home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Collection of Education
/
collectionofeducationcarat1997.iso
/
COMPUSCI
/
EDU0995.ZIP
/
EDU09145.DOC
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1996-05-01
|
12KB
|
218 lines
Subject: Edupage, 14 September 1995
*****************************************************************
Edupage, 14 Sep 95. Edupage, a summary of news items on information
technology, is provided three times each weeks as a service by Educom,
a Washington, D.C.-based consortium of leading colleges and
universities seeking to transform education through the use of
information technology.
*****************************************************************
TOP STORIES
Child Cyberporn Arrests
Wanted: Crime-Fighting Software
AT&T Makes Cellular Investment In Brazil
Microsoft To Overhaul Visual Basic Software
Gore Speaks Out Against Telecom Reform Bill
Scientologists Must Return Seized Computer And Disks
ALSO
Managing A Wealth Of Digitized Information
Novell, UtiliCorp Hook Up For New Service
Digital News Center
IBM, AOL Invest In Terisa Systems
Internic Imposes Annual Fee On Domain Names
Software Sales Soar
Women And Technology -- Plus And Minus
CHILD CYBERPORN ARRESTS
The FBI has arrested a dozen individuals for using America Online to
distribute child pornography and lure minors into sex. The investigation,
which began in 1993 after the abduction of a 10-year-old Maryland boy,
uncovered graphic evidence involving victims 2 to 13 years old shown in
actual or simulated sex acts. America Online has cooperated fully with
Federal investigators, and is not a subject of the investigation. To
create, possess or disseminate child pornography is a federal crime, with
penalties of up to 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. (New York Times
14 Sep 95 A11)
WANTED: CRIME-FIGHTING SOFTWARE
Law enforcement officials have suggested the creation of sophisticated
software to monitor the more than 700,000 electronic money transfers that
take place among U.S. financial institutions each day, and flag suspicious
transactions for further scrutiny. The move would help identify the $300
billion in illegal proceeds that's laundered through financial institutions
each year. But a new report from the Office of Technology Assessment
points out that such activities would make it difficult for U.S. banks to
attract business from Europe and other industrialized nations. The U.S.
would run "the risk of the flight of legitimate capital" from domestic
banks, says the report. Others disagree, with one law professor noting,
"Most other countries generally have more, not less privacy protections
than we do." OTA instead recommends using subpoenas and search warrants
more aggressively to expand government awareness of the way money
launderers manipulate the electronic funds transfer system before embarking
on an extensive artificial intelligence project. (Wall Street Journal 13
Sep 95 B2)
AT&T MAKES CELLULAR INVESTMENT IN BRAZIL
AT&T and Brazilian partners Banco Bradesco S.A. and Globo will invest $1
billion over five years to provide telecommunications services in Brazil,
which is one of the world's most attractive markets. In large cities such
as Sao Paulo there is a huge shortage of phone lines, and renting a line on
the black market can cost $500 a month. The market for cellular service
could reach 5 million users, because installing fixed lines is so expensive
in Brazil's rural areas. (Financial Times 14 Sep 95 p1)
MICROSOFT TO OVERHAUL VISUAL BASIC SOFTWARE
Microsoft will rewrite its Visual Basic programming tools to accommodate
would-be developers of 32-bit applications for Windows 95, Windows 3.1, and
Windows NT. The 4.0 version will be available later this month, priced
from $99 to $999. (Wall Street Journal 13 Sep 95 B5)
GORE SPEAKS OUT AGAINST TELECOM REFORM BILL
Vice President Al Gore says the telecommunications reform legislation
drafted by Congress would "substitute consolidation for competition." Gore
sides with AT&T and others who think the provisions for letting the Baby
Bells into the long-distance market are not stringent enough. Meanwhile,
AT&T Chairman Robert Allen says his company would "fully and strongly"
support a presidential veto of the proposed legislation. (Wall Street
Journal 13 Sep 95 B8)
SCIENTOLOGISTS MUST RETURN SEIZED COMPUTER AND DISKS
A Federal judge has ordered the Church of Scientology to return computer
and files that had been seized last month from two men accused of
disseminating copyrighted Church of Scientology documents over their
computer bulletin board. The bulletin board owners deny posting any
copyrighted material on the Internet. (New York Times 14 Sep 95 A11)
=====================================================================
MANAGING A WEALTH OF DIGITIZED INFORMATION
Nobel laureate economist Herbert Simon points out: "What information
consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients.
Hence a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention, and a need to
allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information
sources that might consume it." University of California, Berkeley Dean
Hal Varian predicts the emergence of "information managers" who provide a
value-added filtering process in sifting and managing information to make
it meaningful to the rest of society. Varian calls for a balance in
intellectual property protection and a rewrite of existing copyright laws
in order to reap the fullest benefit from the cornucopia of information at
our digital fingertips. (Scientific American Sep 95 p201)
NOVELL, UTILICORP HOOK UP FOR NEW SERVICE
Novell Inc. has teamed up with UtiliCorp United to market technology that
allows utility companies to remotely monitor electrical appliances. While
other companies are working toward the same goal, Novell's NEST (Novell
Embedded Systems Technology) software enables communications over power
lines at up to two million bits of data per second, much faster than other
existing technologies. "We think that smart networks will expand way
beyond the local area network," says Novell's CEO. For instance, a PC and
its printer could be connected simply by plugging the power cords into the
wall socket. "To be able to convert this energy system for networking is a
phenomenal opportunity for our industry and our society," says UtiliCorp's
chief executive. (Wall Street Journal 14 Sep 95 B2)
DIGITAL NEWS CENTER
MCI and News Corp. have created the News Center, a digital newsroom
dedicated to producing round-the-clock news content for the World Wide Web.
"Digital journalism is a collaborative effort that will combine traditional
media with modern technology," says the News Center's editor. News Center
pages will include digital video and audio clips, along with traditional
text and photos. "Our News Center is like a newspaper city desk, a
television newsroom and a high-tech computer center -- all rolled into
one," says the editor in chief of News Corp./MCI Online Ventures.
(Broadcasting & Cable 11 Sep 95 p56)
IBM, AOL INVEST IN TERISA SYSTEMS
Terisa Systems Inc., a closely held California firm formed last April, has
signed up two more investors -- IBM and America Online. They join
CompuServe, Netscape Communications, RSA Data Security and Enterprise
Integration Technologies as shareholders in a company devoted to developing
software to protect communication and commerce over the Internet. Terisa's
first product will be the SecureWeb tool kit, which will enable programmers
to include encryption in Web pages designed for engaging in selling
products. (Investor's Business Daily 13 Sep 95 A5)
INTERNIC IMPOSES ANNUAL FEE ON DOMAIN NAMES
Network Solutions Inc. has announced a $50 annual fee for domain names
registered on the Internet. The company is struggling to find ways to fund
the costs of handling some 14,000 net and the costs of doing domain name
registration services are exceeding the budget," says the Internet business
manager at Network Solutions. New registrations will cost $100 per year
for two years, and then $50 thereafter. Companies with names already
registered wi