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Episode: 915
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Title: HPR0915: TGTM Newscast for 2012/01/17
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0915/hpr0915.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 04:50:42
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---
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For sure!
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You're listening to Talk Geek To Me News, number 58, record for January the 17th, 2012.
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You're listening to the Tech Only Hacker Public Radio Edition, to get the full podcast,
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including political, commentary, and other controversial topics.
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Please visit www.TalkGeekToMe.us.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me. Please send your comments to DG at deepgeek.us.
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The web page for this program is at www.TalkGeekToMe.us.
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You can subscribe to me on Identica as the username DeepGeek or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is DGTGM as in DeepGeek Talk Geek To Me.
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And now the tech round up. From eff.log, day of January 12, 2012 by Parker Higgins.
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The internet goes to Washington on January the 18th.
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There's some good news in the efforts to stop the internet blacklist bill Soapa Peepa,
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representative Darrell Issa, an outspoken Soapa critic and the author of alternative legislation
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called the Open Act, has announced that the oversight and government reform committee will
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hold a hearing on January the 18th to hear from actual technical experts, technology
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job creators, internet investors, and legal scholars.
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EFF's activists will be providing life coverage of the event throughout EFF Live Twitter
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account.
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A number of online activists are strategizing plans for a Soapa blackout, censoring websites
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and logos to draw attention to the hearing and showcase the widespread opposition to
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the censorship bills.
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We're glad to see lots of sites participating and we're urging folks to use social networks
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on January the 18th to help spread the word.
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The oversight committee hearing will address the topic of domain name service and search
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engine blocks generally and explore ways for the government to avoid legislation that
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would hamper economic growth.
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Of course, as active and controversial legislation, Soapa and its evil twin in the Senate, the
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Protect IP Act, Peepa, are certain to be discussed.
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At length, here's a look at the witness scheduled to speak.
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Alexis O'Hanian is a founder of Reddit, the social news platform that has been the
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site of numerous anti-Soapa discussions.
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He's spoken out against the bill personally saying, quote, this legislation affects my
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entire industry and livelihood.
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We never would have been able to start Reddit if Soapa were the law, and I worry about all
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of the future innovation we'd miss out on if it were to pass, unquote.
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Stuart Baker, the former Homeland Security Assistant Secretary and former General Counsel
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for the NSA, is certainly an expert on the issue of cybersecurity and the law.
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He's also been a vocal critic of Soapa, explaining the security problems with the original
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bill and the manager's amendment in an extremely cogent blog post titled Soapa Rope a Dopa.
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Brad Burnham is a founder of the prestigious Union Square Venture Investment firm.
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Union Square has been behind some very high-profile tech companies like Twitter and Force Square.
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In the seven years since its founding, supporting job creation and innovation in the tech sector,
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Soapa Rope is rightly concerned that legislation like Soapa could undermine his investments
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and the internet itself.
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In a personal blog post, he lays out the problem, quote, the current legislation in Congress
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does not just create an administrative burden.
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It requires service providers who have built wonderful businesses on the deep conviction
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about human nature to change their relationship with their users in a way that subverts their
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core values.
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Daniel Kaminsky is a well-known security expert known for discovering a major vulnerability
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in the DNS system, the sort that DNS sec initiative is designed to address.
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He is one of 21 trusted community representatives involved in the DNS sec implementation process.
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He is a signer of the open letter from the internet engineers first published by EFF and
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read into the congressional record by Representative Issa.
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Michael McCloud-Ball is the Chief of Staff and First Amendment Council for the ACLU.
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So he is likely to raise the major constitutional issues present in Soapa.
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The ACLU has publicly opposed Soapa on First Amendment grounds, so we expect a free speech
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focus.
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To read the rest of his article, follow links in the show notes.
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From EFF.org. January 10, 2012, by Ketitsa Rodriguez, biometrics in Argentina mass surveillance
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as a state policy.
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Two years ago, the UK dismantled the national ID scheme and shred their national identity
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registry in response to great public outcry over the privacy invasive program.
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Unfortunately, privacy protections have been less rosy elsewhere in Argentina.
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The national ID fight was lost some time ago, a law enacted during the military dictatorship
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forced all individuals to obtain a government mandate ID.
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Now they are in the process of enhancing its mandatory national registry of persons,
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with biometric data such as fingerprints and digitized faces.
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The government plans to repurpose this database in order to facilitate easy access to law
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enforcement by merging this data into a new security-focused integrated system.
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This raises the specter of mass surveillance as Argentinian law enforcement will have
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access to mass repositories of citizen information and be able to leverage existing facial recognition
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and fingerprint matching technologies in order to identify any citizen anywhere.
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In the waning days of 2011, Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner issued
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an executive decree ordering the creation of the federal system of biometric identification.
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A new centralized nationwide biometric ID service that will allow law enforcement to
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cross-reference information with biometric and other data initially collected for the
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purpose of operating a general national ID registry.
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Similarly police fingerprint databases were limited to those suspected or convicted of
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criminal offenses.
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Recently however, the Argentinian federal police was given a large database holding digital
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fingerprints collected from random Argentinians as part of the national ID and passport application
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process.
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Since March 2011, this database has been fed by data collected through the Renepa National
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ID application process.
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The PFA has managed to amass a database of about 8 million fingerprints.
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Yet this process appears to have been too slow for the Argentinian government.
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Further to the new decree, the CBIOS initiative will give PFA access to Renepa's database
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and vice versa, doubling PFA's reach to approximately 14 million digitized fingerprints,
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starting with the first New Year's baby of 2012, Argentina has even begun registering
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newborn biometric information with the CBIOS.
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Argentina projects that as national IDs and passport expire and are renewed and new
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babies are born, that CBIOS database will grow to over 40 million within the next two
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years.
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To read the rest of this article about Argentinian biometric database, follow links in the
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show notes.
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From torrentfreak.com by NIGMEX, January 9, 2012, Pirate Bay shows fertility of domain
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and DNS blocks.
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In October 2011, a court in Finland ordered local ISP Elisa to block the Pirate Bay to
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stop copyright infringement among its subscribers.
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Today the blockade, which covers many domains and IP addresses, took effect.
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But behind the scenes, there is an effort to unblock the site and render the court order
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useless.
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Meanwhile, there is already collateral damage.
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The court order has succeeded in blocking a domain linking to the Electronic Frontier
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Finland.
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In May 2011, the Copyright Information Antipiracy Center, CIA PC, and the finished branch
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of the Music Industry Group IFPI filed a lawsuit in the District Court of Helsinki.
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The group demanded that the local ISP Elisa should be forced to protect the copyrights
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of their members by stopping their subscribers accessing the Pirate Bay.
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Initially, Elisa refused to describe the block demands as unreasonable, but a subsequent
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court order left them with no choice.
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On October 26, 2011, the District Court of Helsinki ordered Elisa to block a range of
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domains and IP addresses associated with the Pirate Bay.
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Although Elisa has contested the decision by filing with the Helsinki Court of Appeal,
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in the meantime they have to comply.
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Today Elisa confirmed it has become blocking the domains and IP addresses listed below,
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along with follows.
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IP addresses to be blocked, three IP addresses follow.
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During the war between Finland and Russia, some suites decided to help Finland.
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They said the finished course is ours.
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A Pirate Bay insider told Torrent Freaks signaling their intention to circumvent the block.
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The Pirate Bay originates from Sweden so that the Pirate Bay will see the finished course
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as its own, only this time, it's against the copyright Russians.
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East concluded.
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And it appears the battle for the course has already begun.
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The last domain on that list certainly peaked our interest, and not only because it includes
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a typo.
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The NYUD.net domain belongs to the peer-to-peer-based Coral CDN service, which links to IP addresses
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all over the world, which is generally a good tool to make block sites accessible again.
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Ironically enough, the domain in question reveals a very easy way to bypass the Pirate Bay
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blockade in Finland.
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Just use one of the alternative domains associated with the Pirate Bay, add nyud.net.
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And the most resilient Torrent site becomes accessible again in Finland.
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While this block can temporarily stop the basic file shareer from using the Pirate Bay,
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we already see a surge of interest in blocking technology, censorship, net neutrality, copyright
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legislation, and court practice in the media.
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Junus Mucking of Finland's Pirate Party told Torrent Freak.
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This probably ends up being beneficial to file sharing, and shows the blocking attempts
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to be counterproductive.
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Side effects will be that the more blocks there are, the more work around people learn.
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This could severely hinder solving important crimes in the future he concludes.
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To read the list of the following links in the show notes, from tectod.com by Glen Moody
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Day, January 13, 2012, why Apple will not be part of the real tablet revolution.
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You don't have to be a marketing genius, or industry-pundit to foresee that tablet will
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be an extremely hot sector in 2012.
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The launch of Apple's iPad in 2010 largely defined the category, just as the launch of
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the iPhone defined a new kind of smartphone in 2007.
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In 2012, we will probably begin to see Android tablets start to gain major market share
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just as Android smartphones have done this year.
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Currently the tablet is something of a cross between the hipsootech toy of choice and a
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trivially easy-to-use computing device for couch potatoes, but those early sectors are incidental
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to the tablet's real potential to revolutionize education, particularly in emerging economies.
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The devices are perfect, they are compact, connect to the net wirelessly, run off battery
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power for hours, and can be used by children and adults alike with little or no training.
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There is just one problem, of course, the typical tablet's high-end pricing, hundreds
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of dollars, places it so far out of reach for most of the world's population that it
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might as well not exist for them, but that is what makes India's Akash tablet basic
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cost around 50 bucks, but only $37 for Indian students thanks to a government subsidy
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so remarkable and so important.
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Of course, its specifications are somewhat limited compared to the iPad, 256 megabytes
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of RAM, 2GB flash memory, a 7-inch 800x480 pixeled resistive touchscreen, but that's not
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really the point.
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The key issue is whether it is good enough for the educational purposes governments around
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the world have in mind, for although the Akash began as a project purely for India, it
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has been swiftly taken up by a number of other countries as this fascinating feature
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about the creation of Akash by the Canadian wireless device make a datawind explains.
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Quote datawind CEO Sunit was invited to meet with Thailand's Minister for Information
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Communications Technology who was so interested in purchasing 10 million tablets that he attended
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their meeting even as floodwaters decided on Bangkok.
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Profiles arrived from Turkey which wants 15 million tablets, Sri Lanka, Trinidad and
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Tobago, Panama and Egypt.
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This gives an indication of the potential of the Akash low-cost tablet to provide portable
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computing devices and would them access to digital knowledge on a truly global scale.
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The feature also explains how exactly datawind managed to produce a tablet for a tenth of
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the cost of an iPad.
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Part of the difficulty in engineering such a device is that the underlying goal that its
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final price should be within the means of those who can't afford high-priced tablets dictates
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crucial engineering and component decisions.
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A piece of high-impact musician glass such as the touchscreen face of an iPad can cost
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upward of $20.
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Datawind's touchscreen glass which the company had engineered down the street cost less
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than $2, though it won't allow for luxuries like pension zoom finger swiping.
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There were also compromises on processing power.
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Datawind's 366 MHz processor cost less than $5 a fraction of the $15 price tag on the
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chips that power iPads and other comparable tablets.
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And while a decision to run Google's free Android mobile operating system on the gadget saves
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money, it requires code to dig deep into the Linux kernel that underpins the software
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tweaking it until it runs smoothly on Datawind's weaker processor.
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As that makes clear, one key ingredient in the design of the Akash was Android and hence
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free software.
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This meant that Datawind's software engineers were able to build on several years work
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by Google and two decades of coding by the Linux community rather than starting from scratch.
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It's a reminder that even if, as seems likely, Apple's iPad retains its highly profitable
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hold on the upper end of the market, it will never be able to offer a model that is competitive
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with minimalist tablets built around free software at the bottom.
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And since it is precisely those ultra cheap models that will be sold in their hundreds
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of millions, perhaps even billions one day, that means that the real tablet revolution,
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the one that will transform education in emerging economies and with it, their societies will
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not be one in which Apple plays a major part, despite its early leadership there.
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From torrentfreak.com, by Ernesto, did January 13, 2012.
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The pirate bay will stop serving torrents.
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In a month, the pirate bay will no longer offer downloads of dock torrent files instead
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of the largest torrent site on the internet will only provide so-called magnet links to
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its visitors.
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The first step in this direction was made today with the pirate bay replacing the current
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default torrent download links with magnets.
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Could this be the end of an error?
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After half a decade of loyal service, the pirate bay shut down its tracker in November 2009.
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The pirate bay argued that bit torrent trackers have been made redundant by technologies such
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as DHT and PEX.
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In addition, the pirate bay team said that they might move away from torrents entirely and
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switch to offering magnet links instead.
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We're talking to the other torrents admins on doing magnet links and DHT and PEX for
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all sites.
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Moving away from torrents and trackers totally, like pick a date and all agree from this date
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will not support torrents anymore, a pirate bay insider told torrentfreak at the time.
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Now two years later, that date is coming soon.
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Today, the pirate bay made the first step towards this new future by making magnets the default
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download links instead of torrents.
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Torrentfreak was further informed that in a month or so, the largest torrent site on
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the internet will stop serving torrent files indefinitely.
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The announcement is bound to lead to confusion and uncertainty among many torrent users,
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but in reality, very little will change for the average pirate bay visitor.
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Users will still be able to download files, but these will now be started through a magnet
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link instead of a torrent file.
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Pirate bay team told torrentfreak that one of the advantages of the transition to a magnet
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site is that it requires relatively little bandwidth to host a proxy.
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This is topical since this week, courts in both Finland and the Netherlands ordered local
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internet progress to block the torrent site.
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Perhaps even better, without the torrent files, everyone can soon host a full copy of
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the pirate bay on a USB thumb drive, which may come in handy in the future.
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Unlike the site's users, existing torrent sites that scraped that torrent files from
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the pirate bay will have to make some drastic changes.
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If they want to continue serving torrent files, they will have to fetch them from DHT.
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Also hot links to that torrent files will stop working and will soon redirect to the
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pirate bay's detail page for the files in question.
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One of the potential downsides of using magnets is that it could take a bit longer for downloads
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to start, especially if there are relatively few people serving a file.
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This is because the torrent file has to be fetched from other users instead of being
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download directly from the site.
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More background on these and other technicalities can be found here.
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The good news is that all mainstream bit torrent clients support magnet links.
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This wasn't the case back in 2009, but when the pirate bay hinted, then the future they
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could become a magnet only site, all developers quickly made their clients fully compatible.
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There's no doubt that a torrentless pirate bay will certainly mark the end of an error.
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At the moment, it's hard to predict what the impact of the pirate based decision will
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be on the bit torrent community, but torrents, however, will never disappear completely.
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News from icelandreview.com, dissentingdemocrat.wordpress.com, magi-micneil.wordpress.com, spanklessboogie.blocksbat.com,
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contact.com used under a ranged permission.
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News from eff.log and torrentfreak.com used under permission of the creative commons
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by attribution license.
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News from democracynow.org used under permission of the creative commons by attribution non-commercial
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no-drivers license.
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Audio-interlude moment of clarity number 106 used under permission of Lee Camp.
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News sources retain their respective copyrights.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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Here are the vials statistics for this program.
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Your feedback matters to me, please send your comments to dg at deepgeek.us.
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The webpage for this program is at www.talkgeektoMe.us.
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You can subscribe to me on identica as the username deepgeek or you could follow me on Twitter.
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My username there is dgtgtm as in deepgeek talk geek to me.
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This episode of Talk Geek To Me is licensed under the creative commons attribution share
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like 3.0 on port license.
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This license allows commercial reuse of the work as well as allowing you to modify the
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work as long as you share alike the same rights you have received under this license.
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Thank you for listening to this episode of Talk Geek To Me.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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If you ever considered recording a podcast, then visit our website to find out how easy
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it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dot pound and the economical and computer
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