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Rediscoveryness-ness (Oct 01 2003 22:59 GMT) - Yes, I realize that my titles are getting less and less legible. But that isn't the point of today's article. It's all about rediscovery, baby yeah! So I'm rummaging through all the old stuff in the basement of the place I'm living at, and low ... |
DotNET-fr
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Créer un composant .Net et l'intégrer dans C#Builder (Oct 01 2003 22:59 GMT) - 2003-10-01 16:51:33 - CGI publie sur developpez.com un premier article sur la création d'un composants winforms, et son intégration dans la palette de composants de C#Builder.Le code source du composant qui illustre l'article est disponible en té (... |
E-Commerce Times
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RIAA Still Suing, Will Warn File Traders (Oct 01 2003 22:58 GMT) - Despite criticism of its technical and legal tactics, the Recording Industry Association of America is continuing its campaign of lawsuits against individual Internet file traders. RIAA spokesperson Jonathan Lamy told TechNewsWorld that the organization has "a thorough and comprehensive process" for ensuring the information it gathers on accused file swappers is accurate. |
Meerkat: An Open Wire Service
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Dell's Dud (Oct 01 2003 22:57 GMT) - The idea that the iPod's position is precarious -- that any day now, some cheaper weak-branded knock-off will knock Apple off its perch -- is exactly backwards. |
Techdirt
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Study Shows That RIAA's Evidence May Be Unreliable (Oct 01 2003 22:56 GMT) - While the RIAA has made a big of show of telling people that it's impossible to hide from their hired copyright sniffing robots, a new report suggests that it's really not that hard to fake peer-to-peer requests to make it look as though a different machine has the files in question. In other words, this sort of thing could explain how someone could be wrongly accused by the RIAA and also calls the quality of their "your IP address identifies you" legal argument into question. Of course, using this argument seems like a bit of a stretch, and seems in the same vein as folks blaming tax fraud on trojans (though, that argument worked). Still, based on this, I wonder if someone could write a file sharing system that specifically generated incorrect information to throw off sniffers? I'm not saying that this is recommended, but from the beginning, we've been saying that all these actions by the RIAA are only going to serve to push file sharers deeper underground. |
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