Monthly Archive for September, 2005

Exploit code released for Firefox vulnerability

According to Brian Krebs blog on the Washington Post, exploit code has been released for the latest Firefox and Netscape vulnerability. To protect yourself against this code either 1) buy a Mac or 2) update your version of Firefox to the latest version - available here.

The exploit code appears to allow an attacker to take remote control of infected PCs - it is interesting to see a serious exploit for Firefox being released, finally - we are far more used to seeing these kinds of exploits being released for internet Explorer!

Lawrence Lessig backs Google Print

I read recently on Google’s blog that Google is being sued by the Author’s Guild for “massive copyright infringement” because of Google’s Google Print project. Google Print aims to index book content from publishers and libraries so that they can be found in your Google search results.

Sound like copyright infringement? Well, Google justifies it by saying:

The use we make of all the books we scan through the Library Project is fully consistent with both the fair use doctrine under U.S. copyright law and the principles underlying copyright law itself, which allow everything from parodies to excerpts in book reviews.

Also, Google doesn’t show the whole book contents in the search results - it simply shows:

a brief snippet of text where their search term appears, along with basic bibliographic information and several links to online booksellers and libraries

Now Lawrence Lessig has weighed in behind Google’s argument. In a post on his blog today he said:

Google Print could be the most important contribution to the spread of knowledge since Jefferson dreamed of national libraries. It is an astonishing opportunity to revive our cultural past, and make it accessible. Sure, Google will profit from it. Good for them. But if the law requires Google (or anyone else) to ask permission before they make knowledge available like this, then Google Print can’t exist. Given the total mess of copyright records, there is absolutely no way to enable this sort of access to our past while asking permission of authors up front. Or at least, even if Google could afford that cost, no one else could.

Google’s use is fair use. It would be in any case, but the total disaster of a property system that the Copyright Office has produced reinforces the conclusion that Google’s use is fair use.

Hard to argue with that, isn’t it? I wonder if the Author’s Guild have really thought this through!

UPDATE:
I see the BBC has picked up this story as well

IT@Cork Annual Conference program announced

The IT@Cork Annual Conference program has been announced. The theme for the conference is Breaking the Barriers and the opening talk, Blogging for Business, is being given by Robert Scoble. Other speakers include Charles Handy, Joe Gantly and Paul O’Callaghan.

There will be a parallel Technical Forum in the afternoon - delegates can choose to only attend this part of the event or can register for the whole day. Speaking at the Technical Forum is Amanda Waite of Sun and Robert Scoble.

We will be having a bloggers dinner with Robert Scoble that evening - you can sign up for the bloggers dinner here.

UPDATE:
You can now sign up for the IT@Cork Annual Conference on the conference web page - look for the “Register” link just above the Breaking the Barriers title.

iTunes 5.01 released

Apple have just released the latest version of their iTunes software - iTunes 5.01

According to Software Update:

iTunes 5 features a new even more powerful instant search, including the new Search Bar which helps you find exactly what you are looking for in iTunes or from among 2 million songs on the Music Store, folders for organizing playlists, and new Parental Controls for music, music sharing and podcasts. iTunes 5.0.1 features several stability improvements over iTunes 5.

Hopefully this update fixes the bug Michael discussed this morning.

Download it from the Apple iTunes download page or via Software Update

Palm waving goodbye to its OS?

Stephen Wildstrom, writing in BusinessWeek Online today reports that Palm will soon announce a Treo powered not by Palm OS software but by Microsoft’s Windows Mobile 5!

Palm sold its stake in the Palm OS software over the last number of years so it can now be agnostic about its choice of OS for the Treo. Palm will still use Palm OS for the Zire, Tungsten, and LifeDrive PDA models but

the market for these nonphone handhelds has been declining for several years, as wireless handsets take up more of their functions.

Palm say, according to Wildstrom, that they will sell both Palm OS and Windows Treos for the indefinite future, however, if history teaches us anything, it is that Microsoft’s software is likely to dominate the market over time.

How to speed up Firefox

Firefox is a great browser so, when I came across an article outlining how to make Firefox even better by speeding it up I had to pass it along!

The steps involved are really straightforward -

  1. You type “about:config” into the address bar and press return
  2. You change “network.http.pipelining” to “true” (scroll down or use the filter to find it)
  3. You change “network.http.proxy.pipelining” to “true”
  4. Change “network.http.pipelining.maxrequests” to some number like 30 (this means it will make 30 requests simultaneously) and finally
  5. Right-click anywhere and select New-> Integer. Name it “nglayout.initialpaint.delay” and set its value to “0″ (This sets the amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it receives to 0).

Be aware that this trick only works if you are on a broadband connection - dial-up users are still stuck with a slow connection I’m afraid!

Via Podz




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