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Three E-Voting Systems Susceptible to Attack, California Team Finds

A report released this morning by the University of California, Davis, which was contracted by the State to investigate the security integrity of three brands of electronic voting machines which the State uses, concludes that all three are susceptible to compromise and tampering, using any number of tools including Trojan Horse programs and simple screwdrivers.

The final report, written by principal investigator Matt Bishop, took great pains to refrain from casting any kind of condemnatory or similar attitude against the three manufacturers whose devices were tested. In fact, it went out of its way to be fair, at one point stating that in many cases, the integrity of the voting machines' software may only be as strong as that of the underlying operating system - which, in all three cases was Windows.

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IE7/Firefox URI Handling Bug Caused by Windows After All

An exploitable bug discovered earlier this month that was first believed to have been caused by Internet Explorer 7.0, before Mozilla was forced to admit that it afflicted Firefox as well, has apparently been traced back to a Windows API function.

The discovery may have been first revealed through the US-CERT Web site of the Dept. of Homeland Security, which now classifies it as a "Microsoft Windows URI protocol handling vulnerability." The function in question is an old favorite of malware writers: ShellExecute(), which was the subject of a notorious Windows 2000 exploit four years ago.

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Verizon Buys UNICEL for $2.67 Billion

Verizon Wireless has agreed to acquire Rural Cellular (UNICEL) for about $2.67 billion in cash, the two companies said on Monday. Rural serves about 716,000 customers across 15 states in New England, the Plains states, the Southeast, and the Pacific Northwest. Verizon service will cover an additional 4.7 million potential customers as a result of the transaction, and expand its coverage in rural locations, it said.

The deal is expected to close early next year. Rural uses both GSM and CDMA technologies. Those customers using GSM would be converted to CDMA, however Verizon plans to keep Rural's GSM network active in order to resell it for other GSM carriers to roam on. "Today, as the wireless industry continues to evolve, our Board of Directors has concluded that it is in the company's best interest to enter into a sale transaction with Verizon Wireless," Rural CEO president and CEO Richard Ekstrand said of the sale.

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iPhone Battery Target of Class-Action Suit

The iPhone has only been out for a month, yet there's already a class-action lawsuit against it over its battery life.

Jose Trujillo filed the suit in the Circuit Court of Cook County, Illinois. Among other things, he claims that the battery can only be charged for 300 cycles before needing to be replaced, and that he wasn't made aware that the battery was soldered inside of the unit.

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Beta Patches Hint at Vista SP1 Features

Microsoft has released to Windows Server 2008 beta testers two new hot-fix packs for Windows Vista, which improve performance and reliability, along with the operating system's compatibility with drivers and hardware. The 12MB worth of fixes are expected to make their way into Vista Service Pack 1 later this year.

Some of the changes noted by testers are better file copy performance, faster boot times, improved compatibility with newer graphics cards, and better performance in games with advanced visuals. According to some enthusiasts, these patches contain the fixes they have been waiting for. Microsoft has not commented on the now-leaked hot-fix packs, which are available for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Vista.

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New EU Mobile Roaming Rates Active

The European Union on Monday put into effect new roaming rates for mobile phone users, which could save customers up to 70 percent. However, the new rates won't be automatically applied to customers until September; before then, they are opt-in.

After months of disagreements over what the roaming rates should be capped out, the EU finally passed legislation at the end of May and the measure was approved by the 27-nation bloc in early June. Customers will now be charged no more than 49 cents for making a call while roaming in the EU, and no more than 24 cents to receive a call while roaming.

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Judge: eBay Can Still Use 'Buy it Now'

A Virginia District Court Judge sided with eBay on Friday, allowing it to continue to use the "Buy it Now" feature, which is at the center of a patent dispute with MercExchange.

eBay lost a Supreme Court ruling last year that found it guilty of patent infringement. However, the high court declined to rule on whether or not an injunction to prevent the future use of the technology should be enforced, leaving that up to the lower court.

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YouTube to 'Fingerprint' Videos by Fall

Lawyers for Google's YouTube subsidiary told a New York District Court judge that it would have a method to "fingerprint" videos in the fall.

The new functionality will help the site find copyrighted videos easier by looking for similarities. It is being developed in conjunction with content providers, and YouTube said it will begin using the new technology by autumn, possibly as early as September.

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DRAM Suppliers Take Major Hit in Second Quarter

The second quarter of 2007 was a terrible time to be in the DRAM business. Tremendous oversupply led to plummeting revenues for all of the world's top 8 and #10 suppliers, even though shipments continued to rise, according to a report released today by technology analyst firm iSuppli.

Hit hardest by the typhoon was #2 Hynix Semiconductor, which saw revenues whacked down 29.7% over the previous quarter to about $1.52 billion, despite unit shipment growth over the previous quarter of 22%.

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Italian Pens Novel Using Mobile Phone

In yet another sign of our increasingly mobile lifestyle, an Italian author has completed a 384-page science fiction novel without the use of a computer or pen and paper. Robert Bernocco wrote the entire book using his Nokia 6630 mobile phone by dividing the manuscript into short paragraphs.

Bernocco, who wrote in his native Italian, utilized the phone's T9 predictive text input designed by Tegic and formerly owned by AOL. He did not use shorthand and transferred the text to his computer only for proofreading. It took Bernocco 17 weeks to complete the novel, working mostly while commuting to and from work on the train. The book -- "Fellow Travelers" in English -- is available for purchase via Lulu.com, which serves as a marketplace for authors looking to self-publish their work.

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Can Microsoft Truly Issue 'Open Source' Licenses?

Yesterday, publisher Tim O'Reilly broke the news that at his company's own open source convention in Portland, Oregon, Microsoft General Manager of Platform Strategy Bill Hilf is planning to -- if it hasn't already -- submit its existing Shared Source Licenses to the Open Source Initiative, for certification as true "Open Source Licenses." The OSI is the designated caretaker of the legal definition of "open source."

But the question may rightly be asked: Is this a genuine move by Microsoft to enroll its Microsoft Permissive License (Ms-PL) as an official open source license that the community can recognize, or is this more of a symbolic act?

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Congress Expresses Concern Over Digital TV Switch

The coming transition from analog to digital television here in the United States has some in Congress a little worried that any consumer confusion may come back on them.

On February 18, 2009, broadcasters will be required to stop transmitting programming in analog format. The spectrum freed up once the move is complete would be reassigned to other uses, including frequencies for first responders and new wireless broadband services.

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Cisco Invests $150 Million in VMware

Following in the footsteps of Intel, Cisco will acquire 1.6 percent of virtualization company VMware from parent EMC for $150 million in cash. Unlike Intel, Cisco will not receive a board seat, but VMware said it would consider appointing a Cisco executive to its board in the future.

Facing increased competition from Microsoft and newcomer Parallels, the investments will help VMware maintain its lead in the marketplace. Through Intel, VMware now has closer ties to the hardware it virtualizes, and Cisco will work with the company to develop virtualization products designed for networking and datacenters. Both Intel and Cisco stand to gain from the transactions as well once VMware goes public.

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BBC Launches Free Online TV in UK

The BBC launched its online television service on Friday, which is being called the biggest change to the way its viewers watch its programming in four decades.

The advent of content on the Internet is as big for the BBC as its first broadcasts in color in the 1960s, according to Director General Mark Thompson.

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EC Charges Intel with Abuse of Dominant Power

This morning in Brussels, spokespersons for the European Commission confirmed that Intel was served yesterday with a formal Statement of Objections, charging the CPU manufacturer with paying for exclusivity with cash, incentives, and discounts in order to compel OEMs not to purchase AMD CPUs.

At present, the EC has not made public the names of OEMs with whom Intel allegedly made deals. However, according to spokespersons, the Statement does specifically name AMD as the sole party which Intel allegedly sought to harm.

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