Volume 4, Issue 48        Atari Online News, Etc.       November 29, 2002   
                                                                           
                                                                              
                  Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2002
                            All Rights Reserved

                          Atari Online News, Etc.
                           A-ONE Online Magazine
                Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
                      Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
                       Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor


                       Atari Online News, Etc. Staff

                        Dana P. Jacobson  --  Editor
                   Joe Mirando  --  "People Are Talking"
                Michael Burkley  --  "Unabashed Atariophile"
                   Albert Dayes  --  "CC: Classic Chips"
                         Rob Mahlert  --  Web site
                Thomas J. Andrews  --  "Keeper of the Flame"


                           With Contributions by:

                                Kevin Savetz
                                Fred Horvat
                              Francois Le Coat



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                 Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
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                                  =~=~=~=



A-ONE #0448                                                 11/29/02

   ~ New Eureka Release!    ~ People Are Talking!    ~ Pirates: Pay Up!
   ~ Kazaa Case May Go On!  ~ Copyright Trial Ready! ~ MESS Updates!   
   ~ Web Tracking Tools!    ~ 2002 Stunk For IT!     ~ Inside Atari DOS!
   ~ Cyber Security Bill!   ~ Child Porn Laws Fail!  ~ New E-mail Worm!

                  -*  Student's Rights Violated!  *-
               -* Software Counterfeiter Gets Prison! *-
           -* Massachusetts Appeals Microsoft Decision!  *-



                                  =~=~=~=



->From the Editor's Keyboard              "Saying it like it is!"
  """"""""""""""""""""""""""



<groan>  Let the feasting begin, or continue, as it may!  The Thanksgiving 
dinner is over, but the leftovers are plentiful.  And my belly is full to 
the point of explosion!  And it's great!  I hope you all had an enjoyable 
holiday yesterday - at least those of you who celebrate.

Now is the time when people take, and act out because of them (as Joe has
so eloquently stated in the past - their stupid pills.  The Christmas 
shopping season has officially started.  As I mentioned last week, I've 
already begun my holiday shopping (Happy Hanukkah everybody!!).  Since I had 
today off, and the holiday ads were bountiful, I decided to hit a few stores 
today looking for some bargains.  Yep, the stupid people were out there!  In 
OfficeMax, I walked in just in front of this one woman.  As we both cleared 
the door, the woman rushed past me to get a lone shopping cart, jostling me 
in doing so.  I wasn't looking to get a cart, so I wasn't bothered by this.
However, after about 15 minutes of looking for this one particular 
advertised item (and learning that this store didn't carry the item - 
stupidity deluxe! - I was leaving the store.  I was passing by the checkout 
areas, and lo and behold was the woman who had to rush past me to get the 
last shopping cart.  You wouldn't believe what she had in her cart!  One, 
yes, I said ONE package of PostIt notes paper!  Not the package that 
contains a million pads, but a package of four or six 3 by 3-inch pads.  It 
probably took more exertion to push that cart than it did to carry that 
package!  I gave her one of my "you really are a stupid (and obnoxious) 
person" looks as I walked by her.  After going to another store and learning 
that they didn't carry the advertised sale item that I was looking to buy, I 
went home.  I can tell this is going to be one of those holiday seasons that
will be full of stupidity!

How about this nice Thanksgiving weather!?  Cold and snow.  Six inches 
(reportedly) around here.  Thankfully, it was the light, fluffy stuff. It 
didn't even warrant getting the snowthrower out.  But I was tempted!  I 
guess that's it for getting the leaves cleaned up for this year.  I hope the 
trash guys pick up the thirty or so bags of leaves I have out at the curb!

Well, it's going to be a short editorial, issue, and week.  I have to get 
some rest as I'm heading out early in the morning to see my father.  It 
should be fun.  Just for the day since we're leaving the dogs behind.  More 
than that and who knows what the house will look like!

Until next time...



                                  =~=~=~=



                         December Release of Eureka


Hi,

My software "Eureka" is updated and released on its WEB site.
It is a "2D Graph Describer" and a "3D Modeller". It is updated
nearly every month, if I found significant improvements for it.
You will have to fetch it at :

http://eureka.atari.org/eurka212.zip
That is the Complete Common Edition

http://eureka.atari.org/eurkafpu.zip
Is the Limited FPU Edition

http://eureka.atari.org/eurka020.zip
Is the Complete 68020 Edition

http://eureka.atari.org/eurklite.zip
Is the Lite Edition, working on early ST with 720kb floppy

http://eureka.atari.org/lib_dgem.zip
Are Dynamic Libraries Extensions for Eureka

http://eureka.atari.org/tiny043.zip
Is the OpenGL Extension (requires previous package)

This month, the release number is the same as the version
number (2.12 that is always the same). I expect that everybody
will have understood ...

I wish you big fun with all this STuff !

Regards,

-- Francois LE COAT
Author of Eureka 2.12
http://eureka.atari.org
lecoat@atari.org



                        Mac and Windows MESS Updates


The Macintosh version of MESS (Multi Emulator Super System) has been 
updated to version 0.61, and the Windows version to version 0.61.2. The 
MESS emulator supports a wide variety of game systems and computers, 
including the Atari 5200, 7800 and 8-bit computers. To download the 
latest Windows and Mac versions of MESS, please visit the MESS Homepage. 
 

http://www.mess.org/



                        Inside Atari DOS on the Web


The full text of the classic book Inside Atari DOS is now online at 
AtariArchives.org. The book was written by Bill Wilkinson, founder of 
Optimized Systems Software, a company that created many great 
programming tools for the Atari 8-bit computers. Due to copyright 
restrictions, the site includes the full text of the book, but does not 
include the actual DOS 2.0S source code as in the physical book.

http://www.atariarchives.org/iad/



                            Portfolio Easter Egg


Egg Name:  Programmer Credits
Works On:  Atari OS Portfolio
Manufacturer:  Atari Systems


How it Works:
1. Start the text editor and open the help file (F2).
2. Now open the help file for the Keyboard.
3. Press down the Alt and [ keys together.



                                  =~=~=~=



                             PEOPLE ARE TALKING
                          compiled by Joe Mirando
                             joe@atarinews.org



Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, Thanksgiving is over and I've got
lots of turkey left over. I love turkey.

One of the things I don't love, however, is pinching a nerve in my back
while hoisting a 20 lb turkey into the oven. That kind of put a damper on
the holiday, but it could always be worse, I guess.

I realize that Thanksgiving is an American holiday and that many of you
could care less about a national holiday that isn't your own, but that's
okay. I'm sure that you've got one or two holidays that I don't
celebrate.

That's one of the things that makes life interesting. If we were all the
same, life would be pretty boring. I hate saying that my wife and I are
an example of ANYTHING, but I'm going to throw caution to the wind here
and point out that we are a good example of people who are very different
complementing each other's strengths. Of course, there's a modicum of
understanding and respect that should be observed too. And THAT is where
we tend to be found lacking... people in general, not my wife and I.
<grin>

As I write this, Dana is probably having fits wondering where my column
is. The excuse "my dog ate it" is wearing pretty thin... especially since
I don't have a dog.

Anyway, as I sit here feeling my back twist up of its own accord (yeah,
even through the painkillers I can feel it), I STILL think that I've got
it pretty good. I'm blessed with friends and family, a decent "day job",
and a plethora of interests to keep me busy and out of trouble.

I don't know what more I could ask for.  Money? Nah, I'd just waste it.
Power? No. With power comes responsibility. OH! I know! MORE TURKEY!!
<grin>

Well, let's get on with the news, hints, tips, and info from the UseNet:

From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
====================================

Jean Luc Ceccoli asks about networking his Falcon and TT:

"I tried connecting a Falcon to a TT via the LAN port using an Apple
cable and Duet, but I couldn't make it work .

Did someone ever manage to have any result using such a cable ?
Please, help me!"

Robert Schaffner tells Jean Luc:

"'LAN' on an Atari suggest it was an ethernet port. It's simple and not
ready to use AppleTalk port without support and software like AppleTalk.

LANPort on Falcon and TT are not more as an RS422 serial port.
You should try an null modem, not an mac printer/modem cable.

Article 12.6.1 of DOITF030 contain the pinout of the port and
an null modem."

Steve Marshall asks:

"Can anyone tell me a source of 3.5" DD floppy drives - i.e. 720K not 1.44
Mb."

Michael Schuelke tells Steve:

"Where are you? In Germany, try OfficeXL (www.officexl.de) -- they sell
new Emtec (formerly BASF) DD disks. "

Hallvard Tangeraas tells Steve:

"Actually you don't need to spend lots of time and money searching for a
replacement 720K drive when HD drives work just fine (with minor
modifications). I've installed several standard PC type 1.44MB drives in
Atari STs and they've worked fine as 720K drives.

I've even documented what to modify regarding Sony drives. I haven't
tried other brands, but I'm sure they would work fine as well, though I
don't want to guarantee anything.

You can download the documentation from:

 ftp://gem.win.co.nz/hall/hardware/sony_144.zip "

Steve tells Hallvard:

"Thanks. This isn't for the ST though. I have heard here that some have
had problems with HD drives (?)

Maybe it is the cheaper disks that are causing problems - maybe it is the
way they are formatted. I have tried several HD drives though and it is
just unreliable."

Hallvard replies:

"Huh? Haven't heard about that. Are you sure you're not confusing it with
HD floppy disks?

HD floppies are indeed not suited for DD use because of the differences
in the magnetic layer. In other words, it's not just the outer shell of
the disks which are different (an extra detection hole for HD disks,
which some people cover up with tape to fool the drive into thinking
it's a DD disk)."

Steve tells Hallvard:

"Hmm... maybe. I think I've tried DD disks with the HD drives and had
problems again though.

I guess I'll need to find the time to go through all the permutations.

Well these disks are formatted in 256 bytes a sector instead of the usual
double that. There are 80 or 81 tracks - I just wondered if this somehow
might  have a difference. But yes, DD formatting of a HD disk.

Perhaps it is just the disks."

Jo Even Skarstein adds:

"The problem is that HD floppies are designed for the much weaker magnetic
field used in "HD-mode". Writing to HD floppies in DD-mode will very
likely destroy data on them."

'Yvo' asks about HD booting on his Falcon:

"I have a Falcon030, but I haven't used it for a few years.

For some reason I can not find how to install the HD (Quantum 120MB) and
boot from that drive. Can someone help me out?"

John Garone tells Yvo:

"If you are using ICD to boot then HDUTIL.PRG sets the boot drive."

Brian Roland asks an interesting question about his hard drive:

"On my Falcon the C partition frequently reports a "Path Overflow" error.
Hard disk scans report no errors. What does path overflow mean?
How do I track it down and get rid of it?"

Jean Luc Ceccoli tells Brian:

"1- put a little utility called FOLDRxxx.PRG in your AUTO folder,
   and replace xxx with a value of, say, 300 to 500, depending to
   the amount of memory you have. There are some other utilities
   which work the same way ;
2- set the appropriate option in your hard-disk driver - HDDriver
   has it, so does Hushi, probably ICD too, and maybe CBHD as well.

All this corrects a bug in TOS that limits the simultaneously opened
folders to 30 - if I remember correctly."

Ken Kosut asks about Audio on the Falcon:

"A long while back I asked the newsgroup how to record Audio.
(I have not done the Audio Modifications on my Falcon.)
Someone suggested that I pick up a SPDIF interface (Soundpool) and
record directly into a Dat Recorder. Thus bypassing the Audio Mods.

I don't have a Dat Recorder. I only have a Tascam Stereo Casette
This doesn't have any optical or Coaxil. Only RCA.

Ideally, I would like to record from my mixer (1/4" jacks)
into the Falcon.
The outputs of the mixer to the input of the Tascam might be
too strong.
But if I could do this,
Would I be able to record using a Line Audio product
like FAD 2/2.?
(I looked all over, but was unable to find pictures of line audio
devices - Only the front panel of Jam Pro in/out)
It seems that all line audio products also require a SPDIF interface
in order to work with Logic Audio.
("Works with Cubase Audio, Notator Logic Audio (needs a spdif interface),
Zero X, The Audio Tracker, Quincy, Stodio Son, to name a few...)

Why is this?

Wouldn't I be better off to try a stand alone D/A or A/D Converter.
Mixer Outs (analog) to converter in (analog) - SPDIF out to
SPDIF soundpool device?"

Janka Gerhard tells Ken:

"For years now I'm using a Line Audio JamIn A/D Converter to feed the
output of my mixer into the Falcon to process it with AudioMaster.
Not the slightest need for SPDIF.

Only thing I would need would be someone who swaps my Soundpool MO4
for an equivalent Line Audio D/A device since the plugs and cables
of the soundpool products don't match the ones of the Line Audio
equipment and when I use AudioTracker I have to feed music back
from the Falcon to the mixer at the same time as recording the
additional track."

Stephen Moss asks about Wensuite:

"Does anyone have a working Freeserve script for wensuite V3.3?.
I can log on ok with V2.0 as it has an option for setting the
authentication (account login and password) to use text format in the
PPP Link set up. Connecting with V3.3 using either the Auto or None
script options results in the connection being terminated presumably
be the provider upon non receipt of an authentic login/password.
Having read the instructions it would appear that the only method of
achieving text authentication under version 3.3 is to select the
manual script option and create your own script. I must admit that I
did not fully understand this information and so just copied the
script shown in the documentation, now as opposed to terminating the
connection it just sits there doing nothing which according the
documentation is probably due to an incorrect script."

Derryck Croker tells Stephen:

"I suggest that you use a terminal program such as Connect to connect to
your ISP, and then interact with the prompts until you have a connection.

WenSuite uses a wait for/respond sequence in its script editor, so that
should be easy to sort out, not sure if it needs a CR at the end of each
response.

You might need to enter a string like "PPP" or "PPP default" at some
point, possibly. Or have I missed the point?"

Stephen tells Derryck:

"Sounds like a good route to take.  Thanks."

Kenneth Medin does some experimenting with ethernet on his TT and posts:

"I have made some further tests with The EtherNEC Ethernet package to make
it run with my TT. I now runs 100% OK on my main TT with Magic 6.20 &
Jinnee.

There must be some rather narrow time-windows inside the driver software
as it is very sensitive to its environment.

To make it run on my main TT I had to skip the idea of using ENEC3.STX at
all.

The other ENEC.STX that is intended for 68000 ST's on the other hand can
be made working perfectly stable under Magic here if it is setup to load
and run from TT RAM and is the last physical driver inside the STING
folder.

With TOS 3.6 it's the other way round, ENEC3.STX works but ENEC.STX
don't! If I try to disable the cache it will not work at all.

On another TT I got it running fairly well with Magic and ENEC3.STX but
not at all using ENEC.STX, neither with TOS or Magic!

To me it seems there is some delicate timing that the driver can't handle
properly when used on a TT. Maybe the driver could be programmed to find
the correct timing on startup by sending dummy packets with different
timing to find the center of this time-window?

Anyway I'm satisfied with transfer speeds as I can now use all the
bandwidth of my 512 kbit ADSL line. Locally I get c:a 1 Mbit out from this
TT and 600 kbit when downloading using ftp_serv.app under STinG.

I've dropped MagicNet for now as the STinG setup is OK.

The docs mention there is risk for buffer overflow with a too big tcp
receive window. I lowered mine to 4380 first but have been using my
"normal" 11680 now again quite a lot without side effects. Ideally you
actually need an even bigger receive window at 512 kbit to get full
transfer speeds over long distances but 11680 will do for now..."

'Ozk' asks Kenneth:

"Did you make further tests with my version of the NE2K driver for
EtherNEC? When you first tested it, did you use use 'ne0' instead of
'en0'?"

Kenneth replies:

"I first had it wrong and it did not work off course. I have never tried
MagicNet before but was able to Ping localhost so I guess the rest of the
setup was OK.

I then tried with the correct interface name but had to reinstall
MagicNet. This time nothing worked. I may have got the setup wrong the
second time but I had very little time to analyze. I will do some further
tests, maybe today.

I normally need some routing capabilities on this TT as there are some
subnets attached to the serial ports. I also must be able to "dial out"
to my WinCE computer and I'm not certain MagicNet can handle that.

OK I have now done quite a few further tests...

Your (ozk@atari-RULES.org) driver does not seem to work at all with
MagicNet here. I get a total lookup and if I let MagicNet autostart from
the Magic START folder I'm very happy there is a TOS in ROM to resort to
to fix things. Without that I would have had to Format c: and reinstall
the OS from scratch like the big Win guys always do... :-)

I guess this is really not so bad news as your driver is really for
MintNet.

When testing the Redelberger ENEC.MIF MagicNet driver I now got it
working perfectly on this TT! Right now I'm even running STinG and
MagicNet at the same time. I have another TT with the parallel to
Ethernet adaptor connected to my main switch.

I can Ping out via MagicNet and the EtherNec adaptor on this TT
(192.168.0.130) via the switch (192.168.0.1) to the other TT running
STinG Ethernet (192.168.0.129) and routing further out via Modem2
(192.168.0.193) back to this TT's Modem2 (192.168.0.194) and STinG gets
the message. Really cool!

Also tried the Redelberger ENEC3.MIF that is optimized for 68030 and it
does not work at all!

Also played the opposite way with STinG using the EtherNec on this TT
which also works fine. Then I setup MagicNet to only use Modem2 and that
also worked. But an interesting thing happened:

I simply can't Ping the 192.168.0.192 subnet from this TT (192.168.0.194)
under STinG. I have put in a proper extra route with 192.168.129 as
gateway to this subnet but no luck. The ROUTE.TAB looks like this:

192.168.0.192           255.255.255.192         EtherNet        192.168.0.129
0.0.0.0         0.0.0.0         EtherNet        192.168.0.1

To me this is OK. I also have similar entries in my pc's and NAT-box and
they have no difficulties to reach my subnets.

Another thing that puzzles me:
Normally I have subnets in in two levels to reach other computers via
SLIP so this TT also has the ROUTE.TAB entries (without Ethernet):

192.168.0.200   255.255.255.248 Midi            0.0.0.0
192.168.0.208   255.255.255.248 Serial 1        0.0.0.0
192.168.0.216   255.255.255.248 Modem 1         0.0.0.0
192.168.0.224   255.255.255.248 Ser.2/LAN               0.0.0.0
0.0.0.0         0.0.0.0         Modem 2         0.0.0.0

In MagicNet I have put in the line:

route add 192.168.0.194 en0 gw 192.168.0.129

That takes the packets to the first 192.168.0.192 subnet. But as I
can't(?) put in a netmask here the other computers on the second level
subnets can't be reached. Off course I could add a line for each computer
but this is not the "right" way do do things.

Is there a way in the MagicNet MAGX_RC.NET to add a route similar to:

192.168.0.192           255.255.255.192         EtherNet        192.168.0.129

like it should be (but does not work?) in STinG.

I guess I really should phone Ronald Andersson about this too as there
must be something wrong in the STinG routing when Ethernet arp tables
come into play..."

Well folks, that's it for this week. I'm going to go have myself a nice
turkey sandwich and nurse my pinched nerve. Have yourself a good week
and, until next time, listen to what they are saying when...

PEOPLE ARE TALKING



                                  =~=~=~=



->In This Week's Gaming Section  - Easier Mac Game Porting!
  """""""""""""""""""""""""""""    
                                   
                                   


        
                                  =~=~=~=



->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News   -  The Latest Gaming News!
  """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""



             New Collaboration Promises Easier Mac Game Porting


MacDX maker Coderus Ltd and PortAsm/86 maker MicroAPL Ltd have announced a
collaboration that the two companies hope will make it easier for PC
developers to bring their games to the Macintosh. While this doesn't mean
that PC game developers can just click a button and expect their game to
work on the Macintosh, it is a significant step closer for developers who
want to make the effort.

Microsoft's own DirectX Application Programming Interface (API) is
ubiquitous in game development on Windows and the Xbox game console. The
technology provides Windows game makers with a common library of commands
supplied by Microsoft that they can use to render 3D graphics, embed
networking capabilities, audio and other components of their games.

Coderus' MacDX provides PC game developers with a way of moving that
DirectX code to the Macintosh without having to rewrite it from scratch
-- Coderus claims that most code which uses DirectX can simply be
recompiled and linked to the MacDX libraries.

The underlying concept of MacDX isn't new. In fact, porting companies who
specialize in Mac game conversion work by and large use their own homegrown
equivalents to MacDX to get the process started. What makes Coderus'
approach unique is that they license MacDX for use by other developers
rather than using it exclusively themselves. And Coderus stays in practice
with MacDX by working with UK-based game publisher Virtual Programming Ltd
to bring PC games to the Macintosh as well.

This new collaboration with MicroAPL Ltd offers an easier way for PC
developers to bring Intel-specific assembler code to the Macintosh.
MicroAPL's PortAsm/86 automatically translates that PC assembler source
into native code that makes sense to the PowerPC chips inside of Macs.
Without PortAsm/86, such code would have to be completely rewritten for
the Mac -- an arduous task at best, according to Coderus Ltd's CEO and
technical director, Mark Thomas.

"Since we released MacDX, porting of titles has become a lot easier, but
there are always problematic areas which can delay a project. One such area
is optimized assembly function calls. Presently most developers have to
rewrite these functions by hand, which can be complex and time consuming,"
said Thomas.



                                  =~=~=~=



                           A-ONE's Headline News
                   The Latest in Computer Technology News
                       Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson



             Tech Firms Draft Guidelines for Web Tracking Tool


Internet users could have a better idea of how they are tracked online
under a set of voluntary guidelines issued by an industry group on Monday.

The guidelines are the first to specifically address invisible tracking
devices called "Web bugs" that can be used to monitor traffic on a Web
site, collect names for "spamming" campaigns, or allow advertising agencies
to build up a detailed profile of a computer user's habits.

Marketers say the invisible, pixel-sized devices allow them to tailor the
online environment to better meet customers' needs, but Web bugs have long
raised the hackles of privacy advocates who say they allow marketers to
profile users without their knowledge.

Developed by privacy consultants, the U.S. Postal Service and high-tech
players like DoubleClick Inc. and Microsoft Corp., the guidelines require
that companies reveal when they use Web bugs, what sort of information they
collect, and how the information is used.

Companies would have to obtain user permission before transferring any
personal data -- such as e-mail addresses and telephone numbers -- to an
outside party.

Because they only take the form of guidelines, compliance would not be
mandatory. But companies seeking the seal of approval from privacy
compliance groups like TRUSTe will be required to abide by them.

The move should help dispel consumer unease over a technology that is
mostly used for innocuous purposes like counting hits on a Web site, said
Trevor Hughes, executive director of the Network Advertising Initiative,
which helped draft the guidelines.

"There was a significant amount of confusion and mistrust of the
technology," Hughes said. "So we said, 'Let's describe it and define it
and let it see the light of day."'

Privacy expert Richard M. Smith, who has studied Web bugs for years, said
the guidelines were a positive step, but could still result in confusion
if companies chose to couch their notices in a thicket of legal jargon.

"Notice is a tricky thing. You could just bury it in a privacy policy and
nobody's going to read it," he said.

The guidelines are unlikely to end all abuses as spammers, which use the
technology to amass lists of "live" e-mail addresses, are unlikely to
abide by them, he said.

But the use of Web bugs in e-mail will likely decline as Microsoft is set
to announce a new version of its popular Outlook e-mail reader that allows
users to block them, Smith said.

An official at the Federal Trade Commission said the guidelines were
useful as well.

"We're not concerned about the technology, but the misuse of information
that's collected through the technology," said Brad Blower, an assistant
director in the FTC's consumer-protection division.



                     Feds Fail to Pass Child Porn Laws


Despite efforts by senior members of both the House and Senate to crack
down on Internet child pornography, two proposed bills failed to become law
this year.

This failure is largely due to disputes over the definition of virtual
child pornography, which both bills targeted. Virtual child porn is made
with morphed computer images and without real children.

"The proliferation of virtual pornography has enabled child pornographers
to escape conviction by arguing that it is so difficult to distinguish the
virtual child from the real one," says Anne Coughlin, a law professor at
the University of Virginia School of Law.

Both bills were in response to a Supreme Court ruling that declared
unconstitutional the Child Pornography Prevention Act of 1996, which made
it a crime to spread "virtual" child pornography on the Internet. The court
said the law's definition of virtual child porn was too broad.

Since the Supreme Court struck down the law, lawmakers have attempted to
pass a substitute, but the challenge was writing a new law that would not
violate First Amendment free speech rights.

Some members of Congress proposed a Constitutional amendment to prohibit
child pornography, even if the pictures were computer-generated, but civil
liberties groups quickly shot down the idea and the proposal was dropped.

Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas) proposed a bill in the House that
"reaffirms the ban on child pornography in a manner that can withstand
constitutional review," he said. The House passed the bill unanimously
last June and Smith urged the Senate to act.

Senators Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) introduced a
second bill aimed at narrowing "the definition of virtual child porn by
requiring consideration of the artistic, literacy, or educational value of
the work as a whole," Leahy said.

The Senate bill was "carefully tailored with an eye towards satisfying the
precise concerns identified by the Supreme Court," Coughlin wrote in a
letter to Leahy. The Senate passed the bill by unanimous consent during
the post-election session in November.

But because the two bills were different, they did not become law; they
had to be identical in order to receive the president's signature.

The key difference was the way in which they defined virtual child porn.
The House version offered a narrow definition, saying it must be
"computer-generated images" that are "indistinguishable" from actual child
porn. The Senate's definition was not as narrow, but it did include some
elements of the obscenity test that make it more difficult for prosecutors
to prove guilt. The House version rejected suggestions to include an
obscenity test.

The differences were not resolved before the end of the congressional
session.

"The House of Representatives' Republican leadership decided to adjourn
without either taking up the Hatch-Leahy bill or working with us to resolve
any differences," said Leahy.

A spokesperson from the House Majority leader's office said the differences
in the Senate version were "unacceptable," killing the bill for this year.

The House and Senate plan to work on a compromise and introduce new
legislation when they return in January.



                 Massachusetts Appeals Microsoft Case Alone


Massachusetts on Friday appealed the settlement in the Microsoft Corp.
antitrust case, splitting from a group of nine states that had been seeking
tougher sanctions against the software giant.

Seven of those nine states will now help enforce the court-ordered
remedies, but Massachusetts continues to believe the settlement is
insufficient to deter Microsoft's abuse of its monopoly in personal
computer operating systems.

"We are prepared to go our own way," Massachusetts Attorney General Tom
Reilly told a news conference. "There was nothing in the deal that would
change Microsoft's business practices in any substantial way."

California, Connecticut and Iowa said they -- as well as Florida, Kansas,
Minnesota and Utah plus the District of Columbia -- would not appeal the
settlement.

Instead, these seven states and the District of Columbia will focus on
ensuring that Microsoft complies with the Nov. 1 ruling by U.S. District
Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly.

West Virginia is the remaining state in the group of nine that thought
the pact negotiated by the U.S. Justice Department was too weak. It expects
to announce its decision on Monday.

Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal said Microsoft had agreed
to pay $28.6 million to the states -- about $25 million to cover legal
costs and fees plus $3.6 million for future enforcement and compliance.

"Consumer interests are now best served by turning our focus to
enforcement," Blumenthal said in a statement.

California Attorney General Bill Lockyer also emphasized enforcing
Kollar-Kotelly's decision.

"While not completely satisfying, the court decree closed enforcement
loopholes, keeps compliance with the remedies squarely before the court and
allows us now to turn attention to making sure that Microsoft competes
fairly in the marketplace," he said.

Massachusetts' appeal to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia will drag out the already 4-1/2-year-old case. But Reilly said
there were important principles at stake.

"The (settlement) deal ignored Microsoft's ill-gotten gains, did nothing
about safeguarding competition in new technologies, and was filled with
loopholes and exceptions," he said. "We believe that a remedy must send
a message that breaking the law does not pay."

But some legal scholars say Massachusetts faces an uphill fight in trying
to convince the appellate judges that Kollar-Kotelly erred in her decision.

"If I were making the call for Massachusetts, I would say: 'We've fought
the good fight, now let's move on to other problems'," said Southwestern
University law professor Lawrence Sullivan, who advised the federal
government in bringing the suit against Microsoft.

Microsoft spokesman Jim Desler said the company remained focused on
complying fully with Kollar-Kotelly's judgment.

The appeals court ruled in June 2001 that Microsoft had illegally
maintained its Windows operating system monopoly, but rejected a trial
court proposal to break the company in two.

The case was then transferred to Kollar-Kotelly to determine the
appropriate remedies in the case. She heard 32 days of testimony to
determine what sanctions should be imposed on Microsoft.

During the remedy hearings, the attorneys for the states argued
unsuccessfully that the antitrust sanctions should be designed to stop
the company from using Windows to crush competition in the markets for
emerging technologies such as server software and handheld computers.

But in her Nov. 1 ruling, Kollar-Kotelly rejected nearly all the demands
for stronger sanctions.

The settlement gives computer makers greater freedom to feature rival
software on their machines by allowing them to hide some Microsoft icons
on the Windows desktop.

Under the settlement, Microsoft is prohibited from retaliating -- or
threatening to retaliate -- against computer makers who choose to feature
non-Microsoft products. Nor can it enter into agreements that require the
exclusive support of some Microsoft software.

The company still faces a series of class-action lawsuits brought on behalf
of U.S. consumers, along with civil suits brought by Sun Microsystems Inc.
and other competitors who claim they were victimized by the company's
anticompetitive tactics.

The world's largest software company is also awaiting the findings of an
antitrust probe by the European Commission.



                  Court to Decide on Online Copyright Suit


A federal judge has signaled his support for a bid by record companies and
movie studios to sue the parent company of Kazaa, a popular online
file-swapping service.

U.S. District Judge Stephen Wilson heard arguments Monday on whether
Sharman Networks Ltd., which is headquartered in Australia and incorporated
in the Pacific Island nation of Vanuatu, is subject to U.S. copyright laws.

"It is a difficult question, but it has to be resolved," Wilson said. "The
court will do its best to resolve it promptly."

Although Wilson did not indicate when he plans to issue a ruling, he
appeared to tip his hand, noting that he "would be inclined to find there's
jurisdiction against Sharman."

"I find the argument about providing the service to so many California
residents compelling," Wilson said, referring to the plaintiffs' claims
that Kazaa provides free access to copyrighted music and films to some 21
million users in the United States. The company has advertising revenue of
about $4 million.

The Sharman case is one of the largest in the recent copyright wars testing
the international reach of U.S. courts. If Wilson decides Sharman can be
sued, the company would be thrust into the same legal predicament that has
stymied popular swapping services such as Napster and Aimster.

David Casselman, an attorney representing Sharman, said holding the online
swapping company liable for copyright violations would be akin to
prosecuting a computer manufacturer for the actions of computer hackers.

David Kendall, an attorney representing six movie studios, including
Disney, Fox and Paramount, said the fact that Sharman's product is
available in this country is sufficient cause to face trial in a U.S.
court.

"It does not violate due process to have them stand here to answer for
their conduct," Kendall said.

Sharman attorney Rod Dorman countered that such a move could open a door
for a judge in "communist China" to rule against U.S. companies that
operate online. The judge did not appeared swayed by the argument.

"I'll take my chances with that judge in communist China," Wilson quipped.

Carey Ramos, an attorney representing song writers and music publishers,
said the judge's comments would send a message to those companies seeking
to operate offshore.

"This is important because it shows that you cannot escape U.S. justice by
setting up shop outside the United States," Ramos said.



                 Judge: Rights Web-Posting Student Violated


A federal judge has ruled that a school district violated a student's
rights to free speech and due process when it suspended him for posting
"intimidation and threats" on the Internet.

The Waterford School District should not have suspended the student in
August 2001 for contributing to "Satan's Web page," U.S. District Judge
Patrick Duggan ruled this week.

School officials were concerned by content that included a passage labeled
"Satan's mission for you this week." It read: "Stab someone for no reason
then set them on fire throw them off of a cliff, watch them suffer and with
their last breath, just before everything goes black, spit on their face."

The student, who was not identified, was suspended after a hearing in which
he wasn't allowed to cross-examine witnesses and could not be represented
by an attorney, said his lawyer, Richard Landau.

The student sued the district, seeking damages of up to $75,000. He has
since graduated from a school in a neighboring district.

School representatives and the attorney representing the district did not
return phone calls seeking comment Wednesday.



            L.A. Woman Gets Prison in Counterfeit Software Ring


A Los Angeles woman was sentenced on Friday to nine years in prison and
ordered to pay $11 million in restitution for her role in one of the
largest counterfeit software cases in U.S. history.

The sentence imposed on 52-year-old Lisa Chen by Superior Court Judge Ronni
MacLaren was the longest prison term for a first-time conviction on
software piracy, prosecutors said.

"I'm pleased that such a significant loss has been appropriately punished,"
Deputy District Attorney Jonathan Fairtlough said. "This sentence sends a
message that law enforcement will vigorously investigate and prosecute
thefts of intellectual property."

Chen was one of four people arrested in November of 2001 as part of a ring
that prosecutors said imported nearly $98 million in counterfeit computer
products and software from Asia, including knockoffs of Microsoft Corp.'s
Windows XP, Windows 2000 NT and Microsoft Office 2000 Pro software, along
with manuals, user license agreements and other materials.

The ring was broken up after an 18-month investigation.

Pat Mueller, a senior investigator for Microsoft, told reporters that Chen
was a "key player" in the ring, which was bringing high-quality counterfeit
products into the country.

"It is very difficult to come up with a counterfeit product that is as good
as we saw here," Mueller said.



             Anti-Piracy Group Orders Net Downloaders to Pay Up


In a unique crackdown on illegal file-sharing, a Danish anti-piracy group
mailed invoices to alleged pirates demanding compensation for downloading
copyrighted materials off the Internet, an attorney for the group said on
Tuesday.

The Danish Anti Piracy Group (APG) identified 150 alleged pirates asking
them to pay a combined $133,600, said Morten Lindegaard, an attorney for
the group. The biggest offenders face a bill of $13,360.

"We are demanding full payment for the use of these copyrighted materials,"
Lindegaard said. The APG has worked with the Danish branch of music trade
body International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, to crack down
on online piracy. The decision to seek compensation for downloads opens up
a controversial new front in copyright holders' ongoing campaign to curb
consumer piracy on the Internet, a phenomenon blamed for a decline in CD
sales and upswing in the free trade of video games, computer software and
video games.

The tactic is drawing protests from some technical and legal experts who
insist that without the violators' computer it's impossible to prove the
existence of copyright violations. Others question the size of the bills.

"In this case, we're talking about compensation for the damage the Anti
Piracy Group claims its members have suffered. It's the courts that decide
the amount of compensation to be paid due to copyright infringement, not
the victim." said Martin von Haller Groenbaek, a Danish attorney
specialising in IT law.

In each case, the Danish users were accused of downloading copyrighted
materials from file-sharing networks Kazaa and eDonkey, two popular
so-called peer-to-peer (P2P) networks in Denmark, Lindegaard said.

Lindegaard, 29, and his helpers -- four Danish university students --
developed a software program that monitored Danish file swappers on the
two P2P networks, honing down to the users' Internet Protocol, or IP,
address to confirm they were logged on from Denmark.

The program also traced the files shared and the time at which they were
downloaded. After reviewing the evidence, a judge ordered the users'
Internet service providers to pass on the violators' billing addresses.

In each case, the alleged pirate first learned they were being investigated
when they received a bill in the post, which began arriving late last week.

A spokesman for the Danish Consumer Council said they received roughly 50
complaints from the fined individuals. After an initial investigation, the
council determined the APG complied with local data protection laws, the
spokesman added.

Lindegaard said the accused range from high school students to
professionals. They downloaded materials ranging from Eminem songs to the
latest Star Wars film to the video game, "Grand Theft Auto."

"The top 10 computer games, music and movies -- it's all there," said
Lindegaard.

The alleged pirates were billed based on the amount of files they shared.
For a single music file, they were charged $2.67; $26.70 for a movie and
approximately $50 for a video game, Lindegaard said. But technical experts
threw into question the fairness of the bill, pointing to the fact that
copyrighted material from time to time is distributed for free across the
Internet in a legitimate manner.

For example, major record labels allow users to download select songs from
new album releases off the Web. The tracks typically expire after a period,
but in some cases the deactivated track may still appear on a users' hard
drive.

Also, the labels, movie studios and video game makers have increasingly
distributed bogus files on P2P networks that resemble the genuine article,
down to file size and title, to frustrate would-be downloaders.

"How do you know each of these copyrighted materials is illegal? That's the
big issue here," said Urs Gattiker, a professor of technology and
innovation management at Aalborg University in Denmark.



                    Digital Copyright Trial Set to Start


A federal judge has ruled that the trial of a Russian software company will
proceed as scheduled next week, if the defendant and the government's key
witness are allowed to enter the country in time.

U.S. District Judge Ronald M. Whyte was told during a pretrial hearing
Monday that the Immigration and Naturalization Service has approved special
visas for Alex Katalov, the CEO of Elcomsoft Co. Ltd., a Moscow-based
software company, and Dmitry Sklyarov, one of the company's programmers.

Elcomsoft is the first company charged with criminal violation of the 1998
Digital Millennium Copyright Act for producing and selling a program that
permits users to manipulate digitally formatted reading material produced
by San Jose-based Adobe Systems Inc., the maker of the popular Photoshop
and Illustrator software.

Elcomsoft is accused of providing the means to "crack" Adobe's eBook reader
that allows publishers to sell books online in a format that prevents
copying or transferring content between users.

Sklyarov, who developed the algorithm upon which the Elcomsoft program is
based, originally was charged along with his employer. But federal
prosecutors agreed to drop charges against him once the case is completed.

Sklyarov, who was arrested after speaking to a hackers convention in Las
Vegas in July 2001, is expected to be one of the government's key
witnesses.

The trial was postponed last month after the State Department had refused
to issue visas to Katalov and Sklyarov.



                  Bush Signs Bill to Boost Cyber Security


President Bush on Wednesday signed a bill authorizing $900 million in
grants to spur federal agencies, industry and universities to devote more
energy to cyber security research.

The five-year program would require the National Science Foundation and the
National Institute of Standards and Technology to bring industry and
academic experts together to fund new research and to help attract top
researchers to the field. It also would encourage efforts to recruit new
students into cyber security programs.

Senate proponents of the legislation were Sens. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., and
George Allen, R-Va.



                   New E-Mail Worm Causing Severe Damage


A new e-mail worm is circulating that has the potential to severely damage
machines that it infects, potentially deleting all the files on a
computer's hard drive while mocking the machine's owner, according to
advisories released by a number of antivirus software makers.

The new worm is called Winevar and was first spotted in South Korea. Its
release was possibly intended to coincide with the AntiVirus Asia
Researchers conference, which was held in Seoul, South Korea, last week,
according to an advisory released by Helsinki-based security company
F-Secure.

E-mail messages containing the worm may contain the subject "Re: AVAR
(Association of Anti-Virus Asia Researchers," according to F-Secure.

The worm is also known by other names, for example: W32/Winevar.A,
W32/Korvar, W32/Winevar@mm, I-Worm.Winevar, and the "Korean Worm."

According to advisories, the worm appears to be a variant of the recent
Bridex or "Braid" worm.

Like that worm, Winevar takes advantage of the known IFRAME vulnerability
in Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser and Microsoft mail clients
such as Outlook and Outlook Express. That vulnerability allows attachments
in HTML-format e-mail messages to be opened without user interaction.

Also like Bridex, Winevar deposits a variant of the Funlove virus on
infected machines once it is run and attempts to shut down processes used
by antivirus software. According to an advisory by Moscow-based Kaspersky
Labs, there are signs that the worm may also be programmed to conduct a
denial of service attack against antivirus software maker Symantec's Web
site.

Winevar spreads itself by searching out e-mail files and extracting
addresses from them. The worm then uses Simple Mail Transport Protocol to
e-mail copies of itself to those addresses, using random series of numbers
to disguise the name of the attachment containing the worm, further
complicating the task of identifying infected e-mail messages.

Whereas Bridex simply gathered information on the systems it infects,
however, Winevar can cause real damage to machines.

Once infected machines are rebooted, the worm displays a dialogue titled
"Make a fool of oneself" with the message "What a foolish thing you have
done!" Clicking on an OK button on the dialogue deletes all files on the
computer's hard drive that are not currently opened, according to the
security advisories.

Winevar is known to have infected machines, according to Kaspersky Labs.

Most leading antivirus companies have posted updated definitions for the
new worm and instructions on removing the worm from infected machines.
Users who suspect they are infected are advised not to restart their
machine before removing the worm's files.

In addition, Microsoft has issued a patch covering the IFrame vulnerability
exploited by Winevar on its Web site, and also has posted a security
bulletin about an ActiveX vulnerability used by Winevar.



                           News Flash: 2002 Stunk


It is the worst of times for IT, say IDC analysts who now dub 2002 the
worst year in the history of the industry. The $875 billion IT industry
suffered its largest decline ever this year, with a growth rate of negative
2.3%, the analysts say.

The industry shrank about 3% in the past two years, compared with an
average annual growth rate of 12% for the past 20 years, IDC says. But it
predicts the growth rate next year to be 5.8%.

Significant changes in the economic or geopolitical environment, such as
prolonged war in Iraq or a stock market plunge, could result in lower
growth rates for IT spending, leading IDC to produce an alternate, more
pessimistic forecast of 2% growth in IT spending next year, the analysts
say.

Under more favorable assumptions, IT spending in the United States would
grow 4.4% next year, led by renewed demand for servers, security, and
network equipment, IDC says.

The worldwide systems market, including PCs, servers, and workstations,
declined 9.3% this year, the analysts say. Storage shrank by 10.6% and is
not expected to recover to its 2001 size until after 2006. The network
equipment market experienced a 7.6% decline, driven by sales to telecom
service providers.




                                =~=~=~=


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