38 Studios: Curt Schilling’s Crony Capitalism Debacle

Former Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling, an iconic figure in New England after anchoring a historic playoff comeback which ended a legendary 86-year title drought, founded 38 Studios near the end of his baseball career in the hopes of becoming a big shot in the intensely competitive multi-player gaming world.

via 38 Studios: Curt Schilling’s Crony Capitalism Debacle – Reason.com.

Using his bully pulpit as both governor and chairman of the Rhode Island Economic Devlopment Corporation (RIEDC), a quasi-public agency whose mission is to promote business in the state, Carcieri pushed hard for 38 Studios to receive a $75 million taxpayer-guaranteed loan.

CAS Raspberry Pi Educational Manual

You’ll find chapters here on Scratch, Python, interfacing, and the command line. There’s a group at Oracle which is currently working with us on a faster Java virtual machine (JVM) for the Pi, and once that work’s done, chapters on Greenfoot and Geogebra will also be made available – we hope that’ll be very soon.

via CAS Raspberry Pi Educational Manual | Raspberry Pi.

The manual itself? It’s brilliant, and we think you’ll find it really useful. Head over to the Pi Store from your Raspberry Pi’s desktop to download a copy directly to your Pi, or, if you don’t have a Raspberry Pi, download it here.

Using Moodle: issued a DMCA takedown for using Moodle

A competitor has issued me with a DMCA takedown notice saying that by using the standard Moodle login page with no modifications, I have infringed his copyright.  He says my Moodle login page is too similar to his login page which he also asserts copyright over. His login page is a standard WordPress wp-admin page.  This can’t be right. Who owns Moodle? I would like to report his actions.

via Using Moodle: issued a DMCA takedown for using Moodle.

Irish Newspaper Collective Wants to Charge License Fees for Links

Note that this is not paying for an excerpt, which is not that unreasonable, or some punitive measure for the copying of an entire article. No, the NNI wants to charge for links like this, this, or this.

For those 3 links, I now have to pay the NNI 300 euros. Seriously. Apparently this group of 15 newspapers is under the impression that merely mentioning an article on one of websites is not legal; they think it is copyright infringement.

via Irish Newspaper Collective Wants to Charge License Fees for Links – The Digital Reader.

Also.  From: 2012: The year Irish newspapers tried to destroy the web

These are the prices for linking they were supplied with:

1 – 5 €300.00
6 – 10 €500.00
11 – 15 €700.00
16 – 25 €950.00
26 – 50 €1,350.00
50 + Negotiable

Patent trolls want $1,000—for using scanners

Vicinanza soon got in touch with the attorney representing Project Paperless: Steven Hill, a partner at Hill, Kertscher & Wharton, an Atlanta law firm.

“[Hill] was very cordial and very nice,” he told Ars. “He said, if you hook up a scanner and e-mail a PDF document—we have a patent that covers that as a process.”

via Patent trolls want $1,000—for using scanners | Ars Technica.

Smaller and smaller companies are being targeted. In a paper on “Startups and Patent Trolls,” Prof. Colleen Chien of Santa Clara University found that 55 percent of defendants to patent troll suits are small, with less than $10 million in annual revenue. Even in the tech sector, a full 40 percent of the time, respondents to patent threats are being sued over technology that they use (like scanners or Wi-Fi) rather than their own technology.

From: http://stop-project-paperless.com/

Drew Curtis, CEO of Fark.com was sued for infringing on a patent that claimed to cover sending press releases out via email.  He made a short five minute video describing how he beat them.  You can find here: http://on.ted.com/Bxwq

Instabridge’s Android app uses Facebook Connect to let you share Wi-Fi with friends.

Instabridge’s free Android app lets you automatically share Wi-Fi networks with your Facebook friends. Available in a handful of European countries, the app works by taking advantage of the Facebook Connect authentication tool, which lets users to log on to websites with Facebook credentials.

via Instabridge’s Android app uses Facebook Connect to let you share Wi-Fi with friends. | MIT Technology Review.

To share a Wi-Fi network through Instabridge for the first time, you must type in your network’s password, which is encrypted and stored on Instabridge’s servers.

European Commission’s Low Attack on Open Source

This secrecy allowed the organisers to cherry pick participants to tilt the discussion in favour of software patents in Europe which shouldn’t even exist, of course, according to the European Patent Convention, FRAND supporters and proprietary software companies, even though the latter are overwhelmingly American so much for loyalty to the European ideal. The plan was clearly to produce the desired result that open source was perfectly compatible with FRAND, because enough people at this conference said so.

via European Commission’s Low Attack on Open Source – Open Enterprise.

Also worth noting in the above statement from the report is the claim that “the distinction between software and hardware is increasingly artificial”. I think if we decode this, what it means is that in the old world of hardware – for example, in telecommunications or codecs – FRAND standards were common, and that’s perfectly true. But in the world of software, the key modern forums for standards such as W3C or OASIS require RF, not FRAND. So this is a crude attempt to force old-fashioned hardware approaches on modern software, because once again the convenient result is that open source is excluded.

Build a Skype Server for Your Home Phone System

Configure Linux to Work with Skype

I’ll assume that because you’re a Linux Journal reader, getting Fedora Core 3 up and running on your Skype server is a no-brainer. The only important thing to remember is that Skype is a Qt application (though it’s also available in a version with Qt statically linked), and the Skype API uses D-BUS. Also, disable the screensaver (after all, there won’t be any screen to “save”) and power standby features as these may interfere with Skype.

Here’s a step-by-step guide to setting up Linux to work with Skype (it assumes you have set up a Linux user account named skype for the purpose):

via Build a Skype Server for Your Home Phone System | Linux Journal.