19051458 story
Posted by
Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @07:58PM
from the if-at-first-you-don't-succeed dept. Evil-G writes "In an email on Friday, SCO informed its partners that
UnXis Inc. was chosen as the successful bidder for SCO's Unix software business on 26 January. The slightly convoluted phrasing is probably due to SCO's current reorganization under Chapter 11. On 16 February, the transaction is to be
submitted for approval to the bankruptcy court where SCO's case is pending."
slashdot business court sco 19050438 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @06:31PM from the won't-somebody-think-of-the-oh-wait dept. Hugh Pickens writes writes "CNN has an interesting interview with Bill Gates who says that unbelievable progress is being made in both inventing new vaccines and making sure they get out to all the children who need them. The improvements could cut the number of children who die every year from about 9 million to half that. But Gates has harsh words for those who engage in anti-vaccine efforts , especially Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who falsified data to 'prove' a fraudulent link between vaccines and autism. 'It's an absolute lie that has killed thousands of kids,' says Gates. 'Because the mothers who heard that lie, many of them didn't have their kids take either pertussis or measles vaccine, and their children are dead today.'" slashdot science vaccine gates 19048382 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @05:05PM from the we-shouldn't-suffer-through-our-media-alone dept. eldavojohn writes "The US government's Broadcasting Board of Governors has revealed in a completed FOIA request the development, testing and planned use of Feed Over E-mail (FOE) to push news through China's firewall . This FOIA request (PDF) indicates that the US government is interested in making sure Chinese people receive up-to-date news, and it wants to expand the arsenal of anti-censorship tools (for news at least). The FOE project is GPLv3 and maintained by Sho Ho of BBG ." slashdot foia foe propaganda 19048032 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @03:48PM from the let's-bomb-the-moon-again dept. coondoggie writes "It obviously leans heavily on the military's concerns for outer space exploration, but the National Security Space Strategy (PDF) released yesterday by the Department of Defense outlines concerns like protection from space junk and system security that all space travelers in theory would want addressed. The NSSS document emphasizes the Obama administration's desire to protect US space assets and to further commercialize space but also to ensure that the US and international partners have unfettered access to outer space." slashdot military nasa science 19046594 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @02:30PM from the food-on-the-table dept. theodp writes "Except for a few odd jobs,' wrote an advice seeker to The Ethicist (NYT, reg. may be required), 'I had been out of work for nine months when I was offered a job setting up an [IT] offshore help desk. Would it be ethical to accept the offer?' Randy Cohen, who pens The Ethicist column for the Times, not only advised the job seeker that it was indeed okay to help co-workers lose their jobs, but also seemed to suggest that it would be unethical for him not to offshore the jobs, saying: 'Some people feel we have a greater ethical duty to those closest to us — our neighbors — but in an era of global trade and travel, that is a recipe for tribalism and its attendant ills.' The job seeker, who noted his father's auto-industry job was outsourced, chose to ignore Cohen's ethics advice — as well as his own wife's — and declined the job out of principle. He continues to seek work. Comments?" slashdot ethics commerce jobs 19045574 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @01:14PM from the turn-on-your-firewall-gentlemen dept. PatPending tips a Wall Street Journal report claiming that hackers have repeatedly broken into the computer networks of the company running the Nasdaq Stock Exchange . "The exchange's trading platform—the part of the system that executes trades—wasn't compromised, these people said. However, it couldn't be determined which other parts of Nasdaq's computer network were accessed. Investigators are considering a range of possible motives, including unlawful financial gain, theft of trade secrets and a national-security threat designed to damage the exchange. The Nasdaq situation has set off alarms within the government because of the exchange's critical role, which officials put right up with power companies and air-traffic-control operations, all part of the nation's basic infrastructure." slashdot windows business crime 19044606 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @11:58AM from the cholesterol-for-the-courts dept. An anonymous reader writes "The avalanche of copyright infringement lawsuits in the United States, mainly against BitTorrent users, are about to hit a dubious milestone. In total 99,924 defendants have been sued in the last 12 months , and new cases are being filed at a rapid rate. Adult companies in particular have embraced the profitable pay-up-or-else scheme where tens of millions of dollars are at stake." Though, as other readers point out, both judges and cable companies are getting tired of the endless subpoenas in P2P porn cases. slashdot court internet lawsuit 19042678 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @10:43AM from the apps-that-delete-facebook-apps dept. An anonymous reader writes "Privacy groups announced a mobile privacy developer challenge yesterday . The competition, Develop for Privacy , challenges mobile app developers to create tools that help ordinary mobile device users understand and protect their privacy. It's sponsored by the ACLU of Northern California, the ACLU of Washington, and the Tor Project, with the assistance of the Ontario Information and Privacy Commissioner's Office. Submission deadline is May 31, 2011. The winner will be announced in August 2011 at an event in Las Vegas, coinciding with the DEFCON and Black Hat security conferences." slashdot aclu tor mobile 19042546 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @09:32AM from the joe-vs-the-papier-mache-volcano dept. An anonymous reader writes "The NY Times is running a story about the response from some high school science teachers to Obama's State of the Union address. It's nice that he wants to celebrate science fair winners, they say, but his obsession with standardized math and reading test scores means they have no time to teach students the fundamentals of how to do science . 'I have so many state standards I have to teach concept-wise, it takes time away from what I find most valuable, which is to have them inquire about the world,' said one teacher." slashdot politics science education 19034254 story Posted by timothy on Saturday February 05, @08:13AM from the bob-dole-doesn't-trademark-his-name dept. Hugh Pickens writes "The LA Times reports that former Alaska governor and 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin has filed paperwork with the US Patent and Trademark Office in November to trademark her name . On her initial application, Palin listed usage of the trademark for a website featuring information about political issues; and educational and entertainment services, including motivational speaking in the fields of politics, culture, business and values. Legal experts say it is relatively unusual for politicians to formally trademark their names because they are generally not associated with commercially valuable products or services and that trademarking a name is more common for celebrities in the fields of entertainment, fashion or sports. 'Sarah is somebody who is now out of government and pursuing other activities, in particular, speaking engagements ... and it looks like she's looking to protect her name with those activities,' says attorney Claudia Ray." slashdot news palin politics 19037776 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @06:54AM from the fads-only-take-you-so-far dept. eldavojohn writes "The Escapist is reporting that the MTV Games division of Viacom is being closed . After selling off Harmonix for an alleged equivalent of a single Red Lobster Gift Card , it turns out that Viacom's division known as MTV Games has little left on its plate. There's some bickering over missed performance-based payments , and MTV Games failed to secure a publishing deal for all the Rock Band games in Europe — which appeared to be the final nail in the coffin for them." slashdot business games music 19034896 story Posted by timothy on Saturday February 05, @04:58AM from the oh-your-honor-don't-you-know-a-joke? dept. nk497 writes "Controversial legal firm ACS Law and its sole file-sharing client Media CAT have shut down their businesses , days before a ruling is due in a case they brought to the UK Patent Court. ACS Law is infamous for sending out letters to alleged illegal file sharers, demanding payment and threatening law suits. Now that ACS has a case before a judge, it's trying to drop the cases, and has now completely closed its doors. The defendants' lawyers are trying to keep the case going, in order to be able to claim back costs." That sounds right in line with other recent ACS happenings, from getting upbraided by a judge to being blacklisted by an ISP , and even putting the brakes on the file-sharing cases themselves . slashdot court internet p2p 19037688 story Posted by Soulskill on Saturday February 05, @03:40AM from the game-on-apply-directly-to-the-forehead dept. An anonymous reader writes "Mozilla has announced the winners of the Game On competition , a contest designed to encourage the development of games based on web technologies. In the various competition categories Far 7 won Best Technology, Sketchout won Best Aesthetics, Favimon won Most Original, Websnooker won Most Polished, and Robots Are People Too won Most Fun. Z-Type won the Community Choice category and Marble Run won Best Web-iness and Best Overall." slashdot games internet mozilla 19036578 story Posted by timothy on Saturday February 05, @02:02AM from the well-that's-not-very-silly-now-is-it? dept. itwbennett writes "Google's Bing sting , reported in Slashdot just days ago and subsequently denied by Microsoft , is now being called 'silly' and 'petty' by search industry analysts and execs. The reason: it would be impossible for Microsoft to use the copied results to reverse engineer Google's search algorithms. And in fact it is more likely that Microsoft was conducting competitive research. Charlene Li, founder of technology research and advisory firm Altimeter Group, saw Google's actions as a misguided response to a real threat from a competitor in its core search business. 'Google isn't used to having competition. You look at this incident and you wonder why they are doing this. It feels amateurish in a way, a kind of 'they're not playing fair' attitude,' she said." slashdot google search microsoft 19035606 story Posted by timothy on Friday February 04, @11:04PM from the maybe-it's-the-year-of-linux-on-the-tablet dept. MojoKid writes "Dell recently started shipping their Streak 7 tablet and it's the highly anticipated big brother of Dell's 5-inch tablet, the Streak 5 that came out in September of 2010. The larger Streak 7 goes up against stiff competition with the likes of Samsung's Galaxy Tab, though the Streak 7 is retailing slightly lower with or without a contract through T-Mobile. Regardless, the Dell Streak 7 offers some pluses over the Galaxy Tab, like its 5MP rear-facing camera, but comes up short in other areas, such as its lower resolution (800x480) display — versus the Galaxy Tab's 1024x600 display. The Dell Streak 7 also has NVIDIA's Tegra 2 dual-core 1GHz processor under its hood for a rather snappy Android 2.2 experience, as you can see here in this early, hands-on preview of the device . In early benchmark testing, the Streak 7 is looking pretty strong versus the Galaxy Tab, which comes in neck-and-neck with the Streak 7 in Neocore, at around 54 FPS."
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