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*HOT* Tech News And Downloads, I Would Read This Thread And Post Any Good Info
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30. June 2006 @ 05:47 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
SECONFIG XP..........Security configuration utility for Windows. One tool to close (not just shield) most Windows security holes. Can close ports 135, 137-139, 445, 1025 (used by file and printer sharing, Windows domains, other LAN-like access and widely exploited by worms, hackers etc.), 1900, 5000 (used by UPnP) and other.... Can disable most dangerous Windows services. Can configure many other hidden security related Windows TCP/IP settings. Works only with registry (no files, services, drivers etc.). Includes two easy to use presets for average home (standalone) and LAN (Microsoft Windows network member) computers .....(free).....GO THERE!
http://seconfig.sytes.net/


OPEN SOURCE FREEWARE..........400 plus extremely useful open source applications and utilities available free under various licenses.....(free).....GO THERE!
http://www.econsultant.com/i-want-open-source-software/index.html
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30. June 2006 @ 05:56 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Two new security flaws have been discovered in Microsoft's Internet Explorer, and one could also affect Mozilla's FireFox, security experts have warned.

Code for both the vulnerabilities has been published, but there have been no reports of attacks taking advantage of the flaws, the SANS Internet Storm Center, which monitors network threats, said in an advisory released Wednesday

go here to read it all
http://news.com.com/Browser+bugs+hit+IE%2C+Firefox/2100-1002_3-60...

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 30. June 2006 @ 06:08

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30. June 2006 @ 06:22 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Super-slim lasers developed to give up to 10x more capacity
Posted by Seán Byrne on 30 June 2006 - 14:56 - Source: Pink Tentacle

Most people have already read many stories about holographic storage and discs containing more than 2 layers promising that would bring us ultra storage high capacities on a CD sized disc, however this has not stopped research into improving the capacity of single layer media. Just when Blu-ray appeared to offer the feasible limit per layer due to the difficulty in focusing laser light to narrower spots without moving further to more expensive shorter wave length lasers, researchers at Kyoto University have developed a new laser that can produce a beam of down to 1/10th the size of that produced by existing laser modules of the same wavelength.

The new semiconductor laser technology uses layers of phototonic crystals incorporated on 0.5mm˛ semiconductor chips. These crystals contain 10,000's of tiny holes, each acting as a mirror, which cause light to resonate in the chip until it gets emitted as laser light, but with an overal beam diameter of up to 10 times smaller than that from semiconductor lasers currently available.



go here to read it all
http://www.cdfreaks.com/news/13620
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30. June 2006 @ 08:54 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
France approves iTunes law
June 30, 2006 8:18 AM PDT

Apple Computer will have to play better with digital-music others in France.

That's the upshot of legislation that French lawmakers gave final approval to Friday. It could force Apple to make its iPod music player and iTunes Music Store compatible with those from rivals. It would make the same demands of companies such as Microsoft and Sony.

An earlier version of the legislation drew fierce criticism from Apple as "state-sponsored piracy" because it would have required companies to share details of their digital rights management technologies. The law as passed reflects a more recent compromise that offers some wiggle room--interoperability is still mandated, but doesn't have to be enforced if services like iTunes get the permission of rights holders such as musicians and record labels to use DRM.

Apple had threatened to bid adieu to France rather than share its DRM secrets with rivals.
Posted by Jonathan Skillings
http://news.com.com/2061-10793_3-6090051.html?part=rss&tag=609005...



more here

Both the Senate and the National Assembly, France's lower house, voted in favor of the copyright bill, which some analysts said could cause Apple Computer Inc. and others to pull their music players and online download stores from France.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060630/ap_on_hi_te/france_itunes_law_5

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 30. June 2006 @ 09:16

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30. June 2006 @ 09:06 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Last chance to jump on board Vista Beta 2

6/30/2006 9:03:45 AM, by Jeremy Reimer

According to a post put up this morning on Ian Moulster's (a Microsoft product manager in the UK) blog, Microsoft is providing only a limited number of copies (both physical and downloaded) of Vista Beta 2, and they are "fast approaching the cut-off point."

Those still interested in becoming part of the beta program can go to Microsoft's beta registration site and sign up for the program. The site requires a "Windows Live" ID, which is essentially the same as your Passport sign-in for Hotmail, and once signed-in you can obtain a beta product key and start downloading the massive 3.2GB file, which comes in the form of a DVD ISO image.


read it all here
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060630-7170.html


go here for vista
http://www.microsoft.com/betaexperience/engb/
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30. June 2006 @ 09:12 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Done the Vista experience, and am not going to revisit that trauma. But the Microsoft Office beta is really nice, am liking this a whole lot, I recommend this one.


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30. June 2006 @ 12:51 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Microsoft in legal trouble over Windows Genuine Advantage

6/30/2006 11:38:55 AM, by Ken Fisher

In the good old days of 2001, Microsoft started an aggressive anti-piracy initiative that is still alive today. Called "Windows Product Activation," Microsoft's early iterations attempted to verify copies of Windows online, going so far as to scan system components in an effort to individually identify machines. Some five years later Microsoft is still trying to keep an eye on piracy online, but they're going about it in a way that angers many.

Los Angeles resident Brian Johnson has field suit against Microsoft in the U.S. District Court in Seattle, charging the company with failing to disclose the true nature of a similar anti-piracy tool that Microsoft has distributed. The tool in question is the now-notorious "Windows Genuine Advantage"?an descendant of sorts from the old WPA approach. Johnson's complaint centers around the fact that previous versions of WGA constantly "called home" to Microsoft, which in his view constitutes a a violation of anti-spyware laws in both California and Washington State. Johnson's suit seeks class-action status for the complaint, and it is being fronted by Scott Kamber of Kamber & Associates LLC in New York. Kamber recently served as plaintiff's counsel in the rootkit fiasco centering on Sony.


go here to read it all
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060630-7171.html
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30. June 2006 @ 12:53 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Be nice if this guy wins, I swear it does an ET on my puter.


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30. June 2006 @ 13:01 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Western Digital settles drive size lawsuit

6/30/2006 1:45:53 PM, by Jeremy Reimer

How big is your hard drive, exactly? This question has caused no small amount of consternation, not only to geeks, but to hard drive companies as well. Western Digital, one of the largest manufacturers of computer hard drives, has just announced a settlement in the class-action lawsuit filed against it in California.

The lawsuit charged that Western Digital sold hard drives, specifically their 80GB WD800VE drive and their 120GB WD1200B011 model, that had only 79,971,254,272 bytes (74.4GB) and 120,002,150,400 bytes (111GB) of usable storage. All this confusion comes from the binary definition of kilobytes, megabytes, and gigabytes, which are 210 (1024), 220 (1,048,576), and 230 (1,073,741,824) bytes respectively.

Apart from math geeks and fans of the binary counting system, does anyone really care about the differences between kilo- and mega- in their binary forms versus their metric forms? The lawsuit charges that consumers do care, because they have become familiar with binary amounts in two ways: from the typical amounts of memory received with every new computer (128, 256, 512 MB and so forth), and because the computer's operating system itself reports free space in terms of binary megabytes and gigabytes. The suit even went on to reference the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and that organization's proposed renaming of the binary standards to "kibibyte" and "mebibyte," arguing that the world's failure to adopt these new terms means that the old binary definitions for kilobytes and megabytes should still stand.

In the end, all this fibble and kibibble winds up with Western Digital offering to compensate customers with a US$30 refund, which the company will provide in the form of free backup and recovery software valued at the same amount. Customers wishing to take advantage of this offer need to visit WD's site and sign up for the Claim Form, which must be completed by July 17.
http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20060630-7174.html
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30. June 2006 @ 14:39 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Spyware Tools | RemoveWGA 1.1

RemoveWGA enables you to remove the Microsoft "Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications" tool, which is calling home and connect to Microsoft servers every time you boot. Once the WGA Notification tool has checked your OS and has confirmed you had a legit copy, there is no decent point or reason to check it again and again every boot.

Also, Windows Genuine Advantage Notifications is different than Windows Genuine Advantage Validation. RemoveWGA only removes the notification part, phoning home, and does not touch the Validation part. As the time I'm writting this, the Validation part is mandatory for some not critical downloads from Microsoft, but the Notification part is not mandatory at all, and you are able to install all of the security updates without installing this one. This may change in the future thought, I don't know what are the Microsoft plans.

Editors Note: Avira detects a trojan in RemoveWGA. The file is clean.

Author: firewall Leak Tester
Date: 2006-06-30
Size: 13 Kb
License: Freeware
Requires: Win XP

get it here
http://www.majorgeeks.com/download5170.html
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30. June 2006 @ 14:49 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
New malware poses as WGA validation and notification

warning A new piece of very nasty malware has been recently discovered on spyware help forums, first here and again here. The file name is wgavn.exe and it creates a service named "Windows Genuine Advantage Validation Notification", as seen in this line in the HijackThis log.

O23 - Service: Windows Genuine Advantage Validation Notification (wgavn) - Unknown owner - C:\WINDOWS\system32\wgavn.exe » New malware poses as WGA validation and notification | Spyware Confidential | ZDNet.com Linked by shanmuga Fri Jun30 2006 1:41am EDT



New malware poses as WGA validation and notification
Posted by Suzi Turner @ 5:41 pm
Digg This!

A new piece of very nasty malware has been recently discovered on spyware help forums, first here and again here. The file name is wgavn.exe and it creates a service named "Windows Genuine Advantage Validation Notification", as seen in this line in the HijackThis log.

O23 - Service: Windows Genuine Advantage Validation Notification (wgavn) - Unknown owner - C:\WINDOWS\system32\wgavn.exe

Thanks to security MVPs at the Aumha forum, I was able to get a sample today ? this is one nasty little piece of malware. I tested it on a virtual machine running XP Pro, totally unpatched. On execution, wgavn.exe creates a folder, C:\Windows\etc\, that contains a file named services.exe. Wgavn.exe copies itself to the \System32\ folder as shown in the HijackThis line above.

On my virtual machine, it disabled the following: WinPatrol, an anti-spyware program, a third party firewall, VMware Tools, VMware User Process, and VPCUserServices by changing the values of the Run keys in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE. Another researcher reported it disabled the Windows firewall and System Restore.

Wgavn.exe immediately attempted to contact several different IP addresses. The ISP is being notified in an attempt to investigate these sites and IPs. At this time, it's unknown how the two users who posted the HijackThis logs got infected with this. The sample has been submitted to anti-malware vendors but as of earlier today was poorly detected. Kaspersky is now detecting it as Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot.st, and another AV at VirusTotal detected it as Backdoor.Win32.IRCBot.BV.

Update June 30: Infoworld now has this story on wgavn.exe and says Sohpos is calling it an AOL Instant Messaging worm and variant of the Cuebot family. Sophos named it W32.Cuebot-K.

Cuebot-K can disable other software, shut off the Windows firewall, download new malicious programs, perform basic DDOS (distributed denial of service) attacks, scan local files and spawn a command prompt, Sophos said.

Worms that spread through instant messaging programs often appear as messages or links sent from friends, which trick a user into executing the program. Cuebot-K propagates by sending itself as a file named "wgavn.exe" to more people in the user's "Buddy List" but without a message, Cluley said.

Both victims posting for help in the forums had AIM, so I'm not surprised that's how it spread. The article says the worm immediately tries to contact two websites, but I observed it contacting three URLs and the firewall log showed four IP addresses.

eepny.stjohnspark.net
ljrpq.haxx.biz
kroqc.haxx.biz
209.11.244.114
209.11.244.115
209.11.244.162
209.11.244.165

These belong to AS35908 VPLSNET, as seen here on a tracert from dnsstuff.com. VPLS Inc.'s website site can be seen here. The whois info for haxx.biz is very sketchy and stjohnspark.net is registered to Haxx Enterprises. Interesting.
http://blogs.zdnet.com/Spyware/index.php?p=838
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1. July 2006 @ 10:27 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Intellectual Property Secret Police,


p2p news view / p2pnet: There's nothing more wonkish than intellectual-property regulation. But intellectual-property enforcement may well turn out to be the lever for government intrusions into private life every bit as profound and extensive as the better-known secret-police initiatives of the Patriot Act.

You know all those old myths and stories about dead folk who just won't stay dead - zombies, vampires, Richard Nixon? Well, there are ideas like that too - ideas that won't stop clawing their way out of the grave and back into the light of day. One such idea is the "broadcast flag," recently returned aboveground, for the Nth time, tucked into an enormous telecommunications bill (S. 2686), now before the U.S. Senate.

"Broadcast flag"? Before your eyes glaze over, give me a few seconds to get you good and scared. Because this one is a real flesh-eating zombie of an idea, and it just won't stay dead.

"Broadcast flag" is shorthand for two different but interconnected things. One of them is a flag or tag or attribute, or whatever you want to call it, embedded in a digital audio or video stream, that says "don't copy me without permission." This is the "broadcast flag" in the literal sense.

Which might seem harmless. It's like an electronic version of the copyright notice on a book, or that goofy thing about the FBI that leads off every video you rent. But if the government ever got serious about enforcing it.... that's where the Inquisition would come tiptoeing into your TV room, and maybe right onto your lap, as we will see a little later.

Well, guess what: Big Media does want the government to enforce the broadcast flag, and the government, ever solicitous for the rights of large-scale property, is eager to oblige.

The broadcast-flag initiative now before the Senate resuscitates an attempt by the FCC, back in 2003, to mandate broadcast flag compliance by all digital media devices. That regulation, known to aficionados as FCC 03-273, was subsequently buried with a stake through its heart by a Federal court. Now the Senate is digging it up again, with near-universal participation by Republicans and Democrats alike. The Flag just sailed through the Senate's commerce committee without a recorded vote, a pretty sure sign of bipartisan ownage by the relevant lobby; the frogs and the mice will not be fighting over this one. The only dissenter, so far, is Senator John Sununu of New Hampshire, who seems to have some real libertarian principles, not just a libertarian line of chat like most of his colleagues.

The 2003 FCC rule, written to order for the Motion Picture Association of American (MPAA), Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), the National Football League and other copyright rentiers, is a thicket of obscure, rebarbative language, vague definitions, cross-references, and cabbalistic terms of art. But if you stare at it for a while, the crux becomes pretty clear: "demodulators" must comply with the broadcast flag. And what is a demodulator? It is any device or component that takes a digital TV or audio signal and turns that signal into a stream of bits that can be written to a CD, or shown on a screen, or downloaded to your iPod.

Sounds like some kind of electronic gizmo, right? A thing with transistors, and wires, and maybe some pretty blinking lights. Indeed, a demodulator can be just that. And maybe it doesn't seem so terribly tyrannical to mandate certain kinds of behavior on the part of a gizmo. There are plenty of precedents - cars have to have seatbelts, for example.

But here's the rub: a demodulator can also be just a piece of software, or part of a larger piece of software. Computers, including your 14-year-old's laptop, are rapidly becoming so powerful that it's only a matter of time before your 14-year-old can download a demodulator, or a program that includes a demodulator, from some other 14-year-old in Finland - or write his own, for that matter.

Now what happens when that wicked Finn, or your wicked offspring, decides to ignore the Broadcast Flag? Well, the FCC doesn't come right out and say. They don't explicitly include such "software demodulators" in the scope of their regulation, but they don't explicitly exclude them either, and the definition of "demodulator" is certainly broad enough to cover them. And the FCC haven't overlooked the possibility of software demodulators - they write:

"... critics note that ... non-compliant hardware or software demodulators could be produced with relative ease by individuals with some degree of technical sophistication...."

They go on to say, ominously, I think:

"... we seek further comment on the interplay between a flag redistribution control system and the development of open source software applications, including software demodulators, for digital broadcast television."

'Interplay' is good, isn't it? Interplay nice, kids. But think for a minute about the implications of all this. Obviously, you won't be able to buy a digital TV, or any other digital media device, whose manufacturers haven't certified to the Feds that it honors the Flag. Perhaps they will have to give the Feds the schematics, or the source code for their "firmware" - the embedded programming that enables the device to operate. And if you want to get around this restriction, and load software onto your laptop that ignores the Flag, then technically, that software is probably contraband and you will have probably committed a federal crime. But will the law be enforced in such cases?

I think, sooner or later, it will. Not tomorrow. For tomorrow, and next week, software demodulators will be a very geekish hobby, too small-scale to bother the MPAA and the RIAA. But we have all seen how quickly geekish hobbies can infect the millions. And when that happens with software demodulators, there'll be a crime wave, and the MPAA and RIAA will sit up and take notice.

They'll want to find all these bad actors who have loaded non-compliant software onto their laptops. But that's not so easy. There's no way a "content provider" can tell, from his end of the wire, what software the recipient of his digital media stream is running.

Ultimately, warrants will have to be issued. Fibbies in flak jackets will charge into your house and confiscate your 14-year-old's computer. Aha! He's running Linux! And he's been visiting Web sites in Finland! Twenty years for the little Commie song pirate!

Does this sound unlikely? It shouldn't -- we've already seen it before, with the FBI breaking into houses and the RIAA filing thousands of lawsuits against people accused of "file sharing."

Intellectual property enforcement, in other words, will lead to a kind of de facto government software regulation. The software police won't entirely succeed in suppressing contraband software - we'll have an eternal war, a little like the Drug War, which suits the police just fine, of course. But certainly they will succeed to some extent; the prospect of a midnight raid will keep all but the bold and heedless safely inside the sheepfold of approved software, produced by Microsoft or Apple or Sony or some other large corporation.

You know what the next step will be. The approved software manufacturers will be approached, just the way the NSA recently approached the telephone companies. Kiddie porn - terrorism - video piracy - bad things, right? Surely you'll help us defeat terrorism and put child molesters behind bars? Your techies have probably left some back doors into that movie software, right? Tell us more. What's that? You're hesitating? You're not a, uh, child molester yourself - are you? Y'know, your ex-wife tells some strange stories....

Paranoid, you say? Well, a few years ago it would been paranoid to predict that cops would be searching people's knapsacks in the New York subways, or that the NSA would be monitoring your grandmother's phone calls.

There's been a vast expansion, in recent years, of the idea of "intellectual property." You can patent most anything - Microsoft, I hear, owns all the transcendental numbers except pi, and they're suing Euclid's estate over that. (Just kidding. Sort of.) Copyright is forever, or as near as dammit. Fair use is narrower and narrower, and there are even public parks where it's a copyright violation to take pictures.

And this is taking place at the same time that technology is making intellectual property a laughably obsolete idea. Once you've got a stream of bits on your hard drive, there is no power on earth that can stop you from copying it -- except the oldest power, the power of armed men to break your door down and take you away.

Michael J. Smith - stopmebeforeivoteagain.org
[Smith says he's a computer programmer by day who by night, conspires to destroy the Democratic Party on his StopMeBeforeIVoteAgain blog. This article originally appeared in the June 30, 2006, Counterpunch, as Intellectual Property is Intellectual Theft ... at Gun Point.]

p2pnet newsfeeds for your site.
rss feed: http://p2pnet.net/p2p.rss
Mobile - http://p2pnet.net/index-wml.php

(Saturday 1st July 2006)
http://p2pnet.net/story/9237


MORE GOOD NEWS BELOW

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 1. July 2006 @ 10:34

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2. July 2006 @ 09:53 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good afternoon all. I want to wish you a happy 4th and watch out for the fireworks, kind of hard to type missing a finger or two. Have a nice get together with your families. Later, George
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2. July 2006 @ 10:01 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
little155 and all a happy and safe 4th,




This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 2. July 2006 @ 10:02

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2. July 2006 @ 16:02 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Open letter to parents'





Hi:

This is an open letter from my wife, Liz, and I to other mothers and fathers who are becoming seriously worried by the influence vested corporate interests are able to exert - long distance and up-close-and-personal - on our children through school systems around the world.

The major record labels and Hollywood movie studios are traditionally and infamously linked to organized crime, rampant drug use, the use of sex as currency and corruption at all levels and they're the absolute last entities on earth to be instructing anyone, let alone children, on moral issues, on what's right and what's wrong and on truth and fairness.

Yet that's exactly what's happening, and it's happening everywhere with the collusion of local governments and school staffs and administrations.

Get 'em while they're young, at kindergarten and university, is the corporate buzz-phrase. And spare no expense.

The RIAA is, "taking the battle for hearts and minds directly to the auditorium of your kid's school," reports thep2pweblog. The RIAA has teamed with i-Safe, "a nonprofit organization" which, "teaches kids, teachers and parents how to be safe on the Internet," with topics such as, "awareness about predators, not to give out too much personal information," and, "the risks of getting on P2P networks".

"Sounds fine so far," the post goes on.

Sounds fine? With the Big Four's RIAA involved? And it should read, "has taken" rather than "is taking".

Nor are Warner Music, Vivendi Universal, EMI and Sony BMG all there is to worry about. Let's not forget Time Warner, Viacom, Fox, Sony, NBC Universal and Disney's MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America). Or organizations such as Microsoft, Apple Computer, Adobe and the other owners and operators of the BSA (Business Software Alliance).

So, 'Sounds fine' is most assuredly not the case, especially, "When you add in the idea of the RIAA feeding iSafe the propaganda and iSafe in turn showing up to your kids school under the guise of saving them from MySpace predators, only to tell them about how music wouldn't be made if the RIAA didn't get thier [sic] cut, it becomes something quite different," as thep2pweblog emphasises.

"Obviously the information presented will be biased in favor of the industry, and I'm going to go out on a limb and bet that no one will talk about the crappy record deals your kid's favorite artists are living with," it states.

But thep2pweblog isn't going out on a limb. It's an iron-clad, carved-in-rock, solid-gold certainty no one will talk about the "crappy record deals," or anything else even remotely connected to truth and reality.

Cheers! And thanks ..

Good little cash cows - 102

go here to read it all,as its a long read...
http://p2pnet.net/story/9238

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 2. July 2006 @ 16:08

gerry1
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3. July 2006 @ 04:28 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good Morning All! It's strong iced coffee for me this morning after a good long walk to the office. I haven't been around much lately, things have been pretty nuts lately but I wanted to say hello to everyone. As its July 3rd, I'm hoping things will be really slow and uneventful here at the office ... gives me the chance to catch up on things here at aD! ...rather like missing three weeks of my favorite soap! I hope everyone is well! ... Gerry
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3. July 2006 @ 04:34 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good morning, Iced Coffee for me too, it is going to be a hot one out there today. Just hoping the rain stays away for tomorrow, don't like grilling in a monsoon. You been missed gerry, glad you finally got a little down time to check in.........hope it continues :)


gerry1
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3. July 2006 @ 04:43 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Howdy Arnie! I've missed being here but things truly have been nuts. We had a hit of massive lay-offs and I've literally been doing the work of four people and inherited the case loads of two others...I've been working seven days a week using Sat and Sundays for data entry that I hadn't had time to do during the week. Things should be better now though; they've transfered a clerk from the main office and she's astonishingly good. She was annoyed at first (fear of the unknown, I guess) but she quickly discovered that one has a lot more fun away from the brass and politics. I hope I'll be around more now.

I don't know where you live Arnie but maybe you're getting the weather we had yesterday. I haven't seen it rain like that in a long time. It ended with a thunderstorm last night that was nothing short of spectacular; I stood in my living room window and just watched it ... like a light show. I haven't seen one like that since I moved north from Miami. I'm not sure but I could swear a couple of the skyscrapers were hit a number of times by lightening but I'm sure they're built with that in mind. It was neat though.

This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 3. July 2006 @ 04:47

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3. July 2006 @ 05:04 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
I live not too far from you, Ohio so we get the same weather. Last night got some real boomers, and wind was pretty bad also. All and all it has been a wet summer, at least my grass is happy it just grows and grows. All I do is mow it, lol :)


janrocks
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3. July 2006 @ 22:26 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
In the wake of the action against the PirateBay some others have joined the fight against restrictive laws


http://www.pirate-party.us/


Thank You!
David and I would like to thank everyone for the huge outpouring of support we have received these last few days. We're working very hard to bring the new site online and start the very important work of this party.
We look forward to working with you. - Joshua Cowles

In the meantime, please visit us on the temporary unofficial forums,
or on IRC server: irc.echel0n.net Channel: #USPirateParty (Java Web Client)

Help Build the Pirate Party
Please consider a donation to us in order to help pay for important things like web hosting, incorporation, accounting and legal fees, and other expenses.

The Pirate Party of the United States is this country's version of Piratpartiet, a Swedish political party that wants to "fundamentally reform copyright law, get rid of the patent system, and ensure that citizens' rights to privacy are respected." As a fraternal party, the PPUS shares similar goals while working within the political context of U.S. to achieve them.

For far too long, Big Media copyright cartels like the Motion Picture Association of America and the Recording Industry Association of America have held back technological progress and individual freedom. They have done so through cutthroat litigation against ordinary Americans, interfering with peer-to-peer networks by flooding them with bogus files, and corrupting the political system with unscrupulous lobbying and political donations.

Similarly, the pharmaceutical firms of the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America have, through the power of their medicine patents, denied lifesaving medical treatment to the world's poorest people suffering on a horrific scale just to raise their profit margins. Doctors and scientists are beholden to Big Pharma's grant money, extorted through patents, to devote research efforts on what makes the most money, not always on what saves the most lives or reduces suffering. The New England Journal of Medicine can no longer find unbiased reviewers of medical studies because of Big Pharma's long patent-granted reach.

Preceding and following the 9/11 attacks, the U.S. government has had a longstanding antipathy towards protecting the privacy of ordinary Americans when it conflicts with their interests in state control. The NSA's phone-tapping, the FBI's Carnivore email spying program, and Congress's two so-called "PATRIOT Acts" are symptoms of a rampant disregard in law enforcement and the legislative branch for the private lives of U.S. citizens.

No matter what excuses or rationalizations Big Businesses and Big Government offer, it all comes down to cold, hard corporate greed and state control at the expense of your freedom and well-being. Most Americans have wished that one of the major parties would have the courage to stand up to these undemocratic conglomerates and policies and win back control of the cultural, scientific, and personal spheres for artists, critics, scientists, patients, and citizens from all walks of life. Both the Republicans and Democrats have instead, as a whole, enthusiastically rolled over for Big Media's and Big Pharma's campaign dollars.

While fine groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Free Software Foundation, Creative Commons, and Doctors Without Borders have been fighting these battles for a long time with us, no political party in United States has made the reform of intellectual property and privacy laws their top priority.

Until now.

Signed,

Joshua Cowles & David Sigal
Provisional Chairmen, PPUS

Original text by Brent Allison, Founder.


gerry1
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4. July 2006 @ 07:46 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good morning one and all; and greeting from Philadelphia, the birthplace of the US. I just want to wish everyone a happy and safe holiday!

To my buddies from other countries, no excuse is ever needed for a good party! ... Gerry
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4. July 2006 @ 08:10 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good going gerry, happy holiday to all. George
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4. July 2006 @ 09:09 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
To all,




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4. July 2006 @ 10:20 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Happy 4th of July to all in the USA. For me here in England another year of wedded bliss has passed 14 years today





There is no such thing as "U.S English"
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4. July 2006 @ 10:30 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Thank you consul, and congrats on your anniversary. For me it is 40 years, and everyone said it wouldn't last, lol :)


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