10.23.12

GPLv3 Was on Target

Posted in GPL, SLES/SLED, Tivoization at 2:31 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Target

Summary: Arguments against the GPLv3 turn out to have come from companies which all along were nothing but trouble

T

HE third version of the GPL is largely accepted, widely adopted, and those who are affected by it are mostly out of business, e.g. Novell. Novell and SUSE opposed the GPLv3. “Linus is changing distros,” told us iophk, quoting Linus Torvalds as saying:” I gave OpenSUSE a try, because it worked so well at install-time on the Macbook Air, but I have to say, I’ve had enough. There is no way in hell I can honestly suggest that to anybody else any more.”

“That’s good news,” says iophk. But another company which the GPLv3 affects is TiVo, which not only pioneered the malpractice now known as “TiVoization” but also became a patent aggressor with growing appetite (it wants of billions of dollars from software patents). TiVo is a very bad company, no matter if it leverages Linux. See our TiVo wiki page for details. Might all Americans with cable television be forced to pay “TiVo tax” for some software patents?

The GPLv3 sought to address two problems which TiVo makes real. The obvious one is “TiVoization”; The other one is software patents. Sadly, a Microsoft marketing executive created a company which routinely bashes the GPL. It is called Black Duck and days ago we found yet more statistics that contradict its dubious, proprietary output (saturated with Microsoft input after a Microsoft deal). We put that in our daily links.

In other news, trolls suffer a loss against Nintendo in the US:

Today sees Nintendo of America prevailing in a patent infringement lawsuit. At the center of the case was the Wii remote, Wii Balance Board, and Wii Fit software. Impulse technology claimed that these three devices or software infringed upon their patent (U.S. Patent No 5,524,637) which was issued in 1996.

Note that this is an American lawsuit. Nintendo is not an American company, but this is where the patent system breeds trolls. We need the GPLv3 to prevent this, but first the licence must become widespread. It’s clear why Microsoft spreads a lot of FUD about it, usually through proxies.

Microsoft Propaganda for Software Patents

Posted in Deception, Microsoft, Patents at 1:57 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Yelling

Summary: New examples of Microsoft lobbying and paid writers who help legitimise extortion

Almost everyone in the software industry agrees that innovation is rapid and often simultaneous in the field of software. Copyrights help defend the GPL or prevent copying where software is proprietary. Markus Persson is saying that “[s]oftware patents are plain evil. Innovation within software is basically free, and it’s growing incredibly rapid. Patents only slow it down.”

“We must fight back against what is criminal and anti-competitive behaviour, portrayed in corruptible press as “business as usual”.”The Seattle Times, funded in part by Bill Gates (other members of the Gates family occupy a lot of Seattle and get coverage from their corporate press) is whitewashing the name/identity of a patent terrorist who hangs out with Gates. Yes, Janet I. Tu, who calls herself a technology reporter, helps promote Microsoft’s chief racketeer, boasting his “trove”. Best propaganda money can buy. The FFII’s president bemoans “More anti-Google, anti-Samsung, anti-Android and pro software patents spin doctoring from Microsoft Florian,” who is funded by Microsoft (see our Florian Müller page).

Recently we learned that “New Zealand Draft Patent Law Rewritten After Microsoft Meeting” (to allow software patents).

The bottom line is, Microsoft continues to distort reality so that it favours software patents. We must fight back against what is criminal and anti-competitive behaviour, portrayed in corruptible press as “business as usual”.

FairSearch a Microsoft Front Group, Designed to Incite Politicians Against Google

Posted in Antitrust, Google, Microsoft, Search at 1:44 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Search

Summary: More Microsoft-funded lie tellers, whose purpose is to unleash antitrust action against Google, get unmasked

TECHRIGHTS has spent a considerable amount of time exposing anti-Google groups which are funded by Microsoft. Sometimes these are one-man (or woman) entities, e.g. Ben Edelman.

Microsoft often uses “consultant” trick for passing a bribe and FairSearch seems to be one such example. To quote:

But Athey isn’t just a professor. She’s also a consultant to Microsoft and has the role of Microsoft’s chief economist. The Microsoft connections weren’t listed next to her name on the agenda, but at least they were made clear in her introduction to those at the event.

Microsoft is using lies again. As the author notes: “That’s not true. Not only is it not true, it’s impossible. It’s impossible because Android code is released to anyone to do anything that they want with. But if just being impossible isn’t enough proof, how about proof of Android devices that have dropped Google as the default search engine?”

Amazon put Bong inside Android. Others too put other search engines in Android, so clearly it is not verboten, it is just disgusting when Microsoft spying is put in place in exchange for kickbacks.

Microsoft Partners Step in Linux Territories

Posted in GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Mono at 1:33 pm by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Crocodile

Summary: Xamarin and Wave promote .NET and UEFI, two of the things that GNU/Linux definitely does not need

Microsoft is hoping to “embrace and extend” GNU/Linux and OS X, even Android and iOS. It’ll do so until they embody Microsoft platforms like Office or Silverlight and .NET. The Microsoft mole says that new Mono is out with “improvements”. Yes, Miguel de Icaza does what Cringely recently described as follows:

Once DOS became the de facto PC desktop standard in the 1980s, Microsoft perfected a technique called “embrace and extend” and sometimes “embrace, extend, and extinguish.” The idea was to adopt outside technologies, extend DOS to include them, then eliminate as a competitor the original developer of the technology. This was before Microsoft figured out that it actually needed third-party developers.

Meanwhile, UEFI boosting from Microsoft propaganda sites (e.g. Kurt Mackie) benefit from talking points of other Microsoft partners (not Xamarin this time) — talking points like:

The Lee, Mass.-based trusted computing vendor announced a partnership with Microsoft in February that will provide “attestation” and computer health reporting services for Windows 8 systems. Wave, which provides its solutions to OEMs, also contributed a lot of input to Microsoft that went into Windows 8′s security model.

Read the rest of it. It is saturated with Microsoft boosters. The problem is clear here; Microsoft gets to speak for the opposition. It pretends to be its own opposition. By doing so it’s hoping to poison the real opposition. That’s what has made people like de Icaza such effective a tool for Microsoft.

Links 23/10/2012: DRM Nightmares at Amazon

Posted in News Roundup at 8:06 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

GNOME bluefish

Contents

GNU/Linux

  • Desktop

  • Audiocasts/Shows

  • Kernel Space

    • 30 Linux Kernel Developers in 30 Weeks: H. Peter Anvin

      This week, the 20th week in our 30-week series profiling Linux kernel developers, we talk to H. Peter Anvin. His Linux story starts in 1992 and involves a hospital stay, stolen OS/2 manuals and a computer hardware order made by pay phone.

    • Linux Kernel 3.6.3 is out, upgrade now

      Linux Kernel 3.7 may still be in development, but that of course doesn’t mean development has halted on 3.6.y, with an updated version out now

    • Intel Keeps Pushing Haswell Code For Linux
    • AMD FX-8350 “Vishera” Linux Benchmarks

      AMD today is lifting the lid on their Piledriver-based 2012 FX “Vishera” processors. Just weeks after the “Bulldozer 2″ Trinity APUs were launched, the new high-end AMD FX CPUs are being rolled out. Being benchmarked at Phoronix today under Linux is the new AMD FX-8350 processor.

    • Graphics Stack

      • With Wayland 1.0, A Large TODO List Remains

        Wayland 1.0 will be released as soon as today, but this doesn’t mark the death of X11 and Wayland beginning to secure major traction on the Linux desktop.

        Kristian Høgsberg, Wayland’s creator that began coding this likely eventual X.Org Server replacement back in 2008 and was first publicly covered on Phoronix, has always reinforced since earlier this year when planning the 1.0 release that this won’t mark a point of domination on the Linux desktop. Wayland 1.0 simply marks the point at which Wayland developers will ensure backwards compatibility with the Wayland core protocol and API. If your tool-kit or application is targeting the 1.0 API/protocol, it will work with future versions rather than in the pre-1.0 state where there was significant breakage without notice.

      • AMD Catalyst 12.10 For Linux Surfaces

        The AMD Catalyst 12.10 Linux graphics driver for x86 and x86_64 architectures is available from the download link offered here.

      • Wayland 1.0 Officially Released

        Kristian Høgsberg after developing the project the past four years officially announced version 1.0 for Wayland. As described earlier on Phoronix, Wayland 1.0 doesn’t mark the point that Wayland is complete and ready to replace the X11 Server as there’s still a lot of work left to do but it marks the point at which there is API/protocol stability in terms of all future releases being backwards-compatible with the Wayland 1.0 release. Regardless of there being a lot of work left until Wayland is common to the Linux desktop, Wayland is exciting many users although it means real bad news for some users.

  • Applications

  • Desktop Environments

    • New EFL release cycle 1.7.1
    • GNOME Desktop

      • GNOME 3.6.1 Has Been Released

        Frederic Peters had the pleasure of announcing the first maintenance release of the GNOME 3.6 desktop environment, on October 18th.

        GNOME 3.6.1 is a necessary upgrade for all users of GNOME 3.6, brining lots of small improvements, updated translations, as well as numerous bug fixes.

        “The first update to GNOME 3.6 series is now available. As usual it provides bug fixes, translations updates and tiny improvements, in order to make our stable release even more stable and useful.”

  • Distributions

    • Which Linux Distro is Best?

      Here’s a topic guaranteed to start controversy. Which Linux distribution is best? It all depends on your criteria for judging. Even then the topic is highly subjective. Here are a few nominees for “best distro” in specific categories.

    • Qubes OSQubes R1

      Last week, when I went in search of a distribution with which to experiment, I thought the choice seemed obvious: Qubes OS. The Qubes project is working to produce a Xen- and Linux-based operating system with a strong focus on security. As the project’s website says, “Qubes is an open source operating system designed to provide strong security for desktop computing. Qubes is based on Xen, X Window System, and Linux, and can run most Linux applications”. Qubes, which comes from Invisible Things Lab, takes an unusual approach to security where the user’s desktop system is divided into separate domains. Each domain gets its own virtual machine. A person might have a few of these different domains, such as one for work-related applications and files, another for casual web browsing & e-mail and perhaps another for security-sensitive tasks like on-line banking.

    • ROSA Marathon 2012 review – Ahem

      Maybe it was my own mistake. Maybe I did not read well enough before trialling ROSA. The truth is, it makes no difference. You do not need and should not need to spend time learning about operating system before using them. The whole idea is to get a seamless, transparent behavior and a pleasant experience, and if this means having to figure out what is free and what is not, and somehow know that your Wireless card firmware might be considered non-free by some vague standard, then thank you, but no thank you.

      If you’re looking for five years of support, you’re better off with Ubuntu. Shame really, because I was rather looking forward to testing ROSA. Finally, something new, something fresh. A system that does not come from the English-speaking world, which means a different mentality, five years, Mandriva baseline, they all sound like a damn good recipe for awesome fun. Alas, no. Not since Trisquel was I this disappointed. Another potential gem, killed by politics. Lastly, I cannot tell you how good or bad this distribution really is, because I didn’t get to test it properly. My hunch tells it’s a fairly decent one, but we shall never know now. Well, I might test the non-free version one day, but my goodwill for today is spent. Take care.

    • Under the Hood with Arch and Gentoo

      Arch and Gentoo are rolling community distributions that emphasise self-help and choice for the adventurous user. Richard Hillesley investigates…

    • Ubuntu 12.10 Virtualization vs. Ubuntu 12.04 LTS, CentOS 6.3

      For kicking off a new week of Linux benchmarks, here are some results of a high-end Intel Extreme Edition workstation when comparing the bare metal host and KVM virtualization performance between Ubuntu 12.10 and the earlier Ubuntu 12.04.1 LTS release and then the RHEL-based CentOS 6.3.

    • New Releases

    • Gentoo Family

    • Red Hat Family

      • Epitome Travel Solutions Adopts Red Hat Enterprise Linux for Mission-Critical Travel Portal

        Red Hat, Inc. (NYSE: RHT), the world’s leading provider of open source solutions, today announced that Epitome Travel Solutions (India) Pvt. Ltd. (ETS), a unique Indian travel organization that offers diverse travel-related solutions and services to corporations and individuals, has selected Red Hat as its trusted solutions partner and implemented Red Hat Enterprise Linux as its core enterprise platform. The implementation of Red Hat Enterprise Linux as its enterprise platform has made Epitome Travel Solutions’ core business more agile, increased performance and enhanced customer satisfaction.

    • Debian Family

      • Derivatives

        • Canonical/Ubuntu

          • Video: Ubuntu Linux hits Google’s Nexus 7
          • Ubuntu Founder Takes Aim at Red Hat

            Canonical has suffered more than a little flack over the years for what some critics call a lack of openness in Ubuntu development. But if one agrees with Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth, the truly closed platforms are Ubuntu’s competitors, especially Red Hat. At least, that’s what Shuttleworth had to say recently on his blog. Here’s the full story.

            Criticism of Canonical’s standards has often centered around issues such as the proprietary licenses that govern some of its software, such as the server side code for the Ubuntu One file syncing service. The company has also irked users for introducing major changes to Ubuntu, like the Unity interface, without soliciting much community feedback first.

          • Ubuntu less Unity: A first look at Ubuntu GNOME Remix 12.10

            For users who want GNOME 3 rather than Unity, a group of developers has now made the first GNOME 3 desktop remix of the Ubuntu Linux distribution available. Ubuntu GNOME Remix 12.10 is based on the recent release of Ubuntu 12.10 and even uses a GNOME package management tool.

          • Installing Ubuntu 12.10
          • Can Canonical Put Ubuntu on Phones, Tablets and TVs?

            Will 2013 be the Year of the Linux Tablet? Personally, I’m not about to bet any cash on it just yet. But if Ubuntu founder Mark Shuttleworth has his way, Linux developers increasingly will be turning their attention to mobile, tablet and TV platforms over the coming year. Here’s what he had to say.

            There’s been plenty of talk in the open source channel about bringing Linux to new types of hardware devices such as phones, tablets and TVs. And some major open source applications — the Unity, GNOME Shell and Plasma Active interfaces, to name a few — are being designed with mobile hardware in mind at least as much as traditional PCs.

          • Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal) Screenshots

            The Ubuntu team is very pleased to announce the release of Ubuntu 12.10 for Desktop, Server, Cloud, and Core products.

            There is no longer a traditional CD-sized image, DVD or alternate image, but rather a single 800MB Ubuntu image that can be used from USB or DVD. Users who previously installed using LVM or full-disk encryption via the alternate CD will find that these installation targets are supported by the consolidated image in 12.10.

          • Thank you, Ubuntu Tweak will continue
          • Ubuntu Tweak 0.8.1 Released: Install in Ubuntu 12.10
          • Protecting Your Ubuntu Desktop
          • Ubuntu 12.10 review: Quantal Quetzal is quite adequate

            Let’s cut right to the chase: Ubuntu 12.10 is a totally, 100%, utterly, completely acceptable release.

            It has some new features. It has some bug fixes. In almost every way, it is very, very similar to Ubuntu 12.04 – which makes a great deal of sense, considering that the two releases are only six months apart.

          • The UDS Design Track

            One week to go! We’re looking forward to UDS. For me personally it will be my first and I’m thrilled to check out all the interesting sessions and hear your stories about Ubuntu and design. There will also be a very exciting design track in which we hope to work together on many cool topics, such as fonts, Juju GUI, Danish toys, the theater and many more!

          • Is Mark Shuttleworth Really Arguing Against Open Ubuntu Development?

            Late last week, Mark Shuttleworth set off a series of heated debates about just how transparent the development process for Ubuntu should be. Specifically, he wrote this regarding the next 13.04 version of Ubuntu: “Mapping out the road to 13.04, there are a few items with high “tada!” value that would be great candidates for folk who want to work on something that will get attention when unveiled. While we won’t talk about them until we think they are ready to celebrate, we’re happy to engage with contributing community members that have established credibility (membership, or close to it) in Ubuntu, who want to be part of the action.” The question is, why is everyone interpreting this as the end of an open Ubuntu development model?

          • Key parts of Ubuntu Linux 13.04 to be developed under wraps
          • Flavours and Variants

  • Devices/Embedded

    • Phones

      • Ballnux

        • Google LG Nexus Phone Confirmed By LG India Executive

          The rumors were bang on target! For past several weeks, our RRS feeds were full of leaks and speculations about new Google LG Nexus flagship phone. Now suddenly the focus shifted to India, where Amit Gujral, head, Mobile Product Planning, LG India, in an interview with IBNLive stated “Google will unveil the LG Nexus on October 29 and the phone will be available in the Indian markets by the end of November.”

        • Amazon: Kindle Fire HD is a global best-seller

          Amazon just dropped us an email to let everyone know that their Kindle Fire HD is a worldwide best-seller. Yeah, like that’s a surprise to anyone.

          In all seriousness, the Android-based tablet has become the retailer’s #1 best-selling product across all of Amazon worldwide. Also, today sees the roll out of a an over-the-air update to add in the Kindle FreeTime feature that lets parents control what a child is able to see on the Kindle Fire HD as well as how long they can use the tablet.

      • Android

    • Sub-notebooks/Tablets

      • Google to Get Last Word in Week of Tablet Launches

        Google isn’t ceding the tech media spotlight to Apple and Microsoft. As Apple gets set to unveil its iPad mini, and as Microsoft revs up for its Surface launch, Google is lubricating the rumor mill with some hints about an expanded Nexus line — perhaps a 32 GB 7-inch tablet, one with 3G, and maybe a 10-inch version. A new Nexus smartphone could be in the works too, perhaps running an updated Android OS.

Free Software/Open Source

Leftovers

  • Humble Ebook Bundle Breaks $1 Million; All The Authors Should Be Best Sellers

    We’ve been talking about the first Humble eBook Bundle, which launched recently, and has taken off really successfully. Over the weekend, it zoomed past $1 million in money raised. As author John Scalzi (whose book Old Man’s War is included in the bundle) noted, if Humble Bundle purchases were counted by the NY Times every one of the authors would be on the best seller list. Think about that for a second.

  • Italian scientists convicted of manslaughter for earthquake risk report
  • Health/Nutrition

    • How Food Stopped Being Food

      In 2008, farmers grew more than enough to feed the world, yet more people starved than ever before—and most of them were farmers. Harper’s magazine contributing editor Frederick Kaufman investigates the connection between the global food system and why the food on our tables is getting less healthy and less delicious even as the world’s biggest food companies and food scientists say things are better than ever. In Bet the Farm: How Food Stopped Being Food, he moves down the supply chain like a detective solving a mystery, revealing the forces undermining our food system.

  • Finance

    • Gupta to Urge Probation From Judge Who Defended Insiders

      Gupta, a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) director, will come before Rakoff in Manhattan federal court on Oct. 24 to be sentenced for leaking stock tips to Galleon Group LLC co-founder Raj Rajaratnam. Prosecutors say Gupta, convicted by a jury in June, deserves as long as 10 years in prison. Gupta seeks probation.

  • DRM

  • Intellectual Monopolies

    • Copyrights

      • Big Brother comes to BitTorrent
      • To the ABA – Tear Down the Pay Wall that Keeps Ethics Opinions From Seeing the Light Of Day (Sign My Change.org petition)

        If you thought that aggressive enforcement of copyright was only for the RIAA, think again. The ABA is just as intent about enforcing copyright interests in its ethics opinions. But whether you agree with the RIAA’s tactics or not, at least its copyright enforcement activity is intended to protect RIAA’s constituents; artists, musicians and record companies who lose money when their music is misappropriated. By contrast, the ABA’s policy of copyrighting ethics opinions — the source of authority that govern lawyers’ conduct and inform many state bodies regulating lawyers — and locking them behind a paywall hurts lawyers and the public.

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