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Month: September 2010 (page 3 of 5)

Retaliatory Attack Takes Down MPAA Site. Whose Side Are You On?

mpaa site taken down

Earlier this month, a company in India claimed that it had been hired by the movie industry to launch cyber attacks on sites that hosted torrents to pirated movies. The company, Aiplex Software, promised denial of service attacks on those sites that ignored infringement notices (the company has since backed off of these claims).

It didn’t take long for Aiplex to end up with egg on its face. A loose group of internet community users, known as “Anonymous,” responded with denial of service attacks against the websites of Aiplex, the RIAA, and the MPAA. The attacks started Friday, and went into Saturday. Even today, the sites were slow to respond, although it is unclear whether that was due to attacks, or due to traffic generated from news of the attacks.

These attacks raise some bigger questions. Should legitimate trade groups engage in rogue behavior, like denial of service attacks? Do the ends justify the means?

And will the attacks by Anonymous do more harm than good? While most of us aren’t thrilled with DRM and copy protection, could attacks like these lead to even greater government involvement in the war on piracy? With the way that the entertainment industry has bought our government, at least here in the U.S., it isn’t hard to envision attacks like this making things worse.

Of course, the biggest question of all might be whether attacking a few sites that nobody visits really even matters in the long run.

What do you think? Who is in the wrong here?



Social Media’s Darker Side Has Reared its Head Outside My Door

The Dark Side of Social Media | 40Tech

Normally, I like to stick to light and fluffy things like how-to’s and reviews. I don’t get up on my soapbox often and I don’t like to mess up people’s days by spreading things that I wasn’t happy to learn. Today is a bit different. The fundamental shift in the way we gather, process, and spread information, while having a hugely positive affect on social efforts like fund and awareness raising, has an equally destructive affect when in the hands of those whose moral centre lays somewhere a billion or so feet below ground. What happened on Facebook over the past week — and is still happening now — is every bit as horrible and disgusting to me as the act that preceded it. I am, quite frankly, unable to fully process it, which is why I am writing about it, trying to put it into some sort of sense. Read more


10 Useful Online Tools For Business

10 Useful Online Tools For Business | 40Tech

We’re all relatively grown here, and chances are that most of us have dabbled in a business venture or two. We’ve spent time reading blogs and listening to podcasts that tell us about this new toy or online start up that may change the way we work (for the better, of course). Chances are we even went and signed up for an account or free beta or three, and spent a little more time mucking about to see if that new online tool would work for us. I have a long (looong) list of things I’ve tried and put aside, still use, or have flagged for later, when it suits whatever project I’m working on.

I’ve culled through that list and pulled out some of the online business services that stuck out to me, avoiding the more obvious ones like Google Apps, Producteev, Evernote, and the like. I’m pretty… thrifty… when it comes to online ventures, so all of these services will be affordable, and many of them will be at least partly free. Check out the list, below, and share some of your own highlights and discoveries in the comments.

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Hey, Power Users: Believe It or Not, You May Love Internet Explorer 9

ie9 beta

Over at Technologizer, Harry McCracken took a look at the first beta of Internet Explorer today, and his opinions may surprise you. He believes that IE9 has finally caught up with the competition in most respects, and in some ways it has surpassed it. Among the highlights:

  • In testing, the IE9 beta blows through animation-rich HTML5 that some other browsers can barely run at all;
  • Like in Chrome, the address bar also doubles as a search field;
  • The Address Bar shares space with tabs, and shrinks to free up space as tabs are opened;
  • IE9 has tight integration with Windows 7 (for example, tabs can be pinned to the Taskbar).

Head on over to Technologizer for a thorough rundown, including a look at how Microsoft seems to be cautious about extensions. If you’re brave, you can also go get the beta.

Is there any chance you’d ever switch to Internet Explorer 9 when it is out of beta?

Internet Explorer 9: Microsoft’s Browser Gets Back in the Game [Technologizer]


10 Killer Content Consumption Apps for the iPad, Part 2

child using ipad as content consumption device

A couple of days ago, we looked at five awesome iPad apps for consuming content.  Since content consumption is where the iPad really shines, a list of five apps doesn’t do the iPad justice.  So, here are five more great content consumption apps to liven up your iPad.

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