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- Volume 4, Issue 50 Atari Online News, Etc. December 13, 2002
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2002
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
- Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
- Rob Mahlert -- Web site
- Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
-
-
- With Contributions by:
-
- Kevin Savetz
- Anthony Bufort
- Dan Iacovelli
- Mirosøaw Kozioø
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphiforums.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- http://www.icwhen.com/aone/
- http://a1mag.atari.org
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0450 12/13/02
-
- ~ Less Spam in Workplace ~ People Are Talking! ~ Klax Site Launched!
- ~ Filters Stymie Users! ~ Up and Coming Browsers ~ Bigger Banner Ads?
- ~ Revenge of the Lizard! ~ Panhandling On the Web ~ Fake eBay Web Site!
- ~ Windows Domain Sought! ~ Napster Bits Auctioned ~ Russian Case Rests!
-
- -* Atari Quick FAQ Seeks Home! *-
- -* Sun Lures Sony Away From Microsoft! *-
- -* Aussie Net Ruling Has Broad Implications! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been one of those weeks where you just can't wait until it's over. The
- problem is that I know that next week is not going to be any better! I
- won't go into details, but it's all work-related - things will get more
- hectic before they get more calm! I can't wait to go on vacation after the
- holiday!
-
- The weather here lately has been dismal, to say the least. No major storms
- to speak of - just damp and gray. A little snow, a little rain. Not too
- cold, but certainly no sun-bathing temperatures either! And winter isn't
- even here yet, officially.
-
- The holiday season is upon us in full swing. We have most of our shopping
- down for a change. We just have a few things to pick up, and of course we
- have some items to get for ourselves. Typically we'd be frantic at about
- this time of the shopping season, but not this year. We may even manage to
- eliminate our last-minute excursions this year! I hope your experiences are
- similar! Desk update, for anyone who cares - it's on the road!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- Atari ST Quick FAQ Looking for New Maintainer
-
-
- Martin-Eric Racine writes:
-
- In April 2001, Nicolas Bales handed me the legacy of his great Atari ST
- Quick FAQ, and I became its maintainer. Recently, I noticed that I never
- gotten around updating the Quick FAQ, even though I've accumulated a LOT
- of new material for it. The truth is, nowadays, I'm perfectly happy
- using Linux and Mac for everything (except to compose music, which is
- why I kept my Stacy and TT030). Therefore, my motivation for updating
- the Atari ST Quick FAQ is essentially nil, at this point.
-
- So, I'm willing to hand over the Atari ST Quick FAQ to someone who is
- still actively using their Atari ST/TT/Falcon and who has kept up with
- whatever new developments that happened during the last 2 years. People
- who are interested can visit my homepage and drop me a short e-mail,
- explaining why they wanna become the maintainer of this venerable
- document. My main selection criteria are:
-
- 1) Still actively using Atari ST/TT/Falcon computers.
-
- 2) Great Web site design abilities that keep CAB users in mind.
-
- 3) Has access to host the Quick FAQ on http://www.atari.org/ or some
- similar community site that will not disappear any time soon - to avoid
- the Quick FAQ constantly changing URL.
-
- In closing, I would like to thank Nicolas Bales for his great work on
- the first version of the Quick FAQ and for entrusting me with it, as
- well as other users who have sent me new material for the FAQ that I
- never got around uploading - I promise you that I'll give the whole lot
- to whoever becomes the new maintainer, so that it eventually makes it to
- the document.
-
- I'll announce the name of the lucky fellow, sometimes in January.
-
- http://www.pp.fishpool.fi/~q-funk/ST/
-
-
-
- KlaxWorld.com Site Launch
-
-
- Hello Fellow Atarians,
-
- I am happy to announce the recent launch of our new web site,
- KlaxWorld.com!
-
- KlaxWorld features all sorts of information and other goodies related to
- that classic Atari puzzle game Klax. Long a favorite of many video game
- fans, there is now a central location you can go to for all your Klax
- needs, and it is US!
-
- Featuring Klax history, slang, strategy, soundtracks, game versions,
- clones, trivia, programmer info, knick-knacks, and MORE, KlaxWorld truly
- has something for every diehard Klax fan and novice alike. You can even
- "Ask the Klax Brat" about any Klax-related question, submit your own "Klax
- to the Max" pics and videos of you and your high score, and purchase "Klax
- Snacks"!
-
- You might also be interested in knowing that respectful homage is paid to
- Atari's engineers and its excellent Lynx handheld unit. There is also
- some interesting Atari trivia among our "Klax Facts".
-
- KlaxWorld was recently featured in the headlines of AtariAge.com, and we
- would like your help too in spreading the word. Link to us, tell your
- friends and visitors about us, and just plain visit us.
-
- Some might think KlaxWorld a little over the top, but what are games
- for if not to go crazy and have a little good, clean fun once in a
- while?
-
- KlaxWorld.com, experience the obsession!
-
-
- -Anthony Bufort
- ajbufort@klaxworld.com
-
- KlaxWorld.com
-
-
-
- New Emulator Atari 8-bit EMUAPC
-
-
- Hi
-
- www.komires.com Official page of the EMUAPC new polish Atari 8-bit
- emulator. You find on this page info and download beta version
- EMUAPC090Beta. (Sorry but page is only Polish now ).
-
- Best Regards
- Mirosøaw Kozioø
- http://epieniadze.onet.pl/mbank
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. It's been an interesting week here in my
- neighborhood. A storm, power outage, and utility maintenance kept things
- jumping.
-
- Mother Nature, along with the local road crews, have thrown a few
- curveballs, and I get the feeling that Mother Nature, at least, isn't
- through yet.
-
- Things have of course been slow on the Atari scene, but slow is not
- necessarily stagnant. There are some new and interesting things in the
- works, and that kind of amazes me. I mean, Atari hasn't made a computer
- in years and yet there are still users and developers who stick with it.
- And that, in my mind, is what makes our chosen platform special.
-
- Sure, Amiga still has a strong following, and even the old TI-994A and
- the Coleco Adam have users who just won't give 'em up, but the Atari
- platform has always seemed different. I can't speak for all users of
- other "classic" platforms, but most of the ones I've met up with were
- more interested in bashing someone else's choice than just enjoying their
- own choice.
-
- Yes, there are those among us Atari users that take great joy in bashing
- someone else's choice, but there seem to be fewer of them. Heck, I enjoy
- bashing Bill Gates and Microsoft as much as anyone else. But it's not as
- important to me as simply being secure in my appreciation of my chosen
- "classic" platform. What's more important to me than anything else is the
- ability to choose. I've made a lot of computer related "non-standard"
- choices. From my esteemed Atari 1040 to Linux on a PC and, yes, even
- Apple's OS X, I like the idea of having a choice. The way I see it,
- computers should provide us with more choices, not less.
-
- If Microsoft's offerings do what you want or need them to do, then by all
- means make use of it. If Linux gives you the flexibility and price-point
- that you want, then use that. If BeOS, BSD, or whatever else is out there
- "does it" for you, then by all means use it and enjoy it. Just make sure
- that you allow others to do the same.
-
- Well, let's get on with the news, hints, tips, and info available from
- the UseNet.
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
- Brad H asks for help with booting his hard drive:
-
- "I'm new to Atari equipment and was wondering if there is a way to boot an
- Atari 520ST with a hard drive connected, but not actually boot off of the
- hard drive? I got the hard drive for free and when the atari tries to
- boot from it, it gets to a certain point, and then resets and tries to
- boot from there again. I'm wondering if there's a way to boot the Atari
- using something else to get in and see if there is anything salvageable
- on the drive."
-
- Edward Baiz offers a pointer or two:
-
- "What software do you use to boot the hard drive? You should have
- HDDriver. I would just boot up the ST, then turn on the drive. Run
- the HDDriver boot program, then install the hard drive icon. Click
- on that icon and it should bring up what is on the drive."
-
- Lonny Purcell adds:
-
- "Try holding down the Alternate key until the desktop appears.
- You might have to try a few times until you get the timing right.
- Meaning at what point you press and hold the key down.
-
- It might help having a blank formatted disk in drive A: to avoid any
- delays while it looks for a disk."
-
- Peter Slegg posts this about networking and such:
-
- "I've been having fun getting up and running on BT Broadband.
- I bought an ADSL modem a D-Link DSL-300G+ and waited patiently
- for my phone line to be converted to ADSL. It only took about
- a week but I had to wait a further 2 days for my isp to supply
- my static ip address.
-
- It was then that I found some info hidden deep in the modem
- documentation. This ADSL modem uses DHCP so even though I have
- a static ip address I think am going to need a router device
- to connect to the modem unless someone knows anything about
- a DHCP client for Atari ?
-
- I haven't managed to configure the modem. The manual says a
- javascript browser is needed but Draconis doesn't like the
- script on the modems web-page. I suspect it need Java too.
-
- I also discovered that BT Broadband uses PPP over ATM and
- not PPP over Ethernet that is common on cable networks.
- If am going to need a router then apparently it needs to
- be able do PPPoA as well otherwise it doesn't work with
- the modem. Does anyone know of such a router at reasonable
- price?"
-
- David Wade tells Peter:
-
- "I can't find an DHCP client for the Atari. I use a router with NAT and
- just reserve and address for the ATARI.
-
- Note that its not always obvious if and how you can reserve static
- addresses in ADSL routers so it may be worth asking the supplier if it
- will do what you want before you buy.
-
- I suspect many of the routers will need this type of browser. Also Not
- sure what type of Atari you have but my TT with CAB and the Lyndon
- Etherenet is not fast enough to take real advantage of broadband. Its
- just too slow at rendering JPEG files etc. I would look at a cheap PC
- running Linux if you want to avoid MS.
-
- There are a number of such routers. I use the Alcatel but its not cheap.
- For cheaper options see the Solwise range, but again these may need a PC
- to configure."
-
- Kenneth Medin adds:
-
- "Note that you really don't have to reserve any static ip addresses, just
- avoid using them on any other computer on the network. I have been using
- a Netgear RT314 "Broadband router" or NAT-box for a couple of years now
- with a couple of pc's and Ataris with DHCP enabled and it works fine. To
- be sure the ip will not be used on any other computer choose a higher
- like 192.168.0.129 or so. Often the DHCP server will start from
- 192.168.0.2 so from 192.168.0.6 and upwards will be OK if you have four
- pc's.
-
- My RT314 is fully configurable from Atari via Telnet. This is also a much
- faster way compared to using a browser.
-
- Partly agreed! I use my Atari TT for all news and mail (virus free!) and
- also lots of surfing by clicking on url's in mail/news posts. As there is
- no extra "online fee" I can wait while CAB renders the pages.
-
- On the other hand a 500 Mhz pc is really much better and more compatible
- for lots of web pages. With the Microsoft dominance you simply must have
- at least IE 5.5 sp2 or you will be locked out of lots of things. And it's
- of course OK to use MS products as long as you don't pay anything for
- them :-)
-
- The Lyndon EtherNEC actually can fill my 500 kbit/sec connection simply
- by downloading files with CAB on a TT.
-
- Everything runs considerably faster with EtherNEC compared to 153600 bps
- null modem that I used on this TT before.
-
- My provider simply uses "bridged Ethernet" where the user must obtain an
- ip address via DHCP and then manually "logon" on a Javascript webpage. As
- long as you renew the ip address you will stay "logged in". This means I
- can keep my pc off and only have to power it up if my link has gone down
- for some reason. The RT314 takes care of the ip address renewals.
-
- May I suggest that you by a separate NAT-box (broadband router) with
- built in switch and four tp connections. If you buy a combined ADSL
- modem/router you may get into trouble when the ADSL technology gets
- obsolete. And no USB!!! this goes for both Atari and pc use!!"
-
- Charles Stanley posts this about keyboard repair:
-
- "I remember seeing pleas for help about failing keys, especially the
- Control key on the TT, over the past years, but could not recall the
- published solution.
-
- In case the problem arises again (Atari Info Sites please copy), I have
- just found my print-out of instructions. They were by Mario Becroft and
- were downloaded, with a comment, from *Funkyware.Org*, July 1997.
-
- Mario's site was http:/www.pl.net/user/mario/ or mailto: mb@tos.pl.net.
-
- I followed his instructions and succeeded in repairing the mylar."
-
- John Garone asks about coding html on his Atari:
-
- "I'm having fun using JOE to build some web pages (great program).
- So far, so good with the very (VERY) basics. In my travels around HTML
- code sites I see login scripts (username/password) that need a program at
- the ISP (ex. Perl) for it to function. Is there a script/program that will
- function within a website and independent of an ISP ?
- Note: Must run on an Atari."
-
- Chris Simon tells John:
-
- "Erm, no! This sort of thing can only be done with server-side scripting
- /CGI (dependant on your ISP - although if you use a standard method then
- it will be portable across ISPs as long as they support that method), or
- client-side scripting where there is no Atari support.
-
- I don't think cookies can be created without some sort of scripting?"
-
- John replies:
-
- "Do FTP logins work similarly? I had a site built that had a lot of
- files with vt and hta and I seem to remember a password in there
- somewhere /:). I made some changes to the site using JOE and transferred
- it all over to another ISP via FTP. It's running the same without the vt
- and hta files so it seems they were'nt being used and made no difference
- regarding logging into FTP."
-
- Chris adds:
-
- "FTP logins are different. You have an account on the server (for the
- sake of argument, let's say it's Unix) and can log into the server as
- though you were logging in at a terminal - that's telnet really but it's
- the same principle for FTP.
-
- When you log into the server using FTP, you are using your own account
- name and password and you have total privileges in your own directory. On
- a Unix server, you could then 'chmod', or change the privileges on
- various directories, to make them secure via HTTP (a web browser) -
- that's how you make a directory secure as detailed in my second response.
-
- I'm not familiar with vt and hta files, although I know that hta access is
- certainly a method of restricting access to HTTP calls. I think it's
- specific to the Apache web server software??
-
- When a user requests page via HTTP (a browser), he gets assigned an
- anonymous username. By restricting access via one of these methods, he
- is required to authenticate with a valid username and password.
-
- Or you can program usernames and passwords via server-side or client-side
- scripting as I've mentioned before. In that situation, you are in charge
- of a username database yourself - you have to program into your pages a
- username/password lookup and then allow the page to be delivered to the
- browser.
-
- I think that's it in a nutshell!
-
- BTW I have done some secured websites in work. If you try
- http://admint.bangor.ac.uk/cardenq/ then you should be prompted for a
- username and password by your browser (I'm not telling you what a valid
- username would be!). Here, I'm using directory permissions on a Windows
- NT server, where that directory can only be accessed by a certain user
- group that I've set up in the operating system.
-
- A different method was used by this site -
- http://admint.bangor.ac.uk/recruit/. This time, you get the first page
- but have to enter a username and password into a HTML form. When it's
- sent to the server via CGI, it is authenticated against a database that
- I've programmed."
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - BMX Game XXXcels in Being Lewd!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" 'Hit Man 2'! Game Maker Alliances?
- 2600 Game Reviews! Rose Bowl Sponsor!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- BMX Game XXXcels in Being Lewd, Crude
-
-
- Acclaim Entertainment's new $50 bike-riding simulation "BMX XXX" is so
- crass, juvenile and pornographic, it's as if the developers wanted to see
- just how far they could go and still sell it as a mass-market game.
-
- Here's a product whose creators take pride in having developed one of the
- few "adult" games on the market. It rewards players with 30-second videos
- of gyrating strippers and allows them to create their own topless bike
- riders. It's laced with obscenities.
-
- On one level, BMX XXX is destined to be a laughable illustration of the
- ridiculous amount of effort some males are willing to undertake just to
- see a bit of flesh. It's a psychology thesis waiting to be written.
-
- But the reality is the game's "Mature" rating will do little to keep it
- out of the hands of children. And that's no laughing matter.
-
- Indeed, this is one game where the rating needs to be taken seriously. The
- slogan for the game is "Keep it dirty," and it delivers on its promise.
-
- Thus, some retailers are refusing to carry the game, whose rating makes it
- inappropriate for anyone younger than 17.
-
- The brouhaha also forced Acclaim to remove the nudity from the PlayStation
- 2 version which, in turn, has alienated some older PS-2 owners who might
- not mind watching a strip tease or two. The nudity remains on the Xbox
- version and for the GameCube product, even though many players regard
- GameCube as a system for children.
-
- The game wasn't always meant to be this extreme. The product was originally
- going to be "Dave Mirra Freestyle BMX 3." It was renamed "Dave Mirra BMX
- XXX" earlier this year with the promise that it would be designed for
- players "who demand more adult-oriented content;" at the time there was no
- reference to nudity. Mirra, one of the world's top BMX stunt riders, is no
- longer associated with the game.
-
- Acclaim tried to head off the criticism in October, releasing a statement
- complaining that the game was "being held to an entirely different
- standard than other entertainment media with comparable content, including
- movies, television and radio."
-
- That's a stretch. The gratuitous nudity in "BMX XXX" is typically reserved
- for adult videos. And, I've never heard the "BMX XXX"-level of profanity
- on any radio or television program, and almost never in a film. In fact,
- the profanity is probably the most offensive part of this game, with
- characters who spew so many obscene words they make Jerry Springer's guests
- seem absolutely erudite.
-
- In fact, I've never seen a game try so hard to be offensive.
-
- Consider what happens to you in one of the early missions. You get an
- assignment from a groundskeeper who announces, using crude language, that
- he's sick and tired of cleaning up the dog detritus. He wants you to go
- across town and fetch the poodle of the local pimp, performing enough bike
- stunts on the way back to rack up 20,000 points.
-
- After you grab the poodle away from the foul-mouthed pimp, you have about
- 50 seconds to earn the 20,000 points and return to the groundskeeper.
-
- If you are successful, the reward is... well, not worth mentioning in
- polite company.
-
- It's for sure, you won't find many experiences like this in other computer
- games. But who would want to? The sophomoric attempts at humor quickly
- wear thin as you try for the 10th time to complete the same mission.
-
- In a perfect world, none of this nudity, profanity and tastelessness would
- matter because the "Mature" rating would keep this game out of the hands
- of children.
-
- But in the real world, kids are a big market for these games because teens
- and pre-teens want to be able to do "adult" things, and buying a game like
- this makes them feel grown up.
-
- Unfortunately, there's no penalty imposed against a store that sells an
- "M"-rated game to a 13-year-old and too many clueless parents don't pay
- attention to the ratings.
-
- In this case, they should.
-
- After all, if kids help make "BMX XXX" is a big hit, could a "BMX XXX II"
- with completely nude strippers and simulated sex acts be far behind?
-
-
-
- Be An Assassin With "Hit Man 2"
-
-
- Life is full of choices. Make the wrong one, and it could prove costly.
- That's especially true with "Hitman 2: Silent Assassin."
-
- Make the wrong choice in this new game for PC, Xbox and PlayStation 2, and
- you'll die. Quickly. Over and over again.
-
- Early on, it's about all I managed to do.
-
- You play a genetically enhanced bald guy (codename Mr. 47, although Mr.
- Clean would seem more appropriate) with a murderous past he's trying to
- forget by living as a fix-it guy in a Sicilian monastery.
-
- Of course, that gig doesn't last long, and soon you're back to your old
- assassin ways. Blame it on the altered genes, or perhaps it's the
- mysterious barcode stamped on the back of your head.
-
- So it's back to the assassin lifestyle, which according to developer Ion
- Interactive, consists of four goals: sneak up on the bad guys,
- strangle/shoot/stab them, steal their clothes for disguise, then drag their
- bodies into a dark corner so nobody notices.
-
- If only it were that simple.
-
- Even on the easy setting, I usually raised the suspicion of my foes. A
- small box in the corner of the screen fluctuates from empty to black to
- red, depending on the suspicion level of nearby enemies. A sure way to die
- is to run, brandish a weapon or appear out of disguise.
-
- After hours of restarting, I finally managed to pull off an assassination
- without anybody else noticing, and I guess it was a kind of sick thrill.
- But there should be a better reward for being patient.
-
- I also feel "Hitman 2" is a bit pedantic, what with all the crouching,
- slinking and tiptoeing around.
-
- The graphics were spectacular, replete with letterbox movies between
- missions that'll take you to Russia, Indian, Japan and Malaysia.
-
- During missions, the artists did a great job of getting textures right:
- wooden doors are grooved and varnished, and it's amazing to watch
- reflections dance from the depths of a swimming pool.
-
- Sonically, "Hit Man 2" really shines. At the very least it deserves some
- sort of award for best computer rendition of the sound of snow crunching
- underfoot. Along with the score, played by the Budapest Symphony Orchestra
- and Choir, there are many aural moments, like the sound of water roiling
- and sloshing around you in a Russian sewer system.
-
- While the game has its thrills, and the sound and graphics certainly
- impress, a big problem remains. The credo of all good assassins, lurking in
- the shadows, not stepping on fallen branches, and generally elusive
- on-the-job mannerisms ù don't mean a thing in "Hit Man 2."
-
- You can romp around with machine guns blazing and you're just as likely to
- succeed. In fact, I had got farther in the game shooting everything that
- moves than I did slinking around.
-
- And even if you decide to do it like a real assassin, the realism only goes
- so far.
-
- Magically, you can carry enough weaponry and ammo to stock a munitions
- depot, all under your coat.
-
- Then there's the all-seeing map, which you can view at any point in a
- level. It removes any uncertainty (and all suspense), providing floor plans
- and realtime movements of all enemies. Not even James Bond has gadgets this
- unfair.
-
- I had sluggish performance the first time I ran "Hit Man 2" on my 1.5
- gigahertz PC, but after downloading the latest drivers for my video card it
- ran smoothly with all the graphics settings maxed.
-
-
-
- Video Games Makers Gear Up for Alliances
-
-
- Rising development costs and shaky finances may speed up alliances in
- Europe's video game industry after the watershed Christmas sales season and
- a key merger in Japan, analysts say.
-
- France's Infogrames, Ubi Soft and Titus Interactive, and Britain's Eidos
- are all seen as potential prey for cash-rich predators, but analysts have
- mixed views on when and how the cards will be reshuffled.
-
- Last month Japanese game software makers Enix Corp and Square Co. Ltd.
- announced plans to merge, unleashing speculation more deals were in the
- offing.
-
- "The merger between Square and Enix bears out our view that there is still
- scope for industry consolidation," said ING analyst Bruno Hareng.
-
- Small-scale merger activity has already been occurring in the United
- States and in Europe, where firms have secured creative skills and market
- share by buying small developers and studios that were struggling to stay
- afloat.
-
- Analysts say this will continue. They also believe large-scale deals will
- take place but are less sure about when.
-
- "Buying of small development studios will continue, but I do not expect
- large-size deals in the short-term," said Schroder Salomon Smith Barney
- analyst Sebastien Lalevee.
-
- Consolidation is inevitable because securing a blockbuster game is key to
- survival and costs tied to developing games for new consoles are high,
- analysts say.
-
- Size also matters when it comes to securing an international distribution
- network or snapping up key franchises.
-
- "There is a size premium in the industry. You need to be in a strong
- position to negotiate with clients, suppliers and movie studios," said SG
- Cowen analyst Jean-Patrick Mousset.
-
- U.S. and Japanese giants are on the prowl.
-
- Microsoft can easily fund the acquisitions it needs among small studios
- and developers with some of the more popular games on its XBox console. In
- September it bought British video game developer Rare Ltd and is expected
- to clinch other deals.
-
- Japan's Sega, which transformed itself last year into a game maker after
- ditching its console business, wants to acquire small development studios
- in Europe and the United States, though analysts say its weak performance
- could limit its expansion.
-
- Predators may also lurk among U.S. games publishers, analysts say.
- Electronic Arts, the largest independent video games publisher, and
- Activision Inc, the second largest, have the means to shop in Europe.
-
- "If the Americans start buying in Europe, it's likely to be a second-tier
- company that needs to get bigger like Activision, Take 2 or THQ.
- Electronic Arts does not really need to grow that way," said Mousset.
-
- The outlook on potential deals could clear after Christmas, which will
- leave some firms more vulnerable and rescue others.
-
- "All these firms are jockeying for position. After Christmas, once the
- dust settles, we will know who is better placed," said Tony Scott from
- market researchers Informa. He expects the real action to begin in the
- second half of 2003.
-
- Games publishers make 40 to 50 percent of their annual sales in the last
- quarter of the year. For the first time this Christmas, all the
- new-generation consoles are available in Europe, which means competition
- will be tougher than ever.
-
- "European games publishers will try to sell themselves when they are in
- good shape -- that is after Christmas 2002. I expect some deals between
- March 2003 and December 2003," said SG Cowen's Mousset.
-
- ING's Hareng agreed. "A buyer must position himself during the industry
- cycle that will end in 2005. If there is a consolidation, it will be on a
- 12-month horizon," he said.
-
- Other analysts see no real action before 2004, when they expect the sector
- cycle to peak. "In 2003 companies will try to benefit from a strong market,
- except those that are really in trouble," said E.T.C analyst Xavier
- Courtois.
-
- European games makers, whose valuations have plunged after the recent
- industry slump, make attractive targets. Infogrames has lost 70 percent of
- its value this year and smaller peer Ubi Soft some 60 percent.
-
- Analysts say loss-making Titus Interactive is in a tough spot. New
- evidence of its difficulties emerged last week when it called a December
- 24 shareholders meeting to get authorisation to extend a deadline for
- redeeming its 2005 convertible bonds and to suspend payment on their
- coupons for three years.
-
- Eidos, maker of cyber heroine Lara Croft, has sound finances and can
- continue to operate as an independent publisher, but with a float of 97
- percent, it could be vulnerable.
-
- "I thought Eidos would be sold before the launch of Tomb Raider, and that
- launch has been postponed to next year. My guess is that something could
- happen soon," one sector analyst said.
-
- Europe's largest video games maker Infogrames, with a float of 70 percent
- and tight finances, is also viewed as a possible target, though it has
- repeatedly stated its intention to remain independent. Its debt,
- furthermore, could act as a deterrent.
-
- Ubi Soft has the financial means to stay independent but its future
- strategy hinges on achieving strong second-half sales via the launch of
- high potential games Splinter Cell and Rayman 3.
-
- Franco-American media giant Vivendi Universal could be a wild card. Some
- analysts say it could make a move in Europe as a buyer.
-
- But others say Vivendi is more likely to sell its games business to cut
- debt, even though the company has said its games unit is not for sale.
- Chairman Jean-Rene Fourtou has said he is open to a gradual spin-off of
- its U.S. entertainment assets.
-
-
-
- Rose Bowl Gets a New Sponsor
-
-
- Sony Playstation has replaced AT&T as the sponsor of the Rose Bowl.
-
- Monday's announcement came nearly eight months after AT&T said it would not
- be renewing its contract, leaving the nation's oldest bowl without a major
- corporate backer.
-
- Washington State will play Oklahoma at the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day.
-
- The sponsors for the other major bowls are: Fiesta Bowl, Tostitos; Orange
- Bowl, Federal Express; and Sugar Bowl, Nokia.
-
- ABC Sports owns the right to choose the Rose Bowl sponsors. The Tournament
- of Roses Association, which stages the game in Pasadena, does not
- participate in sponsor negotiations but does have a final say in the
- sponsorship.
-
- Under the deal signed in 1998, ABC paid $19 million each year to the
- Tournament of Roses to broadcast the 1999, 2000 and 2001 Rose Bowls and
- $20.5 million to broadcast the 2002 game.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
- """""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Atari 2600 Game Reviews
-
-
- By Dan Iacovelli
-
- When I went CGE2k2 I managed to pick up two great 2600 home brew games
- Space Treat and Warring Worms(I did a review on the ROM in the fest issue
- but I'm going give a more in-depth review on it) Warring Worms is made by
- Baroque Gaming and developed by Billy Eno. In this game you are a
- bio-engineered worm and your object is to force your opponent (which also
- another worm) to hit the segments of pain or part of playing field.
-
- If you think this game sounds familiar, than your right. The game is
- loosely based on the Surround game for the 2600. There are a few major
- differences in this game though:
-
- 1.) you are equipped with cannons (which can be enabled or disabled) and
- 2.) There are 8 different play fields which range from open field to a maze.
- Also you can (if your cannon is enabled) shoot at the parts of the worm to
- make an opening for you to go through not to mention that you can shoot
- at the other worm instead of having the opponent hit a part of the worm
- segment or a play field.
-
- Over all this is a very good game and the game play is fun to play and
- still challenging to play. (there's one plus to this game I have to
- mention, unlike the surround game this game does not have the sound effects
- that surround has (you know the loud beeping sound that you hear when you
- move your player) instead you hear a quiet beeping sound.
- I give this game 3 and half stars.
-
- Space Treat is developed by Fabrizo Zavagli and is made by Hozer Video
- Games. The object of this game is to maneuver your space ship past the
- enemies to collect the fruit that is in the cage. Then you maneuver ship
- back to the launch pad while going past the enemies. The game scores by the
- number of levels you pass (the first two are easy, the rest you need to get
- a pass key to open the cage and from level 7 to 99 the enemies will change
- their patterns).
-
- The game play is game fun and challenging to play (it's more or less a
- frogger type game) the graphics on this game are quite good too the same
- goes for the sound effects. I give this game three stars
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Sun Lures Sony from Microsoft
-
-
- Sony has announced it will replace Microsoft Office with Sun Microsystems'
- StarOffice suite on most of its desktop PCs sold in Europe.
-
- The Japanese computer maker said the switch will affect PCs sold in the
- United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, France, Spain and Switzerland. Sun has
- announced that discussions are under way to place the company's StarOffice
- 6.0 software on Sony PCs in other countries, too.
-
- "I'm surprised that more PC manufacturers haven't done this," said Steve
- Kleynhans, an analyst with Meta Group. Kleynhans told NewsFactor that
- because of the cost factor, Microsoft alternatives like StarOffice are
- attractive to PC makers.
-
- Like Microsoft's Office package, Sun's StarOffice 6 is a suite of office
- productivity software, bundling word processing, spreadsheet and other
- applications typically needed for office work. The user interfaces of the
- Sun and Microsoft programs are similar, allowing a user familiar with one
- to switch to the other with relative ease.
-
- Unlike Microsoft Office, StarOffice is an open source software product,
- and it is considerably less expensive. The new version of StarOffice
- retails for US$75.95. Microsoft Office sells for $479.
-
- Additionally, the StarOffice program can be used on both Linux and Windows
- systems. The package uses an XML (extensible markup language) file format,
- allowing users to share or modify StarOffice content with commonly used
- software tools.
-
- While Microsoft has a dominant hold on the desktop PC software market,
- Sony's decision to switch to StarOffice represents a significant victory
- for Santa Clara, California-based Sun.
-
- Indeed, the company has worked hard to erode Microsoft's market share. In
- addition to including StarOffice with its server software, Sun has donated
- millions of copies to schools.
-
- "Since [the software is] not costing them a lot, Sun hopes to make it up
- in the long run," Kleynhans said.
-
- Analysts note that Sun has held discussions with ISPs to persuade them to
- include StarOffice with their basic offerings. Additionally, StarOffice is
- bundled with the offerings of many OS developers, including SuSE Linux,
- Ximian and Turbolinux.
-
- Sun representatives were not immediately available for comment.
-
- Sun has some powerful weapons in its efforts to gain more desktop
- customers. Chief among them is that the company has resolved file
- compatibility problems between StarOffice and Microsoft Office. In other
- words, if users want to transfer content between the two programs -- the
- most common example is Microsoft's .doc files -- the transfer should be
- problem-free.
-
- An even bigger market factor benefiting Sun is falling PC prices, with
- some PCs flirting with a sub-$500 price tag. "The home market is extremely
- price sensitive, and manufacturers are doing anything they can to strip
- out costs," Kleynhans said. One of the few ways to squeeze extra profits
- from low prices is with software, he added, noting that StarOffice's low
- cost gives it a critical advantage.
-
- Kleynhans speculated that Sun offered Sony the software at a price so low
- that it represents only a nominal profit for Sun. The reasoning behind
- that alleged strategy is that if Sun can gather a critical mass of home
- users, adoption in the more lucrative business market will follow.
-
- The other competitor for desktop market share is Corel, which, like Sun,
- has only a small fraction of the office software market. Earlier this year,
- Corel scored a major coup by signing a deal to place its WordPerfect suite
- on PCs made by Gateway, Dell and Hewlett-Packard.
-
- Analysts note that Europe is a particularly fertile market for alternative
- software products, largely because of European reluctance to embrace
- Microsoft. Yet, Corel is less well positioned than Sun to enter the
- European market, because it lacks the necessary alternative language
- versions of its office program.
-
-
-
- Alternative Web Browsers: Revenge of the Lizard
-
-
- The Microsoft Manual of Style advises readers to avoid using the word
- "navigate" to describe browsing Web pages; it instead suggests that writers
- use the word "explore." Little wonder, since Microsoft worked hard to erase
- Netscape Navigator's early lead over its own Internet Explorer Web browser.
-
- Microsoft successfully conquered Netscape, but Navigator's open source
- offshoot, Mozilla, is overtaking Internet Explorer in terms of features,
- if not yet market share.
-
- While Microsoft claims to be a champion of innovation, the Mozilla team
- has developed features that Explorer still does not have. Christopher
- Blizzard, one of the Mozilla developers, told NewsFactor that it is all
- about choice. "One thing that Mozilla does better than all the other
- browsers out there is that we understand that people want to use the Web
- in their own ways," he said.
-
- Blizzard named Mozilla's ad-busting features as some of its most important
- ones. "The specific features that I'm talking about include the ability to
- choose when a site can set a cookie; the ability to block loading images
- from certain sites (think of dedicated ad servers); and the ability to
- control on a per-site basis when Web sites can open pop-up windows," he
- explained.
-
- In these days of rampant pop-ups, Blizzard said, users want control.
- "These features allow users to choose how they view the Web in their own
- unique ways, and I think [they] reflect user demand as the Web grows into
- a more aggressive ad medium."
-
- Although Netscape Navigator and Internet Explorer are both infamous for
- their browser-specific markup tags and spotty standards support, Mozilla
- toes the W3C line. The W3C is a Web standards organization that establishes
- guidelines for such markup languages as HTML and XML, among other tasks.
- "Mozilla also features the world's best CSS (cascading style sheet)
- support," Blizzard pointed out. "Support for other Web standards is also
- equally excellent, including support for all the various versions of HTML,
- XHTML and - XML."
-
- Blizzard said pages designed to take advantage of Internet
- Explorer-specific features can cause problems for Mozilla, and he
- encouraged Web developers to shun proprietary tags. "We have support for a
- couple of non-standard tags and properties, but not many," he said.
- "However, it's quite possible to write Web pages that work in Mozilla and
- IE and [avoid] the use of proprietary tags and properties."
-
- In addition to Mozilla's other features, the browser has one feature that
- Explorer is not likely to emulate. "Mozilla is open source software,"
- Blizzard said. "While this might not seem important to end users, I think
- that it is."
-
- He noted that Mozilla's open code invites corporate use. "For people who
- have more technical needs, like people who have to maintain large corporate
- intranets and custom applications, the fact that Mozilla is open source
- should be extremely compelling. They can change it in any way they want,
- make fixes that might need to be done, and deploy it in the way that they
- want."
-
- Mitchell Baker, Mozilla's chief lizard wrangler, told NewsFactor that the
- software's open source nature also helps the browser development team avoid
- Internet Explorer's many security issues. "We've learned that openness
- makes our product better, and that includes security. We benefit enormously
- from community involvement in identifying possible security issues, in
- tracking the progress of those bugs, and in implementing fixes."
-
- Baker added that although Mozilla has had a few security holes, for the
- most part "our community applies constant vigilance to avoid the level of
- unaddressed security problems that plague some products."
-
- And the benefits of Mozilla extend beyond the program itself. Developers
- are taking advantage of its open source code. For example, a number of
- other browsers make use of the Gecko rendering engine that powers Mozilla,
- including Galeon, Chimera and Phoenix. AOL's Netscape also is based on
- Mozilla, and a beta version of AOL's upcoming Communicator e-mail client
- uses some of Mozilla's code.
-
- Right now, Mozilla's market share is still negligible compared with that
- of Internet Explorer. However, Microsoft came from behind to take away
- Netscape's market share. There is no reason a reverse scenario could not
- occur. In fact, Blizzard said there are good reasons to switch.
-
- "As users become more concerned about privacy and security and have to
- question whether or not they want to trust a company like Microsoft with
- defending their privacy and security, they might come over to Mozilla," he
- said. "And Mozilla is only getting better as a product. Microsoft hasn't
- made significant improvements to IE in quite a while."
-
-
-
- Alternative Web Browsers: Divide and Konquer
-
-
- In the first installment of this two-part series, NewsFactor explored the
- features and functionality of alternative Web browser Mozilla. But Mozilla
- and its commercial twin Netscape are not the only challengers to Internet
- Explorer's throne.
-
- Despite IE's dominance, a crop of alternative browsers has sprung up,
- providing as little or as much functionality as users need. Many of these
- browsers run on operating systems that Microsoft has refused to support
- with Internet Explorer.
-
- One such browser, Opera, is often called "the fastest browser on Earth."
- It is also one of the few that still has a price tag. Speed and a small
- memory footprint are its dominant features, though Opera also pioneered
- tabbed browsing and mouse gestures, which have found their way into Mozilla
- and Konqueror, another IE alternative.
-
- Jon S. von Tetzchner, CEO of Opera Software, which produces the program,
- told NewsFactor that "Opera is about giving power to the user.... We spend
- a lot of time listening to what users want, and that is what we strive to
- offer." He also noted that the Opera browser supports several operating
- systems, including Windows, Linux, OS/2, Solaris and Mac OS.
-
- "Our cross-platform strategy is very important to us, as it sets Opera
- apart from its competitors," von Tetzchner said.
-
- Another contender for browser market share is Konqueror, a part of the K
- Desktop Environment (KDE), a graphical user interface (GUI) that runs on
- Linux and Unix systems.
-
- Konqueror, like Internet Explorer, is much more than just a Web browser.
- "Konqueror is very appreciated for its high level of integration into KDE,
- which means a consistent look and feel [and] a fast startup," David Faure
- of the KDE team told NewsFactor.
-
- Simon Hausmann, another Konqueror developer, agreed that integration is
- vital. "I think it's ... the most important feature for the users out
- there," he told NewsFactor. "[For example], when saving a document to the
- disk, you get the standard file dialog and not something that behaves and
- looks totally different."
-
- Faure added that Konqueror also leads the browser pack in terms of
- supported file types. "I think Konqueror is the browser that comes with
- the biggest number of viewer components," he said. "It can of course
- display HTML pages and directories, but also images, PostScript files, PDFs
- [and] text.... It can also embed components that play sound files
- [including MP3s] and videos."
-
- One feature that is becoming increasingly important to users is security.
- In light of Internet Explorer's numerous vulnerabilities, the development
- teams working on Opera and Konqueror have made security a top priority.
- "Security is a great focus for us and always has been," von Tetzchner said.
- "We tend to go for security when there is a choice between security and
- something else. We try to keep the security system easy to maintain and
- thus simple and powerful."
-
- Faure added that "the focus on security these days is very high." In fact,
- the KDE team delayed its 3.1 release because of security concerns raised
- during a prerelease audit. The release was pushed back to January 2003.
-
- Of course, Opera and Konqueror are only two of the many Web browsers
- entering the market. With a number of mature Web browsers to choose from,
- and more being developed all the time, Internet Explorer's dominance might
- not always be the sure thing it seems today.
-
-
-
- Defense Rests in Russia Copyright Trial
-
-
- An oversight by the U.S. company that sells software products for a Russian
- corporation charged with violating the controversial 1998 Digital
- Millennium Copyright Act may have undermined one of the prosecution's key
- allegations.
-
- Testifying as the final witness before the defense rested its case in
- federal court Tuesday was Ryan Dewell, director of technical services for
- Register Now!, an Issaquah, Wash., re-seller for Moscow-based Elcomsoft
- Co. Ltd.
-
- Dewell told a jury that general sales of a product allowing users to
- circumvent restrictions on Adobe Systems' eBook Reader were stopped almost
- immediately after the San Jose company complained to Elcomsoft.
-
- However, because Elcomsoft's product, the Advanced eBook Processor Program,
- had a different product number for a price-discounted version to longtime
- Elcomsoft customers, the product was still offered until Elcomsoft notified
- Register Now! one version was still available.
-
- Dewell said Elcomsoft President Alex Katalov requested that Register Now!
- remove the eBook software from sale within a five-day period demanded by
- Adobe, but the discounted version was overlooked and continued to be listed
- for several more days. During that period, at least one copy was purchased
- by Los Alamos National Laboratory, a long-time Elcomsoft customer.
-
- "It was an oversight on our part," Dewell testified during questioning by
- defense attorney Joe Burton. "Katalov brought the second version to our
- attention."
-
- Elcomsoft and Katalov, its president, are charged with willfully conspiring
- to sell software that is designed to circumvent technology protecting the
- rights of a copyright owner. Elcomsoft's product, marketed for just a few
- days in the summer of 2001, permitted users to remove publisher-imposed
- restrictions on their electronic books, allowing copying, printing and
- distribution.
-
- Part of the government's case centers on whether Elcomsoft continued to
- sell its product after Adobe informed the company that it believed
- Elcomsoft was violating the DMCA and gave Elcomsoft five days to stop
- selling the software. Evidence introduced by the defense supported
- Elcomsoft's claim that it complied with Adobe's demand within the time
- limit established.
-
- Part of that evidence - two e-mails between Elcomsoft and Register Now! in
- which Katalov instructed the American re-seller to stop selling the Russian
- software - appeared to have caught prosecutor Scott H. Frewing off guard.
- He asked Dewell why neither of the e-mails had been turned over when FBI
- agents subpoenaed all Register Now! documents related to Elcomsoft.
-
- For a second time, Dewell said it was "an oversight."
-
- Earlier, Katalov testified that he didn't believe his company's product
- violated any Adobe copyright or the DMCA. Instead, Katalov testified, the
- software was intended for use by people who legally purchase electronic
- books.
-
- The trial will be in recess Wednesday. Closing arguments are scheduled for
- Thursday.
-
-
-
- Aussie Net Ruling Has Broad Implications
-
-
- A landmark decision Tuesday by Australia's highest court extends the reach
- of that nation's libel laws well beyond its borders, creating a global
- precedent that could subject Internet publishers to lawsuits regardless of
- their geographical location.
-
- The decision, involving an article posted in New Jersey by a Dow Jones &
- Co. magazine, could subject U.S.-based Web sites to stricter libel laws
- than those that apply domestically, where rulings are generally more
- favorable to publishers.
-
- "This is the first time that a Supreme Court anywhere in the world ...
- really tries to look at how jurisdictional law maps onto the Internet,"
- said Michael Geist, a University of Ottawa law professor who tracks
- Internet cases around the globe.
-
- He expects several other countries - particularly Commonwealth nations
- including Canada and the United Kingdom - to apply the Australian ruling.
- But Geist and other legal experts doubted the decision would have a major
- impact on what news organizations will be willing to publish online.
-
- "Their words are their product and if they export it internationally they
- know how to work the cost of litigation into the sale of their product,"
- said Jonathan Zittrain, an Internet specialist at Harvard Law School.
-
- Jerome Barron, a First Amendment professor at the George Washington
- University Law School, said news organizations have historically continued
- to publish outside their home countries even after being sued in other
- nations where their publications circulate.
-
- But Lee Tien, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation who
- focuses on online speech, worries the ruling could silence smaller Internet
- publishers, including individuals who post on message boards and can't
- necessarily afford legal representation.
-
- In Tuesday's ruling, the High Court of Australia unanimously dismissed an
- appeal by Dow Jones aimed at halting a defamation suit by mining magnate
- Joseph Gutnick.
-
- Gutnick claimed a 7,000-word article that had appeared in Barron's in
- October 2000 portrayed him as a schemer given to stock scams, money
- laundering and fraud. The magazine article was also published online.
-
- The decision means Gutnick can sue New York-based Dow Jones in his home
- state of Victoria, in Australia. The high court did address the merits of
- the libel case.
-
- A coalition of 18 news and Internet organizations, including The Associated
- Press, The New York Times Co. and Amazon.com, joined Dow Jones in arguing
- that jurisdiction should be based on where a defendant last exercises
- control.
-
- Lawyers for Dow Jones, which publishes The Wall Street Journal, Barron's,
- Dow Jones Newswires and several stock market indicators, said the case
- should be heard in the United States, where the article was first published
- and its Web servers are located.
-
- Gutnick said the case should be heard in his hometown, Melbourne, since
- people in Victoria could see the article on the Internet and he was thus
- defamed where he is best known.
-
- "It will certainly be re-established that the Net is no different than the
- regular newspaper," he told Australia's Channel Nine television. "You have
- to be careful what you write."
-
- Dow Jones said in a statement that it was disappointed and now must defend
- itself "in a jurisdiction which is far removed from the country in which
- the article was prepared and where the vast bulk of Barron's readership
- resides."
-
- Brigitte Trafford, a Dow Jones spokeswoman, said the ruling won't change
- the magazine's Internet offerings or the types of stories it pursues: "We
- have no intention of changing our high editorial standards."
-
- David Tomlin, assistant to the president at The Associated Press, said the
- ruling "underlines the need for a thorough review of agreements and
- treaties or perhaps the construction of new ones that would govern tort
- law on the Internet."
-
- The seven-judge court did impose some limits on defamation actions.
-
- In its ruling, the court dismissed Dow Jones' concerns that many defamation
- actions could be brought as a result of one publication. It said that after
- any successful defamation action, subsequent legal action could be viewed
- as "vexatious" and therefore unlikely to succeed.
-
- The court dismissed Dow Jones' contention that it would have to consider
- the defamation laws from "Afghanistan to Zimbabwe" in every article
- published on the Internet.
-
- "In all except the most unusual of cases, identifying the person about whom
- material is to be published will readily identify the defamation law to
- which that person may resort," the court said.
-
- But the court acknowledged that the results it crafted "are still less than
- wholly satisfactory. They appear to warrant national legislative attention
- and to require international discussion in a forum as global as the
- Internet itself."
-
- Zittrain said technology may ultimately be required to avoid lawsuits
- elsewhere. Developers are now refining software that could let sites
- identify where visitors come from and block them if they come from
- jurisdictions deemed hostile.
-
- But he said the Internet will be disappointing when "many speakers will
- start limiting the reach of what they say to their own turf to avoid
- lawsuits."
-
-
-
- Internet Watchdog Warns of Fake eBay Web Site
-
-
- Fraudsters trying to steal credit card information from online auction
- house eBay Inc.'s 55 million users appear to have set up a fake Web site
- that mimicked the firm, a private Internet watchdog said on Wednesday.
-
- The scam involved e-mails that asked recipients to log on to a
- Florida-based Web site, ebayupdates.com, and re-enter financial data for
- eBay, said Dean White, the Asia-Pacific coordinator of a U.S. group, SANS
- Institute Internet Storm Center.
-
- "Once you've got the credit card information you can use it for
- everything," White said.
-
- The scam site sported the eBay logo and colors but did not appear to have
- any connection with California-based eBay, White told Reuters.
-
- Representatives of eBay in Australia were not immediately available for
- comment, but the company has issued a general warning on its Web site,
- urging caution over e-mails seeking passwords or credit card numbers.
-
- "Some members have reported attempts to gain access to their personal
- information through e-mail solicitations that are falsely made to appear
- as having come from eBay," the company said.
-
- "These solicitations will often contain links to Web pages that will
- request that you sign in and submit information...eBay employees will
- never ask you for your password."
-
- The scam e-mail, provided to Reuters by White, is headed "Ebay (sic)
- billing error" and begins: "Dear Ebay Member, We at Ebay are sorry to
- inform you that we are having problems with the billing information of
- your account."
-
- White said the mail, aimed at eBay's registered customers but possibly
- mass-mailed to other Internet users, began appearing on December 6.
-
- The company hosting the fake Web site on its computers had been informed
- and by Wednesday the site was unavailable on the Internet.
-
- Security and trust are major issues for e-commerce and Australian banking
- officials have warned consumers to be especially vigilant about Internet
- fraud and identity theft over the big spending Christmas period.
-
-
-
- Web Filters Block Some Health Sites, Study Says
-
-
- Teens searching the Internet for information about birth control, drug
- abuse and other health topics may often be stymied by government-mandated
- filters in schools and libraries, according to a study released on Tuesday.
-
- Filters that screen out pornography and other objectionable material rarely
- block Web sites containing information about alcohol abuse, breast cancer,
- depression or sexually transmitted diseases, the nonprofit Kaiser Family
- Foundation reported.
-
- But at more restrictive screening levels used by many schools, the filters
- were much more likely to block information about homosexuality, condoms,
- and safe-sex practices, the study found. At the most restrictive settings,
- more than half of all Web sites on such topics -- including government
- sites -- were blocked.
-
- Content filters made by companies such as N2H2 Inc. and Websense Inc allow
- parents, librarians or school authorities to block Web browsers from
- viewing objectionable content. Users can choose to block only pornography,
- or can screen out other categories such as nudity, violence, dating and
- swimsuits.
-
- An N2H2 spokesman said the report was proof that filters worked as
- advertised, and report author Caroline Richardson agreed that when set only
- to block pornography, filters could easily differentiate between
- pornography and health sites.
-
- But they were less discriminating when set to screen out other categories,
- she said.
-
- Some saw this as a troubling sign for teens who turn to the Internet to
- find out about topics they may not be comfortable discussing in public.
-
- "This means that the teenage girl who goes online looking for information
- about emergency contraception might not get it in time to prevent a
- pregnancy," said Michael McGhee, vice president of education for Planned
- Parenthood of America.
-
- Congress required all schools and libraries that receive federal technology
- funds to filter their Internet connections two years ago, but a federal
- court struck down the portion of the law that applied to libraries this
- spring. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear the case next year.
-
- The report won praise for its thoroughness -- it tested eight different
- filtering services against more than 3,500 Web sites -- but seemed unlikely
- to resolve a debate about the controversial filters that has raged for
- years.
-
- Anti-porn activist Donna Rice Hughes said filters were necessary to keep
- children from the explicit sexual material so easily available online.
-
- "You can't tell young kids that gurls.com is a great site for kids, but
- girls.com is a porn site," Hughes said. With filters, "a parent can tailor
- a tool for a 7-year-old."
-
- Emily Sheketoff of the American Library Association said that the filters
- only blocked nine out of 10 pornography sites, according to the report.
-
- "That's a worse effectiveness rate than most condoms," she said.
-
-
-
- Workplace Seen Escaping 'Spam' Deluge
-
-
- Despite a rising tide of get-rich-quick scams and herbal Viagra offers on
- people's home computers, American workers say they receive relatively
- little unwanted "spam" e-mail at work, according to a report released
- Sunday.
-
- Half of those surveyed by the nonprofit Pew Internet and American Life
- Project said e-mail was essential to their jobs, saving them time,
- improving teamwork and helping them to communicate with more people.
-
- Few complained about the unwanted junk e-mail that has tripled in volume
- over the past year.
-
- The average American will get more than 2,200 spam messages this year and
- 3,600 by 2007, according to Jupiter Research, a technology consulting firm.
-
- But while spam is a problem for Internet users' personal e-mail accounts,
- it is not slowing them down at work, the nonprofit Pew Foundation found.
-
- More than half of the 1,003 Internet users surveyed said they received no
- spam at work. Another 19 percent reported that fewer than 1 in 10 messages
- were spam.
-
- The report's author said she was surprised with its findings.
-
- "We began this survey expecting to find the beginning of a backlash
- against e-mail -- not just spam, but also against the rising volume of all
- kinds of e-mail," said Senior Research Fellow Deborah Fallows.
-
- "Instead, we found that most American workers are pleased with the role
- e-mail plays in their job, and we found almost zero evidence of
- disillusionment."
-
- Spam was more likely to turn up in personal inboxes, with nearly one in
- three respondents saying that two-thirds of all e-mail they received was
- unwanted commercial pitches.
-
- Businesses are more likely to take measures to block spam, the report said,
- while large services such as America Online and Yahoo that cater to
- individuals are more likely to make their names available through marketing
- efforts and other features.
-
- Spammers also use random name-generating software targeted at large
- services, the report said.
-
- More than 57 million Americans, 60 percent of the work force, use e-mail
- on the job, the report found, twice the number that used it two years ago.
-
- They typically spend half an hour using e-mail, the survey found, and
- receive 10 or fewer messages and send five or fewer on an average day.
-
- The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
-
-
-
- Leave the Tin Cup at Home and Try 'Cyberbegging'
-
-
- Need to pay down credit card debt? Desperate for money for music lessons?
- Simply tired of working and too embarrassed to stand on the corner with a
- tin cup? Try "cyberbegging."
-
- For some, the clicks in their cyberpails are starting to add up. Karyn
- Bosnak, for example, paid off $20,000 in credit card debt -- accumulated
- from her life in New York -- last month, after Web strangers contributed
- more than $13,000 to her cause, according to her Web site
- (http://www.savekaryn.com).
-
- Now that she has paid off her debt, Bosnak is passing the buck, and
- directing Web surfers to other cyberbeggars such as an aspiring opera
- singer trying to pay for voice lessons and college loans
- (http://www.saveelaine.com). Along the way, Bosnak has parlayed her
- new-found fame into talk show appearances and a reported book deal.
-
- Yahoo started a "begging" category with four sites in 1996. But the recent
- spike in activity and diversity of sites, last month led Yahoo to rename
- the category e-panhandling, said Michelle Heimburger, senior lead surfer
- for Yahoo.
-
- There are now 51 sites in the category, ranging from some shamelessly
- looking for cash to others seeking financial assistance for loans or
- medical treatments, Heimburger said.
-
- Rich Schmidt, a freelance music marketer, who was one of the first
- cyberbeggars, wants little more than an appearance on the "Late Show with
- David Letterman" ... and, of course, cash.
-
- "To me, the Internet is creative anarchy. I just wanted to make my mark. I
- thought, what if 1 percent of the Web surfers out there sent me a dollar,"
- Schmidt said. "That was the impetus for the idea."
-
- His site (http://sendeadollar.com) has raised more than $4,800 since it
- was set up about three years ago. Schmidt reviews other cyberbeggars on
- his site and allows people to post a short message or ad for a donation.
-
- When Schmidt first started, he asked Web surfers to send him a dollar in
- the mail, but he soon switched over to PayPal, an electronic payment
- service which makes it easy to collect money on the Internet.
-
- "I get a lot of e-mail from people who really have hardships and are asking
- for advice. If they think they are going to get rich doing it, they
- aren't," Schmidt said. "My goal was to be a guest on the David Letterman
- show, having gotten hundreds of thousands of dollars. Who knows? I may
- still get there."
-
- In the short-term, though, Schmidt said he is going to start selling banner
- ads on his site to help finance a new mini-van for his family.
-
- Other Web sites in the category include the Internet Squeegee Guy
- (http://www.Web Site1.com/squeegee/), who "will wash the inside of your
- monitor screen for spare change."
-
- Penny Hawkins hopes to get enough money to finish nursing school so she
- can divorce her husband, she says. So far, she has received more than
- $1,500 through her Web site, http://www.helpmeleavemyhusband.com.
-
- Along with e-mailed donations, she said she got a healthy dose of feedback.
-
- "As far as the crazier responses, I would have to say that they are usually
- dedicated to the religious fanatics that want to save me and/or my
- marriage," Hawkins said.
-
- A compelling site (http://www.helpleahgetpregnant.com) was started by a
- young Seattle couple seeking emotional and financial support as they tried
- to start a family and pay off an in-vitro fertilization bill of more than
- $12,000.
-
- But Princess Natalie of Westwood, Ohio, may not elicit much compassion.
-
- On her Web site (http://egomania.nu/causes/indexsoc.html) she says people
- should donate money because imagining a world where "someone as talented
- as me was forced to work" would be a scary thought and "it could ruin her
- manicure."
-
- Still, according to the site, she has collected $1,473, a toe ring, a
- phone card, books, and some death threats.
-
- Ed from Dallas is looking to buy a Hummer with Web donations
- (http://www.terravirtua.com/hummer/index.html).
-
- So, why exactly would anyone want to donate their own hard-earned money to
- a cyberbeggar?
-
- "I think when people come to the site they think, 'I wish I'd thought of
- it' and, in the spirit of that, people give a dollar," Schmidt said.
-
- With the success of the e-panhandling sites comes the inevitable backlash
- of parodies, including "Don't Save Karyn" (http://www.dontsavekaryn.com/).
- The site's creators, Bob and Ben, say they too are e-panhandlers, and are
- not pretending to be anything else. If anyone has an extra dollar, they
- promise "to waste your money in inventive and creative ways" rather than
- "use it to pay any bills or help starving children in Africa."
-
-
-
- Web Ad Group Backs Bigger Banner Ad Sizes
-
-
- An interactive advertising industry trade group on Wednesday endorsed a new
- set of ad sizes that are larger than standard Web banners.
-
- The Interactive Advertising Bureau, with members like Microsoft Corp's MSN,
- AOL Time Warner Inc's AOL and Yahoo Inc. on Wednesday also backed a
- "Universal Ad Package," with the new large ad size as well as three sizes
- the group had previously recommended, to make web advertising simpler and
- more cost-effective.
-
- IAB in a press release said the new ad package was created in response to
- advertiser demand for simpler, more efficient units. It said it will now
- solicit industry feedback on the Universal Ad Package.
-
- It said its members have agreed to offer the new unit and package to
- advertisers.
-
-
-
- Napster Goods Go on Auction Block
-
-
- Computers, laptops and a slew of T-shirts with a grinning cartoon cat logo
- will go up for auction as the now defunct song-swap company Napster cleans
- out its remaining physical assets.
-
- The smattering of tech goodies represents all that's left of the company
- dreamed up by a few college students, primarily Shawn Fanning. The company
- crashed and burned, but gave birth to an online song-swap revolution.
-
- Santa Clara-based software maker Roxio bought the brand name and
- intellectual property after Napster's bankruptcy. The leftover computer
- parts, laptops and Napster-logo trinkets are up for grabs at Wednesday's
- auction.
-
- Available for purchase on the cheap are pallets of monitors and servers
- that were once used as the company amassed tens of millions of users
- looking to trade music for free online.
-
- A federal judge ordered Napster offline last year until it could comply
- with an order to halt the unauthorized trade of copyright music. Napster
- never met that legal challenge and has remained offline ever since.
-
- Napster filed for bankruptcy earlier this year, and Roxio says it may
- launch some form of renewed service under the brand name in the near
- future.
-
- Since Napster fell off the map, other free online music trading services
- have taken its place, including Kazaa and Gnutella networks. The music
- industry has tried to counter with its subscription services, pressplay and
- MusicNet, but they've failed to attract anywhere near the audience the free
- services have.
-
- Analysts say the subscription services have fewer than 500,000 users
- combined, whereas Kazaa has about 3.5 million users online at any given
- time.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Goes After Windows Domain
-
-
- A Dutch computer enthusiast who runs a popular Windows XP gossip Web site
- has been summoned by Microsoft to hand over the WindowsXP.nu domain name.
-
- Steven Bink registered WindowsXP.nu two years ago. The site has become an
- important spot for Microsoft beta testers and hobbyists looking for news
- and gossip about Microsoft products, logging up to 20,000 page views a
- day, said Bink.
-
- On Monday, Bink received a letter from Microsoft's Dutch counsel accusing
- him of trademark infringement and giving him until December 19 to sign
- over the domain, or face possible legal action. Microsoft has registered
- Windows as a trademark in the Netherlands and other countries.
-
- "He [Bink] may of course write about Windows XP, but not on a Web site
- with a domain name that is identical to Microsoft's brand," said Alfred
- Meijboom, a partner at Kennedy Van der Laan, the law firm hired by
- Microsoft.
-
- Bink, a 32-year-old owner of an IT services company, is baffled that
- Microsoft has come knocking two years after he started the site, but said
- he won't fight the Redmond, Washington, software maker.
-
- "It's strange that Microsoft comes calling now with the fact that Windows
- is their brand. I want to see if there is room to negotiate, but I don't
- have any illusions about going to court," he said.
-
- Microsoft seems to be cracking down on trademark infringement. The company
- has also asked several small European software makers to rename products
- that had Windows in the name. The makers of "Windows Spy" and "Windows
- Backup Wizard," for example, received letters from Microsoft lawyers.
-
- In the U.S., Microsoft filed suit against Lindows.com of San Diego in
- December last year. Two rulings denied Microsoft's requests to bar Lindows
- from using its company name and the name LindowsOS. The case is currently
- awaiting a judge's ruling in a U.S. District Court in Seattle, according
- to the Lindows Web site.
-
- Meijboom denied Microsoft has launched a campaign against trademark
- infringers, saying that the law firm is not sending around letters or
- subpoenas for Microsoft. "There is no offensive from the side of
- Microsoft," he said.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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