Archive for July, 2010

FBI warns of new Storm worm variant

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

The FBI is warning users not to respond to spam e-mail and not to open attachments or links provided within such e-mail, and advising them to validate the legitimacy of the e-mail by typing the organization’s Web site address directly into a browser window, rather than clicking on a provided link.

On Wednesday, the FBI and its partner, the Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), warned against a new e-mail campaign being used by the creators of the Storm Worm botnet.

“The spammers spreading this virus are preying on Internet users and making their computers an unwitting part of criminal botnet activity,” said the FBI in a press release. “We urge citizens to help prevent the spread of botnets by becoming web-savvy.”

The e-mail uses the the phrase “F.B.I. vs. Facebook” in its subject line and contains a link to view an article about the FBI and Facebook, a popular social networking website. Clicking on the link downloads malicious software onto the victim’s computer.

Yahoo site suffers stock-ticker display glitch

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

A lot of users griped about it though, as ZDnet blogger Garett Rogers observed. “Horrible, horrible new look. How ungoogly!” said one commenter in a long thread of complaints in the comments section below Google’s blog. “The clean and crisp look of your old site was your best feature! Put the classic look back or at least give me an option to still have the classic look.”

The problem afflicted only a small fraction of users, less than 0.5 percent, the company said, and was fixed Thursday. Those who were affected should consider upgrading to the newer My Yahoo version, said spokeswoman Stephanie Arnaldy.

Some users of the customizable My Yahoo portal were unable to see prices for their lists of company stocks for a few days, but the Internet company said the problem has been fixed.

Meanwhile, Google revamped its finance page Thursday, responding to requests to “make it easier to follow the latest news affecting the market as well as those (stories) that are relevant to your portfolio.”

A CNET reader provided this screen shot of the stock-price display glitch.

RIAA, MPAA resume lobbying push to expand copyrigh

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

“We can’t let other countries repeatedly rip off the movies Americans make, the products Americans design and the other fruits of American ingenuity without taking some action,” Baucus said in a statement.

The second RIAA- and MPAA-backed bill was introduced by senators Max Baucus, a Montana Democrat, and Orrin Hatch, a Utah Republican, on Wednesday. It’s called the International Intellectual Property Protection and Enforcement Act, and it aims to ratchet up copyright pressure against countries that the U.S. Trade Representative deems to be taking too few steps against piracy.

A group of librarians and nonprofit groups, including the American Library Association, Public Knowledge, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, sent a letter to senators on Wednesday that says copyright holders–and not government lawyers funded by tax dollars–should be the ones filing the lawsuits.

On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee is scheduled to vote on the so-called Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights Act, a 46-page bill that was introduced in July by Vermont’s Patrick Leahy and Pennsylvania’s Arlen Specter, the committee’s top Democrat and Republican.

The RIAA applauded the bill in a statement, saying it will “protect this national resource with new, meaningful tools.” The MPAA’s Dan Glickman said: “We appreciate the leadership of Chairman Baucus and Senator Hatch. Their efforts to strengthen the enforcement of U.S. intellectual property rights around the world are critical to protecting the many American business sectors and American workers that depend on intellectual property.”

The Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America are lobbying for a pair of bills that enjoy bipartisan support. Both are designed to give the federal government more power to police copyright violations, and both are likely to run into opposition from political foes of the RIAA and MPAA.

It only took a few days after politicians returned from their summer holidays for Hollywood and the major record labels to resume their legislative push to rewrite and expand digital copyright law.

The Baucus-Hatch bill says that the executive branch “shall develop an action plan” against such nations, with benchmarks including “adequate and effective protection of intellectual property rights.” Failure to meet those benchmarks may result in the Feds suspending government procurement contracts involving that nation, and halting loans and development aid, including credit from the Overseas Private Investment Corporation and the Export-Import Bank of the United States.

The measure represents a fusion of previous bills, including ones that have enjoyed support in both the Senate and House of Representatives, and one that Leahy introduced in November 2007. One of the more controversial sections of the latest version would permit the Justice Department to file a civil lawsuit against “any person” committing a copyright violation–which would include thousands, or perhaps millions, of piratical peer-to-peer users.

Another section says the president “shall ensure that an intellectual property attache with the title of Minister-Counselor is placed in the United States embassy of each foreign country with which the President determines the United States has a commercially significant relationship.”

“Movie and television producers, software publishers, music publishers, and print publishers all have their own enforcement programs,” the letter says. “There is absolutely no reason for the federal government to assume this private enforcement role.” (The letter also criticizes the bill’s criminal and civil forfeiture sections, and impounding of business records pre-trial if someone is accused of copyright infringement.)

At EMI, could digital music kill the ‘record’ prom

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

For decades, music labels trying to break in an act pressed thousands of vinyl records or CDs to distribute to disc jockeys, record stores, journalists, and fans. Those types of promotions have grown too expensive in an era of shrinking music sales, says Jeff Rougvie, general manager of EMI’s Caroline Records, who is leading Yelle’s U.S. campaign.

Sweet faced and playful, French electro-pop star Yelle seems an unlikely figure to stick a dagger into the heart of a much-loved but quickly disappearing staple of the music industry.

For an industry that has been decimated by digital technology, this is an example of how at least one of the four largest music labels is putting it to work.

Yelle, pronounced Yeah-elle, was discovered by EMI’s unit in France one week after she posted “Short Dick Cuizi,” a song that took swipes at a member of a rival band. She renamed the song “Je veux te voir” and then released Pop Up, which features three songs, “Je veux te voir,” “Parle a ma main,” and “A cause des garcons” attracting big audiences at YouTube.

While Yelle is a fan of digital music and technology, she says there is still a place for plastic.

Last year, the label brought Utada Hikaru, Japan’s top recording artist, to the United States. EMI helped the singer find an audience in the U.S. without pressing any CDs initially. But the U.S. digital-only campaign was at best an effort to put otherwise hard-to-find product in front of her U.S. fans. Before digital music, those fans might wait months before an expensive import CD hit our shores.

Instead, executives took to MySpace, music widgets, and powerful music blogs like Pitchfork. The label started digital and stayed digital until it reached a critical mass. On April 1, EMI finally released a CD version of Yelle’s album, Pop Up.

The label couldn’t have asked for a better test case than Yelle. The 25-year-old from St. Brieuc, France, told CNET News.com on Wednesday that she grew up with the Internet and fully understands its power to promote and distribute music.

A version of “A cause des garcons” has been viewed 3.5 million times since August. Her songs have also been heard on such TV shows as “The Hills” and “Entourage.”

She is unwittingly helping The EMI Group, one of the four largest music companies, to push CDs further into the shadows. Already a star in her own country and a growing nightclub favorite in the U.S., Yelle was being promoted until recently in this country exclusively through digital means.

Beyond the cost savings that digital music offers, Rougvie says there is growing need for an act to obtain a “groundswell of digital support” from music blogs, download stores, and MySpace to prove to a label that it can attract fans and is worthy of a larger investment. For that reason, focusing on digital at the beginning of a promotion makes sense.

The movement to phase out discs as promotional devices has been around for some time. Last year, EMI drastically scaled back the numbers of CDs it sent out as promos. Just a few years ago, the label may have sent out CDs as complete albums. Now it distributes secure online access where retailers or reviewers can hear songs.

“I don’t know when my first EP on vinyl will come out,” said Yelle, whose real name is Julie Budet. “I don’t know whether it will come out. I think it’s a bonus if it does. It’s a plus. I think now you can download music, buy CDs, and that’s what people really want. But I would be really proud if my album will be out in vinyl.”

EMI says it has already seen positive results.

Caroline Records specializes in introducing international music stars to U.S. audiences. Naturally, this means executives are often less sure of whether a foreign performer can find a niche audience here. Spending big on untested and unknown acts doesn’t make sense. As part of the digital-only promotion, EMI didn’t seek radio airplay for Yelle’s music and didn’t buy banner or print ads in traditional music magazines like Rolling Stone or Blender.

“We’re definitely spending less than on a traditional campaign,” Rougvie said. “It doesn’t make sense when you’re going out the door to spend a lot of money putting out a physical product and taking in costs before you know what (the demand is).”

French singer Yelle is helping to usher out era of disc promos

Digital allows EMI to get product to niche audiences affordably as well as generate incremental income for the company. Hikaru would later go on to sell 7.2 million downloads worldwide.

Naturally, EMI is trying it again.

(Credit:
EMI Music)

CNET News Daily Podcast The day the music (almost

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Nero Liquid TV:TiVo for your PC

Listen now:

Download today’s podcast

Today’s stories:

Facebook hires D.C. lawyer as general counsel

Gadget hounds get ready for CEATEC

With the stock market in free fall today, what might be the likely impact on the technology sector? ZDNet’s Editor in Chief Larry Dignan weighs in.

Visual Studio 2010 to come with `black box’

Hard to believe but Henry Ford’s Model T, one of the most significant breakthrough products of all time, celebrates its centenary.

CNET News’ Greg Sandoval is following the last-minute goings-on in Washington which enabled Web music providers extra time to reach an accord on royalty payments.

Photos: The Model T turns 100

Lingro helps you translate ginormous words

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

To see this post with added definitions using the tool you can simply click here.

Lingro is a translation and reference tool that lets you look up words simply by clicking on them. It works in one of two ways–either by having you run any link through its translator or by saving a browser bookmarklet that will automatically convert whatever page you’re looking at with a single click. The service also supports conversion of documents from your local machine as long as they’re a .Txt, .Doc, or .PDF file.

Lingro has also thrown in an element of crowd sourcing for its definitions. If you come across a word without a decent definition, you can add your own that will go on the list and be linked up to your account. This same account tracks all the words you’ve ever looked up, giving you a quick guide for later reference. It’s not just some boring list though, you can apply those words to little games. For now there are just flash cards that you can re-arrange and get rid of, but I’m assuming we’ll see some others in the future that are more fun to play.

[found via ReadWriteWeb]

Want to read the German version of the Crave gadget blog? Lingro makes it easy.

What makes the service nice is that it sits quietly in the background and pokes out with definitions only when you need it to. Also, if you run across something in another language while on any page you can also swap over to one of seven dictionaries and click on that word again. It’s a nice touch–that is as long as you know what language the word belongs to.

(Credit:
CNET Networks)

On-the-fly reference can be a pain. Say you’re reading something with a word you don’t understand or that’s simply been written in a foreign language. Finding out what that word means usually requires a copy paste into Google and going to one of the free online dictionaries. If you’re lucky enough to be using
Safari on a
Mac, you can just hit Cmd-Control-D, which will pull up the definition from the built-in dictionary, but that’s not going to work on words outside of English, or if you’re on a PC, or using another browser. That’s where Lingro comes in handy.

Apple shuts OpenClip No more copy-and-paste

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Well, that didn’t take long. As soon as people started to get excited about open-source OpenClip, and its ability to bring copy-and-paste functionality to the
iPhone, Apple found a way to shut it down with its 2.1 firmware.

commentary

But for now, its ClosedClip, not OpenClip. Even communities must apparently bow to Apple. Code is law, to borrow Larry Lessig’s phrase, and Apple controls the iPhone code.

Of course, OpenClip is open source, and perhaps enterprising developers will find a way around the 2.1 firmware. Or maybe (gasp!) Apple will actually deliver the copy-and-paste functionality many have demanded.

Micron cuts executive pay amid chip glut, loss

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Amid the dire market conditions, Micron said it would “diligently work…to ensure the competitiveness and long-term success of the company.”

Micron’s earnings pain will pass directly to executives. Micron Technology attributed a $344 million loss in the fourth quarter to a cratering memory market and said it would slash executives salaries as a result.

Micron is also in a flash chip manufacturing joint venture with Intel–IM Flash Technologies–that fabricates chips for both Micron’s and Intel’s solid state drive lines, among other products.

Sales of memory products in the fourth quarter decreased 4 percent compared with the third quarter. Sales of DRAM products decreased slightly compared with the preceding quarter, the company said.

One bright spot: Sales of CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) image sensors in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2008 increased slightly compared with the third quarter and represented 12 percent of the company’s total sales in the fourth quarter, Micron said.

This was Micron’s seventh straight quarterly loss. The largest memory chip manufacturer in the U.S. reported a net loss for the entire 2008 fiscal year of $1.6 billion, or $2.10 per diluted share on net sales of $5.8 billion.

For NAND flash memory products, sales decreased 10 percent, compared with the prior quarter, due to a 20 percent drop in the average selling price. Micron is a major manufacturer of flash memory and recently launched a line of solid state drives that will reach 256GB in capacity this year.

Executives will feel the pain. “We are implementing a 20 percent reduction in salary compensation for Micron senior executives,” Steve Appleton, Micron’s CEO, said in a statement. “The global memory market continues to experience severe oversupply and price degradation, and it remains a challenging period for all of us competing in the industry.”

Microsoft ahead of Apple, Ubuntu in OS update reli

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

The company tested the three services every five minutes.

“Microsoft wins this one hands down,” Pingdom said. It noted that Ubuntu’s service also is available through mirror sites, however.

(Credit:
Pingdom)

A company that measures Internet service reliability has given Microsoft the top score in a test of operating system update services.

Canonical's update service for the Ubuntu operating system had more downtime than Apple's or Microsoft's services.

Microsoft’s Windows Update was available 100 percent of the second quarter of 2008, Pingdom said in a blog posting Friday. Apple’s service was down 2 hours and 34 minutes, with 99.9 percent uptime, and Canonical’s Ubuntu version of Linux was down 1 day, 5 hours, and 45 minutes, for 98.64 percent uptime.

Oracle names new chief financial officer

Saturday, July 31st, 2010

Maffei left Oracle in November 2005 to take a CEO post at Liberty Media. He had earlier replaced Oracle CFO Harry You, who resigned after a nine-month stint to join BearingPoint as its CEO.

In naming Epstein as its new CFO, the company’s founder, Larry Ellison, said in a statement: “Jeff’s expertise in global operations and finance will further strengthen Oracle’s senior management team…We look forward to having him join us as our new CFO.”

Oracle named Jeffrey Epstein as its new chief financial officer on Wednesday, marking its fourth CFO since its long-time bean counter Jeff Henley retired from that post four years ago.

Epstein, the former CFO of Oberon Media, will join the database and enterprise software applications vendor on September 8. Epstein will replace Safra Catz, who will remain an Oracle co-president and board director.

Epstein will report to Catz and assume responsibility for finance, the controller’s office, finance operations, tax, treasury, real estate, investor relations, audit, and customer leasing.

Catz is returning to the co-president’s role full-time, after a nearly three-year run as Oracle’s CFO and co-president. She assumed the CFO role after former Microsoft executive Greg Maffei abruptly resigned from the post after a brief four months.