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Used News: Ridiculous Patents, Biometric DRM

By Jeff Foster, Section UnFairUse
Posted on Sun Jun 06, 2004 at 09:21:12 PM PDT
I was hired this week to help my mother-in-law's neighbor fix her computer. I had no idea how bad the spyware situation was until I got there. This computer was infested with 47(!) dialers, Gator, and various other awful infestations. Even after running both Spybot and Adaware, I'm not sure that I got rid of it all. Personally, I blame Microsoft. IE won the browser war, and look where it has gotten us. Anyone who isn't technically inclined ends up with a unusable computer full of spyware and viri. Pretty sad.

Is there something I missed this week or something you think I should know about? Let me know by leaving a comment below or emailing me at Jeff@malgenic.org


Microsoft Patents Double-click
There have been so many ridiculous patents issued over the years, it would be difficult to say that this one takes the cake, but off the top of my head, I can't come up with one that's worse. Microsoft has, as the headline says, patented the double click. The main thrust of the patent reads: "A method and system are provided for extending the functionality of application buttons on a limited resource computing device. Alternative application functions are launched based on the length of time an application button is pressed." While obsufacated, it does indeed seem to be a patent on the double click. Microsoft will not comment on why they filed the patent, what it applies to, or if or how it will be enforced.

Yahoo Anti-spyware Cheats
A report at of all placess Yahoo News describes how a beta of Yahoo's new spyware removal tool doesn't remove spyware from companies that Yahoo is associated with. It is not clear whether the spyware in question will be removed in future versions.

RIAA Wants Biometric DRM
According to the Register, the RIAA is teamed up with a company called Veritouch to try to lock digital media files to biometric features, like fingerprints. In other words, one couldn't play or copy a file unless it was associated with your fingerprints. They are also looking to limit CD burning in other ways.

SCO Buys out Baystar's A-1 Stock
In a surprising move (at least to me), SCO has bought back Baystar's 40,000 A-1 stock options. Baystar had just recently purchased RBC's 20,000 A-1 options, and with this purchase, SCO has no major investors and completely controls its business destiny. With that bit of news, one would think they'll be out of business within the week.

SCO Stock Watch
DOWN 1.7% to $5.10

Other News of Note

  • Pop-up Blocker Attacks
  • Your Computer is Bad for You
  • Network Associates Anti-spam Patent
  • Harry Potter Helps Spread E-mail Virus
  • AOL settles customer class action on late charges
  • < Bad Bloodlines | Tech Industry Should Clean Up its Own Spam-like E-mail >


    Display: Sort:
    Used News: Ridiculous Patents, Biometric DRM | 4 comments (4 topical) | Post A Comment
    Rediculous[ Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#1)
    by auctionhugh on Tue Jun 22, 2004 at 01:01:36 PM PDT

    I do computer support at a small company with about 70 PCs. I spend considerable time every week dealing with spyware problems. Ad Aware and Spybot are great, but it seems like many machines have something they don't take care of and I have to google suspicious looking DLLs and processes and find some manual way to clean them up.

    My daughter came home this weekend and brought her computer. I had just cleaned it several weeks ago and it was almost non-functional with literally dozens of new spyware programs installed and hogging ram and cpu cycles.

    I don't know how the average non-technical home user can survive in the spyware laden internet environment. Its crazy!

    -----
    Get help with your website from AuctionHugh's wife Kathleen. Professional, artistic, and EASY for you! Kallen Web Design of Kalamazoo



    [ Reply to This ]



    Absolutely[ Parent | Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#2)
    by Jeff Foster on Wed Jun 23, 2004 at 12:07:44 AM PDT

    How old is your daughter? The computer I described above had a Teenage(15?)girl on it. I suspect there is a cottage industry that plants spyware in software that appeals to teenage girls(pretty screen savers and the like). After all, it's pretty obvious that a substantial amount of spyware is targeted at teenage boys, or at least it is contained in software that appeals to the teenage boy in all of us, so why not target the other half?

    I don't know how the Non-tech can survive either. I just got back from cleaning a Brand NEW machine of no less then 4 different worms. The woman who had bought it had plugged it right into her brand spanking new DSL modem with no firewall in between, and of course within 10 minutes she had Sasser, Red Alert and any number of other worms. The machine restarted within 30 seconds of establishing an network connection. Trusted Computing at it's finest I guess.

    [ Parent | Reply to This ]



    Daughter[ Parent | Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#3)
    by auctionhugh on Fri Aug 27, 2004 at 01:36:48 PM PDT

    My daughter is 21 and at college. Very interesting thought that perhaps spyware stinkers are targeting that age group!

    -----
    Get help with your website from AuctionHugh's wife Kathleen.
    Professional, artistic, and EASY for you!
    Kallen Web Design of Kalamazoo



    [ Parent | Reply to This ]



    IE has "won" something?[ Reply to This ] (none / 0) (#4)
    by John Q Public on Sat Dec 03, 2005 at 11:37:12 AM PDT

    I take exception to the statement that IE has "won" the "browser wars". They have won nothing but a few battles, and they have done that not by besting their opponents, but merely by fiat. Their browser is already installed on most end-user machines; people have tended to use what is already there, no matter how bad it may be. I -- and many others now -- use Firefox almost exclusively. (Except when developing for the Web, because after all, one must acknowledge the existing user base.) Even then, I find it tedious because it does not display page elements in a standard and consistent manner, among other things. When the status quo becomes bad enough, people WILL abandon the status quo, en masse. Apparently, IE is not quite bad enough -- yet -- in comparison to the others. In regard to the average end user, of course.


    ** "It's not what you don't know that hurts you, it's what you do know that ain't so." - Twain **
    [ Reply to This ]


    Used News: Ridiculous Patents, Biometric DRM | 4 comments (4 topical) | Post A Comment
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