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Censorship

British ISP Ordered To Block Links to Pirate Site 157

An anonymous reader writes "A UK High Court judge has ruled that BT must block access to a website which provides links to pirated movies. Justice Arnold ruled that BT must use its blocking technology CleanFeed — which is currently used to prevent access to websites featuring child sexual abuse — to block Newzbin 2. 'Currently CleanFeed is dealing with a small, rural road in Scotland,' ISPA council member James Blessing told BBC Radio 4's PM programme. 'Trying to put Newzbin and other sites into the same blocking technology would be a bit like shutting down the M1. It is not designed to do that.' Digital rights organisation the Open Rights Group said the result could set a "dangerous" precedent. "Website blocking is pointless and dangerous. These judgements won't work to stop infringement or boost creative industries. And there are serious risks of legitimate content being blocked and service slowdown. If the goal is boosting creators' ability to make money from their work then we need to abandon these technologically naive measures, focus on genuine market reforms, and satisfy unmet consumer demand," said ORG campaigner Peter Bradwell."
Security

HBGary Federal Forces Aaron Barr Out of DEFCON 65

Trailrunner7 writes "Former HBGary Federal CEO Aaron Barr says he will withdraw from a planned appearance at the DEFCON conference in the face of threatened legal action over his plans to take part in a panel discussion there. Barr notified DEFCON organizers on Wednesday that he was withdrawing from the Aug. 6 panel discussion after attorneys representing HBGary Federal threatened to file an injunction against him if he did not withdraw from the panel immediately. The incident is just the latest in a series of conflicts between Barr and HBGary Federal following attacks by the anarchic hacking group Anonymous on February 5."

Comment Update from the field (Score 1) 137

We just finished packing up the K10's (we have more than one) and will be heading back to California tomorrow. I'll see if I can post pictures soon.

As one of the primary designers of K10's avionics, I can authoritatively answer questions!

1.) K10 and the other robots that were out in the desert are research platforms and are not intended to fly in space. As such, we can get away with many things including the use of commercially available non-space qualified parts.

2.) Our entire group at NASA Ames primarily runs on Linux (desktops and robots)! We also have a good Mac contingent as well.

3.) K9, it's predecessor, was designed for research in autonomous exploration/science on Mars. Yes, it was named after K-9 in Dr. Who.

For more information on the avionics inside K9 and K10, see:

http://ic.arc.nasa.gov/publications/pdf/0851.pdf

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