 22 nanometres in size, transistor gates are about 42 atoms across.

The working transistor was created by replacing seven atoms in a silicon crystal with phosphorus atoms.

“Now we have just demonstrated the world’s first electronic device in silicon systematically created on the scale of individual atoms,” said Professor Michelle Simmons, lead researcher on the project at the University of New South Wales.

Moore’s Law predicts that the amount of memory that can fit on a given area of silicon, for a fixed cost doubles every 12-18 months. The limit of this prediction is being tested as components get ever smaller and their computationally useful properties become less reliable.

If an entire chip could be made with every one of its billions of transistors made from the silicon crystals, it could mean an “exponential” leap in processing power, said Professor Simmons.

The researchers are a long way from a commercial process because the tiny transistor they created was handmade. The team used a scanning tunnelling microscope to move the phosphorus atoms into place.

The work on the tiny transistor is being carried out as part of a larger project to create a quantum computer.

The research team revealed their results in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.

Original Article with Courtesy of : news.bbc.co.uk

The FTC said the ISP helped funnel spam on to the internet Spam in e-mail inbox, BBCAn internet firm linked to many of the internet’s criminal gangs has been shut down.

The US Federal Trade Commission said Belize-based 3FN aided gangs that ran botnets, carried out phishing attacks and traded in images of child abuse.

The servers and net hardware of 3FN have been seized and are due to be sold off as the firm is dismantled.

The operators of 3FN must also pay back $1.08m (£750,000 ) they are reputed to have made by hosting criminal sites.

Servers seizedThe FTC began its legal action against 3FN in June 2009 charging that it was “actively colluding” with the web’s cyber criminals to distribute almost every type of malware and illegal content.

It was involved in distributing spyware, viruses and trojans, had a hand in many phishing schemes and helped gangs sell illegal images. It also acted as a discussion forum for many spammers.

In particular, said the FTC, the net firm worked with fraudsters who run botnets and helped them steal data by seeding hijacked computers with keyloggers. It maintained a library of more than 4500 malicious programs that could pilfer data from hijacked PCs.

In June last year, the FTC used an injunction to cut 3FN off from other hosting providers and sever its connections to the net.

Now the FTC has gone a step further and won a court order that will see the company stop trading and its hardware confiscated. The FBI has been ordered to carry out the shut down and seizure operation.

3FN operated under a number of aliases including Pricewert LLC, 3FN.net, Triple Fiber Network, APS Telecom and APX Telecom.

Original Article with Courtesy of :  news.bbc.co.uk

silouthette of someone in front of facebook sign Facebook says its members will have simplified user settings soon

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has admitted that Facebook “missed the mark” over recent privacy concerns.

In a column in the Washington Post newspaper, he said the social network would soon make changes to users’ privacy options.

The move may placate some of the growing band of members who had pledged to quit the social network on 31 May.

“Sometimes we move too fast – and after listening to recent concerns, we’re responding,” wrote Mr Zuckerberg.

“The biggest message we have heard recently is that people want easier control over their information.

“Simply put, many of you thought our controls were too complex. Our intention was to give you lots of granular controls; but that may not have been what many of you wanted. We just missed the mark,” he wrote.

The technology blogger Robert Scoble also published, with permission, an e-mail exchange with Mr Zuckerberg from the weekend, in which the Facebook CEO admitted “we’ve made a bunch of mistakes”.

Privacy concerns

Facebook has faced increasing criticism from US civil liberties advocates, consumer groups and lawmakers. European Union data protection officials described recent privacy changes as “unacceptable”.

Mr Zuckerberg’s admission also comes after Facebook said on Friday 21 May that it had changed how it shared data with advertisers on the site.

The Wall Street Journal had highlighted how under certain circumstances Facebook had been sending the user name or ID of the person clicking on an advert to the relevant advertiser.

“We fixed this case as soon as we heard about it,” a Facebook spokesperson told the Wall Street Journal.

Mr Zuckerberg did not offer a date on which the new settings would be implemented, but said the social network was “working hard to make these changes available as soon as possible”.

However, it remains to be seen whether Facebook has done enough to change the minds of a growing band of users who had said they would quit the social network.

The quitfacebookday website records that more than 13,500 Facebook members have committed to deleting their profiles on 31 May 2010.

Article with Courtesy of: news.bbc.co.uk
Facebook Logo

The controversy over Facebook’s privacy policy is helping those developing alternatives to the social network.

Funding and users are flowing to services that claim to put members in charge of their personal data.

The rivals range from start-ups to more established firms working on the specifications for an ecosystem of open social networks.

Experts say Facebook may have little to worry about, despite 11,000 people pledging to quit Facebook on 31 May.

“Nobody has reached anything like critical mass in the same social platform area,” said Lee Bryant, from social technology consultancy Headshift.

“Facebook is like an entire web operating system,” he said.

Old rivals

There are already many well-established alternatives to Facebook.

Fans of the microblogging service Twitter might argue that it is poised to steal the site’s crown. It entered the world’s top 100 websites only last year, and is now sitting around tenth position globally, according to Alexa, a web information company.

But Twitter is more a micro-blogging site than a social network, where friends follow each other’s daily activities by default.

Alongside are a whole host of other early high profile innovators in social networking.

But many, including Bebo, Friendster and Myspace have seen their popularity decline in the last 24 months. None of these are still in Alexa’s global top 20.

The founders of Diaspora The Diaspora team hopes to change social networking Young upstarts

The latest round of privacy issues with Facebook has provoked considerable interest in some more embryonic social network projects.

Mr Bryant said: “Many people are looking to Diaspora as a new model – something which is standards-based, open-source and distributed.”

Diaspora was founded in early May year by four New York University students who aim to create “the privacy aware, personally controlled, do-it-all distributed open-source social network”.

It also caught the eye of investors on the Kickstarter website, which aims to find funding for creative projects. In just a few weeks, the Diaspora team has received pledges of $175,000 (£122,000). They started out asking for just $10,000.

Max Salzberg, one of the founders, told BBC News: “Facebook is not what we are going after.

“We are going after the idea there are all these centralised services where people are giving up their personal information. We want to put users back in control of what they share.”

But Diaspora’s software is still in the early stages of development, and it’s not yet clear exactly where the project might go.

Another fledgling social network is OneSocialWeb that has the backing of mobile giant Vodafone.

Its designer, Alard Weisscher, told BBC News “We believe social networking is becoming so important … that users should have the right to choose their provider, be able to switch between providers … whilst owning and being in full control of their data.”

Common standards

Mr Weisscher said that rather than try to create a new social network, the OneSocialWeb team is trying to define a common language, called protocols, for communication between social networks.

This is an idea common to many such projects.

Michael Chisari founded Appleseed in 2004, to try and build a simple social network. The question he pondered at the time was “If two sites were running my software, why couldn’t they interact?”

Like Diaspora, Appleseed’s approach is one of a growing band of “distributed social networking” projects, where anybody can set up a social network, and the different systems should be able to interact with each other.

Mr Chisari said: “I compare it to the 1990′s, when AOL and CompuServe (early Internet Service Providers) were both very popular, but were ‘walled gardens’”.

“Users on AOL could only e-mail other AOL users, same with CompuServe. Then, e-mail started getting popular and some people switched, but it forced people to ask why they were being walled off,” he said.

Mr Chisari pointed out that both AOL and Compuserve “were forced to open up … so that their users could participate with the rest of the world.”

Both companies have since faded considerably, and Mr Bryant at Headshift thinks something similar might happen at Facebook: “It’s a real and present danger. What people are looking for as a sign of that is a flocking behaviour.

“It was a flocking behaviour that built Facebook, and it’s a flock of people saying they’re going to a different social network that could lead to its decline.”

Competing standards

So can the new social networks establish a set of standards that they all stick to?

Mr Bryant said it is a sensible goal in the long term. “But over the short term, it will be a real battle.”

The founder of Appleseed has discussed universal standards with OneSocialWeb, because the software he developed has some similarities to their social networking language.

But well-funded Diaspora has indicated that it might use its cash pile to implement a different set of open standards called OStatus.

Those are being developed in part by yet another potential rival to Facebook.

That company is called StatusNet, which itself has created social networking software in use by 25,000 sites, with more than 1.5 million user accounts, according to Evan Prodromou, the company’s head.

“Any StatusNet site lets people from other (OStatus standards-compliant) sites follow the users there”, he said.

“The open protocols that we use mean our software works with much higher-profile services, like Google Buzz, Posterous, LiveJournal, WordPress, and Tumblr.”

Is there any chance that Facebook might sign up to such an open model as well, just as AOL and Compuserve did with E-mail?

Mr Bryant from Headshift thinks not: “The valuations we’ve seen for rounds of investment in Facebook mean they have to focus on making money soon.

“If they go down the open standards route, they would lose much of the lock-in that gives them value,” he said.

Closed meeting

And any such move would also assume that a common, open language can be established in the first place.

According to Mr Prodromou from StatusNet, a “federated social web summit” is planned in July to try and build momentum for one around OStatus standards.

However, he said, it would be “invite-only”.

Article with Courtesy of: news.bbc.co.uk

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