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- [***][9/5/83][***]
- COPYRIGHT COURT:
- The U.S. Court of Appeals in Philadelphia has ruled that
- all computer programs can be copyrighted, even if they're an
- integral part of a computer's language. The decision knocks
- down the exact opposite ruling by a lower court, in a suit
- brought by Apple Computer against Franklin Computer. Apple claimed
- that Franklin copied 14 of its operating system programs. The
- decision clears up the "grey area" in the copyright law which
- only specifies protection for literary works and inventions.
- Apple's lawyer believes this ruling puts all questions about
- language-copyright to rest, "People who have made millions copying
- others' programs had better start spending time developing their
- own," said Jack Brown.
- ----
- CONTACT: APPLE COMPUTER
- CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA
- 408-973-2042
- ----
- FRANKLIN COMPUTER CORP.
- PHILADELPHIA, PA.
- 215-592-7060
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- 1984 ALREADY??
- Get ready for the Internal Revenue Service to invade your
- privacy. The agency plans to access commercial mailing lists
- supplied by private marketing companies to find out whether our
- lifestyles can be used to identify who among us are tax cheaters.
- Our incomes, the location of our homes, even the age of our cars
- will be used in the survey. The IRS says tax cheaters cost the
- government nearly $82-billion dollars in 1981. The method to be
- employed is perfectly legal, but it points up to the fact that
- our private lives aren't so private anymore. Among the largest
- companies with mailing lists are Reuben Donnelley of New York,
- R. L. Polk of Detroit and Metromail of Lincoln, Nebraska.
- ----
- CONTACT: WALTER BERGMAN, DEPUTY ASSISTANT COMMISSIONER
- INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-566-5000
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- NOW "RACE-HORSE" GAMES:
- A group of some 20 computer-raiding juveniles and adults have
- been trapped by the F.B.I. as they alledgedly engaged in a hacking
- operation to access a horse-listing service. Bloodstock Research
- Information Services, Inc. which lists pedigrees, breeding records,
- and racing statistics for every race-horse in the U.S., says the
- raiders were trying to get into the programming level of the main
- computer, and nearly succeeded until the FBI was called in. An
- investigation revealed the same group has also broken into computers
- all over the country, including the U.S. Leasing Corp. in San
- Francisco where they filled the files with obscenities and caused
- $260-thousand in damages.
- ----
- CONTACT: RICHARD BROADBENT
- BLOODSTOCK RESEARCH INFORMATION SERVICES
- LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY
- 606-223-4444
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- ANOTHER 'GREY' AREA:
- What do you do with a computer criminal? The U.S. laws aren't
- particularly clear. The ringleader of the "414's" who broke into
- an unclassified section of the Los Alamos computer, and helped
- ruin a file at Sloan-Kettering Cancer Institute worth about $15-
- hundred dollars in billing information, has received immunity in
- connection with his testimony about the group's actions. 17-yr-old
- Neal Patrick (featured on this week's NEWSWEEK cover) lives in
- Wisconsin, one of 16 states with computer crime laws, but state
- officials are waiting for federal authority to prosecute. The
- Patrick family attorney says if anybody is prosecuted, it will
- probably take the form of a fine amounting to the cost of unpaid
- long-distance phone bills.
- ----
- CONTACT: PAUL PIASKOSKI, ATTY
- MILWAULKEE, WISCONSIN
- 414-282-1133
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- A PORTABLE CASUALTY:
- Computer Devices Inc. of Massachusetts, a maker of portable computers
- has posted the fourth quarter-loss in a row, and plans to lay off 163
- people--that's one quarter of the staff. The maker of the DOT portable
- personal computer says its 3.5-inch stiff disk, made by Sony is the
- problem. Consumers prefer the standard 5.25-inch floppy. The company
- plans to come up with an optional floppy drive to appease consumers.
- ----
- CONTACT: SEAFORTH LYLE, PRESIDENT
- COMPUTER DEVICES INC.
- BURLINGTON, MASSACHUSETTS
- 617-273-1550
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- BANKING ON PORTABLES:
- A market research firm predicts at half of the nation's 60 portable
- computer manufacturers will be out of business by 1986. It seems
- everyone's making a portable computer, and the shakeout will be
- devastating for all but a few. International Resource Development
- believes IBM, Apple and Xerox will be the winners. (Where's Osborne?)
- Here's another statistic: more than 1-million portable units
- will be in use by 1987.
- ----
- CONTACT: KEN BOSOMWORTH, PRESIDENT
- INTERNATIONAL RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INC.
- NORWALK, CONNECTICUT
- 203-866-6914
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- PORTABLE BANKING:
- California is expected to be the first state with large-scale
- computerized shopping. "Interlink" is the product of 5 big
- banks--consumers will be issued ATM plastic cards that can be
- used instead of cash or checks at grocery stores, gas stations
- and large retail chains. An attachment to an electronic
- cash register will debit the person's bank account. Vendors
- for the service are still being solicited. Bank of America,
- Crocker Bank, Wells Fargo, First Interstate and Security
- Pacific are planning the venture; a starting date has not
- been announced.
- ----
- CONTACT: JOHN MICKEL, 'INTERLINK' COMMITTEE CHAIRMAN
- BANK OF AMERICA
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-953-6797
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- NOTES ON THE FAIRE:
- The nation's first IBM PC Faire in San Francisco drew more than
- 325 companies that manufacture goods for or similar to the IBM PC.
- But nobody from IBM was talking about the proposed "Peanut". An
- IBM spokesman says "We do not have such a product, there is no
- Peanut." Insiders say look for an October release date, a
- computer with 64K, and a base price of about $600.
- ----
- CONTACT: IBM
- BOCA RATON, FLORIDA
- 305-241-6007
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- ROBOT REVERSAL:
- An American robot manufacturer has succeeded in selling a robot
- to Sony Corp. in Japan. This unprecedented accomplishment is from
- Pennsylvania-based American Robot Corp. The robot will be used
- in electronics assembly and will be followed by a shipment of
- 3 more in November. 15 other robots have been sold to Great
- Britain, and 10 to Belgium since the company started deliveries.
- This is also the first time Sony has bought a robot from a
- non-Japanese company.
- ----
- CONTACT: ROMESH WADHWANI, PRESIDENT
- AMERICAN ROBOT CORPORATION
- CARNEGIE, PENNSYLVANIA
- 412-787-3000
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- TRYING AGAIN:
- American and Japanese diplomats plan to sit down and resolve their
- trade differences in Tokyo on September 7th. At issue is semi-
- conductor trade between the countries. Nobody's offering any
- predictions as to how successful the talks will be; this is the
- third in a series that started in July 1982.
- ----
- CONTACT: INTERNATIONAL TRADE COMMISSION
- WASHINGTON, D.C.
- 202-523-0161
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- BOY'S PLAY:
- A new study by Stanford University psychologists finds that
- girls have less access to computers than boys. In the first
- study, 13-percent of 87 students reported having computers at
- home--all the respondents were boys. In the second study of
- computer camps, there were 3 boys enrolled for each girl enrolled.
- The psychologists suggest parents think their sons need computer
- education more than their daughters, and this kind of thinking
- will put the young women at a disadvantage when they grow up
- in the technology-dominated future.
- ----
- CONTACT: DRS. IRENE MIURA AND ROBERT HESS
- STANFORD UNIVERSITY
- PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-497-2432
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- MIND-READING VIDEOGAMES:
- A Santa Cruz, California company has come up with a videogame
- directed by the principle of galvanic skin response. A mouse-like
- device held by the player directs the objects on screen up or down,
- right or left. Three such games will premier in October from
- Behavioral Engineering. Future products include a wristband that
- measures emotions, and software for the handicapped also operated
- through galvanic skin response.
- ----
- CONTACT: ROBERT DILTS
- BEHAVIORAL ENGINEERING
- SANTA CRUZ, CALIFORNIA
- 408-438-5649
- ----
- [***][9/5/83][***]
- LET YOUR FINGERS DO THE BUYING:
- Grocery shoppers who own personal computers in San Francisco will
- be able to modem-in their orders by January. The company offering
- the computerized grocery service is "Grocery Express". The goods
- will be delivered to their home within a few hours after their
- call. The minimum order will be $20-dollars, and grocery officers
- are putting the final touches on the software.
- ----
- CONTACT: JOHN COGHLAN
- GROCERY EXPRESS
- SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
- 415-641-5460
- ----
-
-