Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Saturday, 3 May 2008

BBC Exposes Facebook Flaw



EEEK!!! I was going to say my next move is to remove all my applications from my profile, but then realised that my "friends'" profile may contain potential nasty applications. Actually now that I think about it I think I will remove still remove my applications. Even though this probably won't immunize me, I will be sure that I am not infecting others. Damn you Darrell and Alana for introducing me to Facebook! I have reconnected with too many people to just give it up now.

Saturday, 26 April 2008

Searchme.com

This is pretty neat. I don't know how efficient it would be when sifting through mass results. I would go in to further detail but I wouldn't want to ruin Searchme for you

Coolest Keyboard

I've seen some pretty cool keyboards, but this one is a strong front runner with programmable LED keys

Friday, 1 February 2008

Sunday, 23 September 2007

The Pirate Bay fights back!

TPB files charges against media companies

Thanks to the email-leakage from MediaDefender-Defenders we now have proof of the things we've been suspecting for a long time; the big record and movie labels are paying professional hackers, saboteurs and ddosers to destroy our trackers.

While browsing through the email we identified the companies that are also active in Sweden and we have tonight reported these incidents to the police. The charges are infrastructural sabotage, denial of service attacks, hacking and spamming, all of these on a commercial level.

The companies that are being reported are the following:

* Twentieth Century Fox, Sweden AB
* Emi Music Sweden AB
* Universal Music Group Sweden AB
* Universal Pictures Nordic AB
* Paramount Home Entertainment (Sweden) AB
* Atari Nordic AB
* Activision Nordic Filial Till Activision (Uk) Ltd
* Ubisoft Sweden AB
* Sony Bmg Music Entertainment (Sweden) AB
* Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Nordic AB


Well done TPB! After being conned by big media with CD & DVDs, I really hope TPB takes a big bite of out the collective asses of Big Media. When the disc medium first came out, they were tagged with lofty promises to explain their tag. They were supposed to last forever and they cost more to make. Now we've find, thought the experience of time, that they DON'T last forever and are in fact cheaper to make.

The Internet in 1999 as seen in 1967



Wow, this is uncanny to say the least. As someone of the one of message boards put it: "That is amazing… It’s a lot more accurate than the Back to the Future movies. LOL."

Sunday, 10 June 2007

TorrentSpy Ordered To Start Tracking Visitors.

TorrentSpy Ordered To Start Tracking Visitors.

A court decision reached last month but under seal until Friday could force Web sites to track visitors if the sites become defendants in a lawsuit.

TorrentSpy, a popular BitTorrent search engine, was ordered on May 29 by a federal judge in the Central District of California in Los Angeles to create logs detailing users' activities on the site. The judge, Jacqueline Chooljian, however, granted a stay of the order on Friday to allow TorrentSpy to file an appeal.

The appeal must be filed by June 12, according to Ira Rothken, TorrentSpy's attorney.

TorrentSpy has promised in its privacy policy never to track visitors without their consent.

"It is likely that TorrentSpy would turn off access to the U.S. before tracking its users," Rothken said. "If this order were allowed to stand, it would mean that Web sites can be required by discovery judges to track what their users do even if their privacy policy says otherwise."

The Motion Picture Association of America, which represents Columbia Pictures and other top Hollywood film studios, sued TorrentSpy and a host of others in February 2006 as part of a sweep against file-sharing companies. According to the MPAA, the search engine was sued for allegedly making it easier to download pirated files.

Representatives of the trade group could not be reached for comment.

The court's decision could have a chilling effect on e-commerce and digital entertainment sites, said Fred von Lohmann, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation. He calls the ruling "unprecedented."



I don't really have anything to say about this. I just thought I'd post this as a "public service" to those of you naughty people out there who frequent TorrentSpy. Does anyone know where TorrentSpy is based? I thought most of these are usually located in either the Scandinavian countries or the BeNeLux countries - If they are, how does a US court achieve jurisdiction?