IIA Gets Behind iiNet in Legal Battle

Australia’s peak internet industry group which represents Telstra and Optus has thrown its weight behind iiNet’s Federal Court bid to fend off a major copyright lawsuit. The Internet Industry Association wrote to all parties involved in the case last week informing them of its intention to lodge an application to be heard by the court under its amicus curiae (friend of the court) provisions

Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp Launches Global Service to Link All its Outlets

News Corporation is launching a global service that will make all its news stories and videos instantly available to its entire network of TV, print and online news outlets. The service, called NewsCore, will operate like a global wire service for all the company’s newspapers, TV networks and websites. News Corp is describing the venture as a 21st-century multi-media information service that will draw on the worldwide news and sports resources within News Corporation and make them available to other News properties everywhere

WordPress Blogs Under Attack from Hack Attack

Older versions of WordPress are vulnerable to a subtle attack that hides itself while adding spam. Is this a turning point for the free product? WordPress blogs, one of the most prevalent among custom install blogs (and used by organisations including Downing Street and the Daily Telegraph) are vulnerable — and being hit — by a worm that affects any old (ie before 2.8.4) version

The ‘Telepathy’ Chip That Lets You Turn on the TV Using the Power of Thought

A telepathy chip that allows people to control computers, televisions and light switches by the power of thought is being developed by British scientists. The tiny sensor would sit on the surface of the brain, picking up the electrical activity of nerve cells and passing the signal wirelessly to a receiver on the skull. The signal would then be used to control a cursor on a computer screen, operate electronic gadgets or steer an electric wheelchair. The chip is the brainchild of Dr Jon Spratley, 28, from Stevenage, Hertfordshire, who developed a prototype during his PhD at Birmingham University

How 136 People Became 7 Million Illegal File-Sharers

The British government’s official figures on the level of illegal file sharing in the UK come from questionable research commissioned by the music industry. The Radio 4 show named More or Less examined the government’s claim that 7m people in Britain are engaged in illegal file sharing. The 7m figure actually came from a report written about music industry losses for Forrester subsidiary Jupiter Research. The report was privately commissioned by none other than the UK’s music trade body, the BPI. The 7m figure had been rounded up from an actual figure of 6.7m, gleaned from a 2008 survey of 1,176 net-connected households, 11.6% of which admitted to having used file-sharing software — in other words, only 136 people. That 11.6% was adjusted upwards to 16.3% to reflect the assumption that fewer people admit to file sharing than actually do it. The 6.7m figure was then calculated based on an estimated number of internet users that disagreed with the government’s own estimate. The wholly unsubstantiated 7m figure was then released as an official statistic — via Slashdot

YouTube and PRS Make Peace as Musicians Protest About Plans to Punish File Sharers

Thousands of music videos pulled from YouTube in a royalties dispute will go back online after peace broke out today between the website and the music industry. A new licensing deal with PRS for Music, the trade body that collects music royalties, has brought the six-month dispute to an end. But while this conflict has been resolved, another dispute has erupted over the digital future of the music industry. A rift has opened between music’s creators and its record labels, with a broad alliance of musicians, songwriters and producers fiercely criticising the business secretary Lord Mandelson’s plans to cut off the broadband connections of internet users who illegally download music. In a statement seen by the Guardian, a coalition of bodies representing a range of stars including Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Elton John and Damon Albarn attacks the proposals as expensive, illogical and extraordinarily negative

Google Trick Tracks Extinctions

Google’s algorithm for ranking web pages can be adapted to determine which species are critical for sustaining ecosystems, say researchers. According to a paper in PLoS Computational Biology, PageRank can be applied to the study of food webs. These are the complex networks of who eats whom in an ecosystem. The scientists say their version of PageRank could be a simple way of working out which extinctions would lead to ecosystem collapse

Reboot for UK’s Oldest Computer

Britain’s oldest original computer, the Harwell, is being sent to the National Museum of Computing at Bletchley where it is to be restored to working order. The computer, which was designed in 1949, first ran in 1951 and was designed to perform mathematical calculations; it lasted until 1973. When first built the 2.4m x 5m computer was state-of-the-art, although it was superseded by transistor-based systems. The restoration project is expected to take a year

Quantum Computer Slips Onto Chips

Researchers have devised a penny-sized silicon chip that uses photons to run Shor’s algorithm — a well-known quantum approach — to solve a maths problem. The algorithm computes the two numbers that multiply together to form a given figure, and has until now required laboratory-sized optical computers. This kind of factoring is the basis for a wide variety of encryption schemes

Nation’s Web Access Cut After Telstra Outage

Telstra’s national internet network went down for an hour today, the company says. The outage affected all Telstra home and businesses broadband and mobile internet customers nationwide, between 7.50am and 8.50am, a spokesman said. The company formed a major incident response team to investigate the outage. It’s not yet known what caused it. Another spokesman told Sky News that customers could not access any international sites or Australian sites containing international links

Vodafone 3G: 11 Hour Outage Hits Perth

Vodafone’s 3G network coverage in Perth has now been restored after an 11-hour outage caused by routine network maintenance. Vodafone Hutchison Australia confirmed that its 3G coverage in Perth and surrounding suburbs experienced an outage between midnight and 11.00am today. Customers had earlier today complained that 3G and GSM/GPRS reception was intermittent

Broadband to Stimulate Seniors’ Grey Matter

The federal government has launched its $15 million senior citizens internet education program. Federal Minister for Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs Jenny Macklin today unveiled the first 42 of 2000 internet kiosks which will be placed in community sites exclusively for teaching senior citizens how to use the internet. The kiosks are essentially basic PCs with internet connections

A More Sensitive Cancer Breathalyser

Lung cancer is a brutal disease, often not caught until it’s too late for treatment to do much good. Now researchers are building an electronic nose that could help physicians detect the disease during its initial stages. Using gold nanoparticles, scientists at the Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa have created sensors with an unprecedented sensitivity for sniffing out compounds present in the breath of lung-cancer patients

eBay Reaches Deal to Sell Skype

eBay has agreed to sell the majority of internet phone company Skype for about $2bn. Skype is to be majority-owned by a group of private investors, including Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen and private equity firms. eBay will keep a 35% stake in the firm, which it has been trying to sell for some time. It has said that Skype had limited synergies with it. The deal values Skype at $2.75bn. EBay bought Skype for $2.6bn in 2005

Woman Fired For Using Uppercase In Email

An accountant in NZ has been awarded NZ$17,000 for unfair dismissal after her boss fired her without warning for using uppercase letters in a single email to co-workers. The email, which advises her team how to fill out staff claim forms, specifies a time and date highlighted in bold red, and a sentence written in capitals and highlighted in bold blue. It reads: To ensure your staff claim is processed and paid, please do follow the below checklist. Her boss deemed the capital letters too confrontational for her co-workers to read after they woke up from naptime — via Slashdot

Optus Email Change Angers Customers

Optus has been forced to halt the planned shut down of its optushome.com.au email domain after users complained of insufficient warning. Thousands of long-time Optus customers awoke this morning to find empty email inboxes after the telco last night flicked the off switch to its optushome.com.au email domain server. Optus says it warned subscribers of the impending change — a migration to a new domain, optusnet.com.au — in an April newsletter but admitted it failed to issue any follow-up warnings

Vodafone Coverage Hits 94%

Vodafone has gone live today with its expanded 3G coverage to rural areas, now reaching 94 per cent of the population. Coverage has been extended out to Kununurra in Western Australia, Port Douglas in Queensland and Devonport in Tasmania, according to the company. Vodafone’s 3G coverage previously reached 80 per cent of the Australian population. The upgrade has also included adapting the 2G network to support EDGE technology