Author: Kenny Yeoh

RapidShare must remove infringing content proactively

Kenny Yeoh
06 October 2008, 19:29

File sharing service RapidShare may find itself without a viable business model if a German court ruling stands. After getting sued by a German copyright holder, the company argued that it was doing all it could to screen out copyrighted material. The court, however, has ruled that its efforts were insufficient, raising questions about whether doing anything that was legally sufficient could be done without incurring enough costs to sink the company.

RapidShare is one of a large number of companies that will host large files for users who need to exchange them with friends and family. Like many of these companies, it offers a free service with limited features in the hopes of enticing users to spring for the cost of a premium service, which offers some significant perks, such as hosting larger files, unlimited download speeds, and permanent storage. All of this occurs through a simple web interface, and doesn’t involve the P2P transfers that have attracted the ire of ISPs and the copyright industry. As a result, their popularity is growing rapidly; RapidShare accounts for five percent of all IP traffic in some regions.

Of course, the exchange of large files is what P2P was all about, so it’s no surprise that copyrighted material is showing up on RapidShare, as well; attention from copyright holders was also inevitable. In this case, that attention came in the form of a lawsuit in Germany, where a copyright holding organization called GEMA has been seeking legal sanction and financial penalties. As we noted in our earlier coverage, Germany lacks the “safe harbor” provisions afforded to US companies, which are exempted from liability for infringing material that their users place on servers or make accessible through their networks if they take it offline once notified of its infringing nature.

The case has been going poorly for RapidShare so far, and it appears to have taken a turn for the worse. The P2P Blog notes that the German courts have issued a ruling (in German, naturally) in which their expectations for RapidShare’s antipiracy efforts are spelled out more clearly.

RapidShare argued in court that it maintained hashes of copyrighted material that had appeared on their service in the past, and used those to prescreen material that is uploaded. In addition, it had hired six full-time staff members to go through material it was hosting and to respond to complaints about infringing material. None of this, apparently, is good enough. Simply twiddling a few bits could defeat the hash-based screening, the court ruled, and the six employees were insufficient to proactively examine everything posted to the company’s servers before it was made available for download.

The blog translates part of the decision as stating, “a business model that doesn’t use common methods of prevention cannot claim the protection of the law,” in determining that the near impossibility of screening for all copyrighted material doesn’t excuse RapidShare from the legal requirement to do so. I’m hard pressed to think of a “common method” that would suffice to enable the screening of this volume of data. As a result, it looks as though RapidShare may be forced to manually screen every bit of uploaded content. Closing its doors is likely to be a cheaper option should the ruling stand.

Nintendo has announced that it will release an upgraded model of its popular handheld, the Nintendo DS. Featuring a camera, music playback and more modernized features, it will come to market in Japan this year at a price not far above the current model.

According to reports from Japanese-language newspapers, pictures taken with the camera will be usable in games released for the system. Meanwhile, it is predicted that CDs and other music will be able to be imported onto the DS for playback.

The Wi-Fi antenna currently in use for multiplayer gaming is set to get a power boost, as well. The new wireless technology under the hood will be used to “more easily access news” and other up-to-date information such as weather.

The upgraded DS will be released in Japan this year at a price of “under 20,000 yen” ($189). For reference, the current DS sells in Japan for 16,800 yen ($159).

aaNet is having a BBQ

Kenny Yeoh
27 September 2008, 11:31

According to members, aaNet will host a BBQ

The email sent to their customers:

As an aaNet customer, you have been exclusively invited to attend one of aaNet’s community BBQ’s. The BBQ’s provide an ideal opportunity to meet other aaNet customers and members of the aaNet team. We want to bring ‘community’ back to aaNet and we’re hoping the BBQ’s will be a step in the right direction. All you need to do is turn up! And we’ll do the rest!

The plan on the day

The aaNet BBQ’s are fully catered with juicy BBQ food, refreshing drinks and great company! On the day there will be competitions and prizes, and we have the much awaited aaNet polo shirts which we promised some of you a long time ago!

Bring your family, your picnic rug and your favourite BBQ games and we’ll make sure you have a great time!

Don’t delay, register today!

Crysis Warhead Preview

Kenny Yeoh
16 September 2008, 19:15

In Crysis Warhead, players will don the Nanosuit of Sergeant Sykes, also known as ‘Psycho’, one of the most memorable characters from Crysis. More brash and aggressive than his Delta Force squadmate Nomad, players will experience Psycho’s parallel story during the events of the original game, finding that life on the other side of the island is even more intense and explosive than they ever could have imagined. Luckily, Psycho’s Nanosuit is just as capable and he’s equipped with an even bigger arsenal of fully customizable weapons and new vehicles, giving players access to the tools they need to dominate any situation.

Crysis Warhead is a parallel story to Crysis, one of the most critically-acclaimed first person shooters and PC games of 2007. The game is first title to be developed at Crytek’s Budapest studio, and built on a new, enhanced and optimized version of Crytek’s CryENGINE 2 technology.

It is avaliable in the U.S and will be on sale in Australia by the end of the year.

Halo 4???

Kenny Yeoh
16 September 2008, 19:13

The Halo saga reached a dramatic climax with Halo 3, but the franchise did not end there — not by a long shot. Along with Halo Wars and the Peter Jackson Halo Project, a fourth entry in the legendary shooter franchise is rumored to be on the readyline. Rumors run heavy on what the future of Halo will be — some point to series originator Bungie as the likely generals behind the next chapter, while others say that a new unit (likely suspects currently being Gearbox) has taken command of the future of Halo, and everything from a true “#4″ sequel to a franchise reboot to a secret next-generation Xbox Halo have all been talked about as possible directions for the Halo franchise to take.

2nd Gen iPod Touch Review

Kenny Yeoh
13 September 2008, 15:36

With its latest iteration of the iPod Touch, Apple has added two highly coveted features–external volume controls and a speaker–and lowered prices, too. However, the Touch’s physical changes are incremental, and they don’t bring the device up to the level of its sibling, the iPhone 3G.

To be sure, the lower prices make the Touch a more attractive purchase than before, coming in at $229 for 8GB (previously $299), $299 for 16GB, and $399 for 32GB (down from $499). The prices are more in line with what Apple and AT&T charge for the iPhone 3G: $199 for 8GB, and $299 for 16GB. (You don’t have to pay a monthly fee to use the Touch, though.) While the amount is still more than what you might pay for competing media players, you get more with the Touch, too.

Let’s begin with what stays the same. This version of the Touch continues to share many characteristics with the first-generation Touch and with the iPhone 3G. All have a bright, gorgeous, 3.5-inch, wide-screen multitouch display with 480-by-320-pixel resolution at 163 pixels per inch. All have 802.11b/g wireless support. And all sport the same operating system software that allows for easy navigation, a host of useful apps (Safari Web browser, calendar, e-mail, contacts, Google Maps, YouTube, weather, clock with multiple alarms and stopwatch, ordinary and scientific calculators, and notepad), and the ability to expand your device through Apple’s App Store.

Playing music remains a breeze. Press the home button below the display to activate the screen, and then select Music from the dedicated buttons along the bottom of the screen. In vertical view, the music’s cover art dominates the display; orient the player horizontally, and it switches to Cover Flow view, which lets you page through the cover art as if you were viewing a flip book.

Read More >

Why the old iPods are a Classic

Kenny Yeoh
10 September 2008, 21:53

By adding new features to the iPod over time (notes, photos, videos, etc.), Apple has given owners of previous models plenty of reasons to lust after the latest and greatest models. But Apple hasn’t just been adding features to the iPod, it’s also been taking some away. I own a fifth generation (5G) iPod, and compared to my original second generation (2G) iPod, there’s a lot missing nowadays.

The latest iPod packaging is remarkably slim compared to the original’s. You could actually fit four 5G iPod boxes inside the box of the 2G. And Apple is proud to point this out on the Product Design page of their Environment site:

The packaging volume of our fifth generation 30GB and 80GB iPod was reduced by 69% from earlier models. This enables 120 more units to be shipped per pallet compared to the fourth generation 30GB iPod.

What that means for the environment is “eliminating hundreds of thousands of pounds of packaging waste.”

How did Apple manage to reduce the iPod’s packaging that drastically? By removing most of the accessories that the iPod previously came with.

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iPod invented by furniture salesman

Kenny Yeoh
10 September 2008, 21:50

Apple has admitted it did not invent the iPod, which was in fact the brainchild of a British man who patented his prototype 30 years ago.

Kane Kramer, now 52, took out a worldwide patent in 1979 for a media player that looked similar to the iPod but could store only 3.5 minutes of music. He dubbed it the IXI and planned to expand its capacity as technology advanced.

However, after running out of funds in 1988 Kramer was unable to put forward the £60,000 needed to renew the patent so his idea fell into the public domain.

Kramer, now a struggling furniture salesman, was therefore not entitled to receive any money or recognition from those who used his design.

The revelations came to light after patent holding company Burst sued Apple, claiming the iPod infringed on its patents.

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Apple considering Unlimited Music Plans

Kenny Yeoh
19 July 2008, 21:11

Apple is currently in discussions with music companies to allow customers to have unlimited access to the entire iTunes music library in exchange for paying a premium for its iPod and iPhone devices (presumably for the life of the device).

The plan sounds similar to Universal’s Total Music Plan in which the cost of music is embedded into the music player itself. Based on the wording of this article, it seems Apple’s version of the plan adds the cost on top of the iPod or iPhone.

The negotiations are currently being held up due to disagreements in pricing. Apple is reportedly only offering $20 per device, while Nokia is playing almost $80/handset for a similar plan. Other possibilities appear to include a subscription based service for iPhone users ($7-8/month, for example) with the capability to keep up to 40-50 tracks/year even after the subscription lapses.

Historically, the Financial Times has been a reliable source of information with early details of Apple’s plans to introduce iTunes Movie rentals well ahead of its release,

Apple has quietly released a 1.1.5 firmware upgrade for the iPod Touch. The 1.1.5 firmware remains a free upgrade path for firmware 1.1.4 users who chose not to upgrade to 2.0 ($9.95US).

From what we can tell upon first blush, there are no major (or even minor) changes that are easily detectable, which indicates that perhaps Apple has merely tweaked some of the underlying architecture. After all, there were a number of security updates included in iPhone/iPod touch firmware 2.0, so those may also be integrated into iPod touch 1.1.5 as well.

The 2.0 upgrade was released over the weekend and brings support for MobileMe, Exchange, 3rd Party Applications (App Store) and more. Based on early reports, firmware 1.1.5 appears to add no new features but may improve the speed and stability of existing applications. The update is available through iTunes.

Meanwhile, it appears that Apple is currently testing version 2.0.1 of the iPhone and iPod Touch firmware.

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