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Thursday, March 1, 2007
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T-Mobile Bans Others' Apps On Their Phones. cshamis writes "T-Mobile has recently changed their policies and now tell their customers with appropriate data plans and with Java-Micro-App-capable T-Mobile phones: no third-party network applications. You can, of course, still use their incredibly clunky and crippled built-in WAP browsers, but GoogleMaps and OperaMini are left high and dry. Would anyone care to speculate if this move is likely to retain or repel customers?" [Slashdot]
9:53:54 PM
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Lawmakers Tout DMCA Killer. The Fair Use Act would free honest consumers to pick the electronic locks on their digital media, under certain circumstances. A congressman says it's a good first step. Luke O'Brien reports from Washington. [Wired News: Top Stories]
9:33:54 PM
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Congress killed the Total Information Awareness (TIA) program in 2003
and several new programs have been reported to take its place. (See Total Information Awareness just changed its name FGI,
2006-02-26.) A forthcoming GAO report looks at the use of the Analysis,
Dissemination, Visualization, Insight and Semantic Enhancement (ADVISE)
system.
9:13:23 PM
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Pending the mayor's signature, which is expected, all clubs where dancing is permitted will be required to install surveillance cameras at entrances and exits. While some Council members raised privacy concerns, the overwhelming majority agreed the surveillance tapes would be an invaluable deterrent and aid police if a crime is committed.
All surveillance tapes must be securely stored, and clubs could be fined up to $50,000 if the footage makes its way onto TV or gossip Web sites.
Industry representatives welcomed the surveillance camera vote, but pointed out that 90 percent of clubs with dancing already have such cameras installed.
8:50:56 PM
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The Defense Department has signed an agreement with Microsoft under
which the software vendor will help develop tools and methods for
analyzing the department's 9.1 million electronic patient records to
find better ways to manage the health of DOD beneficiaries.
Under
the cooperative research and development agreement, Microsoft will work
with the Army's Telemedicine and Advanced Technology Research Center to
extract, store and analyze data stored in DOD's Armed Forces Health
Longitudinal Technology Application (AHLTA) electronic health record
system.
The AHLTA clinical data repository (CDR) is "an untapped
goldmine of health information, and the ability to draw upon and
efficiently use this data will allow us to unleash the true power of
AHLTA," said Dr. William Winkenwerder Jr., assistant secretary of
Defense for health affairs. "This project has the potential to vastly
improve our ability to provide both force health protection and
population health improvement activities for every soldier, sailor,
airman and Marine."
Microsoft and the Army center aim to develop
a clinical data warehouse (CDW) that provides predefined queries of
interest to clinicians and analysts. The warehouse also will support
data mining, which uses clustering and pattern recognition techniques
to discover previously unknown correlations in the data. Intel and HP
are providing support on security, sizing, and scalability testing of
the CDW architecture, Microsoft said.
Dr. Deborah Peel,
chairwoman of the Patient Privacy Rights Foundation, views the patient
information not as a goldmine ripe for exploitation but as a collection
of personal and sensitive health information that needs to be zealously
guarded and only accessed with express consent by the patient.
7:46:58 PM
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MPAA Fires Back at AACS Decryption Utility.
RulerOf writes "The AACS Decryption utility released this past December known as BackupHDDVD originally authored by Muslix64 of the Doom9 forums has received its first official DMCA Takedown Notice.
It has been widely speculated that the utility itself was not an
infringing piece of software due to the fact that it is merely "a
textbook implementation of AACS," written with the help of documents
publicly available at the AACS LA's website, and that the AACS Volume Unique Keys
that the end user isn't supposed to have access to are in fact the
infringing content, but it appears that such is not the case." --- From the thread
"...you must input keys and then it will decrypt the encrypted content.
If this is the case, than according to the language of the DMCA it does
sound like it is infringing. Section 1201(a) says that it is an
infringement to "circumvent a technological measure." The phrase,
"circumvent a technological measure" is defined as "descramb(ling) a
scrambled work or decrypt(ing) an encrypted work, ... without the
authority of the copyright owner." If BackupHDDVD does in fact decrypt
encrypted content than per the DMCA it needs a license to do that." [Slashdot: Your Rights Online]
7:43:21 PM
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Berners-Lee Speaks Out Against DRM, Advocates Net Neutrality. narramissic writes "Speaking before the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet, Tim Berners-Lee advocated for net neutrality, saying that the Web deserves 'special treatment' as a communications medium to protect its nondiscriminatory approach to content. Berners-Lee's more controversial statements came on the topic of DRM, in which he suggested that instead of DRM, copyright holders should provide information on how to legally use online material, allowing users the opportunity 'to do the right thing.' This led to an odd exchange with Representative Mary Bono who compared Berner-Lee's suggestion to 'having a speed limit but not enforcing the speed limit.'" [Slashdot: Your Rights Online]
7:31:36 PM
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'Electric Slide' Creator Steps on Fair Use. EFF Lawsuit Battles Bogus Copyright Claims
San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) filed suit today against the man who claims to have created the popular line dance "The Electric Slide," asking the court to protect the free speech rights of a videographer who captured a few steps of the dance in a documentary video he posted to the Internet.
EFF's client, Kyle Machulis, shot the video at a concert last month. In one ten-second segment, a group of fans in the audience attempts to dance part of the Electric Slide. Machulis later uploaded the video to YouTube. Within just a few days, Richard Silver, owner of www.the-electricslidedance.com, filed a takedown demand under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Silver claimed he owned the copyright to the Electric Slide and that Machulis' video infringed his rights. The removal appears to be part of a broad campaign by Silver to misuse copyright allegations to prevent dancers from performing the dance "incorrectly."
"Silver's claim of copyright infringement is absurd and is a classic example of the kind of DMCA abuse that can chill Internet speech," said EFF Staff Attorney Corynne McSherry. "Even if Silver had a valid copyright in the dance--which is not at all clear--this is a fair use and not infringing."
EFF's complaint asks that the judge immediately rule that the video does not infringe any copyright owned by Silver, and that Silver cease his meritless claims towards Machulis.
"We spend a lot of time fighting the misuse of copyright law on the Internet, but this situation is particularly outrageous," said EFF Staff Attorney Jason Schultz. "With thousands of videos being uploaded to sites like YouTube every day, free speech is on the line and needs to be protected."
For the full complaint:
http://www.eff.org/legal/cases/electricslide/complaint.pdf
Contacts:
Corynne McSherry
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
corynne@eff.org
Jason Schultz
Staff Attorney
Electronic Frontier Foundation
jason@eff.org [EFF: Breaking News]
7:23:19 PM
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DHS Issues REAL ID Regulations; CDT Urges Repeal of Law. The Department of Homeland Security has issued proposed regulations implementing the REAL ID Act, which would require states to adopt tighter standards and create a networked system for driver's license issuance. Given the Act's fundamental flaws, CDT has joined other civil liberties groups in supporting legislation introduced in recent days in the House and Senate to repeal the hastily-enacted 2005 law and return to the driver's license reform process begun by the previous Congress. CDT is especially concerned that the Act would result in the creation of a linked network of government databases of personal information, without standards or limits on access and use. [Center for Democracy and Technology]
7:17:49 PM
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Senators Weigh in on WIPO Broadcast Treaty. Senators Patrick Leahy and Arlen Specter recently sent a letter to the Copyright Office and the PTO, expressing their concern about the WIPO Broadcast Treaty. In it, they voice many of the same concerns that have brought together a broad alliance of public interest groups, libraries, technology groups, and communications providers against the treaty as it is currently envisioned at WIPO. Specifically, the senators (who are, respectively, the Chair and Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee) are worried that granting broadcasters a separate, 20-year-long IP right in broadcasts could interfere with the fair use of works, as well as complicating the legal hoops that consumers would have to jump through. The letter also addresses the fact that copyright owners and ISPs could run into unintended liabilities under the treaty. read more
[Public Knowledge - Blogging, Events, and Action Alerts]
7:16:23 PM
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© Copyright 2007 Paul Hardwick.
Last update: 3/4/07; 10:16:53 AM.
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