Shared posts

07 May 21:31

EFF updates the Takedown Hall of Shame

by Cory Doctorow

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has published its latest "Takedown Hall of Shame" installment, listing three companies that used baseless and stupid legal threats to censor the Internet. The current crop includes Kern's Kitchen in Louisville, which claims a trademark on the common term "Derby Pie" and threatens bloggers who post their family recipes for the classic desert -- they also target WordPress.com for their threats (one victim changed the name of the recipe to "Mean Spirited Censorship Pie).

Another inductee is Time Warner Cable, who went after a critic who put up a site making fun of the company's terrible customer service, trying to get its YouTube, Twitter and other social media sites taken down.

Finally, there's Fox, which earned a place in the Hall of Shame by sending out fraudulent takedown notices over my bestselling novel Homeland, swearing on pain of perjury that it represented me (it doesn't).

Takedown Hall of Shame Inductions, May 2013

    


07 May 19:35

U.S. Govt. Attack on Megaupload Bears Hallmarks of ‘Digital Gitmo’

by Robert Amsterdam

Digital Gitmo, by Robert Amsterdam

New Zealand is celebrated worldwide for its human rights. Renowned as being the first country in the world to grant suffrage to women in 1893, the first nation to stand up to the United States and ban nuclear-powered ships from her harbors in 1984, the Kiwis have never backed down from difficult decisions.

robertamsterdamThat’s why it’s particularly difficult to see the United States come forward to their ally New Zealand, and purposefully distort facts, withhold evidence, and make the government an accomplice in a massive violation of rights during the crackdown against my client, Kim Dotcom.

Perhaps once considered a beacon for values of personal liberty, in more recent years, the reputation of the United States on rights has sunk to new lows. Following two grinding wars of the George W. Bush era, hopes were high for an improvement. Unfortunately that hasn’t been the case under President Barack Obama, as drone strikes have escalated completely beyond anyone’s imagination, while a massive hunger strike of more than 130 prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, some of them being force fed through nasal tubes, has virtually eliminated the U.S. administration’s ability to speak about international law in any capacity.

However it’s a mistake to think that the failure to close Gitmo is simply an aberration. It represents an attitude among a handful of key U.S. officials, from President Obama to Vice President Joe Biden as well as Attorney General Eric Holder – who happens to be visiting New Zealand this week – that the rights of certain people and businesses can be suspended at their choosing.

The flagrant overreach of the U.S. attack against Megaupload bears all the hallmarks of a digital Gitmo.

Digital Gitmo contains no bars, no barbwire, and no guards. What it does share in common is a total absence of rule of law; the type of exceptional treatment and arbitrary deprivations of rights that are usually reserved for terrorism and threats to national security. Digital Gitmo belongs to no single nation; instead it is a shared perception that the rights of a very small group of corporate and government interests are more important than the rights of everyone else. The deprivation of rights is seen as convenient to the state, which has unburdened itself from the obligation of actually having to prove its case before the courts of law.

But what purpose does the law serve if such frequent exceptions are made?

It’s a fact that U.S. prosecutors misled both the defendants as well as the government of New Zealand. The search warrants were fraudulently obtained, and the spying against Dotcom and other individuals was carried out illegally. An entire business, along with the rightfully owned property of millions of users was stolen before Megaupload or Kim Dotcom were even given one chance to defend themselves in court. Essentially, the U.S. prosecutors made specific decisions to deprive Megaupload and Kim Dotcom of the normal rights of defense, including an absurd worldwide asset seizure to prevent them from retaining defense counsel.

Earlier today the defense team for Kim Dotcom released a new white paper detailing the unlawful handling of this case, and highlighting the political motivations it served by guaranteeing the continuation of campaign financing by the ‘Hollywood lobby,’ including the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), among others. When the draconian Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) failed – a piece of legislation which would have granted Washington worldwide control over the content of the Internet – the Hollywood lobby openly threatened to cut off campaign financing unless the Obama administration did something dramatic to service these special interests.

What they chose to do was to destroy Megaupload, even though they had to break the law to do it.

Consider for example the fact that Dotcom and his family were planning to travel to the United States only a few months after the chosen date of the raid. The putative defendant had made firm travel plans that the FBI knew about from their illegal spying. He would have stepped off the plane right into U.S. jurisdiction – so why did they deploy the Government Communications Security Bureau (GCSB), two attack helicopters, dozens of armed men, and attack dogs, risking the life of his pregnant wife and her unborn twins while also creating an unnecessary extradition challenge?

The Americans did not share their alleged evidence with New Zealand, and the New Zealand officials appeared to not care. Judging by their haste and willful disregard of local and international law, the authorities appeared only too enthusiastic to be used by the FBI in a raid that was specifically designed to create the impression that this was some kind of dangerous criminal gang.

Was the government of New Zealand particularly eager to assist the U.S. in this illegal campaign because it would please Hollywood? Already we have seen this government generously deliver more than $120 million to the film studios in the form of tax breaks, and has even gone to far as to create special laws to suspend labor rights and allow them to employ New Zealanders at exploitatively low wages.

The Prime Minister of New Zealand has already publicly apologized to Dotcom for trampling over his rights, but unfortunately, now the GCSB’s reaction is to call for an expansion of their spying powers over Kiwi citizens. The facts detailed in the white paper should alarm each and every citizen of this country. Not only does this case set a negative precedent for Washington’s ability to unilaterally censor the global Internet, it carries dark overtones for more authoritarian-inclined nations who can now use the same reasoning to remove content or services or ideas that find “troubling.”

It’s possible that some readers of this publication may not like the larger-than-life excesses of Kim Dotcom, or alternatively, they may not understand him. But that is not sufficient reason for him to have fewer rights of defense than anyone else.

When New Zealand rejected nuclear power and took other stands like rights for same-sex marriage, it did not do so because these issues were universally popular. It did so because it was right.

If reasonable people are willing to read this white paper and fairly consider the facts presented, a real discussion can begin. We do not need to be given anything – all we want is a fair fight for our rights, because a fair fight is one that we can win.

Robert Amsterdam is founding partner of the international law firm Amsterdam & Partners LLP, with offices in London, United Kingdom and Washington, DC. His company is currently working alongside the Rothken Law Firm as they defend Megaupload, Kim Dotcom, and his associates in their ongoing legal battle with the United States and New Zealand governments.

Source: U.S. Govt. Attack on Megaupload Bears Hallmarks of ‘Digital Gitmo’

07 May 19:32

BitTorrent goes legit with new ‘gated’ file format

by Adrianne Jeffries
Dj_kaskade_large

DJ Kaskade.

Kazaa. Limewire. Napster. There are hardly any widely used filesharing sites that didn't try to "go legit" at some point after being dinged for facilitating piracy. It doesn’t usually work. Napster, for example, no longer exists; it was nearly bought by a porn company before it was acquired by Roxio and then sold to Best Buy, which de-branded it and merged it with the paid service Rhapsody. So could BitTorrent, the current king of peer-to-peer filesharing, succeed where the first generation failed?

BitTorrent, Inc., which invented BitTorrent and owns the most popular client, is releasing a version of the torrent file called the BitTorrent Bundle. The Bundle format allows creators to require an action before users can...

Continue reading…

07 May 19:21

Ray Harryhausen (1920 - 2013)

by Mark Frauenfelder

One of the greats is gone today. Thanks for the wonderful movies, Ray!

The Harryhausen family regret to announce the death of Ray Harryhausen, Visual Effects pioneer and stop-motion model animator. He was a multi-award winner which includes a special Oscar and BAFTA. Ray’s influence on today’s film makers was enormous, with luminaries; Steven Spielberg, James Cameron, Peter Jackson, George Lucas, John Landis and the UK’s own Nick Park have cited Harryhausen as being the man whose work inspired their own creations.

Harryhausen’s fascination with animated models began when he first saw Willis O’Brien’s creations in KING KONG with his boyhood friend, the author Ray Bradbury in 1933, and he made his first foray into filmmaking in 1935 with home-movies that featured his youthful attempts at model animation. Over the period of the next 46 years, he made some of the genres best known movies – MIGHTY JOE YOUNG (1949), IT CAME FROM BENEATH THE SEA (1955), 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH (1957), MYSTERIUOUS ISLAND (1961), ONE MILLION YEARS B.C. (1966), THER VALLEY OF GWANGI (1969), three films based on the adventures of SINBAD and CLASH OF THE TITANS (1981). He is perhaps best remembered for his extraordinary animation of seven skeletons in JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS (1963) which took him three months to film.

Harryhausen’s genius was in being able to bring his models alive. Whether they were prehistoric dinosaurs or mythological creatures, in Ray’s hands they were no longer puppets but became instead characters in their own right, just as important as the actors they played against and in most cases even more so.

Raymond Frederick Harryhausen, Born: Los Angeles 29th June 1920, Died: London 7th May 2013

    


07 May 12:38

27 Best (And 2 WTF) New Android Apps And Live Wallpapers From The Last 2 Weeks (4/25/13 - 5/6/13)

by Jeremiah Rice

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications, games, and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous 2 weeks or so.

This is the app roundup. The game roundup from this week can be found here.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the AppBrain widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.

Looking for the previous roundup editions? Find them here.

Featured App

3CX Mobile Device Manager

Today's roundup is brought to you by 3CX Mobile Device Manager. The app is designed as an employee, device, and inventory tracking service, allowing employers to keep a fast and accurate look at where all their mobile devices are at any given time.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

27 Best (And 2 WTF) New Android Apps And Live Wallpapers From The Last 2 Weeks (4/25/13 - 5/6/13) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.



07 May 12:37

Senate passes nationwide online sales tax bill

by Adi Robertson
Amazon-box-logo-stock-2_1020_large

The US Senate has approved a bill that could one day spell the end of sales tax-free online purchases. The Marketplace Fairness Act of 2013, which the Senate symbolically supported earlier this year and has now passed by a margin of 69 to 27, will give states the authority to collect sales tax from online storefronts, regardless of whether the sellers have a physical presence in the state. Technically, citizens are supposed to estimate and pay internet sales tax on their annual returns, but this is rarely done, leading states to eye Amazon or other sellers as a prime source of uncollected tax revenue.

This bill is a centralized effort to address something states have been working on for years, coming at a time when the online market is...

Continue reading…

07 May 12:26

New Man Of Steel TV Spot Online

New Man Of Steel TV Spot Online

Plus score snippets and new poster

We’re just over a month away from the release of Man Of Steel, and the marketing is kicking into Action Mode with this new TV spot crammed full of big-scale destruction, though hopefully not every moment from the movie. Unless you’re on a trailer-free diet, take a look below. 

Based on the most recent trailer and other ads, it appears we’re in for an all-action Superman this time around, with plenty of trouble from Michael Shannon’s General Zod to balance out the soul-searching and father-son bonding with real alien dad Jor-El (Russell Crowe) and adoptive Earth pop Jonathan Kent (Kevin Costner).

With Clark Kent (Henry Cavill) struggling to find his place in a world where he’s essentially a god, and threats from his old home planet promising mucho destruction, Zack Snyder and co are now turning up the pitch level to “epic.”

And if you’ve enjoyed the music you’ve heard so far, why not listen to a full track from Hans Zimmer’s score, which hits US stores on June 11 and then June 17 over here? While the John Williams theme will always be close to our hearts, it’s hard to deny Zimmer’s effort goes from moody to soaring with real power. 

If you fancy feasting your eyes as well as your ears on the coming attractions from Krypton, check out this new Man Of Steel banner released over the weekend.{Man Of Steel Banner}

Finally, for those craving more from Kal-El and co, check out the Supes/Zod-tastic new Empire, currently available in shops and on the iPad.

Man Of Steel lands on June 14.

 

    


07 May 12:25

Megaupload Launches Frontal Attack on White House Corruption

by Ernesto

dotcom-prezThe Truth will come out.

Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom has been announcing it for months on his website and a white paper released today is the first big step towards that goal.

Titled “The United States vs You (and Kim Dotcom)” and written by Megaupload lawyers Ira Rothken and Robert Amsterdam, the paper accuses the Obama administration of being a pawn of big corporations. It further describes in detail how the authorities obliterated Megaupload on flaky legal grounds.

“The message is clear. The White House is for sale. Due process and the rule of law have little value to the current administration. More and more of our rights are eroding away to protect the interests of large corporations and their billionaire shareholders,” Dotcom tells TorrentFreak.

According to Dotcom his case is just one example of how corporate interests threaten people’s rights and freedom on the Internet in general.

“Silicon Valley has been turned into Surveillance Valley. Kids with keyboards are the new terrorists. Copyright is now a matter of national security. This is all very un-American. Read the White Paper and wake up.”

The 38-page white paper starts with a bang:

“The criminal prosecution of Megaupload and Kim Dotcom is purportedly the ‘largest copyright case in history,’ involving tens of millions of users around the world, and yet it is founded on highly dubious legal principles and apparently propelled by the White House’s desire to mollify the motion picture industry in exchange for campaign contributions and political support,” the white paper begins.

One of the main complaints against the legal process is that under U.S. law Megaupload and its employees can’t be held criminally responsible for copyright infringements committed by the site’s users.

“The prosecution seeks to hold Megaupload and its executives criminally responsible for alleged infringement by the company’s third-party cloud storage users. The problem with the theory, however, is that secondary copyright infringement is not – nor has it ever been – a crime in the United States.”

“The federal courts lack any power to criminalize secondary copyright infringement; the U.S. Congress alone has such authority, and it has not done so. As such, the Megaupload prosecution is not only baseless, it is unprecedented,” Rothken and Amsterdam write.

The paper continues to give a detailed overview of legal jurisprudence in Megaupload’s favor. Among other things, the lawyers note that Megaupload granted very broad DMCA takedown powers to copyright holders, who could remove any file from the cloud hosting service without oversight.

Most of the legal arguments laid out in the white paper have been highlighted previously. What is new, however, is the legal team’s frontal attack on the Obama administration. The suggestion is, that the White House has been corrupted by corporate money and that the assault on Megaupload was a payoff.

“The degree to which the Copyright Lobby, and the MPAA specifically, have managed to instrumentalize the current Administration to take down a foreign corporation and its executives is, quite literally, un-American,” the lawyers write.

Corrupted by sizable election contributions from corporate interest groups, the United States no longer stands for principled standards and the rule of law, the lawyers argue.

“Those values appear to have fallen by the wayside under this White House, which seems content to violate the due process rights of criminal defendants, mislead the courts, and advance baseless legal theories so long as its fund-raising remains uninterrupted.”

The Truth Will Come Out

truth

Megaupload’s lawyers see the MPAA as the driving force behind the criminal prosecution of the cloud hosting site and its employees. According to them, it is no coincidence that the Hollywood group is headed by former Senator Chris Dodd, one of Vice President Joe Biden’s best friends.

“As the new Chairman and CEO of the MPAA, Chris Dodd improperly leveraged his friendship with Joe Biden to achieve the MPAA’s objectives. Former Senator Dodd’s relationship with the Vice President– who comes off manipulated, a cheerfully credulous facilitator – together with the Obama Administration’s ravenous hunger for campaign contributions, has given the MPAA absolute control over how the U.S. Department of Justice plays the game in enforcing copyright law,” they write.

Continuing on the corruption theme, Rothken and Amsterdam go on to describe MPAA’s influence in Washington as “State Capture.”

“The MPAA’s overt use of campaign contributions to sway the U.S. government into engaging in what amounts to unlawful action against Megaupload reflects a form of State Capture, a term coined by the World Bank to describe a brand of corruption characterized by the ability of a relatively small number of private interests to shape the official rules of the game through direct payments or other forms of financial influence.”

One cited example of how political funding was used to influence decisions was a January 2012 threat from the MPAA’s Chris Dodd. He stated that Hollywood would stop donating to politicians who fail to protect their interests.

“By threatening to revoke vital political and monetary support from the Administration at a crucial moment, the MPAA has exercised de facto control over key levers of executive power in Washington – law enforcement, prosecutors, trade negotiators – and is using those instruments of state power to further the financial interests of its members in Hollywood.”

The white paper further gives numerous examples of how Megaupload’s lawyers believe the authorities abused their power to further the interests of the copyright lobby. The overall conclusion is that people’s rights and freedoms are trumped to secure political donations, which are clear signs of contract prosecution.

“The U.S. government’s attack against Megaupload bears all the hallmarks of a contract prosecution: a case resting on erroneous theories of criminal law, littered with due process violations and prosecutorial abuses, carried out for the benefit of a select few in exchange for their political and financial support,” the lawyers write.

“In the name of eliminating copyright infringement, Hollywood has exerted a corrupting influence in Washington, leading us all down a slippery slope that not only threatens innovation and Internet freedom, but also has profound implications for constitutional principles of free speech, privacy and due process.”

Finally, the white paper suggests that this is not an isolated incident. It warns the public that these corrupt forces can quash anything that stands in the way of the private interests of those who make significant campaign contributions.

“Megaupload and Kim Dotcom are today’s targets, but the crosshairs can just as easily be trained on anybody who dares challenge or inconvenience a special interest that holds sway in Washington, and the current Administration – with its notoriously insatiable appetite for campaign contributions – seems all too willing to cooperate.”

The above points are just samples from the white paper, which is certainly worth reading in its entirety. There is no doubt that the Megaupload legal team have just planted a virtual bomb under the Megaupload prosecution. It will be interesting to see how this is received, and whether we will hear a response from the accused.

Source: Megaupload Launches Frontal Attack on White House Corruption

06 May 23:02

Adobe Just Killed Your Ability To Pirate Photoshop

by John Paul Titlow

Well, it was fun while it lasted. Countless students, artists and overall cheapskates who have long enjoyed using Adobe's Creative Suite software without paying for it will soon have to pony up. Adobe is formally moving the latest versions of Photoshop and related design and production software to the cloud — specifically, to Adobe's newly dubbed "Creative Cloud" — where they will only be available via monthly subscription

It's a smart business move for Adobe, who stands to receive a steady stream of revenue from customers who otherwise might take their sweet time shelling out several hundred greenbacks for each major upgrade. Instead, those folks can just dole out $50 per month for access to the entire collection of Adobe software, which is all tied together with the company's cloud-based storage and offers other Web-based features.

With this move, the software we still fire up our laptops to use makes a significant shift toward a cloud-based, mobile world. Makes sense. 

Uncracking The Creative Suite 

Switching to a subscription model also makes it much harder to pirate the software. This is something Adobe has struggled with for a long time, routinely coming up with new ways to verify the authenticity of new installs.

Of course, each new form of copy protection also triggered a workaround from hackers who would crack the software and then make it available on file-sharing sites. The latest version of the Creative Suite Master Collection, for instance, can easily be torrented and, using easy-to-follow instructions, cracked to feign authenticity and block Adobe's servers from discovering that you did not in fact pay $1,300 for it. 

Pirating Adobe's software — especially Photoshop — has become very common among consumers who can't or won't pay several hundred dollars for it, but who nonetheless rely on its state-of-the-art image editing features for school, work or personal projects.   Older versions of Photoshop, Illustrator, Dreamweaver and the rest of the Creative Suite will still be available from Adobe — as well as the Pirate Bay — for some time to come. 

But from now on, Adobe's product development will thrive behind a subscription paywall. Using Adobe CS6 will be sufficient for quite a while, but eventually anybody wanting to take advantage of the latest and greatest in photo-editing, Web design and other creative production will have to pay up.

An Opportunity For Competitors — And Consumers 

For those not willing to subscribe to Creative Cloud, there's a growing list of alternatives. Nobody offers a suite quite as robust as Adobe's, which handles photos, graphic design, print layouts, Web development, video editing, animation and more. But for each of the creative needs that Adobe meets, there are other offerings. 

The most sought-after alternatives will likely be to Photoshop. Again, the original CS6-and-earlier versions of Adobe's apps will still work. But if one ever tires of the feature set and wants to try a product that continues to evolve, desktop apps like Pixelmator and Inkscape are pretty impressive. For basic photo-editing, tablet-based apps like PhotoGene, Photoshop Touch and Apple's iPhoto for iPad are all surprisingly capable. 

For each app in the suite, there's a different list of competitors. There's Final Cut Pro for video, Maya for animation and um, actually learning to code for Dreamweaver. 

Perhaps most important, Adobe's shift to a subscription model presents new opportunities for other companies and developers to build new capable, competitively-priced alternatives. As for the software-crackers, we have no doubt that they'll be busy trying to find ways to trick Adobe's new system. 

06 May 22:01

Top 10 most popular Android apps from last week

by Taylor Wimberly

Every week we cover new Android apps with Fresh Meat on Wednesday, followed by Android Gaming on Thursday and Top 10 app updates on Friday. Now every Monday we will look back and see which ones were the most crowd-pleasing among our audience. Read on for the 10 most popular Android apps among your peers from last week.

1. Twilight

twilight-630

We first discovered Twilight a couple weeks ago, and I’m surprised it still has less than 100k installs. This app filters the blue spectrum on your phone or tablet after sunset and protects your eyes with a soft and pleasant red filter. Recent research suggests that exposure to blue light before sleep may distort your natural (circadian) rhythm and cause inability to fall asleep. I’ve been sleeping great since I installed this app and I would suggest anyone try out the free version.

2. Flatout: Stuntman

flatout-stuntman-630

I’m kind of surprised that Flatout has stuck around this long, but it comes in again as the most popular Android game from last week. The Flatout series is one of the most popular stunt titles on gaming consoles, and this mobile version delivers all the same exciting action. The game is optimized for Tegra-powered devices, but it runs on a wide variety of Android smartphones and tablets. It’s free to play, so check it out if you enjoy ragdoll fun.

3. Jiffy

jiffy-630

Jiffy is a time tracking tool designed and developed by people who need to track time for people who need to track time. It was just featured last week in our Fresh Meat column, and it’s the highest ranking new app on this list. I have yet to try it out, but the design looks awesome and it has an average review score of 4.4.

4. AppAware

appaware-promo-630

AppAware is an older app, but still one of my all time favorites. I used to promote it all the time, but I hadn’t linked to it in ages until I wrote about the First 10 apps I install when I get a new phone. If you are an app junkie, which I assume you are since you are reading this post, then it’s a must have app to discover new apps.

5. Minimalistic Text

minimalistic-text-630

Minimalistic Text moves up one spot from last week and continues to draw attention. It is a widget app that displays information in a minimalistic way. It was recently updated to Version 3.0, so give it a look if you love clean looking widgets.

6. Personal Capital

personal-capital-investing-

Personal Capitol is a new app that helps you manage your money by giving you a holistic view of all of your accounts. It has similar features to other expense managers, but this is one of the best designed finance apps I have seen in a long time. The app integrates with over 10 thousand financial institutions to show you your complete financial picture at a glance and it only takes a minute to download the app and put it to work for you.

7. MyColorScreen

mycolorscreen-630

MyColorScreen.com is one of the more popular sites for browsing Android home screens and this unofficial app brings that experience to a native app. Download MyColorScreen to browser screens description, apps used for the screens, comments and view even more screenshots of that screen.

8. NQ Mobile Easy Finder

nq-mobile-easy-finder-630

NQ Mobile is known for their suite of security and privacy apps, and they recently released a stand-alone app to track a lost device. The app is still in beta but it can automatically locate & track the phone, photograph the intruder, backup the data and contact, even wipe the data on your phone if an intruder attempts to unlock the phone to retrieve your personal information. Early reviews are positive with an average score of 4.5.

9. Google Voice

google-voice-number-circles

Google Voice already has over 10 million installs, so I’m a little surprised that it made our most popular list. I wrote that it was the first app I install when I get a new Android phone, so that’s what pushed it into the Top 10. I thought our audience was quite familiar with the service, but head over to the official Google Voice site for a full intro.

10. Hider+

hider-plus-630

Rounding out the Top 10 is Hider+, an app that provides a secret vault for pictures, sms, call logs, and more. The app is brand new and it has less than 10k installs, but it features a slick design and the early reviews are positive.

    


06 May 19:29

Separate Negative Thoughts from Actions with False Pessimism

by Eric Ravenscraft

When things get tough, it's easy to believe that our pessimistic thoughts are fact. Weblog Dumb Little Man suggests saying negative things to yourself when you know they're untrue to help train yourself to know the difference between your thoughts and reality.

For example, when you leave work, you might have a tendency to think "I just can't work out right now." Your body may be perfectly up to the task (especially if you work in an office and don't get much physical activity), but it feels like you can't and your negative thoughts reinforce that idea. To highlight this distinction in your mind, here's what Dumb Little Man suggests:

“I can’t walk.” exercise. Simply walk around wherever you are, and say, “I can’t walk”. Say it to yourself and then say it out loud while walking. Although this may seem silly, you are actually training your mind to distinguish between thoughts that are helpful and those that are not.

Separate thoughts from behavior in other simple tasks. For the next week or two choose 2 to 3 activities that you know you can do with no problem and say out loud or in your head “I can’t ________.” This could be “I can’t brush my teeth for 30 seconds.” “I can’t get out of this chair”. “I can’t walk up this stair.” It doesn’t matter what activity you choose as long as it is easy and you say, “I can’t _______” while performing the activity.

It's not a guarantee, and there's certainly no magic secret to retraining your brain, but if you have trouble getting things done in spite of your mind, it couldn't hurt.

A Simple 5-Step Process to Separate Your Actions from Negative Thoughts | Dumb Little Man

Photo by Paul Smith.

06 May 12:58

Google reportedly launching paid YouTube subscriptions this week

by Matt Brian
Theverge1_1020_large

Google is set to introduce new paid subscriptions for specialist video channels on YouTube, as it looks to move beyond its main advertising revenue stream and deliver a wider range of content. According to the Financial Times, Google could launch the new service as early as this week, with up to 50 YouTube channels offering subscriptions to video content from $1.99 a month.

Continue reading…

06 May 10:29

Former Tory mayor admits to beating up woman who videod him parking illegally

by Cory Doctorow

Brian Coleman, a former Conservative mayor and concillor has admitted to assaulting a constituent who was video-recording him while he parked illegally to use an ATM. Coleman had been unpopular for passing strict parking rules, and the woman whom he assaulted was a local parking campaigner.

Coleman, of Essex Road in Finchley, was ordered to pay £1,385, including a £270 fine, prosecution costs of £850 and £250 to the victim as compensation.

Ms Michael, 50, a mother-of-two, who suffered injuries including scratches to her wrist and soreness to her shoulder and chest, called on Coleman to resign.

She said: "[I was] looking at my phone and all of a sudden he's upon me, it was pure shock.

"I think he's bullied and intimidated people for a long long time and I think he has now got what has been long overdue."

Barnet Councillor Brian Coleman admits parking row attack [BBC]

    


05 May 22:20

At Least 8% of All Pirate Bay Traffic Now Provided By Proxy Services

by Andy

tpb-logoAs the ISP blocks against The Pirate Bay continue to roll in across Europe, so do services offering workarounds to the censorship problem.

A common way for BitTorrent users to circumvent ISP blocks and protect themselves at the same time is to use a VPN service. These products do the job particularly well, but of course they do cost a small amount of money.

Those who prefer a free solution for unblocking their favorite torrent site are increasingly turning to dedicated proxies. These sites are as simple to access as typing a URL into a web browser and provide immediate access to sites such as The Pirate Bay and the more recently blocked KickAssTorrents.

Nevertheless, anti-piracy companies continue to claim that blocking is a success. In carefully worded statements they state that blocks are effective since visible traffic to domains has reduced since they were censored. Of course, those statements are technically true, but what they do not take into account is the number of users now accessing blocked sites through VPNs and various proxies.

And, according to the operators of The Pirate Bay, proxy websites are now driving a substantial amount of traffic to the world’s largest torrent site.

“A total of 8% of all Pirate Bay page views go through the proxy IP-address now, so I’m guessing the blockades are not working too well,” a spokesman told TorrentFreak.

But even that number is a lower-end estimate. The TPB insider told us the figure only relates to proxy sites that connect to TPB using a dedicated IP address.

“The 8% is just what goes through the dedicated IP-address, a lot of proxies use the site’s domain name instead,” he added.

Exactly how many proxy sites are out there is unknown, but TorrentProxies currently lists more than 200. The ones generating the most traffic at the moment appear to be PirateProxy.net (way out in front) followed by PirateReverse.info and ProxyBay.net.

“So far in 2013 we’ve had 4,964,424 unique visitors to our pirate bay proxies,” the operators of PirateReverse told TorrentFreak. “That equates to 61,546,871 pageviews, with a rough average of half a million a day.”

The table below shows the top countries in terms of visitors to PirateReverse. It comes as no surprise that out of the top six entires, five of those countries are currently blocking (or attempting to block) access to The Pirate Bay. An earlier review produced similar results.

PirateReverseStats

Finally, it is pretty much common knowledge that there are more dedicated Pirate Bay proxies around than those serving other blocked sites such as KickAssTorrents, H33T or Fenopy. As a result, PirateReverse told us that their KAT.ph proxies (kickassunblock.info and katunblock.com) are now generating more traffic than their Pirate Bay services.

There used to be a popular phrase which went something like “kill one file-sharing site and 10 more will appear in its place.” These days that’s probably untrue, but in the case of The Pirate Bay it’s fair to say that blocking one site has led to the creation of 200 new sites specifically designed to unblock it. That’s undoubtedly a powerful message.

Source: At Least 8% of All Pirate Bay Traffic Now Provided By Proxy Services

05 May 22:20

Ben Laurie on BitCoin

by Cory Doctorow
I wrote yesterday about Dan Kaminsky's excellent thoughts on BitCoin, and wished aloud for comparable work from Ben Laurie. It turns out such work exists: here's Ben's critique of BitCoin, and here's his proposal for an alternative. Both are short, clear, excellent reads.
    


05 May 13:32

U.S. Government Fears End of Megaupload Case

by Ernesto

megauploadSeveral months ago Megaupload filed a request to dismiss the indictment against it, until the U.S. Government finds a way to properly serve the company.

Megaupload based its request on “Rule 4” of criminal procedure, which requires the authorities to serve a company at an address in the United States. However, since Megaupload is a Hong Kong company, this was and is impossible.

The defense argued that the court can only protect Megaupload’s due process rights by dismissing the case. However, the Government disagreed and asked the court to deny Megaupload’s motion. Among other things the Government claimed that federal rules shouldn’t be interpreted so narrowly.

Two weeks ago Megaupload renewed its request and the defunct file-hosting company noted that the Government was trying to change the law in its favor. The lawyers cited a letter to the Advisory Committee on the Criminal Rules where the DoJ made suggestions that would directly influence the Megaupload case.

Among other things the letter suggested an amendment to the law so that it would no longer be a requirement to serve a foreign company in the United States. Megaupload’s lawyers used the letter to point out to the court that the Government knew very well that it was not playing by the rules.

This week the U.S. Government replied to the motion, stating that Megaupload misrepresents the facts.

The Government explains that the DoJ’s letter begins with “a bedrock principle of criminal law, one that applies equally to both organizations and natural persons,” citing the following passage:

“When a person located abroad violates the laws of the United States, that person may be held criminally liable despite the fact that the person has never set foot in the United States.”

In other words, every person and company in the world should comply with U.S. law. The Government explains that some companies including Megaupload are exploiting “Rule 4” to remain unaccountable. However, the Government tells the court that the suggestion to improve the law doesn’t mean that Megaupload can’t be prosecuted.

“The Department never concedes, as Megaupload wrongly claims, that a proper interpretation of Rule 4 would bar the company’s prosecution,” the Government tells the court in its most recent filing.

In addition to this clarification the Government further references an additional legal precedent which shows that foreign companies without an address in the United States can be criminally prosecuted.

The Government’s response ends with a “warning” that dismissing the indictment against Megaupload, even temporarily, may mean the end of the case.

“Such dismissal, even without prejudice, would harm (perhaps fatally) the government’s ability to fully prosecute serious criminal conduct of the corporate defendant Megaupload, the ability of victims to obtain justice, and the public’s interest in resolving this case efficiently,” the Government writes.

With the sentence above the Government suggests that the entire case against Megaupload could collapse, putting a lot of weight on the decision of District Court Judge Liam O’Grady, and perhaps not unintentionally.

Under this pressure the Judge now has to decide whether or not Megaupload should be dismissed from the indictment. If that’s the case, Megaupload plans to give users access to the files that were seized, and it will also free up funds for a proper defense.

Source: U.S. Government Fears End of Megaupload Case

05 May 13:32

Piracy not an issue after one year of selling DRM-free ebooks, says Tor Books

by Jacob Kastrenakes
Dsc02009_large

After nearly a year of selling ebooks free of DRM copy protection, Macmillan subsidiary Tor Books UK said that it has seen no increase in piracy on any of its properties. The company's editorial director elaborated in an extensive reflection on the decision earlier this week, writing, "The move has been a hugely positive one for us, [...] we’re still pleased that we took this step." The science fiction and fantasy publisher officially made the change last July alongside its American sister company, noting that their audiences were too technically savvy to be forced to deal with the limitations of DRM.

Though Tor Books UK's editorial director noted that the decision was met with significant support by its authors and customers, it...

Continue reading…

04 May 20:11

Calvin and Hobbes for May 04, 2013

04 May 20:10

Rain will get more extreme thanks to global warming, says NASA study

by Carl Franzen
Rain-don-graham-flickr-cc-2_large

The forecast for the future of rainfall on Earth is in: over the next hundred years, areas that receive lots of precipitation right now are only going to get wetter, and dry areas will go for longer periods without seeing a drop, according to a new NASA-led study on global warming. "We looked at rainfall of different types," said William Lau, NASA's deputy director of atmospheric studies and the lead author of the study, in a phone interview with The Verge. "The extreme heavy rain end the prolonged drought side both increase drastically and are also connected physically."

Continue reading…

04 May 20:10

E! Online struck by hackers days after Twitter warns of ongoing threats (update)

by Bryan Bishop
Twitter_logo_640_large

Earlier this week Twitter sent out a memo to news outlets, suggesting ways in which they could keep their accounts safe from hackers — but the official account for E! Online appears to have been hacked nonetheless. Earlier today, the account — which goes under the handle @eonline — posted several tweets attributing false statements to Justin Bieber. The Twitter account is currently suspended.

According to retweets and images currently circulating, a later tweet from @eonline named the Syrian Electronic Army as the party responsible for the self-described troll. A group going by the same name has claimed to be behind the takeover of several other high-profile Twitter accounts and websites, including ones connected to NPR, CBS, and T...

Continue reading…

04 May 09:42

X-51A WaveRider hypersonic missile successfully hits Mach 5.1 in final test

by Dieter Bohn
Waverider_lead_large

In its fourth and final test, the X-51A WaveRider pulled off three and a half minutes of flight under the power of its supersonic combustion ramjet (Scramjet), the longest such flight ever. The WaveRider, developed by Boeing, DARPA, and the Air Force, is designed to test the feasibility of Scramjet-powered flight. A Scramjet utilized the atmosphere's oxygen, the air compression from its own forward motion, a less fuel than a traditional rocket to propel a craft to hypersonic speeds — in this case Mach 5.1. It's called the "WaveRider" because part of the reason it's able to stay aloft is that it literally rides its own shockwaves.

The last test of the X-51 didn't go so well, crashing down early into the Pacific after just 15 seconds....

Continue reading…

04 May 09:32

Prison and racial segregation: why a Jewish guy eats with the Aryan Brotherhood

by Cory Doctorow

From a 2009 Southern Poverty Law Center report, David Arenberg describes his life as a Jewish guy inside a heavily racially segregated state prison where he faces violence and even death if he doesn't eat with the Aryan Brotherhood. Arenberg uses the essay to jump into a harrowing view into the rise of serious, politicized neo-Nazi skinheads in prison -- guys who make the Aryan Brotherhood look like moderates.

Not that there's anywhere else I could eat. The prison yard is broken down into five distinct racial categories and segregation is strictly enforced. There are the "woods" (short for peckerwoods) that encompass the whites, the "kinfolk" (blacks), the "Raza" (American-born people of Mexican descent), the "paisas" (Mexico-born Mexicans), and the "chiefs" (American Indians). Under the strict rules that govern interracial relations, different races are allowed to play on the same sports teams but not play individual games (e.g., chess) together; they may be in each others' cubicles together if the situation warrants but not sit on each others' beds or watch each others' televisions. They may go to the same church services but not pray together. But if you accidentally break one of these rules, the consequences are usually pretty mild: you might get a talking to by one of the heads (who, of course, claims exemption from this rule himself), or at worst, a "chin check."

Eating with another race, however, is a different story. It is an inviolate rule that different races may not break bread together under any circumstances. Violating this rule leads to harsh consequences. If you eat at the same table as another race, you'll get beaten down. If you eat from the same tray as another race, you'll be put in the hospital. And if you eat from the same food item as another race, that is, after another race has already taken a bite of it, you can get killed. This is one area where even the heads don't have any play.

This makes it difficult for me, of course, to fit into the chow hall. Jews, as we all know, are not white but imposters who don white skin and hide inside it for the purpose of polluting and taking over the white race. The skinheads simply can't allow me to eat with them: that would make them traitors of the worst kind — race traitors! But my milky skin and pasty complexion, characteristic of the Eastern European Ashkenazi, make it impossible for me to eat with other races who don't understand the subtleties of my treachery and take me for just another wood. So the compromise is that I may sit at certain white tables after all the whites have finished eating. In exchange, I must do free legal work as directed by the heads (Jewish lawyers, even jailhouse lawyers, are hard to come by in prison) and remit to them a portion of the legal fees I collect from everyone else I do legal work for on the yard.

David Arenberg Reflects on Being Jewish in State Prison (via )

    


03 May 15:56

The Google Play Store is on its way to Nook tablets, including the Nook HD and HD+.

by Thorin Klosowski

The Google Play Store is on its way to Nook tablets, including the Nook HD and HD+. The update should be rolling out over the course of the day. Head over to Cnet for more info.

02 May 22:21

[New Game] EA Launches Bejeweled Blitz On Android So You Can Match Gems With Friends

by Ryan Whitwam

unnamedIf you've never played Bejeweled before, you're probably in the minority of human beings in the developed world. This series of puzzle games is a classic and thoroughly addictive in just about every form it's ever taken. After being available on iOS and Facebook for a while, Bejeweled Blitz has reached Android, and it's free to download (you should know what that means by now).

Bejeweled Blitz is based around the tried-and-true matching gameplay with some additional social elements built in. There is also a time limit, hence the "blitz" part. You can play against Facebook friends, or just spam your news feed with Bejeweled updates.

Done With This Post? You Might Also Like These:

[New Game] EA Launches Bejeweled Blitz On Android So You Can Match Gems With Friends was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

    


02 May 22:21

Gmail now lets you add calendar events straight from your email

by Nathan Ingraham
Dsc08327_large

Google has just added a long-overdue feature to Gmail — now, users can add a calendar event to their Google Calendar by clicking on dates and times in email messages. Gmail will even attempt to come up with a proper name for the event, though you can swap it out if you please. It also shows you a handy view of your day so you can tell right there whether or not you have time for the selected appointment. It's a smart addition, and the type of feature we're a bit surprised Google didn't add to Gmail a long, long time ago. As with many of Google's improvements, this feature will be rolling out in waves to users over the next week or so, and it'll only be available to US English users, though Google plans to add support for other...

Continue reading…

02 May 20:24

Outlook.

by Melanie Pinola

Outlook.com has two new features today: SMTP send (so you can send emails from Outlook.com as another email address) and better SkyDrive integration. Also, Hotmail is officially dead, with all accounts migrated to Outlook.com. Read more here. [via The Verge]

02 May 16:32

Android platform numbers for April are in, Jelly Bean on 28.4% of devices

by Jerry Hildenbrand

Platform numbers

Jelly Bean rises as Ice Cream Sandwich falls, legacy versions remain virtually unchanged

Google has released the platform version numbers for the month of April, and the general trends we've seen for the past months is still the norm. Jelly Bean is slowly growing, up to 28.4-percent compared to last month's 25-percent. The majority of the growth looks to be coming from devices released with Ice Cream Sandwich, who's numbers have dropped almost two-percent as devices get updated. Honeycomb is also declining, as is Gingerbread. Legacy numbers are pretty stagnant, and any movement there is likely from users upgrading to a newer device. 

The important number, from an application developer's point of view, is that over 50-percent of all devices now run Android 4.0 or higher. This number has to move higher, and faster than it has been, before they can stop writing apps designed to work with older devices. The good news is that device manufacturers seem to be targeting the latest versions with new hardware releases, so there may come a day when everyone can stop worrying about Gingerbread.

Source: Android developers

    


02 May 16:28

Why You Get Sudden Muscle Cramps (and What You Can Do About It)

by Thorin Klosowski

No matter what type of shape you're in or your age, we're all prone to those spontaneous, out of nowhere muscle cramps that knock you down for a few seconds. It usually comes and goes, but if you've ever wondered what's going on, The Wall Street Journal has some some answers.

In most cases, leg cramps are nothing to worry about, and it usually just has to do with dehydration:

Dehydration, whether due to insufficient fluid intake or sustained and heavy exercise, is a prime and sometimes overlooked culprit, says Dr. Morrissey. Lack of fluids causes a loss of electrolytes—sodium, potassium and calcium, to name a few—and "if your electrolytes are out of whack, you can have spasms."

Other causes include "mechanical stress on muscles" from standing for long periods, or muscle fatigue from walking on a hard surface. Both can result in nocturnal cramps. The toxins ingested by heavy smokers and the electrolyte imbalances that can result from excessive alcohol consumption may also be a source of sudden muscle cramps.

In general, if it's not a sustained or repeating problem, sudden muscle cramps aren't anything to worry about. If you get them infrequently but they're still annoying, you can do a couple simple things to stop muscle cramps from happening:

In large part, Dr. Morrissey says, stay hydrated and maintain a good balance of electrolytes. For people who tend to get muscle cramps at night, he suggests drinking Gatorade or Vitaminwater (both of which contain electrolytes) before retiring at night. Another preventive measure involves doing muscle-strengthening exercises before going to bed.

As for folk cures like salt in your socks or pickle juice? They're probably not more helpful than good old hydration. Head over to The Wall Street Journal for the full breakdown.

Quick Cures/Quack Cures: Mystery Muscle Cramps | The Wall Street Journal

Photo by Army Medicine.

02 May 16:27

Install Google Fonts on Windows or Mac for Faster Web Browsing

by Melanie Pinola

Windows/OS X: Google is now offering a convenient way to download Google Fonts, its 1,000+ collection of free, open-source fonts, to your desktop. Not only will your downloaded fonts sync to Google, they'll also help load websites faster if they use those fonts.

Although there are other ways to download Google Fonts to your computer, if you use the free tool SkyFonts as Google recommends, your fonts will be synced with Google's directory. So you'll always have the latest versions of the fonts (for example, if new characters are added).

Even if you don't plan on using the fonts for your own projects, installing the fonts locally, Google says, will make browsing websites that use those fonts faster, since your browser won't have to fetch the font data.

Download SkyFonts and Google Fonts via the link below. Once you've installed SkyFonts, browse the fonts collection on the website and select the ones you want to install. (Too bad there's no "select all" option.)

Sync Google Fonts to your Desktop with SkyFonts | Fonts.com via Google Developers Blog and TechCrunch

02 May 16:26

Google to testify on tax activities in U.K.

by Dan Graziano
Google U.K. tax avoidanceExecutives from Google and its auditor Ernst & Young will be called to testify in front of a British parliament committee on the company's operations within the United Kingdom. The head of Britain's Public Accounts Committee, Margaret Hodge, told Reuters that she plans to summon Google to elaborate on earlier comments it made to the committee. Google had previously said that, in an effort to avoid additional taxes, it doesn't make sales to U.K. customers from inside the country. Google instead employs "a couple of hundred" staff members at its Dublin offices who sell to U.K.-based clients.

Continue reading...