Posts Tagged ‘australia’

p2pnet World Headlines: Dec 4, 2009

Posted in Software, filesharing on December 4th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

Peter Mandelson declares war on Rupert Murdoch’s media empire Guardian Lord Mandelson declared war on the Murdoch empire today when he accused News Corporation of maintaining an “iron grip” on pay television and warned that the company wants to import rightwing Fox News-style journalism to Britain. In his strongest attacks on News Corp since the Sun abandoned its support for Labour hours after Gordon Brown’s party conference speech, the business secretary accused the company of imperilling the traditions of British broadcasting

Continued here:
Limewire still fighting

p2pnet World Headlines: Dec 3, 2009 #2

Posted in Software, filesharing on December 3rd, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

Redbox in Talks with Game Publishers DailyTech Many movie fans have learned that the cheapest way to get films is to rent them from kiosks like the ones Redbox operates. These kiosks are popping up in all sorts of locations and many locations offer more than one kiosk in stores because of the high demand. Reuters reports that Redbox, one of the leading DVD rental kiosks, is in talks with video game providers to add video gamer rentals to its kiosks.

Here is the original post:
ABOUT Ares Vista

p2pnet World Headlines: Dec 3, 2009 #1

Posted in filesharing on December 3rd, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

Meet the new Comcast-NBCU: Content meets conduit everywhere; Will it work?

Original post:
ares download

p2pnet World Headlines: Nov 24, 2009: #1

Posted in 367, Software, filesharing on November 24th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

IE bug leaks private details from 50m PDF files The Register A bug in Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser is causing more than 50 million files stored online to leak potentially sensitive information that could compromise user privacy, a security researcher said. The documents stored in Adobe’s PDF format display the internal disk location where the file is stored, an oversight that can inadvertently expose real-world names and login IDs of users, the operating system being used and other information that is better kept private. The data can then be retrieved using simple web searches

Read this article:
Wal-Mart is offering DRM-free music

Canada not a ‘piracy haven’

Posted in filesharing on November 23rd, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

p2pnet news view P2P | Politics:- The OECD has released new data on its global counterfeiting estimates, concluding that the share of counterfeit and pirated goods in world trade is estimated to have increased from 1.85% in 2000 to 1.95% in 2007. That represents an increase to $250 billion worldwide.  That is obviously a big number, but notably far lower than the claims from ACTA supporters.

Read more from the original source:
What is Ares?

World’s first iPhone worm in the wild

Posted in Software, filesharing on November 16th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

p2pnet news view Security | Mobiles:- iPhone owners in Australia “awoke this weekend to find their devices targeted by self-replicating attacks that display an image of 1980s heart throb Rick Astley that’s not easily removed,” says The Register , going on: “The attacks, which researchers say are the world’s first iPhone worm in the wild, target jailbroken iPhones that have SSH software installed and keep Apple’s default root password of ‘alpine.’ In addition to showing a well-coiffed picture of Astley, the new wallpaper displays the message ‘ikee is never going to give you up,’ a play on Astley’s saccharine addled 1987 hit ‘Never Gonna Give You Up’.” “Tricking victims in to inadvertently playing the song has become a popular prank known as Rickrolling.” And, it’s a lot more than a joke, confirms Peter Hansteen on That grumpy BSD guy “The rickroller is about bad passwords, no more, no less,” he says, going on, “this incident only underscores what we’ve been repeating until your eardrums wear thin an my vocal cords swell from exhaustion: Publishing your username and password is a really bad idea. It’s almost as bad as picking a guessable password. “Add to this that the fact, as we’ve noted here earlier, there is a whole cloud of hijacked machines out there beavering away at guessing passwords right now, and they have been at it for quite a while.” Finally, he adds, “some words of advice for those of you who want to avoid both rickrolling and getting cracked by other password guessing” »»» You should at least consider setting a password policy and enforcing it with something like John the ripper , which more than likely is available at the cost of a few keystrokes from your package system

Go here to read the rest:
ares

Britney Spears: screams without the passion

Posted in filesharing on November 11th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

p2pnet news view Music:- “Some reporters have said they love it and some don’t.” That’s Britney Spears over the miming row that surfaced during her first Australian tour. “I came to Australia for my fans,” she’s widely reported as saying.  “Some reporters have said they love it and some don’t.” Discussing the “brouhaha Down Under,” it “turns out she MIMES!” – says the Lefsetz Letter ’s Bob Lefsetz, going on »»» In order to deliver on the audience’s expectations.  She’s got to be the Britney from TV.  Perfect in every way.  Dazzling them with her dance moves.  And it’s almost impossible to dance like that and sing.  Have you ever talked to one of those fucks who calls you when he’s on the treadmill?  You wonder if they’re going to have a heart attack during the conversation! But what does the audience expect?  A show, a tightly choreographed presentation, something you watch and ooh and ahh to?  Or a musical performance, that penetrates your body and mind? Last time I checked, I didn’t see Widespread Panic on TV.  Look at MediaBase, they’re not in the Top Forty either.  By nineties standards, they don’t exist.  But it’s 2010

Original post:
CD sales slip as music downloads surge

ACTA talks – the ‘highest level of secrecy’

Posted in filesharing on November 10th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

p2pnet news view P2P | Politics:- Last week Canadian officials travelled to Seoul for the latest round of closed-door negotiations on an international treaty called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA). While battling commercial counterfeiting would seem like a good idea, the ACTA process has been marked by unprecedented secrecy as well as leaks revealing that the treaty is really about copyright rather than counterfeiting. From the moment the talks began last year, observers noted the approach was far different from virtually any other international treaty negotiation.

Read the original post:
Filesharing networks used to spread Trojan horse

p2pnet World Headlines: Nov 9, 2009

Posted in filesharing on November 9th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

UK surveillance plan to go ahead BBC The Home Office says it will push ahead with plans to ask communications firms to monitor all internet use. Ministers confirmed their intention despite concerns and opposition from some in the industry.The proposals include asking firms to retain information on how people use social networks such as Facebook. Some 40% of respondents to the Home Office’s consultation opposed the plans – but ministers say communication interception needs to be updated

View post:
ares free download

ACTA talks in Seoul? Zip.

Posted in filesharing on November 6th, 2009 by admin – Comments Off

p2pnet news view P2P | Politics:- The latest round of ACTA negotiations, which concluded yesterday in in Seoul, Korea, might have been summed up as secret talks on transparency, Michael Geist suggested.

Visit link:
free ares download


SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from Techblissonline