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Kafka alive and well, and working for the NYPD
Posted By: Gary
Emmanuel Goldstein, one of the guiding forces behind the hacker magazine 2600, was arrested and detained for over 33 hours during the RNC, for doing nothing more than covering protests which are supposed to be every American citizen's right. The story of his arrest, and the long, slow, grinding process of being processed through the “justice” system is available over at
2600.
[Read More!]
Nature's take on Bush V. Kerry
Posted By: peg
By Nature, of course, I mean the
the magazine. In a (mostly) free area the position of the candidates on various scientific issues is discussed, from stem cells to climate change to nuclear waste and weapons. Also, they rehearse the Bush administration's apparent manipulation of science for its own ends.
Those needing additional grist for the mill can find it in the
specials - us election page.
UTX OTARD UPDATE
Posted By: Harold
I'm informed by my contacts that the FCC has traditionally exempted colleges and universities from OTARD on the grounds that the relationship is not a standard landlord/tenant relationship. As a consequence, the OTARD declaratory ruling does not apply to UTX or other dormitory situations. The June 24, 2004 ruling did not change any existing OTARD exemptions. It merely clarified that OTARD applied to unlicensed services as well as licensed services.
Looks like the UTX policy is therefore legal. Whether it is wise or not is an entirely different question, and not for yr hmbl obdnt to judge.
Stay tuned . . . .
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: UTX, OTARD, UH-OH!
Posted By: Harold
As readers of Slashdot may have seen,
The University of Texas at Dallas has prohibitted students in certain dorms from setting up wireless access points. If you read the
policy, you will find out that the University is not simply amending its acceptable use policy (AUP), it prohibits setting up access points using residential DSL or cable.
Rather than break into the raging debate in the comments on how this policy meshes (as it were) with the
FCC's recent ruling prohibiting landlords from mandating such things, I'll use Wetmachine to say what I want (but feel free to refer anyone from Slashdot over here to our humble corner of the internet if they would like to hear from a lawyer who dabbles in such things).
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I got enough technoparanoia on earth
Posted By: John
Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sausage Factory: Indy Media Centers Harassed by Feds?
Posted By: Harold
The Independent Media Centers got started after the mainstream press gave very corporate/globalization friendly coverage of the protests around the WTO meeting in 1999 that kicked off the anti-globalization movement.
IMCs frequently provide on the spot coverage of anti-globalization events which the archive and distrbute via streaming media.
NY IndyMedia
reports that the FBI and Secret Service have subpeonaed information about who posted a list of RNC delegates.
While I cannot claim direct experience with the FBI harrasment of the civil rights movement in the name of the struggle against communism, I know enough about history to be damned sensitive to the first sign I'm repeating it.
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The RFID Privacy Questions Continue
Posted By: Harold
USA Today has a story
about how a uniform supply company is using its RFID tag uniforms. The company scoffs at the idea that it is tracking individual workers. As for me, I ain't laughin'.
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Tales of the Sausage Factory: Tales of the Sauasage Factory: Delay in Unlicensed in Broadcast Bands
Posted By: Harold
'Lo all. I'm back from vacation which included mud, wireless connectivity, poetry on the field of battle, and more mud. Eventually, I'll get the mud dried out and have more to say about the real cool Community Wireless Networking summit I attended. But first, some breaking wireless news.
The FCC has granted a
90-day extension for comment in the proceeding to allow unlicensed activity in the broadcast bands. The IEEE and the broadcasters had asked for a 6-month delay. I have some rather harsh words about the IEEE and its all too usual combination of hubris and political naivette that remind me way too much of ICANN and will no doubt get me in trouble. But what the heck?
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File sharing network operators not responsible for illegal use
Posted By: Stearns
Says US appeals court decision:
cbsnews.com
and
money.cnn.com
Orson coming to your kitchen by way of your TV
Posted By: John
Another
reason I want to set my wayback machine to about 1890. (And another reason I'm glad we got rid of television in my house.) From the story:
Sealey said advertisers would gain an unprecedented ability to see how their spending affected sales, especially as retailers adopt radio-frequency identification. RFID, the system that could replace bar coding, tracks the movement of individual products such as groceries from a few feet away.
In about five years, Ad-ID and RFID could be used together, he said.
“Then we could measure whether we delivered the commercial to you, and, as I am monitoring your pantry, whether you bought the product, too,” he said.
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