>> HARD NEWS <<
free to peruse?
The GUARDIAN this week devised an fiendishly distributed system
of encryption for its article on police seizure of ISP-held
data. Duncan Campbell's "Police tighten the Net" piece began
with the revelation that a major ISP had been raided, and
one of its employees arrested as part of the global
"Operation Wonderland" child porn crackdown. The ISP was
not named in the main article: instead, the newspaper
steganographically concealed its identity by hiding it in
the same edition's "Corrections" section. The Guardian there
apologised in advance for implying that any Demon employees
were apprehend--- whoops! Meanwhile, safe from the lawyers,
the Web edition of the paper identified Demon in the first
(unedited) paragraph of the article - and continued to
maintain an arrest had taken place.
http://online.guardian.co.uk/theweb/905960359-privacy.html
All of these tactics fortunately failed to conceal
Campbell's main thesis - that ISPs are being pressured to
open up their servers to general police inspection. The
timing for ISPs couldn't be worse - at the same time as the
police force are encouraging them to sign an informal
"memorandum of understanding" to allow this, the government
is preparing its draft E-COMMERCE BILL, expected in October
and probably to include a new criminal offence, inserted by
the Home Office: it will become a crime to refuse to provide
plaintext versions of encrypted data to the authorities in
the course of a prosecution. Worse still, over in the US,
tech companies appear to be reaching a privacy consensus
with the government there: in return for a relaxation on
strong crypto controls, hardware manufacturers like Cisco
will introduce new strong crypto-enhanced routers that will,
nonetheless, have a plaintext backdoor for law enforcement.
With that hardware installed at ISPs' offices, the memo of
understanding signed, and the UK legislation in place,
British ISPs will become what they have been desperately
trying to avoid all this time: an easy touch when it comes
to stomping over the rights of their own customers.
http://www.wired.com/news/news/technology/story/13658.html
- in which the privacy lobby propose the compromise
http://www.techweb.com/wire/story/TWB19980916S0012
- and the US government start being nice for a change
Oh, yadda, yadda, yadda. Enough with the dull and gloomy
crypto talk: what fun stuff is happening in that crazy zany
UK IT industry? Well, the good news for ACORN fans is that
next month's Acorn World show has been postponed, giving
RISC PC owners a chance to build up even more excitement
over the platform's future. The bad news is that... it
doesn't have one. Acorn are abandoning all future RISC PC
developments, sacking 2/3rds of their non-engineering staff,
and moving everybody else to their set-top box and Apple
co-development departments. Amiga owners should zoom over
to comp.sys.acorn.advocacy and crow while you can. In the
meantime, the remaining Acornites are talking of turning the
original Acorn World date into a drunken wake. We'll drink
to that.
http://wwwis.cs.utwente.nl:8080/~faase/Ha/Atom/
- from little Atoms, mighty Acorns fail
http://www.hotgames.com/games/v2000/review.htm
- still, there's always Virus 2000
>> ANTI-NEWS <<
berating the obvious
SLASHDOT feature on the problems of too many Slashdot
comments receives over 350 comments... more current
Microsoft employees at BURNING MAN than current Wired
employees... new Irish TV show TECHTV Web forum crashes
after presenter is referenced as "that fucking gobshite" -
see http://www.hackwatch.com/~kooltek for details... by
contrast, the guestbook at http://www.alfayed.com/ is
impressively one-sided... NYTIMES hackers gain respect
via "greets" to GK Chesterton, lowercase lettering...
"TV must do more than repackage for the Web" expensive
FORRESTER REPORT uncovers... AINTITCOOLNEWS writes that
Paramount execs watching STAR TREK: INSURRECTION screening
were "literally blown away" - well, that's one way to get it
past the suits... Jakob Nielsen criticises the STARR REPORT
for poor Web usability - wait 'til they release the
Quicktime movies... proposed domain naming organisation,
ICANN, registers icann.org, icann.com and icann.net (Why all
three? Because they *can*)... new MANICS album may contain
"worst lyrics ever" (theirs or anyone else's)...
>> EVENT QUEUE <<
goto's considered non-harmful
An NTK no-prize goes to the first person to make a
"downsizing" gag at tonight's IT SLEEPOUT, in aid of the
NCH's "House Our Youth" campaign (18/09/98, Finsbury Square,
London EC2), billed to feature UK directors from 3Com and
Bull. Unfortunately, if it rains, they won't be able to pop
into the DIGITAL UNDERGROUND show in the nearby disused
Aldwych tube station, because they are supposed to be
outside, suffering the cold - not inside, suffering "sound
and visual installation, robots, digital conversation, and
unusual interfaces". And anyway, it shuts at 6 o'clock (12-6
pm, 18-22/09/98, The Strand, London WC2). More advanced
urban spelunkers shouldn't pass up the recon opportunities
offered by LONDON OPEN HOUSE '98, including such tempting
trophies as the ITN building, Lloyds of London, and a
Victorian "Grade I listed waste-water pumping station" in
Bexley.
http://www.HOY2000.org.uk/contents.html
- also has advice for homeless people with net access
http://www.artserver.org/digitalunderground
- about as "underground" as these lamers get
http://www.londonopenhouse.demon.co.uk/Listings%20One.html
- hey, it's no http://www.infiltration.org
And another of those unfortunate date-clashes again next
Thu, with THE LONDON INTERNATIONAL INVENTIONS FAIR
(24-27/09/09, Barbican Exhibition Centre, London EC2Y) going
right up against horrid consumer electronics show LIVE '98
(24-27/09/98, Earls Court, London SW5), where virtual
reality (oh god) sits alongside the very latest developments
in car CD players. Yeah, we sound bitter, we know, but we
never got over the "Live" show we went to a few years back
where Microsoft demonstrators were painting the Win 95 logo
onto children's faces.
http://www.sphinx-exhibitions.co.uk/sphinx/invent98/
- "hundreds of creative and charismatic characters, your
fellow inventors."
http://www.live98.com/
- anyone go to "Toys For The Boys"? Thought not.
>> TRACKING <<
making good use of the things that we find
If we were ever tempted to draw comparisons between MOZILLA
and those other dinosaur mascots, the Jurassic Park raptors
(genetically engineered from doomed species, unable to
reproduce, tendency to chomp heads off hackers releasing it
into the wild, etc), we're stopping right here. After a long
period of incubation, the Mozilla Open Source egg is
beginning to hatch. Signs that life has found a way include a HTTP
compression scheme that promises to speed up modem
downloading 30%, the beginnings of a port to the Linux GNOME
desktop, OS/2 and Rhapsody versions and - tee hee - even hooks
into the Microsoft Active Desktop system. Psychologically,
hacking Mozilla should become more fun too, now that Chris
Nelson has introduced a "Worker's Heroes"-style hall of fame
in his regular Mozilla Status page. Not that you'd ever
think of coding just for a moment of tawdry glory...
http://www.mozilla.org/status/
- All Hail The Eternal Principles of Zawinskite Slashdotism!
http://www.sky.co.uk/history/classroom/alevel/stalin3.htm
- today's new word: Stakhanovitve
>> MEMEPOOL <<
hasta la altavista
New Urban Legend: URANIUM processing inspectors sprinkled it
on their tongue to see if it "tasted right"... those cheap
Asian rip-offs of the IMAC are already on their way:
http://www.din.or.jp/%7Etoy/tb/tb20e.html ... REYNOLD B.
JOHNSON, inventor of disk drive, spins off this mortal
platter at 92... www.bluesnews.com goes for real life BFGs
http://www.ittc.ukans.edu/~botanika/warning_label.htm#bfpg
http://www.unabombertrial.com/documents/psych_report1.html -
how would *you* score?... hey ECO-WARRIORS, how about
"liberating" oil from supertankers?... DIY geek posters:
http://space.jpl.nasa.gov/ ... Shatner? October? SPAIN?
http://www.freeent.com ... our only VIAGRA joke ever (c/o
the BBC news ticker) http://subatomic.com/images/viagra.gif
... imagine what hidden messages people will find on track
10 of http://www.cddb.com/xm/cd/misc/d10ec20f.html ...
>> GEEK MEDIA <<
may contain strongly-typed language
TV>> like we should be grateful for the BBC's sci-fi "triple
bill": despite SubGenius allusions (Zeists - or Xists?),
HIGHLANDER II: THE QUICKENING (10.20pm, Fri, BBC1), is
incoherent nonsense - even by Highlander standards, FIRE IN
THE SKY (11.45pm, Fri, BBC1) is just a plain dull redneck
Rockford X-File, and draw your own conclusions about 1954's
THE SHE CREATURE (1.30am, Fri, BBC1)... sources suggest that
"accessible" net history GLORY OF THE GEEKS (8pm, Sat, C4)
is only the first of two new tech series hosted by god-like
Robert X Cringely... while another X-rated aliens blah blah
conspiracy blah blah all a hoax (or *is it?*) yawnathon
prolongs a new series of THE X FILES (9.25pm, Sat, BBC2)...
yes, more nutty small-town Americans in MAXIMUM BOB (10pm,
Sun, BBC2) - ignoring the inevitable Elmore Leonard link and
direction from useless Barry "Men In Black" Sonnenfeld, it's
actually supposed to be quite good... still, our money's
with trapping-rappers containment drama TRESPASS (10.45pm,
Sun, BBC2)... "hedge disputes" are the latest flashpoint for
NEIGHBOURS AT WAR (9.30pm, Mon, BBC1)... real-life Tomb
Raider goes on spurious QUEST FOR THE LOST CIVILISATION
(9pm, Mon, C4) - his name: Graham Hancock... and not content
with the exciting theory that a meteor killed the dinosaurs,
EQUINOX (9pm, Tue, C4) spends a thrilling hour on the
alternative hypothesis that it was just ordinary volcanic
activity... old established media clearly too scared to
mention NTK in publicity for wacko panel game KING STUPID
(6.25pm, Tue, Radio 4)... lame sequel THE STEPFORD HUSBANDS
(9.35pm, Thu, BBC1) precedes unexpected new episode of THE
OUTER LIMITS (9.45pm, Thu, BBC2)... and "Renegade TV" worth
rebelliously taping includes HOAX (12.40am, Thu, C4)
interviewing people who con fly-on-the-wall shows. At least,
that's what they *claim* they do...
FILM>> spectacular action-by-numbers, but the passing of Mel
Gibson's suicidal tendencies blunts the impact of LETHAL
WEAPON 4 (imdb "plot keywords": blockbuster /
illegal-immigrants / slave-labor / frog / handy / murder /
dentist / martial-arts / shark / racism / police-brutality /
counterfeiters / marriage / triad / chase / los-angeles /
police / pregnancy / baby). And hey, whatever weapons
they're using, they're clearly not *that* lethal... in a bit
of deja-viewing for anyone who's seen his Alan Turing story,
Derek Jacobi plays a gay genius who falls for a burglar in
LOVE IS THE DEVIL (imdb: biographical / drama) (and Kurt
Cobain is Jesus, presumably?). But this time it's the
arty-looking life of dead painter Francis Bacon (the one
whose stuff looks a bit like Bill Sienkiewicz)... David
"Friends" Schwimmer plays slightly against type, sleazily
battling Jason "Chasing Amy" Lee over Mili "Sha'uri from
Stargate" Avital in expletive-packed rom-com KISSING A FOOL
(imdb: comedy / independent)... a limited London release for
grunge cameo-heavy not-about-video-games-at-all trashfest
THE DOOM GENERATION (imdb: devil / black-comedy / bisexual /
teen / mistaken-identity / nazi / satire / road /
cult-favorites / castration / vulgarity / violence /
nihilism / rape / _drama_ / sex / gay / masturbation-scene /
murder)... so surprise recommendation of this week: John
"Lone Star" Sayles' worthy but harrowing Central American
self-explanatory Heart Of Darkness holiday MEN WITH GUNS
(MPAA rated: R "for language and some violent images")...
MAGS>> the first "proper" issue of FRONTIERS (out now) is,
indeed, all that we feared, with glaring typos in each of
the first three picture-spread features ("pray" for "prey",
"wrecked" for "wreaked", "peak" for "peek"); reporting of
the famous Blitzkrieg hoax as fact (p76); some confusion
over the use of "sheep sperm" to create the Dolly clone
(p30) (hint: she's called "Dolly" [Parton] because they were
udder cells); and bizarre references to Damon Knight's
sci-fi story "March Of The Morons" (p73), when they actually
mean "The Marching Morons" by Cyril M Kornbluth. We didn't
get any further - the rest was so pre-teen dull that we
ended up yearning for Focus, which is *never* a good sign...
conflicting noises about whether Future's new semi-adult
games lifestyler (due 17/11/98) is still going to be called
"Arcadia" (as believed in NTK 21/08/98), or the rather more
pedestrian ARCADE. Still, let's hope it lasts as long as
their previous multi-format effort, "Ultimate Future
Games"... also from Future, watch for their attempt at a
games news site - http://www.futuregamer.com/ - plus a new
version of OFFICIAL PLAYSTATION MAGAZINE, aimed at "younger
readers" (What, *toddlers*?)... EMAP Images' SEGA SATURN
MAGAZINE is believed to have run its last House Of The Dead
walkthrough, leaving the division (our source opines) "with
only three magazines to their name. Two of which aren't very
good"... despite his feature byline in the Sept issue of
wacky women's monthly FRANK, Hari Kunzru now denies all
responsibility for the closing comment: "Ms Pac-Man has
recently been relaunched as a Web game"... and finally,
something good for a change, tipped by excellent
Disinfotainment importer and kinder egg fan Mark Pawson -
http://www.mpawson.demon.co.uk/ . Praise THE IMP issue 2, a
68-page "extended essay" on Jack Chick religious comics,
featuring title checklist, cross-ref'd dictionary, and
Daniel Clowes cover for just UKP3.25. Ultimate damnation or
your money back!...
>> SMALL PRINT <<
Need to Know is a useful and interesting UK digest of things that
happened last week or might happen next week. You can read it
on Friday afternoon or print it out then take it home if you have
nothing better to do. It is compiled by NTK from stuff they get sent.
It is registered at the Post Office as "well-connected":
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~trin0364/dirk.html
NEED TO KNOW
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