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Catch up on industry news here first!
(old news - 06:49AM Tuesday Apr 13 2004)
Inside Todays Bytes:
•More Google Woes... Cal State Senator Moves to Block GMail
•WUSB to Kill Off BlueTooth by 2006?
•Wireless firms bill clients $937 million for "federal recovery fees"
•Music sales strong despite digital piracy
•China says it is the world's largest victim of CD piracy
•Cisco Fires Back at Hacking Tool
•iPod Mini Getting Static
•Get more industry news and other TidBytes you should know about.... on the inside!


•WUSB to Kill Off BlueTooth by 2006?:
If Intel has its way, Bluetooth will be a dead technology by the end of 2005. Intel’s pushing hard for a new wireless USB standard, called WUSB. WUSB is being set up as a counterpart to 802.11, handling the device to device transfers WiFi doesn’t cover; like the movement of audio and video files between PCs and cameras, MP3 players and the like, and will have data transfer rates of 480 megabits per second at a range of 2 meters. Bluetooth delivers 12 megabits per second.
•Wireless Services Now Represent 25% of U.S. Corporate Telecom Spending:
As U.S. enterprises increasingly adopt wireless voice and data environments, their wireless spending is taking an increasingly large bite of their total telecom budget. U.S. enterprises say 25 percent of their telecom budget is spent on wireless, but decentralized account management is hindering businesses' ability to accurately assess wireless expenses, according to a new Yankee Group study.
•McDonalds Picks Provider for McWireless:
Wayport, based in Austin, Texas, has won a contract to become the sole provider of wireless Internet access in thousands of McDonald's restaurants. Under the agreement, Wayport plans to offer Wi-Fi service in as many as 3,000 McDonald's restaurants by the end of the year, charging $2.95 for two hours of access.
•Music sales strong despite digital piracy:
On-line file-sharing and other digital piracy persist, but a gradual turnaround in U.S. music sales that began last fall picked up in the first quarter of this year, resulting in the industry's best domestic sales in years. Overall U.S. music sales — CDs, legal downloads, DVDs, etc. — rose 9.1 per cent in the first three months of the year over the same period in 2003.
•China says it is the world's largest victim of CD piracy:
China, which is often criticized for intellectual property infringement on a grand scale, says it is in fact the world's main victim of CD piracy. Hundreds of millions of fake CDs enter the country across its porous borders, winding up in Chinese shops and hurting its reputation abroad, according to the spokesman of the Chinese National Copyright Administration.
•Verizon's Got You Covered by Broadband... or They Will by 2005:
By the end of 2005, courtesy of Verizon Wireless, you should be able to wirelessly connect a laptop, PDA or cellphone to the Internet at broadband speeds from almost any location in every major U.S. metropolitan area. This not hotspot coverage. Called BroadBand Access and based on the cellphone technology called EV-DO, it will provide true wireless high-speed Internet service that you can use just about anywhere, even on the street or in a car.
•Cell Phone Chill Pill:
University of Wisconsin researchers say they have developed a "chill pill" to help cool down overheated cell phones and improve signal quality while using less battery power. The research team rearranged the energy cells within a power amplifier so that any heat produced dissipates uniformly, rather than moving toward the center. The rearrangement reduces the overall temperature, which enhances overall performance.
•Build a better SpamKiller:
Network Associates announced that the latest update to SpamKiller adds pattern recognition based on Bayesian principles. Pattern recognition techniques allow products to learn from past examples, helping them to formulate a way of classifying messages as "spam" or "legitimate." The security company plans to use the technology as one measure of how likely it is that a particular e-mail message is spam.
•iPod Mini Getting Static:
Apple Computer said late Monday that it is looking into some users' complaints of sound problems with the iPod Mini. Complaints ranging from crackling sound to interrupted play have been making the rounds on Apple enthusiast sites.
•Hotspots an Easy Hack:
Wireless networks aren't just popular with computer users on the go. Hackers are finding them an easy target to snoop on consumers' laptop PCs and, eventually, their employers' networks. Many hot spots do not require passwords. That lets anyone with a wireless connection and hacking know-how to hop aboard the network and filch business files, credit card numbers and other confidential information.
•Intel: We'll Just Make Wireless Networks Safe From Hackers:
The next generation of Intel microprocessors for cellphones and handheld computers will, for the first time, include hard-wired security features that can enforce copy protection and help prevent hackers from wreaking havoc on wireless networks. Intel's PXA27x processors, announced yesterday at a conference in Taiwan, contain a security 'engine' that is on the same piece of silicon but separated from the area where general processing takes place. The 'engine' also has access to secure memory.
•Wireless firms bill clients $937 million for "federal recovery fees":
The National Association of State Utility Consumer Advocates filed a petition with the FCC demanding the FCC to take a more active role in regulating misleading line item charges on monthly wireless bills. At issue are so-called "federal recovery fees" which are used primarily to pay for costs associated with allowing customers to change providers while keeping their phone numbers. But wireless companies have used the line item to cover all manner of expenses, including marketing and advertising costs.
•Cisco Fires Back at Hacking Tool:
Cisco Systems has announced the availability of Extensible Authentication Protocol-Flexible Authentication via Secure Tunneling (EAP-FAST) for users who want to use an 802.1X EAP type that needs no digital certificates and is safe from dictionary attacks. The company was responding to the release last week of a tool which can be used to exploit weaknesses in the Lightweight Extensible Authentication Protocol (LEAP) used in Cisco wireless devices.
•Cal State Senator Moves to Block Google's GMail:
California state Senator Liz Figueroa says she is drafting legislation to block Google Inc.'s free e-mail service "Gmail" because it would place advertising in personal messages after searching them for key words. This comes in addition to European groups recently lodging a complaint with UK authorities, charging that Gmail may violate Europe's privacy laws because it stores messages where users cannot permanently delete them.

TidBytes:
Is Google the future of e-mail?
Presidential politics divide Silicon Valley
N. Carolina woman joins brother as 'spam' defendant
Who Wants To Regulate VoIP?
The Java trap

Forums » Morning Broadband Bytes
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Post a:
Unreal111

join:2004-01-21
Minneapolis, MN

NEWS

Keep it up China.

I think the sales never went down because of illegal downloading.
BosstonesOwn

join:2002-12-15
Everett, MA
clubs:
·Comcast
·Comcast Formerly ..

Re: NEWS

said by Unreal111 See Profile:
Keep it up China.

I think the sales never went down because of illegal downloading.

Don't worry the RIAA will say it's because of their work, and they won't stop till every one buys their music. Hey RIAA see what happened.

I-tunes and the like sales are actually up, Imagine that we got a choice and we used it wow. Now let's keep lowering cd prices a bit and then there will be even better sales.
--
This package does not contain a winner...
November70

join:2003-07-29
Philippines

China is innocent...

The pirates are from further south-southeast. Check the region's history, from the 16th century onwards, they have always been pirates
tdkyo

join:2002-12-07
Rochester, NY

GMail


Cal State Senator Moves to Block Google's GMail:
California state Senator Liz Figueroa says she is drafting legislation to block Google Inc.'s free e-mail service "Gmail" because it would place advertising in personal messages after searching them for key words. This comes in addition to European groups recently lodging a complaint with UK authorities, charging that Gmail may violate Europe's privacy laws because it stores messages where users cannot permanently delete them.

Someone have nothing else to do but to kill a service that comes with legit advertisements. What do they want? Free everything???

fahrenheit412



Re: GMail

--Someone have nothing else to do but to kill a service that comes with legit advertisements. What do they want? Free everything??--

The real scare is that there is such a large population ready to accept becoming mindless automatons with no sense of privacy. Orwellian indoctrination is about complete and irrevocable.

Next phase is to churn out genetically engineered zombies that will automatically obey the corporate-state thru satellite signals. The person quoted above is probably there, while not having a clue as to what's being said here.

woody7
Premium
join:2000-10-13
Torrance, CA
·EarthLink
·DSL EXTREME

Re: GMail

Pander to everyones fear, then offer a way to fix it....gotta love politicians...My idea is just don't sign up if it is going to bother you....same for music and tv...if the content bothers you don't watch/listen or turn off...this is all deflection...they don't have a clue how to fix the pressing problems, so they "fix" the ones they think they can...IMO
--
BlooMe
threeten

join:2002-12-19
Denver, CO
Your comments are ironic. You are suggesting that users are not intelligent enough to make their own decisions about Gmail, so they should turn regulation of it over to the government?

Who is the "mindless automaton?"

halfband
Premium
join:2002-06-01
Huntsville, AL
You don't have to ban GMail, if you don't like the privacy policy, then don't use it. Who are they trying to protect us from, ourselves?
--
Registered Bandwidth Offender #40812

pnh102
Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty
Premium
join:2002-05-02
Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast

said by tdkyo See Profile:
Someone have nothing else to do but to kill a service that comes with legit advertisements. What do they want? Free everything???
I know! Ever since the New Deal more and more Americans are more than happy to look towards the government to solve their perceived "problems." This state senator's actions are just an extension of that.
--
Keep America Strong! Bush/Cheney 2004
Queasy

join:2004-01-20
Lawrenceville, GA

Why am I not the least bit surprised that this came from California, the biggest anti-business state in the U.S.?

On a side note, I hope Gmail is not like Google's search engine with the targeted advertising. I did a search for 'swings' to find a swing for my son's swingset and the targeted advertising I was given was of the "Meet Adult Swingers In Your Area!" and "Swingers XXX" kind. Yech.

furlonium
Computer Over? Virus equals Very Yes?

join:2002-05-08
Bethlehem, PA

Re: GMail


Nothin Dirty Here
said by Queasy See Profile:
Why am I not the least bit surprised that this came from California, the biggest anti-business state in the U.S.?

On a side note, I hope Gmail is not like Google's search engine with the targeted advertising. I did a search for 'swings' to find a swing for my son's swingset and the targeted advertising I was given was of the "Meet Adult Swingers In Your Area!" and "Swingers XXX" kind. Yech.

Not sure what you exactly did a search for, but I typed in "swings" into Google and this is what returned for their targeted ads.
Queasy

join:2004-01-20
Lawrenceville, GA

Re: GMail

said by furlonium See Profile:

Not sure what you exactly did a search for, but I typed in "swings" into Google and this is what returned for their targeted ads.

Hmmm. Maybe it was just 'swing'. I'm at work right now so I'm not about to try it again until I get home.
TheGreatWill

join:2004-03-17
Toronto, ON

A little too obvious to anyone with half a brain, which is at minimal, everyone who uses this site, GMail's security problem are the problem of any email service. Now of course, any politician would also look out for the needs of the people, and by banning Gmail, no one has to fear privacy concerns of a service that isn't even available.
--
The dictionary says... Idiot: Anyone with differing opinions than your own

gruggni
Oxygen Gets You High

join:2003-07-28
Corpus Christi, TX

WIFI hacks?

"Digital intruders are piercing defenseless air space at corporations, public Wi-Fi hot spots and homes to gain illegal entry to computers. About 90% of mobile devices lack protection, says market researcher Gartner."
There is no piercing if the wifi is open. I love the use of words. Defenseless means anyone can go in. Hacking know-how? Please, it you know how DHCP works, it doesn't require hacking know how. DHCP is wifi's worse enemy. If wifi is open, you should be using a firewall to began with. Trusted network computing is not your friend. What open wifi is to criminals, is the same as fishermen fishing in a large clear water glass aquariam.

It's easy pickings for criminals, they can see their prey sitting a few feet away. Instead of sitting at home. Open wifi coffee shops are hunting grounds for sharks. A pack of sheep with no guards.

You need a shepard with dogs to keep the wolves away.

Some people are always the sheep.
--
"I'm sick of following my dreams man; I'm just going to ask where they're going and hook up with them later."- Mitch Hedberg
Estragon

join:2003-06-20
Greenville, NH
·Fairpoint Communic..
·MV Communications,..

Hey, Verizon! What about the rest of us?

It's really nice that Verizon will give us "the Internet at broadband speeds from almost any location in every major U.S. metropolitan area".

But if I lived in a major U.S. metropolitan area, I'd just get DSL or cable or WISP for my broadband. And for less than $80 a month, too.

How about deploying this in the rest of America where we have no alternatives?
Forums » Morning Broadband Bytes


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