09.09.16
Links 9/9/2016: IBM’s New Servers, SUSE Eaten by HPE
Contents
GNU/Linux
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Linux Zombie Processes [comic]
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Identity: Our Last Stand
By that I mean every corporate cathedral you can shake a mouse at is full of Linux, yet Linux has not yet enabled a free and open marketplace for every business and every customer. Instead, every human being on the commercial net remains trapped in corporate cathedrals, many of which are ravenous for the blood of personal data, most of which is acquired by surveillance. In fact, nearly our entire existence in the commercial world is inside cathedrals where we have near-zero autonomy and great exposure to whatever those running the cathedrals wish to know about us.
The wide-open bazaar—the open public marketplace—where we can roam free, as anonymous or selectively know-able as we please, still doesn’t exist online. And it should, because the internet protocol was built to support it. Just because it isn’t there yet doesn’t mean we shouldn’t build it. Hell, commercial activity has existed on the internet only for 21 years so far. (Starting on April 30, 1995—that’s when the NSFnet, the last of the internet backbones that forbade commercial traffic, stood down.)
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Desktop
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Bundling Redux
What is it with courts to accept the status quo instead of recognizing fundamental principles of law and justice? Are they on the payroll of monopolists? What’s wrong with giving consumers choice? Nothing. This court has blundered like so many others.
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Server
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IBM lifts lid, unleashes Linux-based x86 killer on unsuspecting world
IBM is mounting its strongest challenge yet to x86 hegemony with the unveiling of its spanking new Linux based S822LC system. What makes this system different is that it’s based on a new processor/motherboard configuration, complete with a sporty NVIDIA NVLink connector.
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IBM launches new Linux, Power8, OpenPower systems
IBM on Thursday rolled out its latest Power8 processor, which is designed to move data faster, and new servers with OpenPower features.
For IBM, the OpenPower Foundation community is critical for its Power8 processor. A bevy of companies are in OpenPower, a group that aims to be a counterweight to x86-based servers.
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IBM Brings More Power to Power8 Linux Server Lineup
IBM is adding new capabilities to its Power8 silicon and introducing new Linux-based servers in a bid to grow its share of the Big Data analytics market.
IBM first launched its Power8 family of servers in April 2014 and has been steadily growing the portfolio ever since.
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IBM unveils new Linux based servers for heavy computing tasks including AI, deep learning, and data analytics
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IBM launches new Linux based Power8, OpenPower systems
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IBM ‘Minsky’ HPC Boasts Two Power8 CPUs, Four Nvidia Tesla P100 GPUs
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IBM’s new Power8 server packs in Nvidia’s speedy NVLink interconnect
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IBM’s new AI-friendly server adopts Nvidia’s NVLink for faster memory
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New IBM Linux servers could boost AI and big data efforts
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New IBM servers could expand AI, deep learning and advanced analytics applications
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IBM unveils Power8 Linux servers for deep learning
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IBM Power8-powered Linux Servers Use Blazing Fast NVIDIA NVLink For AI, Deep Learning
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IBM Debuts Power8 Chip with NVLink and 3 New Systems
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With An Eye On Accelerated Computing, IBM Expands Power-Based Server, Processor Line
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IBM and Nvidia team up to launch a new server purpose-built for machine learning
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Refreshed IBM Power Linux Systems Add NVLink
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IBM unveils new chip and servers for data-intensive workloads
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New IBM Linux servers custom-made for AI, deep learning and data centre efficiency
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IBM Power8 Server Includes Nvidia’s Fast NVLink Interconnect
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IBM rolls out Power8 processer
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Under-the-hood-of-the-new-IBM-Power-Systems-S822LC-for-High-Perf
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Keynote: The Operations Dividend – Joe Beda
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DevOps Done Right: The Operations Dividend
Containers and cloud native are great technologies, but what is the larger business context? Why should the pointy-haired bosses care? Joe Beda of Accel Partners described the tremendous business value of DevOps done right in his keynote presentation at LinuxCon North America in August.
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New Mobile App Lets You Manage Kubernetes Clusters on the Go
For more than a year now, we’ve covered the Google’s move to release Kubernetes under an open source license, and the steady pace at which the technology nearly has become as high profile as Docker and other tools in the container space. Contributors to the Kubernetes project include IBM, Microsoft, Red Hat, CoreOS, Mesosphere, and others.
Now, Skippbox has announced that it will debut Cabin, the first mobile app for the Kubernetes container orchestration system. As Kubernetes becomes a popular standard, this mobile management app has a lot of promise.
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Kernel Space
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Linux Kernel 4.4.20 LTS Updates the AMDGPU and USB Drivers, Fixes Btrfs Bugs
After announcing the release of the Linux 4.7.3 kernel, renowned Linux kernel developer Greg Kroah-Hartman informed the community about the availability of the twentieth maintenance update to the Linux 4.4 LTS kernel series.
Linux 4.4 is currently the most advanced long-term supported kernel branch, until Linux kernel 4.9 takes over later in the year, and it is being used in very popular GNU/Linux operating systems, such as Ubuntu 16.04 LTS (Xenial Xerus). Therefore, it is imperative to it to receive security updates that patch various bugs and flaws discovered by various researchers and hackers.
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Linux inventor Linus Torvalds has another rant over code debates
Linus Torvalds, the inventor of Linux, has gone on another rant at a contributor over a piece of code with which he disagrees. It’s not the first time he has got involved with the community in this way.
Torvalds has repeatedly told the community that he is not willing to consider tying firmware and driver modules together in a single unit.
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Hyperledger’s Executive Director Brian Behlendorf on Strategy, Goals and Growth
The Hyperledger Project, a collaborative cross-industry effort to advance blockchain technology led by The Linux Foundation, announced that 17 new organizations have joined to help create an open standard for distributed ledgers for a new generation of transactional applications. The project now has more than 80 members, which represents a growth of 170 percent in the last six months.
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Nxt Foundation becomes first alternative cryptocurrency foundation to join Hyperledger project
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Chinese multinational conglomerate Wanda Group joins Hyperledger blockchain projec
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Wrapping Your Head Around Private Blockchains
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fcam-dev now gets autofocus on 4.7 kernel
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25 years of Linux
25 years of linux and yes, I know Linux is popular. Still it was unexpected when I was asked in public transport if I know about Linux. Man wanted me to help with X restarting due to bad graphics drivers… I asked how he realized… and he told me about my T-shirt. I realized I have UnitedLinux T-shirt on… Given SCO’s involvement in that one… should I burn the shirt?
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Graphics Stack
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NVIDIA 370.28 Linux Driver Has Pascal Overclocking, PRIME Sync, PixelShiftMode
NVIDIA’s Unix team today released the 370.28 driver as their newest Linux/BSD/Solaris driver in their short-lived branch.
The NVIDIA 370.28 driver most notably adds over/under-clocking support for GeForce GTX 1000 “Pascal” graphics cards. This Pascal clock adjustments via CoolBits was previously added to the NVIDIA 370 beta Linux driver from last month.
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Nvidia 370.28 Linux Video Driver Available for Download with Vulkan Improvements
Today, September 8, 2016, Nvidia released a new short-lived graphics driver for Linux and other UNIX-like operating systems, including FreeBSD and Solaris, the Nvidia 370.28.
Looking at the release notes, we can notice that Nvidia 370.28 is here to add many fixes for bugs that have been reported by users since the last stable release, and it also looks like it contains that changes implemented during the Beta stages of development of the Nvidia 370.x graphics driver series.
Yes, that’s right, Nvidia 370.x was in Beta until today, and now Nvidia promoted it to the stable channel, but it’s a short-lived branch, which means that it won’t be supported for long until a new version will see the light of day, so our recommendation is to always stay on the long-live branch of the Nvidia video driver.
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The Interesting Wayland/Vulkan/Graphics Talks Happening This Month At XDC2016
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XWayland Pointer Confinement & Warping
X.ORG –
Playing legacy/X11 games on Wayland via XWayland may soon be in better shape with the latest slew of X Server patches.Jonas Ådahl today published a set of 12 patches for implementing pointer confinement and warping within XWayland.
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Intel Has Been Working On A Fast 2D GPU Renderer Focused On Web Content
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Applications
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Wireshark 2.2 — New Stable Release of Open-Source Network Analyzer
A new stable release of Wireshark, the nifty network sniffing tool, is now available for download. You may recall the app from the Ubuntu “Spyware” saga. Wireshark was among the tools used to inspect packets/searches travelling from the Unity Dash and back.
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Which Is The Best Compression Tool For Linux?
Before looking at a more detailed test I wanted to try each compression tool against a single file type so that we could see how each tool handles the file in question.
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TigerVNC 1.7 Released
TigerVNC 1.7 was released today as the newest version of this open-source, high-performance, cross-platform VNC implementation.
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Calibre 2.67 eBook Manager and Viewer Supports Kobo Aura One Firmware Version 4
On September 8, 2016, Calibre developer Kovid Goyal announced the release of a new maintenance update for his popular, free, open-source and cross-platform ebook library management software.
Calibre 2.67 is now the most stable and advanced version of the application, and among the new features it includes we can mention an updated Kobo driver that supports Kobo Aura One e-book reader’s firmware version 4, support for reading more image formats as covers, and support for displaying book counts on the Tag Browser’s right edge.
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Proprietary
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Official Spotify App for Linux Updated, Can Open SpotifyURLs Again
A new version of the official Spotify desktop app rolled out last week. The update, which bumps the version number to v1.0.37, features just one notable Linux-specific fix: support for opening/playing albums, artists and tracks using Spotify URLs. Revolutionary, man.
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Instructionals/Technical
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Editing a Screencast in Gimp
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Installing Ubuntu on an IBM Power System LC server
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How To Set Up Apache with HTTP/2 Support on Ubuntu 16.04
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Running WordPress on Kubernetes
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Run commands on Fedora Atomic host from Remote host using Ansible
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Setting up the Raspberry Pi just got a lot easier, thanks to PiBakery
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Games
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Rocket League Officially Released for SteamOS and Linux with a 25% Off Promotion
On September 8, 2016, game studio Psyonix was proud to announce the availability of a Beta version of the popular Rocket League game for SteamOS/Linux and Mac OS X operating systems.
Rocket League is a futuristic, physics-based sports/action game that lets players play European football while driving booster-rigged vehicles. It is the successor of the popular and classic Supersonic Acrobatic Rocket-Powered Battle-Cars game released in 2008 only for Sony’s PlayStation 3 gaming console, also developed and published by the Psyonix game studio.
The game officially hit the Microsoft Windows and PlayStation 4 platforms in July 2015, and a few months later, in February 2016, it arrived for Microsoft’s Xbox One gaming console as well. Due to popular demand, Rocket League is now also officially available for the Linux and Apple’s Mac OS X operating systems, but only in a Beta form at the moment of writing this article.
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Rocket League Finally Released For Linux
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Rocket League released for SteamOS, it’s in beta
Rocket League is now officially available for SteamOS, due to the time of the release I will be unable to give any actual impressions as I am likely asleep while this gets published.
I will be able to get impressions up rather early tomorrow morning (UTC time), as it will be my first priority. It will likely be the main game on our Friday livestream too.
It’s been a bit of a wild ride, but it’s here ‒ finally.
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Mesa & AMDGPU-PRO Appear To Run Fine With Rocket League On Linux
With many Linux gamers having looked forward to the Linux release of Rocket League, I tested out the Linux port of the game when using Mesa RadeonSI Gallium3D as well as the AMDGPU-PRO blob.
Considering Rocket League on Linux lists system requirements even lower than the Windows specifications and do mention AMD, I was expecting the process to go well. Additionally, Rocket League is powered by Unreal Engine 3 — yes, UE3, not UE4. Considering that, it went well.
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Pan-Pan, an intriguing adventure and puzzle game is now on Linux, here’s some thoughts
Pan-Pan was sent over by my friends at GOG to take a look at. I had never heard of it before, but the visuals are so interesting it was begging to be played.
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Some thoughts on Fear Equation the horror and strategy title, lead a train to safety in the fog
My GOG contacts sent over Fear Equation, a game I have been really wanting to play as the sound of managing a train in a horror setting filled with fog and deadly creatures sounded fun.
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Remember the Smach Z handheld? LowSpecGamer took a look and others at Gamescom
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ARK: Survival Evolved gains a paid DLC while still being in Early Access, reviews are getting destroyed by it
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Jupiter Hell is a spiritual successor the roguelike version of Doom (DoomRL) and it looks incredible
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Stellaris 1.3 patch ‘Heinlein’ will overhaul Space Creatures and Pirates
Stellaris 1.3 patch ‘Heinlein’ is starting to sound more and more exciting! They really are putting in a lot of effort to make the overall game feel more alive and rewarding. This latest post on their new patch sounds fantastic.
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Fight gravity, destroy alien turrets and recover the energy core in Gravitus Minus a free retro shooter
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Desktop Environments/WMs
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5 Lightweight Linux Desktop Environments
Do you own an old PC, like the ones that came with windows XP? Well, you don’t have to dump them just yet as they can be brought back to life with these lightweight Linux desktop environments. These desktop environments are characterised as lightweight because they consume lesser resources than other popular desktop environments with feature-rich experiences. Here are all of these lightweight Linux desktop environments.
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K Desktop Environment/KDE SC/Qt
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Kdenlive 16.08.1 Open-Source Video Editor Out with UI Changes, Improved Workflow
Just a few moments ago, the development team behind the open-source Kdenlive video editor software for GNU/Linux operating systems proudly announced the release of Kdenlive 16.08.1.
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KDE Applications 16.08.1 Software Suite Released for the KDE Plasma 5.7 Desktop
Today, September 8, 2016, the KDE developers published the first point release of the KDE Applications 16.08 software suite for the KDE Plasma 5 desktop environment.
KDE Applications 16.08.1 is here right on time for the last maintenance update to the KDE Plasma 5.7 series, version 5.7.5, which should be out on September 13, 2016, according to the official release schedule, and it brings, as expected, multiple improvements to many of the included KDE apps and components, along with the Long Term Support (LTS) version of KDE Development Platform 4.14.20.
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Distributions
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What Has Happened To Zorin Linux?
If people need a version of Linux that looks like XP then they could easily go for Q4OS and for people looking for an Apple style interface there is Elementary.
I really liked Zorin when it first came out but I am struggling to see its place in the world now that time has moved on. Many Windows users have become accustomed to Windows 10, Linux users are happy with their desktops of choice and Zorin just doesn’t offer as much as Mint and Ubuntu
The fact that Zorin will always lag behind Ubuntu is definitely a downside and Mint is just a better distribution, with better stability, more consistent release cycles and better support.
Read more
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New Releases
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Kali Linux 2016.2 Adds Security Tools, Desktop Options
A year ago, Kali Linux moved to a rolling release cycle in an effort to provide a continuous stream of application updates. Kali Linux is a popular open-source Linux distribution for security professionals, loaded with a growing list of tools for information gathering, vulnerability analysis, web application analysis, database assessment, password attacks, wireless attacks and reverse engineering. Despite Kali Linux’s rolling release cycle, it still puts out milestone releases as a roll-up omnibus of changes made over a period of time. The Kali 2016.2 milestone was released Aug. 31. In addition to application updates, it also provides users with a choice of different desktop environments. By default, Kali Linux in the past has provided users with a GNOME desktop although they have long had the choice to load their favorite desktop on their own. With the Kali 2016.2 update, users can now just simply download a version of Kali that already boots with the MATE, LXDE or Enlightenment desktops. In this slide show, eWEEK takes a look at some of the features of the Kali Linux 2016.2 release.
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Black Lab Linux 8 “Onyx” Beta 2 Has Full exFAT Support, Based on Ubuntu 14.04.5
Black Lab Software’s CEO Robert J. Dohnert informs Softpedia today about the availability of the second Beta development milestone of the upcoming Black Lab Linux 8 “Onyx” operating systems.
Black Lab Linux 8 “Onyx” Beta 2 is here approximately three weeks after the launch of the first Beta build and it adds a few local applications, among which we can mention the Abiword word processor, Gnumeric spreadsheet editor, Rhythmbox music player, Totem video player, GIMP image editor, Chromium web browser, and Thunderbird e-mail and news client. OpenJDK 8 (Java support) is available as well.
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Arch Family
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Arch Linux 2016.09.03 Ships with Kernel 4.7.2, Available to Download Now
Believe it or not, we completely forgot to write our usual story about the updated installation medium (a.k.a. ISO image) for the month of September 2016 of the famous Arch Linux operating system.
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OpenSUSE/SUSE
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Our Last Stand, SUSE Merged with HPE, Whazzup Zorin
Seems like the top story today was the merger of Hewlett Packard Enterprise and SUSE parent company Micro Focus. Links to the press release arrived yesterday emphasizing that SUSE is now HPE’s preferred Linux partner. In other news, the Everyday Linux User pondered the “strange” developments over at the Zorin OS camp and OMG!Ubuntu! discussed Ubuntu’s new default wallpaper. Michael Larabel took TrueOS Beta for a spin and Doc Searls said today, “Linux has been used at least as much to build corporate (and government) cathedrals as to liberate the geeks who write it.”
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SUSE Primed for Continued Growth via Micro Focus Merger with Hewlett Packard Enterprise’s Software Business Segment and Alliance with Hewlett Packard Enterprise
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Sweet SUSE! HPE snags itself a Linux distro
Before HPE spun out its software assets in a deal with Micro Focus, the UK-based business was best known for its soup-to-nuts support of COBOL. What most people missed is the deal also made HPE the first major, old-school technology company to give preference to Linux distributor SUSE.
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Red Hat Family
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Red Hat claims skills shortage holding back mobile strategy implementations
Just 51% of Australian and New Zealand organisations have the right skills in-house to develop and support their mobile enterprise strategy, according to research by open source software giant, Red Hat.
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Finance
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Brokerage Firm Rating Update on Red Hat (RHT)
Red Hat (RHT) has an average broker rating of 1.31, which is interpreted as a Strong Buy, as rated by 16 equity analysts. Nonetheless, 13 analysts are positive on the stocks future and they recommend a Strong Buy on the stock. 1 other analysts advise a Buy. Nevertheless, the majority of 2 analysts consider that the stock is a Hold with neither a large upside nor a downside. Ranking by Zacks Investment Research for Coach Inc is 3, which is also a Hold.
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Stock Slipping Down Over the Past Five Trading Sessions: Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE:RHT)
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Looking Ahead for Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE:RHT); Are These Shares Ready to Go Higher?
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Today’s Top Gainers in the Market Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE:RHT) from Technology
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Earnings Estimates Revision Trends: Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE:RHT)
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Fedora
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DNF 2.0 Is In Development On Fedora
While it may just feel like recently when DNF 1.0 was released and Fedora switched from Yum to DNF by default, DNF 2.0 is already in development and hitting Fedora Rawhide systems.
Honza Silhan confirmed at the end of last week that DNF 1.1.10 is the last version of DNF-1 with the 1.x version already being unmaintained. DNF-2 is now in development and is landing in the Fedora Rawhide development repository. DNF-2 will bring new features and bug-fixes. One of the big underlying changes is making use of libdnf rather than Hawkey/libhif.
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Debian Family
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Derivatives
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Canonical/Ubuntu
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Leostream Joins Canonical’s Partner Program to Accelerate Ubuntu OpenStack Virtual Desktop Deployments
Leostream Corporation, a leading developer of hosted desktop connection management software, and Canonical, the company behind Ubuntu, the leading OS for container, cloud, scale-out and hyperscale computing, today announced that Leostream has joined the Charm Partner Programme to facilitate the deployment of virtual desktops on Ubuntu OpenStack. The partner program helps solution providers make best use of Canonical’s model driven operations system, Juju; enabling instant workload deployment, integration, and scaling on any public or private cloud, as well as bare metal with just a click of a button. The Juju Charm Store has a rapidly growing number of charms available to DevOps teams, with hundreds of cloud-based applications available.
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View Battery Usage on Your Ubuntu Laptop with CPU-G
Monitoring battery life of your Ubuntu laptop just got a touch easier. The Atareao team has added a new battery usage and information section to its fork of the CPU-G hardware information tool (think CPU-Z on Windows). You’re probably familiar with seeing a timeline power usage graph on your mobile device, be it Android, Ubuntu or iOS.
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Meet The New Default Wallpaper of Ubuntu 16.10
As you’re no doubt aware, a new desktop background accompanies each new stable release of Ubuntu.
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Devices/Embedded
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The Orange Pi: Linux on Quad Core for Under $20
The Orange Pi series of machines lets you run a small Linux machine dedicated to a specific task for a very attractive price — less than $20 for setup. Some ideas for using an Orange Pi include adding network connectivity to an older printer, transcoding a USB webcam and sending it over the network, or just connecting some hardware to the 40 pins and being able to interface to chips faster than a microcontroller could.
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Parrot SLAMdunk isn’t a basketball-playing drone
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Parrot’s latest project is a dev kit to help drones navigate indoors
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This drone kit doubles as a Ubuntu Linux PC
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Parrot Dev Kit Helps Bring Autonomous Operation to Aerial Drones
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Parrot turns enabler with SLAMdunk kit for drone developers
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Parrot and Ubuntu score a S.L.A.M.dunk in robot drone navigation
In the hope that this joke never sees the light of day again, Linux distro maker Canonical and drone maker Parrot have joined forces to create S.L.A.M.dunk, a development kit to help design autonomous vehicles that avoid obstacles even in the most innest of indoors.
The system uses a combination of Ubuntu and ROS (Robot Operating System) to provide an environment for prototyping self-driving, 3D mapping or data gathering. Attaching it to a drone turns it into an “intelligent robot”, according to Ubuntu.
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10 Million Raspberry Pi Computers Have Been Sold, New Starter Kit Available
Today, September 8, 2016, Raspberry Pi Founder Eben Upton was extremely proud to announce that a total of ten million Raspberry Pi single-board computers have been sold to date.
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The @Raspberry_Pi Has Sold Over 10 Million Units, Celebrates with New Starter Kit
I think most of us expected it would be a success, but this big a success? I’m talking about the Raspberry PI of course, the single-board computer that has now sold over 10 million units since launching back in 2011.
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Board-set aims Bay Trail Pico-ITX SBC at robotics apps
Advantech’s 3.5-inch form-factor “MIO-6300” board-set aims the company’s Celeron N2930-based Pico-ITX SBC at robotics and other real-time control apps.
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Phones
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Tizen
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Developing for Tizen is fun!
I am a software engineer at Samsung Poland R&D Center and I have started my adventure with application development in Tizen and for Tizen based devices about 2 years ago. In that time I had the opportunity to create applications and games both for Tizen smart phones, like Z1 and Z3. The meeting with the Tizen Platform was also my first step to programming wearables. That made my Tizen experience even more interesting. I had the opportunity to create applications for Samsung Gear S, Gear S2 and Gear Fit 2 devices.
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Android
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iPhone 7 vs. Samsung Galaxy S7: iOS and Android Face Off
Apple and Samsung have always dominated the smartphone market by offering flagship phones with a potent combination of powerful hardware, functional software, and unique features. The recent announcement of the iPhone 7 takes things to the next level by adding a beefed-up processor, major improvements to the camera, and waterproofing. Let’s take a look at how Apple’s new flagship compares with the Samsung Galaxy S7, one of the best Android phones available.
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Google Granted Extension to Respond to EU’s Android Charges [Ed: Always remember that this case was initiated, bolstered and lobbied for by Microsoft]
Alphabet Inc.’s Google has been granted a second extension by the European Union to respond to accusations that it has abused its market dominance with its Android mobile operating system.
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How I rooted my Amazon Android tablet
I’m a huge fan of Amazon’s cheap tablet computers. Amazon’s Android-based tablet OS is breeze to set up for my 9 year-old, but their proprietary paywalls blocked me from getting everything I wanted installed on mine. Luckily, rooting most Android devices is pretty easy.
I was so happy with my daughter’s Fire HD 7 that I almost bought one for myself. Reading about Amazon’s hardware, I realized I could get the earlier 7″ model, the HDX, for about the same price but with oodles more horsepower, resolution and RAM. I decided it was a worthy $60 experiment, to see if I could convert. A 64GB WiFi-only unit was soon in my hands.
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DeskDock shares your computer’s mouse and keyboard with your Android device
What is this witchcraft? DeskDock, now available on the Play Store, allows you to share your computer’s keyboard and mouse with your Android device. If you’ve ever used Synergy, it’s very close to that.
What’s the point of something like this, you may ask? The primary use the developer provided was to make Android development much easier. With this tool, you could work on an application on your computer, push it to your device, and test it without your hands ever leaving your keyboard. But there’s plenty of other potential uses as well – you could use your Android tablet as another monitor to watch media on, for example.
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Australian airlines ban Galaxy Note 7 use as FAA considers options
The latest development in the Samsung Galaxy Note 7 recall saga: Three Australian airlines have banned the use of Note 7 handsets onboard their aircraft, citing safety concerns after at least 35 devices suffered battery fires or explosions. Meanwhile the U.S. Federal Aviation Authority says it’s considering its options.
According to Reuters, the airlines weren’t ordered to ban use of the phone by the authorities, but pro-actively put these measures in place following Samsung’s global Note 7 recall.
The Note 7′s battery issues recently made the news in Australia after one local model caught fire in a hotel room, causing a reported $1,870 worth of damage.
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The iPhone 7 reveal has me seriously considering leaving Apple for Android
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There’s a new sign that Apple expects iPhone 7 sales to be disappointing
Usually, after Apple releases a new iPhone, it puts out a breathless press release about how many people preordered it on the first weekend.
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When will Super Mario Run be released for Android?
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Super Mario Run is coming to Android too
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Google Shares Android Nougat, Safe Browsing Security Enhancements
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Google Fleshes Out Details of Android Nougat Security Enhancements
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How to avoid certificate pinning in the latest versions of Android
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Android 7.0 Nougat review
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[Pretty cool] You can now add Chrome extensions from your Android device to your desktop’s Chrome
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iWedia to Provide Software Integration Services for Android Client STB for the Ericsson MediaFirst TV Platform
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Android 7.0 Nougat Factory image and OTA file for Nexus 6P now posted
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BlackBerry Hub+ coming to more Android phones
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Free Software/Open Source
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How Google Uses and Contributes to Open Source
Engineer Marc Merlin has been working at Google since 2001 but has been involved with Linux since 1993, in its very early days. Since then, open source adoption has dramatically increased, but a new challenge is emerging: Not many companies care about the license side of open source, Merlin stated in his talk “How Google Uses and Contributes to Open Source” at LinuxCon and ContainerCon North America.
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Top 10 Open Source Ecommerce Tools
According to the U.S. Census, online retailers in the United States sold $97.3 billion worth of goods in the second quarter this year. That represents roughly 8 percent of all retail sales in the country during that time period.
If you’re a small business owner, getting a piece of that market can seem like a very attractive opportunity. But setting up an online shop may be a daunting prospect if you aren’t very technical.
In this article, we feature 10 ecommerce software solutions that can make setting up an online store easier. These are all open source solutions, which means that they are completely free if you run the software on your own server. If you don’t want to host your own website, many of them are also available through hosting providers for a small fee.
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What a Pixar open source project says about your software strategy
Such open source is a signal to developers that an employer is developer-friendly, and it also allows companies to collaborate on code even as they compete for box office market share, automobile customers, etc. Whatever your organization, in short, you need more developers, which means you also need more open source. A lot more.
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Open source algorithm helps spot social media shams
Researchers from Carnegie Mellon University say they have developed an open source algorithm that can help spot social media frauds trying to sway valuable community influence.
“Given the rise in popularity of social networks and other web services in recent years, fraudsters have strong incentives to manipulate these services. On several shady websites, anyone can buy fake Facebook page-likes or Twitter followers by the thousands. Yelp, Amazon and TripAdvisor fake reviews are also available for sale, misleading consumers about restaurants, hotels, and other services and products. Detecting and neutralizing these actions is important for companies and consumers alike,” the researchers wrote in a paper outlining their algorithm known as FRAUDAR.
According to Carnegie Mellon researchers the new algorithm makes it possible to see through camouflage fraudsters use to make themselves look legitimate.
According to Christos Faloutsos, professor of machine learning and computer at Carnegie Mellon the state-of-the-art for detecting fraudsters, with tools such as NetProbe, is to find a pattern known as a “bipartite core.” These are groups of users who have many transactions with members of a second group, but no transactions with each other. This suggests a group of fraudsters, whose only purpose is to inflate the reputations of others by following them, by having fake interactions with them, or by posting flattering or unflattering reviews of products and businesses, he said in a statement.
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Destroy to create: How one CEO innovates in object storage, open source
While VMworld 2016 is now in the rearview mirror, some major partnership announcements emerged from within the conference halls. One such announcement partnered cloud and object storage company Scality, Inc. with hosting and Internet infrastructure provider OVH. This new go-to-market team-up will provide enterprises large and small a solution to handle large-scale storage needs.
This partnership is just latest in a string of pioneering ventures at Scality since it opened its doors in 2008. To explore the company’s impressive growth and market strategies, SiliconANGLE recently spoke to Jérôme Lecat, CEO of Scality.
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Open Source Software & Security Are Key To 5G
Open source software and security will be fundamental elements of 5G, according to top executives at the 2016 CTIA Super Mobility conference here.
During yesterday’s opening keynote session, CTIA chairman and AT&T mobility president and CEO Glenn Lurie highlighted the role of open source software in the 5G roadmap. “We have to embrace open source, software-centric solutions. We know this drives flexibility and scalability with the growth of the network. It makes everything faster, better, and cheaper,” Lurie said.
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Oracle/Java/LibreOffice
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Italian military move first 8000 PCs to LibreOffice
The Italian military have switched the first 8000 PC workstations to Libreoffice, an open source office productivity suite, reports Sonia Montegiove, a software analyst working for the Italian province of Perugia who is helping the military with the switch to LibreOffice.
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Italian Military Gets FLOSS
Anyway, the Italians have figured out that they don’t have to stick with a single source of supply from USA for all their IT. Good for them. They wouldn’t do that for anything else. Why IT? So, they are gaining freedom from M$, saving money and getting better IT. It’s the right way to do IT. I hope they get around to using a FLOSS OS too someday. That will compound their savings and increase security.
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LibreOffice Suite Now Competes Directly with Google Docs
On the heels of announcing new versions 5.2 and 5.1.5 of the free, LibreOffice suite of productivity applications, The Document Foundation has provided statistics indicating that LibreOffice is gaining traction with Linux users, developers, administrators, and enterprises. In fact, the new version 5.1.5 of the suite is specifically tuned for enterprise users.
The Document Foundation’s Annual Report notes that the LibreOffice project now has more than 1,000 contributors with 300 making commits in 2015. Moreover, new releases of the suite include enhanced focus on compatibility and standards. The suite’s import/export filters have improved exponentially, and — in a move that will appeal to many admins and cloud-minded users — the suite has been steadily adding direct integration with platforms and services including Google Drive, SharePoint, and Alfresco. You can now open files directly from — and save files to — these services via menu choices under the File menu in LibreOffice applications.
Integration with these platforms and services, of course, means that LibreOffice is now much more competitive with Google Docs. Additionally, as security concerns remain on everyone’s radar, The Document Foundation is working closely with the Transglobal Secure Collaboration Program (TSCP), a public-private partnership formed to secure electronic communication for organizations including defense contractors and government entities. The TSCP has specifications and frameworks that preserve more secure shared documents online. LibreOffice 5.2 complies with these document classification specifications.
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Pseudo-Open Source (Openwashing)
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Yahoo’s New Pulsar: A Kafka Competitor?
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Yahoo opens Pulsar ‘pub-sub’ messaging system
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Project Malmo available as Open Source: Use Minecraft for AI research [Ed: Microsoft is, as usual, openwashing the proprietary Minecraft]
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BSD
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Trying Out Eight BSDs On A Modern PC: Some Are Smooth, Others Troublesome
Following the seven-way Linux distribution benchmark comparison published earlier this week, on the same system I set out to test a variety of BSD distributions on the same system and ultimately benchmark their out-of-the-box performance too. Those performance benchmark results will be published later this week while today were a few remarks I wanted to share when trying out TrueOS, DragonFlyBSD, GhostBSD, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, MidnightBSD, and PacBSD (Arch BSD) on this modern Intel Xeon system.
All of my testing was done on an Intel Xeon E5-2509 v4 Broadwell-EP system with MSI X99A WORKSTATION motherboard, NVIDIA GeForce GTX TITAN X, 16GB of DDR4 memory, and an OCZ TRION 150 120GB SATA 3.0 SSD. With the seven Linux distributions tested in recent days they all worked fine on the system: Ubuntu, Clear Linux, Scientific Linux, openSUSE Tumbleweed, Fedora, Antergos, and Sabayon Linux.
Below are my various brief remarks when testing the different BSDs on this Intel Xeon system. These are my thoughts with admittedly being a Linux enthusiast while just touching BSD, Solaris, and others only on a semi-frequent basis. I am by no means a diehard “Linux fan boy” and have no fundamental objections to BSD, I simply prefer the operating system that best fits my needs and for benchmarking where I can get my tests done in a reliable, reproducible, and timely manner. I at least prefer my operating systems have a clean and quick install process with sane defaults; working generally ~100 hour weeks, I don’t have time in 2016 if an OS cannot easily install and boot properly on a modern PC. I enjoy testing out the various BSDs and have no strong bias to any of them. This is the largest BSD testing comparison I’ve done in the past 12 years on Phoronix at the same time and on the same hardware.
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Licensing/Legal
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Open licenses don’t work for uncopyrightable subjects: 3D printing edition
Michael Weinberg (who has written seminal stories on 3D printing and copyright) writes, “We are seeing widespread adoption of copyright-based open licenses in 3D printing and open source hardware. This is great in that it shows that the culture of openness has really permeated the culture. It is not so great because a significant number of the things nominally licensed in these communities aren’t actually protected by copyright.”
“This could create problems by 1) undermining long term confidence in open licenses when people find out that they are not enforceable when a copyright isn’t involved and/or 2) creating a constituency of people who want to expand the scope of copyright protection in order to make their open licenses enforceable.”
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Openness/Sharing/Collaboration
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Open Access/Content
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Report: Students Can Save Thousands By Using ‘Digital, Open-source Textbooks’
A report related to a state pilot program has declared that college and university students from Vernon and across the state can save thousands with the use of “digital, open-source textbooks.”
The results of the pilot program were published last month.
See the report here.
The pilot program was created through Special Act No. 15-18, “An Act Concerning the Use of Digital Open Source Textbooks in Higher Education.”
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Leftovers
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Science
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China to completely end use of incandescent bulbs
The China government will prohibit imports and sale of 15W to below 60W incandescent light bulb from October 1, 2016, leading to a complete end to use of such lighting product, according to industry sources.
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Machine Learning: The Bigger Picture, Part I
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Hardware
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Wait… is that how you are supposed to configure your SSD card?
I bought a laptop with only SSD drives a while ago and based on a limited amount of reading, added the “discard” option to my /etc/fstab file for all partitions and happily went on my way expecting to avoid the performance degradation problems that happen on SSD cards without this setting).
Yesterday, after a several month ordeal, I finally installed SSD drives in one of May First/People Link’s servers and started doing more research to find the best way to set things up.
I was quite surprised to learn that my change in /etc/fstab accomplished nothing. Well, not entirely true, my /boot partition was still getting empty sectors reported to the SSD card.
Since my filesystem is on top of LVM and LVM is on top of an encrypted disk, those messages from the files system to the disk were not getting through. I learned that when I tried to run the fstrim command on one of the partitions and received the message that the disk didn’t support it. Since my /boot partition is not in LVM or encrypted, it worked on /boot.
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Health/Nutrition
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Two US Congressional Leaders Criticize WTO For Stance On Trade Remedy, Food Safety Measures
From a press release issued today: “House Ways and Means Committee Ranking Member Sander Levin (D-MI) and Senate Finance Committee Ranking Member Ron Wyden (D-OR) today sent a letter to World Trade Organization (WTO) Director-General Roberto Azevêdo, criticizing the WTO Secretariat’s stance on measures it views as protectionist, and urging the office to better support the rules-based global trading system.”
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Security
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Thursday’s security advisories
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DragonFlyBSD Switches Over To LibreSSL By Default
DragonFlyBSD is now the latest operating system that has decided to switch from OpenSSL to LibreSSL by default.
LibreSSL is now used by default in base while the ports packages may still depend upon OpenSSL until they have been shifted over to using LibreSSL.
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WordPress 4.6.1 Security and Maintenance Release
WordPress 4.6.1 is now available. This is a security release for all previous versions and we strongly encourage you to update your sites immediately.
WordPress versions 4.6 and earlier are affected by two security issues: a cross-site scripting vulnerability via image filename, reported by SumOfPwn researcher Cengiz Han Sahin; and a path traversal vulnerability in the upgrade package uploader, reported by Dominik Schilling from the WordPress security team.
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Security getting hard/impossible on recent systems
Cache attacks: this is not good. Ok, so we have a rowhammer: basically very common, hard-to-work-around, hardware problem. Bits in your memory may flip. Deal with it.
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OPM Spent Less Than Nearly All Other Federal Agencies on Cybersecurity [Ed: recall the likely Windows connection [1, 2, 3]]
The federal agency that stored, and lost, millions of current and former government employees’ sensitive files, fingerprints, and security clearances spent only a small fraction of what other federal agencies allocated for cybersecurity, according to a new report published by the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Wednesday.
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FBI Arrests Two in String of Breaches at CIA, Justice Department
Two North Carolina men were arrested Thursday on charges that they were part of the hacking group “Crackas With Attitude’’ that pulled off a series of embarrassing data breaches against the head of the CIA, a senior FBI official, and the Justice Department’s case management system.
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Linux and Windows Backdoor Trojan is Now Able to Infect Mac OS
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New OS X Backdoor Can Scan Computers For Cryptocurrency Wallet Files
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Holy Mokes! OS X users warned of sophisticated backdoor malware
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OS X is under attack from sophisticated Moke backdoor malware
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Macs Targeted by Windows, Linux Spyware
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A Man from Florida Held for Hacking Linux Kernel Organisation
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Florida man arrested for hacking into Bay Area computer servers
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Defence/Aggression
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Your Tax Dollars, Creating Jobs (in Afghanistan)
The United States government spent over $42,000 per Afghan to create 500 jobs over there.
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Gary Johnson Crushes Libertarian Hopes with 3 Little Words
The Libertarian candidate for president has apparently not been keeping close tabs on the Syrian civil war that has decimated the country and created hundreds of thousands of refugees.
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Transparency/Investigative Reporting
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The Misunderstandings of the Anti-Transparency Hillary-Exonerating Left
Of course the FBI never really addresses how Hillary violated the Federal Records Act. Of course the FBI never really addresses how Hillary tried to avoid FOIA. (Note too that Drum ignores that some of those “personal” emails have been found to be subject to FOIA and FRA and Congressional requests; they weren’t actually personal.)
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Vox: If The Clinton Email Scandal Has Taught Us Nothing Else, It’s That Email Should Be Exempt From FOIA Requests
This argument might make some sense if Yglesias had ever advocated for the alteration of federal statutes like the Electronic Communications Privacy Act or the Third Party Doctrine that have been abused for years by government agencies with complete disregard for wholesale changes in personal communication preferences. (Under the Yglesias theory, phone calls = emails, so the government should need a wiretap warrant to access the contents of these communications, rather than just regular search warrants.)
Furthermore, he’s simply wrong about the FOIA’s treatment of phone calls and emails. If a public record is generated by a phone call, it too can be accessed with a FOIA request. One example would be 911 calls, which are always recorded and are considered public records.
This was pointed out to Yglesias by USA Today journalist Steve Reilly. Yglesias responded once, indicating he was making a point, rather than aiming for accuracy.
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Finance
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Users Continue to Rock Against the TPP With Three New Tour Dates
The Rock Against the TPP concert tour continues to gather steam as it makes its way around the country, giving voice to users whose concerns about the Trans-Pacific Partnership are being ignored. This Friday, the event will hit San Francisco, and there’s still time for you to claim your free tickets. Hip hop stars Dead Prez and punk legend Jello Biafra are headlining the event, joined by nine other acts in an event that will rock long into the night. EFF will also be there, as well as at a teach-in on the following day, to explain how the secretive deal will impact your digital rights.
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Paying Taxes Is a Lot Better Than Phony Corporate Courage, Apple
Every fall the internet and its resident tech mumblers congregate for The Apple Event, a quasi-pagan streaming-video rite in which Tim Cook boasts of just how much money his company is making (a lot) and just how much good it’s introducing to the world (this typically involves a new iPhone). This is merely annoying most years; but in 2016, when Apple is loudly, publicly denying its tax obligations around the world, it’s just gross.
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Obama Promises Lame-Duck TPP Push Despite Uproar Over Pro-Corporate Provisions
A provision that would let foreign corporations challenge new American laws and regulations has become the latest flashpoint in the battle over the Trans Pacific Partnership trade agreement, even as President Obama on Tuesday said he will renew his push for its passage in the lame-duck session of Congress.
“We’re in a political season now and it’s always difficult to get things done,” Obama said at a town hall meeting in Laos. “So after the election, I think people can refocus attention on why this is so important.” He sounded confident: “I believe that we’ll get it done.”
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Goldman Sachs tells employees they cannot donate to Trump campaign – but no restriction on Clinton’s
One of America’s largest banks has told its high-ranking employees they cannot donate to Donald Trump – but has left open the way for them to contribute to the campaign of Hillary Clinton.
According to a memo that was circulated to staff at Goldman Sachs, the bank said it had expanded its political restrictions to partners at the firm and listed those persons it now considered “restricted”.
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Calm Down, People: Data Shows Airbnb Isn’t Really Driving Up Rent
Last year, we did an episode of the Techdirt podcast discussing whether or not Airbnb was good or bad for cities, and afterwards I heard from a few people insisting that we were too quick to dismiss the concerns of the anti-Airbnb crowd. It seemed to us that the problem, if there was one, was in the overall housing stock of cities, rather than Airbnb having a legitimate impact. Yes, certainly there are some people who just use some homes/apartments/condos for doing short-term rentals, but it was difficult to see how (even at Airbnb’s scale) it was enough to significantly impact housing prices.
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AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics
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Green Party reaffirms support for nominees Jill Stein and Ajamu Baraka at the Dakota Access Pipeline protest after charges are filed
Green Party leaders reaffirmed the party’s support for presidential nominee Jill Stein and running mate Ajamu Baraka as they face charges for civil disobedience during the ongoing protest against the Dakota Access Pipeline.
“The Green Party stands in solidarity with Native Americans and others gathering at the Standing Rock Sioux reservation. The oil pipeline poses a serious danger to local drinking water — it was moved away from Bismarck for this very reason. It desecrates Lakota burial ground on land seized from the tribe. It shows that the Obama Administration, deferring to Energy Transfer Partners and the Army Corps of Engineers, still refuses to take the climate crisis and fossil-fuel consumption seriously,” said Chris Blankenhorn, co-chair of the Green Party of the United States.
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Nobody Asked Hillary Last Night About the Messed Up Veterans Hiring Preferences at Her State Department
Last night’s MSNBC Commander-in-Chief Forum featured two candidates who couldn’t be more in love — with “The Troops.”
The troops were spoken of as if they were a they, maybe that group huddled outside smoking or something. Both Trump and Clinton made it clear they are ready to do anything to support the troops. Good, we owe the troops a lot for having to take the big hits for some dumb foreign policy decisions.
But it is only Hillary who cites her “experience,” so let’s take a look at that. Specifically, during the years she was secretary of state, how did her organization implement veterans preferences in hiring new Foreign Service Officers (FSOs; America’s diplomats)?
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‘Commander-in-Chief’ Forum Panned as Colossal Failure of Journalism
Putting aside the shortcomings of both major candidates, for many critical observers the biggest loser during Wednesday night’s presidential “Commander-in-Chief” forum on NBC News was the platform itself.
Moderated by NBC’s host of The Today Show Matt Lauer, the town hall-style event was staged inside the belly of the U.S.S. Intrepid, a retired World War II aircraft carrier that now serves as a military museum in New York City, and was promoted by the news outlet as a chance to extract specific positions from both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump on veterans affairs and foreign policy.
But instead of informing viewers on these key subject matters or holding the candidates to account for past actions or statements, a widespread reaction among progressive viewers and critical journalists from across the political spectrum was that Lauer failed to ask the necessary tough questions or followups, with many suggesting the forum was a lesson in how not to inform voters or put a check on those seeking high office.
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Trump, Clinton stumble in debate dry run
Clinton wobbled on style. Trump stumbled on substance.
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Censorship/Free Speech
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48 Words at 4 AM Is All Network News Has to Say About Pipeline Protests
Those 48 words are a one-sided retelling of an NPR report (“Dakota Access Pipeline Protests in North Dakota Turn Violent,” 9/4/16), which in turn gets most of its information, as well as its anti-protester spin, from an AP story, “Oil Pipeline Protest Turns Violent in North Dakota” (9/4/16).
But the report on NPR‘s website also contains video footage from Amy Goodman of Democracy Now! (9/4/16), who—apparently unlike any of her colleagues from network TV—thought the largest mobilization of indigenous activists against environmental degradation was worth reporting on. Goodman’s footage shows the construction project’s security guards wielding pepper spray and deploying attack dogs to provoke and injure demonstrators—violence on the part of the pipeline authorities that got left out of CBS‘s rip-and-read on the protests.
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Google Program to Deradicalize Jihadis Will Be Used for Right-Wing American Extremists Next
A Google-incubated program that has been targeting potential ISIS members with deradicalizing content will soon be used to target violent right-wing extremists in North America, a designer of the program said at an event at the Brookings Institution on Wednesday.
Using research and targeted advertising, the initiative by London-based startup Moonshot CVE and Google’s Jigsaw technology incubator targets potentially violent Jihadis and directs them to a YouTube channel with videos that refute ISIS propaganda.
In the pilot program countering ISIS, the so-called Redirect Method collected the metadata of 320,000 individuals over the course of eight weeks, using 1,700 keywords, and served them advertisements that led them to the videos. Collectively, the targets watched more than half a million minutes of videos.
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North Korea bans sarcasm because Kim Jong-un fears people only agree with him ‘ironically’
North Korea has forbidden people from making sarcastic comments about Kim Jong-un or his totalitarian regime in their everyday conversations.
Even indirect criticism of the authoritarian government has been banned, Asian media reported.
Residents were warned against criticising the state in a series of mass meetings held by functionaries across the country.
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YouTube is not censoring freedom of speech [Ed: defunding free speech, hence causing self censorship]]
In the past few days, vloggers (video bloggers) have been upset with YouTube because it has a new policy about which videos can host advertisements and make money and which cannot. YouTube is essentially more strictly enforcing where ads go, bypassing videos that have controversial content. The complaints range from the company depriving creators of their rightful ad revenue to, my personal favorite, the enforcement being a form of censorship. Please allow me to clear a few things up.
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CNN Censors Their News Like State-Run TV
For years now, CNN has been dubbed the Clinton News Network and even the Communist News Network, with a disturbing amount of truth for the former and a much more hyperbole for the latter.
But last week, CNN emerged as the Censoring News Network. Is anyone surprised?
There are certainly some fine reporters at CNN who strive to be balanced and fair in their work, and when compared to Fox and MSNBC, there have been times when CNN appears to be less biased then their cable competitors.
But as the presidential campaigns wear on, CNN’s pro-Hillary, anti-Trump reporting is becoming even more glaring to the point of blatant censorship. Shades of the old Communist Party playbook!
As an early endorser of Ted Cruz, I noticed CNN’s fairly obvious disdain for him during the Republican primaries, as a Trump or Hillary victory in one state would be described as very important or highly significant, while an even bigger Cruz victory in an equally important state would be reported flatly and without adjectives, as in, “Senator Cruz wins in Utah.”
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Censorship by Mainstream Media Should Outrage Every American [Ed: Pointing out the obvious -- that major media isn’t in the business of journalism but censorship, agenda, and bias]
Does America realize that the racist, bigot and warmonger slurs and the desperate attempts to shut down an American and his free speech is something to be gravely concerned about? Take a hard look at what is happening in this country and just who it is stifling your right to speak and be heard.
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Netizen Report: With Gabon’s Internet Shutdown, Activists Confront Challenges of Circumventing Censorship
Global Voices Advocacy’s Netizen Report offers an international snapshot of challenges, victories, and emerging trends in Internet rights around the world.
The government of Gabon blocked access to the Internet shortly after protesters began contesting results of recent presidential elections in which incumbent President Ali Bongo appears to have won by a narrow margin. Hundreds of people were also detained during demonstrations over the election results, following allegations of election fraud by the opposition party. The shutdown followed reports of throttled bandwidth and limited access over the weekend, and persisted for five days.
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U of Northern Colorado Will Abandon Bias Unit
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U. of Northern Colorado Will Disband Controversial Bias-Response Team
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After Summer of Scandal, UNC President Promises To Push Ahead With Changes To Bias Response
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UNC reshuffles bias team amid continuing censorship concerns
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UNC ‘Bias Response Team’ Shut After Heat Street Report
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University of Northern Colorado to abandon embattled Bias Response Team
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Full text of University of Northern Colorado President Kay Norton’s State of the University speech
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President Norton joins the Twitterverse
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Norton Talks Milestones, Commons, Other Priorities in Annual Address
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Zuckerberg Accused Of Abusing Power As “World’s Most Powerful Editor”
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The realisation that Facebook can censor comes too late to publishers
Has Facebook sorted out the difference between the nudity of Michelangelo’s full frontal David and the naked nine-year-old Vietnamese girl fleeing a napalm attack?
How risqué in Facebook-world is an eyeful of Titian’s Venus of Urbino, complete with “fully nude female breast”, buttocks and partially covered genitalia or a thousand Renaissance works featuring nude children, aka cherubs?This is a pressing issue now that Facebook has censored a post by a Norwegian writer Tom Egeland in which he showed the famous war-time photo of Kim Phúc running from a toxic cloud.
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Mark Zuckerberg Has Been Blasted Over Facebook’s Censorship of the ‘Napalm Girl’ Photo
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Norwegian news editor hits out at Mark Zuckerberg over Facebook censorship of ‘Napalm girl’
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Facebook Slammed for Censoring Pulitzer Prize-Winning ‘Napalm Girl’ Photo
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Mark Zuckerberg accused of ‘abusing’ power after Facebook removes Vietnam war photo
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Mark Zuckerberg accused of abusing power after Facebook deletes ‘napalm girl’ post
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Mark Zuckerberg under pressure to explain why ‘napalm girl’ photograph from Vietnam War was censored on Facebook
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Facebook slammed for censoring iconic Vietnam War photo
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Critics lambast Mark Zuckerberg after Facebook censors iconic image of Vietnam war for nudity
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Mark Zuckerberg accused of ‘abusing power’ after Facebook deletes iconic image of ‘napalm girl’
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Zuckerberg criticized over censorship after Facebook deletes ‘napalm girl’ photo
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Zuckerberg slammed by Norwegian paper over Facebook censoring iconic war photo
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Mark Zuckerberg lambasted over Facebook’s censorship of Pulitzer Prize-winning ‘napalm girl’ photo
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Facebook ‘Napalm Girl’ Row Escalates as Norway PM Posts Picture
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Facebook ‘Napalm Girl’ Photo Row: Norway’s Aftenposten Newspaper Accuses Mark Zuckerberg Of Abusing Power
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Norway PM defies Facebook censors with ‘Napalm Girl’ pic
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Norwegian newspaper blasts Facebook’s Zuckerberg for censorship
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Norway Leader Joins ‘Napalm Girl’ Protest Against Facebook
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Facebook under fire for censoring iconic Vietnam War photo
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Privacy/Surveillance
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ACLU Seeks To Unseal Docket In FBI’s Tor-Exploiting Takedown Of Freedom Hosting
The ACLU would like to take a closer look at the government’s activities regarding its seizure of Freedom Hosting back in 2013. To date, the docket remains sealed — as is the case in far too many DOJ prosecutions. In this case, the FBI basically took over Freedom Hosting to serve up its Network Investigative Tool to unmask anonymous Tor users.
The difference between this and its more recent NIT deployment in the Playpen child porn case is that many of those exposed by the malware weren’t suspected of any wrongdoing. While letting the exploit run its course, the FBI also helped itself to TorMail’s email database, later acquiring a warrant to access the contents of the seized communications.
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The FBI’s latest mission: Be cool enough to recruit hackers
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The FBI Wants To Hire Young Tech Savants, Has No Idea How To Attract Them
The FBI is suffering from an image problem. Its boss has spent a great deal of time arguing against protecting phone owners from thieves and malicious hackers. Its anti-terrorism program seems to be focused on pushing vulnerable people into doing things they’d never do on their own. And it has, along with the NSA, seen whatever street cred it might have had stripped away by leaked documents, litigation, and the realization that all Americans and their rights are subject to the agency’s chants of “national security.”
In order for an agency to keep up with the hacking Joneses, it needs periodic injections of new blood. The problem is, the only decently-skilled hackers the FBI can apparently press into service are those it’s arrested. It’s having a difficult time attracting new hires that honestly want to use their skills in the ways the FBI would like to deploy them.
So, the FBI is trying to alter its stance on hiring, as well as the public’s perception of the agency. And, of course, it’s failing to do so because it’s allowing Jim “Nerd Harder” Comey to act as spokesperson for the FBI’s youth movement. After being informed by his daughter that the FBI = “The Man,” Comey is using this dad anecdote to lead into a series of dad jokes that seem better suited for attracting people like him, rather than the people his agency actually needs.
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EU General Data Protection Regulation – Part II
Moreover, since such consent must be freely given by the data subject, special attention must be paid to those situations in which the data subject is in effect left with no choice but to give consent. Consent will be deemed not to have been properly given where, for example, there is a clear imbalance of power between the data subject and the controller seeking consent, or where the processing of personal data is not necessary for the performance of the contract, even if it is included in the contract.
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Teamed with Box, Google Dumps Docs Storage Lock-in Scheme
For a long time now, Google has been gaining traction with Google Docs, which remains one of the key ways that many people work in the cloud. However, Google–a company known for its dedication to open standards–has dragged its feet on preventing various kinds of lock-in for Docs users. In particular, to use Google Docs and keep documents stored in the cloud, you’ve traditionally been required to keep them under Google’s umbrella, storing documents on Google’s platform.
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U.S. congressman: Americans ‘will be shocked’ by government use of phone-spying tech
The Stingray, a controversial cellphone tracking device used by the U.S. government and law enforcement, will be the subject of a forthcoming investigation from the House Oversight Committee, according to Committee Chairman Jason Chaffetz (R-Utah).
“You will be shocked at what the federal government is doing to collect your personal information,” Chaffetz said on Wednesday morning. “And they can’t keep it secure, that’s the point.”
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National Privacy Commission to issue findings on Comelec breach
Last March 2016, the Commission on Elections (COMELEC) fell victim to what is now known as one of the biggest government-related breaches in history. This hack on the COMELEC database leaked the personal information of approximately 55 million registered Filipino voters. The incident soon caused widespread concern and public outrage, prompting FMA to call the attention of the then-newly established National Privacy Commission (NPC). Shortly after FMA’s call, the NPC started an independent investigation on the breach, which is now the subject of the young Commission’s first case. Over the past few months, the NPC conducted several investigatory hearings on the case, at least two of which were attended by FMA.
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Civil Rights/Policing
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The Real News
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The Significance of Theresa May’s Disgraceful Quote
Firstly, if either Nicola Sturgeon or Jeremy Corbyn had done this they would be under simply colossal pressure from the mainstream media. Tarring by association has been the backbone of the mainstream media campaigns against both Corbyn and the SNP, and pages after page and headline after headline have been concocted around the slightest association of Corbyn, Sturgeon or Salmond with people a great deal less vile than Collins, over just single intemperate social media entries.
Will anybody attempt to deny it is true that if Corbyn or Sturgeon quoted a twitter account as offensive as this one it would be massive front page headlines?
Secondly, it is important because May’s tactic at Prime Minister’s Questions is to ignore the question asked, but reply with a pre-arranged jibe about Jeremy Corbyn. That is precisely what happened here. The “joke” quoting Lewis Collins by name was written by one of May’s political advisers – paid by the taxpayer – and then read out by her. May claimed that “Lewis’s” comment had been selected from replies to a Corbyn social media tweet canvassing public opinion. It seems to me massively improbable that this is true. Tory advisers are not sifting through tens of thousands of public social media replies to Jeremy Corbyn, and then happening to hit on this Tory commenter.
The truth is rather that Collins’ gross Tory laddism appeals to Tory professionals, and that May’s adviser who wrote the question is almost certainly a follower or fan of Lewis Collins’ output. And that seems to me to tell us something very significant indeed about this Tory government.
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Washington Escalates Punishent Of Truth-Tellers
Former British Ambassador Craig Murray, a truth-teller, has been banned from entering the United States of America.
Washington is so afraid of truth that the most honorable man in Great Britain cannot be allowed into the USA.
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Anti-Racist Dutch MP Refuses to Shake Netanyahu’s Hand
A Dutch politician from an anti-racist party declined to shake hands with Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, before a meeting at the Dutch parliament in The Hague on Wednesday.
Tunahan Kuzu, a member of Parliament who was born in Turkey and co-founded the new multi-ethnic party, Denk, or Think, in 2014 to represent immigrants to the Netherlands, explained later that he intended the gesture as a sign that many in the Netherlands object to the abuse of Palestinian civilians living under Israeli military rule in the occupied territories.
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Monitoring the Vote With Electionland
There is no more essential act in a democracy than voting. But making sure that the balloting is open to all and efficiently administered has been, at best, a low priority for many state legislatures, a victim of misplaced priorities and, at times, political gamesmanship.
Historically, newsrooms have focused on covering the outcome of Election Day, relegating voting snafus to be followed up later, if at all. Today we’re announcing Electionland, a project to cover voting access and other problems in real time. The issue is particularly urgent this election year, as states have passed laws that could affect citizens’ access to the ballot box.
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Lauri Love extradition ruling: Friday 16 September
Lauri is the subject of extradition requests from three separate US court districts for his alleged participation in #OpLastResort, the series of online protests that followed the death of Aaron Swartz. Swartz tragically took his own life in January 2013 while facing prosecution under America’s draconian Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and extraordinary pressure to agree to a plea deal.
Over the course of a three-day hearing earlier this summer, Judge Tempia heard evidence on the inadequacy of US prison conditions, coercive plea bargaining, disproportionate sentencing and the discriminatory treatment meted out to hackers in the US justice system.
Changes in the law were made in 2013, in the wake of the Gary McKinnon case to address public concerns about extradition and the severity of conditions for vulnerable British citizens in the United States penal system. It is now up to Judge Tempia to decide whether Lauri should benefit from those protections.
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Dungavel immigration detention centre to close
The centre, near Strathaven, is set to close towards the end of 2017.
The Home Office said it would look to build a new short-term holding facility near Glasgow Airport.
Dungavel opened in 2001 and can hold up to 249 detainees. It is the only such centre in Scotland and has been the subject of numerous protests, which branded the site “racist and inhumane”.
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Internet Policy/Net Neutrality
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AT&T’s Already Happily Tap Dancing Around Its DirecTV Merger Obligations
If you’ve followed the telecom sector for any amount of time, you’ve probably noticed that the merger conditions affixed to its rotating crop of mega-mergers are usually hot garbage. Frequently the ankle-height goals are proposed by the companies themselves, and are usually something the companies planned on doing anyway. Telecom companies also know full well that regulators historically can’t be bothered to check their math on such promises, letting them essentially trot out a rotating crop of feel good, but totally hollow “obligations” before they get to work laying off redundant employees and raising rates.
It’s a win-win relationship of dysfunction, where giant companies get to grow ever larger, and regulators score cheap political points for “toughness” thanks to a media that can’t be bothered to actually read the fine print of such deals, lest readership get bored.
When Comcast was pushing for its 2011 acquisition of NBC Universal it crafted a new wrinkle in this old story. It proposed offering $10, 5 Mbps broadband to low-income homes if regulators signed off on the deal. And while regulators were happy to promote this as yeoman’s work in bridging the digital divide, it didn’t take long before low-income families began protesting in the streets, pointing out the plan was hard to find, hard to qualify for, and difficult to sign up for. Still, Comcast’s “Internet Essentials” plan has been a PR bonanza, with the cable giant holding an endless barrage of PR junkets advertising its selfless altruism.
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After Massive Cable Industry Lobbying And Disinformation Effort, The FCC Is Forced To Weaken Its Cable Box Reform Plan
Back in February, the FCC approved a new plan to bring some much-needed competition to the old cable box, resulting in better, cheaper, and more open hardware. But fearing a loss of control (and $21 billion in annual cable box rental fees) the cable industry launched an unprecedented lobbying campaign featuring an endless barrage of editorials attacking the plan for encouraging piracy and even being racist. The cable industry even managed to get the Copyright Office to fight on its behalf, spreading false claims that the plan would “harm copyright” despite having really nothing to do with the subject.
[...]
But like so much said about the FCC’s plan over the last seven months, that’s simply not true. The FCC would primarily act to ensure the cable industry didn’t just supplement one bad idea (the locked down cable box) with another (apps saddled with onerous restrictions and fees), which is a pretty far cry from an entirely new copyright apparatus being forged in the belly of the FCC. And again, contrary to the Copyright Office’s claim, this debate has absolutely nothing to do with copyright, and everything to do with control.
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Cruz slams internet transition plan on Senate floor
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Video: Ted Cruz spreads internet FUD all over the Senate floor
Senator Ted Cruz just gave a speech in the Senate proposing adding an appropriations rider to the upcoming continuing resolution in an effort to halt the IANA transition.
He repeated many of the same false claims he has already made regarding the transition.
Cruz claims ICANN is an international body akin to the United Nations. He claims that the transition empowers China, Russia and Iran to censor the internet.
“Imagine searching the internet…and seeing a disclaimer that the information you’re looking for is censored,” he said. “It [the content] is not consistent with the standards of this new international body. It does not meet their approval.”
Um, ICANN isn’t a new international body. And it doesn’t control content.
Amusingly, he later points out that some internet giants have agreed to censorship requests by certain countries. Cruz suggests that the powers that be are determined to censor the internet. Yet this also shows what we already know: governments and other entities can already apply censorship to some degree inside their own borders. But no one country controls the internet.
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GOP Lawmakers Launch Effort to Block Internet Handoff
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Obama’s Radical Proposal Could Result in Censorship Online [Ed: nope.]
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Can the GOP stop Obama’s internet giveaway? [Ed: Anti-Obama sites bash Obama even when he does the right thing regarding the Internet]
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Intellectual Monopolies
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Fujifilm’s second Arrow declaration survives AbbVie’s strike out application as Humira biosimilar battle rages on
AbbVie also argued that in this event, the Arrow declaration against AbbVie UK should be struck out as the Bermuda entity was the applicant for European Patent Application No 1 737 491 and, thus only it had committed the acts in the EPO that Fujifilm (and now the judge) relied upon as evidencing a “real prospect” in relation to the Arrow declaration. AbbVie UK had no interest in the subject matter of the application. Fujifilm also argued that it was probable that the Bermuda entity would grant an exclusive licence to the UK entity at some point in the future in order to later seek lost profits. Further, the UK entity, even if it is not granted an exclusive licensee, would have a significant financial interest in the inventions in the patent family because it will be the one who exploits the inventions in the UK. An Arrow declaration binding on the UK entity thus served a purpose so as to “forestall the possibility of AbbVie making threats to its customers or making statements that its product infringed”.
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WIPO Enforcement Committee To Discuss National Experiences In 2017 [Ed: WIPO will discuss anything other than its truly serious violations of human rights]
The enforcement of intellectual property rights – how they are enforced and by whom – is left to countries’ discretion. Members of the World Intellectual Property Organization committee on enforcement shared experiences this week on how they raise awareness about IP, their IP enforcement policies and regimes, and capacity-building in relation to WIPO training activities. And at the end of the session, delegates decided to pursue those topics of discussion again in 2017.
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Nintendo DMCAs Fan-Game ‘No Mario’s Sky’, Devs Rename It ‘DMCA Sky’
In the world of video games, it’s always useful to remember one thing: Nintendo hates you. More specifically, Nintendo hates its fans that go about expressing their fandom in ways that Nintendo does not specifically approve of. And Nintendo doesn’t approve of much it seems, whether its fan-remakes of games made 25 years previously, fan videos of fan-created Mario Bros. levels, or fan-made movies featuring Nintendo game characters. Nintendo is not on board when it comes to its customers’ desire to be creative and express their love for the games the company makes or the characters within them.
That stance continues to present, with Nintendo shutting down all kinds of fan-made creations. Those creators typically walk away from their projects in defeat. But when Nintendo decided to send a DMCA complaint to the creators of No Mario’s Sky, those creators didn’t just walk away. The game itself came out of a coding competition.
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Copyrights
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US Copyright Office Charged With Industry Bias [Ed: In an Empire of Corporations, where Corporations fund politicians to do their bidding, almost every Federal office is a pawn of Corporations]
“The Copyright Office is one of the starkest examples of a captured agency operating within the government today,” Meredith Rose, policy advocate at Public Knowledge said in the announcement of the report release. “With limited accountability a pattern of favoritism toward industry and rightsholder groups, it is unsurprising that they have staked out tenuous positions and advocate for expansive copyright monopolies. It is clear from its positions–both implicit and stated–that the Copyright Office often acts more as an advocate for profit-maximizing entertainment industries, rather than as an impartial organ of government.”
The 50-page report from Public Knowledge is here.
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Hyperlinks Can Infringe Copyright If Commercial, European High Court Says
The CJEU press release on the decision is available here [pdf]. The decision itself is available here.
“The posting of a hyperlink on a website to works protected by copyright and published without the author’s consent on another website does not constitute a ‘communication to the public’ when the person who posts that link does not seek financial gain and acts without knowledge that those works have been published illegally,” the CJEU release summarises. “In contrast, if those hyperlinks are provided for profit, knowledge of the illegality of the publication on the other website must be presumed.”
The case involved a company called GS Media in 2011 linking to copyrighted Playboy photographs of a woman named Britt Dekker that had been posted to an Australian website without permission. After the Australian site took the photos down, GS Media linked to another site that posted them until that one also took them down. Then visitors to the GS Media site posted links to other sites where the photos could be found. GS Media was sued for copyright infringement by the editor of Playboy.
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Terrible Ruling: EU Decides That Mere Links Can Be Direct Infringement [Ed: So merely throwing a link – maybe in error – in one’s Twitter or other social [control] media account can give you massive fine or even jail]
Last year, we talked about an important copyright case in the EU regarding whether or not linking to infringing material was, in itself, infringing. The case involved a blogger in the Netherlands, Geen Stijl News (“GS Media”) linking to some pre-publication Playboy photos. There had been an earlier case, the Svensson case where the European Court of Justice got things right with regards to whether or not hyperlinks could be infringing, but there were some questions left open in that ruling. The court in the Svensson case found that linking to authorized content wasn’t infringing. But what about unauthorized content?
And now we have the ruling and it’s not very good. Some are trying to spin it as a good ruling, because it basically says that if the link is not for profit, then it’s not infringing, but the worrisome part is that if the link is considered “for profit” then it can be direct infringement. Basically, the court tries to split the baby here. It notes concerns that many people had about how posting a mere link to content could be infringement, in that many times those posting the link will have no idea if the original content is authorized. But rather than actually deal with that specific issue, it just basically said “well, if it’s a for profit effort, then they can afford to figure out if the content is authorized.”
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Hyperlinks and communication to the public: early thoughts on the GS Media decision
As reported in this morning’s (super-)breaking news post, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) has finally issued its decision in GS Media, C-160/15.
The Court held that Article 3(1) of the InfoSoc Directive “must be interpreted as meaning that, in order to establish whether the fact of posting, on a website, hyperlinks to protected works, which are freely available on another website without the consent of the copyright holder, constitutes a ‘communication to the public’ within the meaning of that provision, it is to be determined whether those links are provided without the pursuit of financial gain by a person who did not know or could not reasonably have known the illegal nature of the publication of those works on that other website or whether, on the contrary, those links are provided for such a purpose, a situation in which that knowledge must be presumed.”
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