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Electronic Frontier Foundation Defends Fair Use with the Takedown Hall of Shame

takedownhallofshame.pngThe Electronic Frontier Foundation has created the Takedown Hall of Shame as part of its No Downtime for Free Speech Campaign to showcase what it believes are the worst takedown requests that used “bogus copyright claims or other spurious legal threats”. EFF Senior Staff Attorney Corynne McSherry says that the the content showcased on the site qualified as fair use, but that this did not stop rights holders from attempting to have the content removed.

Hall of Shame “honorees”, as the EFF refers to them, include National Public Radio, who the EFF claims attempted to remove a YouTube video that was critical of same-sex marriage because it used a portion of an interview from NPR’s program All Things Considered, Ralph Lauren, who it claims sent takedown requests to the ISPs of Photoshop Disasters and Boing Boing after both sites posted a picture of a Ralph Lauren ad, and Diebold, who it claims attempted to silence discussion about the security of its e-voting machines following a leak of internal e-mails by sending cease-and-desist letters to ISPs under the DMCA.

Many of the takedown requests are filed under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which ISPs act on without checking their validity because they fear litigation, according to the EFF. The EFF believes that the DMCA has instead become a tool that corporations use to remove content that is unfavorable to them.

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Firefox 3.5.4 Released

firefoxlogo.pngFirefox 3.5.4 has been released. It is a minor update that targets security and stability issues rather than adding new features. The update fixes:

  • “Several security issues.
  • Fixed several stability issues.
  • Added the ability to re-submit crash reports (bug 378528)
  • After using Clear Recent History some SSL sites would not load all images and styles without pressing reload (see bug 480619)”.

You can also view the complete list of security vulnerabilities that the update fixes, as well as a complete list of changes included in the update.
If you have not been prompted to update, you can also manually download the update from Firefox’s website.

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Android 2.0 Support Added in Android SDK

androidrl.jpgSupport for Android 2.0, also known as Eclair, has been added to the Android SDK. Android 2.0 includes:

“new developer APIs for sync, Bluetooth, and a few other areas. Using the new sync, account manager and contacts APIs, you can write applications to enable users to sync their devices to various contact sources. You can also give users a faster way to communicate with others by embedding Quick Contact within your application. With the new Bluetooth API, you can now easily add peer-to-peer connectivity or gaming to your applications.”

A complete list of new features can be found on the Android developer website.

The latest version of Android SDK Tools, Revision 3, is also required to develop for Android 2.0.

It was also announced that there will be one minor version update after Android 2.0 toward the end of this year, which will be the final update for the year. Also, Android phones that run at resolutions of 800×480 and 854×480 will soon be released.

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No More New Apple Products in 2009

Apple told Gizmodo that its “holiday lineup is set”, meaning that there are likely to be no new Apple products announced this year. While this is not unexpected, as last week, Apple released a 27-inch iMac, a new Macbook design and the Magic Mouse for the holiday season, it does quell rumors about a tablet or six-core Mac Pro from Apple before the end of the year.

Rumors about a tablet from Apple have been abound all year and recently Bill Keller of The New York Times mentioned “the impending Apple slate” during his talk at Harvard University’s Nieman Journalism Lab, reviving rumors about the device.

Apple is also rumored to be testing the latest version of Intel’s Xeon CPU, a six-core version known as Gulftown, for inclusion in future Mac Pros. Gulftown will not be mass produced by Intel until Q2 in 2010, meaning that Apple may get to use the chips exclusively for a number of months if they include it in Mac Pros early next year.

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GeoCities Now Closed

geocitiesdown.pngYahoo announced in April that it will be shutting GeoCities down on 26 October, although it missed that deadline by a day. Yesterday, I wrote a brief history of the GeoCities, from its start in 1995, to Yahoo purchasing the company in 1999 for $3.6 billion in stock, to the decline in visitors the service has been seeing in recent years. GeoCities provided a service that was once much needed at the time, free hosting and a tool with which to easily build webpages. In recent years, however, hosting has become inexpensive and GeoCities’s rudimentary PageBuilder has been superceded by easy to install and use software such as WordPress, Blogger and various content management systems. Still others are now looking to social networking sites to establish their Web presences, rather than creating their own websites.

Yahoo has now officially shut GeoCities down, with GeoCities sites no longer available.

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Facebook Allows You to Memorialize Accounts

Facebook has introduced a feature that allows you to “memorialize” the account of a deceased person. Doing so makes it so that only confirmed friends can view the person’s profile and removes the profile from search results. It also removes status updates and contact information from the account and makes it so that the account no longer appears in suggestions. The account’s Wall is, however, preserved, allowing friends and family to make posts.

Facebook has created a form where the death of a person can be reported. To prevent people from maliciously flagging accounts as belonging to a deceased person, proof of death, in the form of an obituary or news article, is required.

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Google Introduces Social Search

Google has released an experimental new search feature called Social Search. Enabling Social Search will place already-indexed public content from your extended social circle at the bottom of your search results. This allows you to see your friends’ content, as well as their friends’ content, even if it would normally not appear on the first page of search results, as they results are likely very relevant to you personally.

Google knows who your friends are by looking at the social networking accounts that you have added on your Google profile, the feeds you are subscribed to in Google Reader and your Gmail contacts. Google then expands your social circle by including the friends of your friends as part of your extended circle.

A Google account is required to use the feature, which can be enabled from Google Labs.

Google has made two videos to explain the feature:

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Use Google Voice With Your Existing Number

Previously, using Google Voice required the use of a new phone number, but now you are able to use a light version of the service with your existing number. When you initially set up GV it will now ask if you want to get a new number for the service or if you want to use your existing number. Choosing to use GV with your current number gives you access to the following features:

  • “Online, searchable voicemail
  • Free automated voicemail transcription
  • Custom voicemail greetings for different callers
  • Email and SMS notifications
  • Low-priced international calling”.

Some features are, however, only supported if you use a GV number:

  • “One number that reaches you on all your phones
  • SMS via email
  • Call screening
  • Listen In
  • Call recording
  • Conference calling
  • Call blocking”.

Google Voice is still invite-only, so if you do not have access to the service yet you will need to either sign up for an invite or get one from a friend. GV is only available in the United States and supports the following carriers: Alltel, AT&T, Cricket Wireless, MetroPCS, Sprint, T-Mobile, US Cellular or Verizon.

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Farewell, GeoCities

geocitiesclose.pngIn April, Yahoo announced that it was no longer accepting new registrations to GeoCities and that it would close the service on 26 October, almost eleven years after it had purchased it. That day has now come and Yahoo will be pulling the plug any minute now, at which point all free GeoCities accounts will be deleted. Yahoo is instead promoting Yahoo Web Hosting, a paid hosting solution that allows GeoCities users to retain their websites. The Internet Archive is working to archive as many GeoCities pages as possible before the service is shut down and has set up a webpage where you can check if your page has been archived and recommend it for the archive if it is not already included.

GeoCities, originally known as GeoPages, was started in 1995 by Beverly Hills Internet. The service allowed users to create websites for free which were organized into what BHI called “neighborhoods”, such as Hollywood, RodeoDrive or WallStreet, CapitolHill, Paris or SiliconValley. GeoCities went public in 1998, trading on the NASDAQ stock exchange, where it saw its stock value double on the first day of trading.

It was purchased by Yahoo in 1999, when GeoCities was the third most visited website, for $3.6 billion in stock. Yahoo originally updated the GeoCities’s terms of service to give it ownership over all content posted on GeoCities, but it later changed its policy due a backlash by users. It also removed the neighborhood system that GeoCities had since its beginning, instead allowing users to select a shorter vanity URL located at geocities.com/username. Yahoo also introduced premium accounts while downgrading the experience of free users. Premium users were given FTP access to their accounts, a feature that was previously available to everyone, as well as extra storage space.

Over ten years after it had purchased GeoCities, Yahoo announced on 23 April 2009 that it would be closing it on 26 October. GeoCities struggled to make a profit and recent years have been tough on the service. The popularization of social networks, the advent of cheap hosting and easy-to-install blogging software and an increase in web design standards have all made the service look outdated and have contributed to slipping visitor numbers. Still, the site has some sentimental value to many, myself included, whose first website was created and hosted on GeoCities. Its PageBuilder tool allowed you to build a website, albeit an ugly one compared to modern websites, without any knowledge of HTML and it provided free hosting at a time when hosting was otherwise expensive.

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BlackBerry Storm2 Coming Soon

blackberrystorm.jpgResearch in Motion has announced the BlackBerry Storm2, the successor to the BlackBerry Storm, which was released in December 2008. The Storm2 features some improvements which should make it more competitive in the touch-screen smartphone market.

The Storm2 delivers an electrical pulse when buttons are pressed, rather than having the entire screen move as the original Storm did. This greatly improves typing on the device’s virtual keyboard, according to The Wall Street Journal. The keyboard itself has also been improved, with a full QWERTY keyboard being displayed when the device is in vertical mode. The Storm2 will also support Wi-Fi, a feature which is standard for smartphones but, which the original Storm lacked.

According to the WSJ, the Storm2’s battery life is on par with other smartphones, with 5.5 hours of talk time. It also notes that the browser is still not as good as Safari on the iPhone and the BlackBerry’s interface does not work well on a touch screen, despite improvements since the original Storm.

According to Computerworld, the Storm2 will also have built-in GPS, 3G and Bluetooth support. Also included is a 3.2 megapixel camera with zoom, flash and video capture. It comes with 2GB of memory, which can be expanded up to 32GB with a micro-SD card.

Verizon, who will be the exclusive carrier of the phone in the United States as it was for the original Storm, has yet to announce a release date for the Storm2. It is, however, expected to be released sometime in November and be priced at around $200. Vodafone has announced that the Storm2 will be available in the UK starting on 26 October for free along with a two-year contract that costs £35 per month and comes with 600 minutes of talk time, unlimited SMS and unlimited Internet usage.

[Image from flickr.com/photos/nor048]

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