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March 25, 2005

Finding Creative Commons licensed material

How do you find photos, music or text in a particular category that you can use without getting prior permission (subject to conditions)?

Yahoo have now released a Creative Commons search engine (via Lessig).

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Posted 25th March 2005 by David Jacobson in Legal, Web/Tech

March 23, 2005

No misuse of data in 2004 election

The Australian Communications Authority (ACA) has found no evidence of misuse of data from the Integrated Public Number Database (IPND) during
the 2004 federal election campaign.

The ACA has been investigating a complaint by the Australian Labor Party about telemarketing activities by the Liberal Party of Australia during the campaign.
The ACA’s investigation focused on whether the Liberal Party’s telemarketing activities improperly used data from the IPND.

“Our investigation found that the phone numbers were obtained from publicly available databases,” ACA Acting Chairman Dr Bob Horton said.

“These databases can include numbers that in the past were listed numbers, but have since become unlisted, as well as information from other sources.

“However, the ACA has asked the Office of the Federal Privacy Commissioner to review the complaint because there may be other matters within its jurisdiction.”

UPDATE: 30 March
The Privacy Commissioner, Karen Curtis, has advised that she will
not be investigating the complaint about the telemarketing activities
of the Liberal Party of Australia, which was referred to her by the
Australian Communications Authority (ACA) on 21 March 2005.

“I have examined the information provided to me by the ACA following its investigation of this matter,” Ms Curtis said.

“On the basis of that information, I am satisfied that the matters
raised would fall outside the jurisdiction of the Privacy Act, as it
provides an exemption for the acts and practices of political
organisations and those organisations  contracted to them,” said Ms
Curtis.

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Posted 23rd March 2005 by David Jacobson in Privacy

March 21, 2005

RSS feeds

RSS feeds make keeping in touch with
updates to this website easy, quick and flexible. The feeds enable
you to see at a glance what new content has been added in your areas of
interest, without having to repeatedly visit or search the site.

How do I read the feeds?

  • If your web browser has an orange icon in the address or tool bar like this – RSS icon -
         just click on the icon to add an RSS feed as a favourite or bookmark.
  • Access your RSS feeds on the web. Go to Google Reader, Yahoo! or Bloglines and register there.

This Cnet review explains how you can see RSS feeds and even has a video tutorial.

What are the Terms of Service for this site’s RSS feeds?

UPDATED 18 October 2007

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Posted 21st March 2005 by David Jacobson in Web/Tech

March 15, 2005

BitTorrent under attack in Australia

I talked about BitTorrent recently here.

Last week Kim Weatherall reported on a raid of an Australian ISP using BitTorrent.

Here’s the latest report from ZDNet on the court proceedings.

The general allegation apparently is that BitTorrent is a facilitator of copyright infringement. No doubt more will be revealed tomorrow.

UPDATE: ZD Net report 16 March 2005

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Posted 15th March 2005 by David Jacobson in Web/Tech

March 12, 2005

Microsoft’s 10 immutable laws of security

Microsoft’s Security Response Center has published its 10 immutable laws of security to support its view that  not all security problems result from product flaws.

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Posted 12th March 2005 by David Jacobson in Web/Tech

March 8, 2005

Record Retention and Electronic Discovery

Ever since Enron, businesses have been aware of their obligation to preserve records in the face of pending litigation.

How do we know whether electronic records exist or have been altered or destroyed? This is the realm of electronic discovery.

Electronic discovery is now a standard tool in litigation. See here.

Merrill Corporation (via Dennis Kennedy) has prepared a series of free on-line presentations (audio synched with slides) on this topic (under New Directions).

So far there are 3 presentations: 2 by Dennis Kennedy (Computers and Copies – Is Every Step Traceable? and The Mysterious World of Metadata) and 1 by Tom O’Connor (Fitting Electronic Discovery in the Litigation Support Process). They are short (10-15 minutes) and easy to listen to.

Whether you are a lawyer, IP Professional or a businessman these presentations give you an insight into the electronic trail that computer records leave.

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Posted 8th March 2005 by David Jacobson in Legal, Web/Tech

March 1, 2005

Databases

Further to my post on the Choicepoint database identity fraud, comes this Vanity Fair article on the author of the MATRIX data mining system (via Ernie the Attorney).

It’s a great read about a self-taught programmer who wrote a program to identify the 9/11 terrorists:

"MATRIX, for Multi-state Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange. The list was forwarded through Asher’s law-enforcement contacts to Brian Stafford, head of the U.S. Secret Service, and to a senior F.B.I. agent. The feds were stunned.
         

According to Asher, five of the names on his list were under investigation by the F.B.I., and
one was on those passenger manifests—Marwan al-Shehhi, pilot of the second jet that hit the World Trade Center. Asher had current and prior addresses for al-Shehhi and the rest of those 419 names. He had bank records, motor-vehicle records, and driver’s licenses, complete with digital photographs. He had aviation licenses. He had credit histories. He had the names of neighbors and landlords, along with
their digital pictures."

Is he a hero or a villain?

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Posted 1st March 2005 by David Jacobson in Privacy, Web/Tech