09.02.11
Posted in GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Novell, OpenSUSE, SLES/SLED at 9:51 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Matthias Hopf leaves the company formerly recognised as Novell, validating what we have said about the general trend in SUSE
OPENSUSE is trying to bury bad news. Key people from the board speak about the conference and impending releases such as OpenSUSE 12.1, which is now in milestone 5. Yesterday I spoke to someone who plans to leave OpenSUSE and he is currently checking what to move to. This is not an unusual sight. After SUSE had signed a patent deal with Microsoft and got Microsoft sponsorship, fewer and fewer people can sincerely believe that SUSE was ever dissociated with Novell’s infamous Microsoft deal. why would a supporter of GNU/Linux stick with the Attachmate-led and Microsoft-funded SUSE when there is so much other choice out there? And why work for SUSE when there is a thriving Linux market out there and high demand for Linux skills? Well, Matthias Hopf has reportedly just left SUSE (his blog confirms):
Matthias Hopf, a SUSE developer working on the X11 stack for the past seven years and one of the original xf86-video-radeonhd driver developers, has left the company.
This long-time X developer is leaving two years after SUSE lost another one of its RadeonHD developers, Luc Verhaegen. Luc was laid off with several other developers at the German office in 2009 when Novell was attempting to cut its costs during the global economic crisis. Matthias is leaving SUSE to become a professor of Applied Computer Science at Georg-Simon-Ohm University. Ohm is a university of applied sciences in Nürnberg where he currently resides.
What’s left of Novell are some security patches for proprietary software [1l, 2] (no new releases) as news is very scarce and Novell/Attachmate PR is done for proprietary VMware, not Linux virtualisation. It is sad to see what happened to Novell, but since it signed a deal with Microsoft, this was inevitable. █
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Posted in Patents at 9:33 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Microsoft’s ally, Facebook, is already attacking small rivals using software patents, but BusinessWeek portrays Facebook as a potential victim
THERE IS a very obtuse new article titled “When Patents Attack: Could Facebook Be Next?”
The headline is ridiculous because Ashlee Vance, a former troll/writer from The Register, paints Facebook as a victim when it fact Facebook is a patent aggressor attacking small rivals. And speaking of small companies being threatened or attacked by patents, yesterday we mentioned the Patent Pledge (not to be confused with the Microsoft Patent Pledge), which we and others at the time considered to be silly because it’s basically an exemption for small companies, avoiding all the real patent issues that impair the industry. Here is a detailed explanation of why the Patent Pledge does not address the issues properly. To quote part of it:
The bigger issue is that it seems like this pledge may be targeted at exactly the wrong group on both sides of the pledge. First off, the companies signing it tend to be startups who aren’t asserting any patents against anyone anyway. Second, when startups of less than 25 people are getting sued for infringement, it’s pretty frequently by small trolls, who have no business but suing (or threatening to sue), and who would never sign such a pledge. I don’t think we’re going to see Lodsys or Kootol sign up for something like this ever, and no amount of shame is going to make them care about it.
As shown in the previous post, patents have become extremely anti-competitive, even among mega-corporation. It is us, the customers, who pay the price, sponsoring hoarding billionaires and their lawyers. As Carlo Piana, put it yesterday, it increasingly seems like the only solution is to abolish them. Patents have outlived their purpose. █
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Posted in Apple, GNU/Linux, Google, Microsoft, Patents at 9:01 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: Using a proxy (patent troll), Microsoft’s patent cartel appears to be preparing for a legal war on Linux
AS POINTED out about an hour ago, Linux is winning in mobile platforms. There is evidence of this coming from different directions, so it seems irreversible. When GNU/Linux was winning on the server side, Microsoft paid SCO which back then launched the never-ending SCO case, so we know what Microsoft is capable of. Microsoft also tried (but got caught by the OIN) to sell some Linux-hostile patents to patent trolls [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]. The biggest mistake one can make is assume that Microsoft is “dead” and therefore doing nothing more to harm GNU/Linux.
As we noted earlier in the week, Microsoft’s partner Attachmate now possesses UNIX, but not before Attachmate gave a lot of Linux-hostile patents to Microsoft (CPTN). As TechDirt points out, “part of the legal fight involved SCO claiming slander against Novell for telling the world that SCO didn’t actually hold the copyrights for UNIX. SCO tried to claim that this hurt its business, and Novell reasonably countered that the thing that really hurt SCO’s business was its own actions — and, as part of that, showed the jury a BusinessWeek article about how SCO was “The Most Hated Company in Tech.” SCO claimed this was hearsay, but the court didn’t buy it, noting that it was one minor image seen by the jury over a much larger trial, but, more importantly, noted that “there was repeated testimony and argument over the course of the trial pointing out the unpopularity of the SCO Source program.””
SCO is just a bad PR absorption proxy, it is being used by others to cause trouble to Linux. Look no further than those who funded SCO, either directly or directly. “Microsoft wished to promote SCO and its pending lawsuit against IBM and the Linux operating system, explained Larry Goldfarb, a key investor in SCO who had been approached by Microsoft. “But Microsoft did not want to be seen as attacking IBM or Linux.”
Microsoft recently took over Nokia (senior Nokia staff claims this), which helps Microsoft “neutralise” MeeGo, to use the word the OIN’s CEO repeatedly used in his very long conversation with me. Some patents are now being passed to a patent troll, MOSAID, which is already attacking Linux companies (Groklaw covered this several days ago). The pro-Microsoft lobbyist is promoting this press release titled “MOSAID Acquires 1,200 Nokia Standards-Essential Wireless Patents and 800 Wireless Implementation Patents”. To quote a portion:
The patents and patent applications cover technologies used in a wide range of mobile communications devices and services. One hundred of the patent families, consisting of approximately 1,200 patents and applications, have been declared essential to second, third and fourth-generation communications standards, including GSM (Global Systems for Mobile communications),
Dr. Glyn Moody quotes “expected to generate income from lawsuits” and says that this is “totally sick”. Here is an article about it. “Nokia sees Canadian IP firm manage 2,000 of its patents in licensing and lawsuit push” says the headline. So Elop’s (Microsoft’s) Nokia is now using a proxy for extortion. Why? Because unlike Nokia, it cannot be sued back. It has no products. Here at Techrights we’ve warned about Nokia’s patents since 2007. We did this many times, even though Nokia was exploring Linux at the time. In other news today, “Google Chairman Eric Schmidt Weighs In On Patent Issues: They’re ‘Terrible’”. Who can blame him for saying that? To quote:
Eric Schmidt, Google’s Executive Chairman and former CEO, took the stage at the Dreamforce conference in San Francisco today to talk about a host of topics, including the success of Google Apps, his feelings about Steve Jobs, Google’s recent acquisition of Motorola, with the conversation with Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff even ranging into Schmidt’s thoughts on the current landscape facing the U.S. patent market.
The executive chairman began by addressing the purchase of Nortel Networks’ roster of patents by a group of buyers that included some of Google’s rivals, including Microsoft and Apple. Fellow TechCruncher MG Siegler covered the back-and-forth between Google and Microsoft that unfolded in regard to the supposition that the group that bought the Nortel patents was effectively attempting to cut the legs out from underneath Android.
Also see the mew blog post “Patent Shill Attacks Google for Complaining about Patent Predation” and mind the new article “Apple Cries About Samsung and Motorola’s Patent ‘Monopoly’”. [via]
I. Apple Claims Android Phone makers are “Abusing” Patent System
Yes, this is the same Apple that has initiated a patent war [1][2][3][4][5] with these smartphone rivals. And it’s the same rival that has tried to remove competing products from the market, rather than agree to negotiate a licensing fee. And it’s the same company that patented multi-touch gestures 26 years after they were invented at a research university. And it’s the same company that allegedly doctored evidence in European courts [1][2] to support its lawsuits against Android.
Yet in Apple’s rose-colored glasses it is Samsung and Motorola who are bullies. Apparently Apple is irate about these companies’ countersuits, which rely largely on patents covering wireless communications.
Apple and Microsoft are waging patent war on Linux, through Android. Now they are using trolls to prepare for legal attacks that are harder for Google to counter. Where on Earth are antitrust regulators? This is sheer corruption. It is a cartel and it is a clear distortion of the market… brought to the world by Apple to Microsoft. They cannot compete on a technical basis, so they cheat, they extort, they intimidate, and they hide behind proxies like CPTN and apparently MOSAID. █
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Posted in Apple, Microsoft at 8:26 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz
Summary: At Microsoft, spying on the user is a design choice, so a massive lawsuit is launched against the company
THE fight for Linux on mobile platforms is in part motivated by our digital rights and liberties. Nothing shows this better than actions like this new class action against Microsoft: [via]
ass action lawsuit filed in Seattle yesterday charges that Microsoft intentionally designed the software that runs cameras in Windows Phone 7 smartphones to collect and report…
This does not surprise us as Windows for the desktop contains similar antifeatures, to borrow the term the FSF likes to use. The illness of intrusion is one that Apple and Microsoft have in common. Apple versus Microsoft is a false dichotomy; the real argument is (software) freedom versus tyranny. █
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Posted in Asia, GNU/Linux, Microsoft, Site News at 7:42 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

The Homepage of Julian Assange
Summary: A quarter of a million diplomatic cables, many of which secret or classified, are released to supply Techrights with exclusive and important stories to cover
In the years 2008 and 2009 Techrights got a lot of mainstream coverage owing to Comes vs Microsoft exhibits that we had uncovered and explained. We expect to have a lot more to reveal now that Wikileaks has fully uploaded and decrypted its stash of diplomatic cables from all across the world, spanning many decades.
As noted a few minutes ago, 60 GB of compressed diplomatic cables are now out in their complete form. We have begun studying the material and over the course of the coming year we hope to show/demonstrate government kowtowing and misconduct that affect the industry. Yesterday for example we found this:
¶1. (SBU) SUMMARY: To bridge the digital divide between the
India's high-tech urban centers and its vast rural hinterland,
Microsoft Corporation (Microsoft) is working with the GOI and
state governments to establish Internet Technology (IT)
connectivity in 100,000 villages around the country. Pilot and
developed programs from this project are already being initiated
in parts of East and North East India. Microsoft is also
working with other U.S. corporations such as Intel, Dupont,
United Telecom and Hughes Telecom to supply hardware and
software. As part of its eGovernance plan, the GOI hopes that a
wired rural India will lead to better citizen services and more
employment opportunities. Microsoft considers this effort a
good business model for bringing about rural connectivity as
well as providing critical public services in underdeveloped
parts of India. Microsoft India Vice President Tarun Malik and
Project Manager Vineet Garg emphasized that this program is
intended to be self-sustaining and commercially viable. The
company stressed that this is not part of a Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) program as CSR initiatives can cripple the
self-sufficiency of the recipients if not managed properly.
This effort to bring IT connectivity in East and Northeast India
appears to be well coordinated and looks to offer great
potential for improving local government services and for
enhancing rural IT connectivity. End Summary.
This raises all sorts of questions. For example, why are US politicians involved in this and why is Microsoft given all this leeway? Can’t Indians provide their own software? India has its own GNU/Linux distribution. This nicely relates to the Tamil Nadu debacle we wrote about in recent days. We are starting to see damage control now that some documents are leaked and public scrutiny is mounting. See today’s article titled “It Was Management’s Decision To Drop Linux From Tender”:
The Tamil Nadu government has dropped the provision of Linux operating system (OS) due to a management decision, said Atul Anand, managing director, Electronics Corporation Of Tamil Nadu Limited (ELCOT).
In a brief conversation with EFYTimes.com, Anand said, “It was purely a management decision to do that. However, if the users want, they can always download Linux and use it.”
Probably, the issue is not as simple as it is projected by the ELCOT. The decision has invited a lot of criticism for the government body as well. The state government has been criticised by the open source community for saying “No” to Linux for its 9.1 lakh free laptops.
As before, we encourage our readers to learn about Microsoft influence in the Indian government and also read what was based Comes vs Microsoft exhibits:
Cablegate is out and Microsoft is not going to like it. Among those who tried to derail Wikileaks was one who is close to Microsoft.
Some people have expressed their willingness to help Techrights study these issues together and we are gratified to learn that some of these people have already downloaded the whole of Cablegate (which also has many online mirrors with search facilities). Those who are eager to help us out (it’s a monumental task, but a truly rewarding one) can help turn raw material into clear articles with worldwide attention, so please join us in any of our IRC channels. This is where we coordinate most things (real-time, unlike blog comments). █
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Posted in News Roundup at 7:13 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz

Contents
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Desktop
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Audiocasts/Shows
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In this episode: Against all odds, Mandriva 2011 has been released while HP looks set to drop WebOS and its TouchPad tablet. We discover things, provide an update on our wireless mesh project and listen to your opinions in the Open Ballot.
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Kernel Space
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Attackers compromised several servers at kernel.org using an off-the-shelf Trojan that appears to have entered via a compromised user credential. However, the source code for the Linux kernel does not appear to have been altered, thanks to its “git” distributed revision control system, say kernel maintainers.
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I have finally decided to blog about my netem tool that I wrote a couple of months ago.
First, the introductions, netem is a kernel component for controlling QoS, rate control and various network properties that allows you to emulate a network by modifying the kernel’s IP stack’s queue disciplines. You can read more about it here : http://www.linuxfoundation.org/collaborate/workgroups/networking/netem
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Graphics Stack
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Following a proposal earlier this summer by NVIDIA to extend the RandR protocol, they have now produced a patch for the X.Org Server that adds border property support to the RandR (Resize and Rotate) extension.
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Applications
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Desktop Environments
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K Desktop Environment/KDE SC)/Qt
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I’ve had a little time to play with my ExoPC tablet kindly provided by Intel, and after a brief look at the MeeGo/Intel tablet UX decided that Plasma Active was the way to go (sorry Intel!). The MeeGo UX is far from complete and the lack of applications made the tablet next to useless for anything besides basic web-surfing. Plasma Active, on the other hand, is a full openSuse and KDE install and so has many apps to play with. Plasma Active itself is remarkably usable already and has some nice features that actually work the way I expect a tablet to function. It’s amazing how far the Active team has come in such a short time and that’s a tribute to both the Plasma architecture that Aaron put in place and the flexibility of our Platform/Frameworks. If only Intel had approaced KDE first…
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So before meeting: Charge tablet & fetch needed documents.
Possible issues: Everything was on a my imap server. Minutes was a plain text file, Agenda was a docx file, treasures report was a xls spreadsheet, and the various other papers were pdf files.
For fetching, I’ve heard a lot about Kontact Touch and everything using Akonadi. Besides me not being fully able to properly enter my password in the first 10 tries, and a sometimes flaky internet connection, everything here was a breeze.
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Red Hat Family
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Red Hat, known as the world’s leading provider of open source technology solutions, announced last week they will move their headquarters from their current location on Varsity Drive to the Progress Energy Building in downtown Raleigh.
The company will occupy part of the space that is expected to be created with the merger of Progress Energy and Charlotte-based Duke Energy.
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Debian Family
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I’ve used Debian many times to get old hardware running and, like the author of this entry, Joshua Price, I find the flexibility and lightness of Debian really helps the Linux distribution live up to its billing as “The Universal Operating System,” which can run well on many different kinds (and eras) of hardware.
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Derivatives
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Canonical/Ubuntu
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A few minutes ago, the first
Beta version of the upcoming Ubuntu 11.10 (Oneiric Ocelot) operating system was made available for testing by the Ubuntu developers. As usual, we’ve grabbed a copy of it in order to keep you up-to-date with the latest changes in the Ubuntu 11.10 development.
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For those that do not know, I develop software for the Mythbuntu project. Over the past couple of Ubuntu releases I have been working on Mythbuntu-bare, a backup and restore utility for MythTV systems. I have been slowly adding functionality to this software which was included with the mythbuntu-common package, but due to the growing complexity of the software and size I decided it was time to move it from the mythbuntu-common package into its own set of packages. This is where my issues began.
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There is growing interest surrounding the Raspberry Pi Foundation and their promise of a PC that will cost just $25. We’ve seen how the OLPC has struggled to deliver a $100 laptop for developing countries, and yet Raspberry Pi is confident in delivering the $25 PC by November this year.
Although we know a bit about the PC, there’s still a lot of information missing, but further details are starting to appear as Raspberry Pi develops the machine further and talks to more people about it. Eben Upton, director of the foundation, recently gave a talk at Bletchley Park regarding Educating Programmers, which focused on the thinking behind the $25 PC. You can watch it below.
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Phones
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Android
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There was another upsurge in discussion of Android GPL issues last month, triggered by couple of posts by Edward Naughton, followed by another by Florian Mueller. The central thrust is that section 4 of GPLv2 terminates your license on violation, and you need the copyright holders to grant you a new one. If they don’t then you don’t get to distribute any more copies of the code, even if you’ve now come into compliance. TLDR; most Android vendors are no longer permitted to distribute Linux.
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A survey of smart phone subscribers over 13 up to July 11 has some interesting numbers. It gives total numbers of smart phones, growth rate of smart phones and shares. If I express the shares as millions of smart phones I can calculate the growth rate of the installed base by platform. Android/Linux is growing at nearly twice the rate of iOS and pulling far ahead. The numbers of new Android/Linux subscriptions can almost account for all the increase in smart phones, indicating that many who already own a smart phone will replace it. Presumably Android/Linux is replacing phones and arriving on new phones while everyone else is replacing and being cast off. The others includes Phoney7 which is not only losing share but numbers of units in service. At this rate Android/linux will have a majority by the end of 2011.
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Sub-notebooks/Tablets
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Lenovo has unveiled a seven-inch IdeaPad A1 tablet running Android 2.3, due to ship for just $200 with 8GB of storage memory. Meanwhile, ViewSonic unveiled two more seven-inch Android tablets — a seven-inch, Nvidia Tegra 2-based Android 3.2 tablet called the ViewPad 7x and a lower-end tablet called the ViewPad 7e — plus a V350 dual-SIM Android 2.2 phone.
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Good news today! I read in the news that the Ministry of Education in my country is about to provide 25,000 laptops for several elementary schools in two years. These laptops are the XO-1 models by the project OLPC (One Laptop Per Child).
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I should not have to write about this again but stories are popping up all over the web that Android/Linux tablets are not selling well against iPad and that iPad is pulling away. Nothing could be further from the truth:
* Amazon.com shows 8 Android tablets selling with greater popularity than iPad. Those 8 all have 4 stars just like the iPad. Between the iPad 16 gB and the 32gB there are three more Android/Linux tablets.
* iSuppli, which fawns over iPad, draws a chart showing iPad losing its majority to Android/Linux in 2012.
* Even The Register gets in on the act.
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In early July, I ran across Jeffrey Breen’s post on doing sentiment analysis in R a bit before two in the morning. It was interesting enough that I stayed up into the wee hours of the morning digesting his approach, downloading the necessary dependencies in R and outputting very basic sentiment histograms. Since then we’ve included it as a supplement to our research, as in examples like our post on PhoneGap’s marketplace trending.
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Events
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The popularity of the open source Django web framework is underlined by a 30% increase over last year’s attendance for DjangoCon US with a week still to go. Django, “the web framework for perfectionists with deadlines” is used by many large corporations, and is a special favorite of the newspaper industry.
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Web Browsers
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Chrome
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Mozilla
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“Firefox 8, which only just appeared on the Nightly channel, is already 20% faster than Firefox 5 in almost every metric: start up, session restore, first paint, JavaScript execution, and even 2D canvas and 3D WebGL rendering. The memory footprint of Firefox Seven (and thus Eight) has also been drastically reduced, along with much-needed improvements to garbage collection.
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Defence/Police/Aggression
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Al Jazeera’s Jamal Elshayyal unearthed files in Libya’s intelligence headquarters that suggest that David Welch — the former assistant secretary of state under President George W. Bush who brokered the deal that normalized relations between Libya and the United States and who later went on to work for the manufacturing and development giant Bechtel — met with Libyan officials in early August to coordinate on undermining the Libyan rebels and NATO forces by, for example, trying to establish ties between the uprising and al Qaeda:
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Cablegate
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A confidential cable posted on whistleblowing website WikiLeaks says Chinese officials “sought answers” on how the Australian Government had been handling human rights issues.
The cable is believed to have come from the US embassy in Canberra in 2009.
It reports on Australian talks with Chinese officials who visited the country earlier that year as part of the Australia-China Human Rights Dialogue.
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Whistleblower group Wikileaks announced on its website Friday that it has posted online all 251,287 diplomatic cables in its possession.
The new memos include hundreds of previously unpublished secret and confidential cables on the Philippines.
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After a long day of painful acrimony dealing with the incorrigible ‘old media’ at the Guardian and after weighing the pros and cons of the issue through an online forum and poll, WikiLeaks released a 60 GB torrent of the complete Cablegate files just before midnight New York Time.
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The Government is examining thousands of diplomatic cables published by Wikileaks to find out if any “Australian interests’’ have been compromised, after confirming they contain the name of an ASIO officer.
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Finance
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Crisis says that with no sign of economic recovery in sight, there are already signs that homelessness is returning to British streets. In London, rough sleeping, the most visible form of homelessness, rose by 8% last year. Strikingly, more than half of the capital’s 3,600 rough sleepers are now not British citizens: most are migrants from eastern Europe who cannot find work and, unable to get benefits or return home, are left to fend for themselves on the streets.
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Censorship
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One of the unanswered questions arising from the August riots is whether the government needs new powers to block the use of Twitter, Facebook and other social media which were used to organise the disturbances.
Prime Minister David Cameron suggested, in the immediate aftermath of the rioting, that blocking the use of social networking communications was a policy option that was to be urgently discussed with telecommunications operators (and then implemented as a priority).
So when the Home Office says (as it has done) that no new powers are needed, then it follows that either no new powers are needed (ie, the government already has the power to block social networking communications) or the politicians have quietly gone off the idea (and have decided not to say so).
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Privacy
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Millions of internet users in Pakistan will be unable to send emails and messages without fear of government snooping after authorities banned the use of encryption software.
A legal notice sent to all internet providers (ISPs) by the Pakistan Telecommunications Authority, seen by the Guardian, orders the ISPs to inform authorities if any of their customers are using virtual private networks (VPNs) to browse the web.
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Civil Rights
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The UID is a corporate scam which funnels billions of dollars into the IT sector. To me, it is one of the most serious transgressions that is on the cards. It is nothing more than an administrative tool in the hands of a police state. But coming back to censorship: since the US government has pissed on its Holy Cow (Free Speech – or whatever little was left of it) with its vituperative reaction to Wikileaks, now everybody will jump on the bandwagon. (Just like every country had its own version of the ‘war on terror’ to settle scores.) Having said this, India is certainly not the worst place in the world on the Free Speech issue: the anarchy of different kinds of media, the fact that it’s such an unmanageable country and, though institutions of democracy have been eroded, there is a militant spirit of democracy among the people… it will be hard to shut us all up. Impossible, I’d say.
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If you received fundraising emails from Barack Obama or campaign manager David Plouffe in 2008, it probably comes as no surprise that Obama and Plouffe didn’t write all of them. They began with “Friend –” and included links to credit-card donation forms. The campaign regularly blasted them out to millions of people.
Elijah Zarlin, the author of many of these emails as part of Obama’s new-media campaign team, was arrested today outside the White House during a protest of the Keystone XL pipeline, a proposed oil conduit from Alberta, Canada to the Gulf Coast. Zarlin was one of Obama’s primary fundraising-email-writers, according to Zarlin and Stephen Geer, a new-media staffer on Obama’s campaign payroll.
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Intellectual Monopolies
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Copyrights
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ACTA
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A new study on ACTA, commissioned by the Greens/EFA, concludes that ACTA is incompatible with fundamental European human rights instruments and -standards. [1] We believe the Parliament should ask the European Court of Justice an opinion on this delicate issue. Only the Court can decisively resolve the uncertainties.
A second Greens/EFA study concludes ACTA increases the risks and consequences of wrongful searches, seizures, lawsuits and other enforcement actions against legitimate suppliers of generic medicines. [2]
Furthermore, according to our own analysis, green innovation will partly inherit the issues in the software field. ACTA will hamper both green innovation and diffusion of green technology. [3]
Apart from compatibility with the European Convention on Human Rights, the Charter of Fundamental Rights, general principles of Union law, the Treaties, current Union laws and existing international obligations, there are more issues to address.
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