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| | New agreement may end the cable box esocid clues us to news that Sony and the National Cable and Telecommunications Association have come to agreement on the way forward for two-way TV without set-top boxes. The actual agreement was not made public, pending review by other members of the Consumer Electronics Association, and as a result the coverage of the agreement is uniformly pretty incoherent. The background is that the NCTA and the CEA submitted competing proposals to the FCC on how to handle two-way, interactive TV services. None of the articles I turned up made clear what the future of the CableCard is to be. This was an interim solution to allow competition in set-top box manufacture, but its adoption has been plagued with problems. "Sony and the cable companies — Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Cox, Charter, Cablevision, and Bright House Networks — agreed to adopt: the Java-based 'tru2way' solution powered by CableLabs; new streamlined technology licenses; and new ways for all those involved to cooperate in the development of tru2way technology at CableLabs." New agreement may end the cable box
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| Only Today - Win NEW IPhone 3G ! WELLCOME ! Only Today! The Action - Test New Search System And WIN - IPhone 64Gb 3G ! http://IPhone3G.net | | Verizon, comcast say they are p2p friendly An anonymous reader writes "Verizon and Comcast announced they will not 'block or throttle Internet traffic delivered via peer-to-peer networks' — essentially proclaiming that they are now P2P friendly. The decision came as a result of a test conducted with Verizon and Pando Networks, testing the benefits of a P2P/ISP partnership. During the test, the amount of P2P content delivered to Verizon subscribers from inside its network grew from 2 percent to 50 percent. This shows ISPs need to work with P2P companies to improve content delivery and manage traffic. Verizon also announced it will be looking at ways to use P2P technology to deploy new features on FiOS TV." Just the same, read on for one approach to mitigating likely tightening restrictions on P2P network use. Verizon, comcast say they are p2p friendly
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| Wizards, Confessors, Battles, and Prophecy. Awesome action sequence from Legend of the Seeker. www.ebaumsworld.com | | Comcast invests in p2p AHTuttle writes to mention Comcast, recently under fire for throttling P2P traffic, has decided to invest in a P2P video-delivery startup called GridNetworks. "Seattle-based GridNetworks on Monday said that Comcast would make an unspecified investment in the company and collaborate on developing so-called peer-to-peer file-sharing techniques that are 'friendly' to Internet service providers." Comcast invests in p2p
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| Cippi, the farting chipmunk. A snake gets iced in Cippi's latest adventure. www.ebaumsworld.com | | Comcast, cox slow bittorrent traffic all day narramissic writes "A study by the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems found that Comcast and Cox Communications are slowing BitTorrent traffic at all times of day, not just peak hours. Comcast was found to be interrupting at least 30% of BitTorrent upload attempts around the clock. At noon, Comcast was interfering with more than 80% of BitTorrent traffic, but it was also slowing more than 60% of BitTorrent traffic at other times, including midnight, 3 a.m. and 8 p.m. Eastern Time in the U.S., the time zone where Comcast is based. Cox was interfering with 100% of the BitTorrent traffic at 1 a.m., 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. Eastern Time. Comcast spokeswoman Sena Fitzmaurice downplayed the results saying, 'P-to-p traffic doesn't necessarily follow normal traffic flows.'" Comcast, cox slow bittorrent traffic all day
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| Dealing with dialup An anonymous reader writes "It looks like my parents may end up stuck having to use dialup to access the Internet from their cottage inside the Cape Cod National Seashore. Neither Comcast nor Verizon want to bother upgrading the hardware required to get them faster service. They could put a satellite dish on their roof, but it's a 300-year-old house and they feel a dish would be as prohibitively ugly as running dedicated lines would be prohibitively expensive. I've suggested they get familiar with a text-only email client; I also suggested they talk with their senators and local political reps. , Are there other ways they can increase the functionality despite the pitiful bandwidth? Any other good ideas? Any success stories you can share where people have finally got the bandwidth they crave?" Dealing with dialup
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| Google, sprint, others to build wireless data network Nerdposeur writes "Google has announced that it will partner with several other companies to build a high-speed mobile data network. In a separate but related deal, Google will also become the default search provider for Sprint, including having one-click search access and Google Maps pre-installed on some Sprint phones. 'The consortium includes a disparate group of partners: Sprint Nextel, Google, Intel, Comcast, Time Warner and Clearwire. The partners have put the value of the deal at $14.5 billion, a figure that includes radio spectrum and equipment provided by Sprint Nextel and Clearwire, and $3.2 billion from the others involved. They expect the network, which will provide the next generation of high-speed Internet access for cellphone users, to be built in as little as two years, but there is no timetable on when it will be available to users and the price is not determined. The partners are seeking to beat Verizon Wireless and AT&T Wireless to the market.'" Google, sprint, others to build wireless data network
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| Comcast floats a 250gb monthly bandwidth limit techmuse writes "Comcast is considering the imposition of bandwidth caps and reductions in network bandwidth to customers who, while paying for the use of a certain amount of bandwidth, dare to actually use it! Gizmodo has more on the subject." Reader Acererak points out that it would take some pretty heavy usage (by current standards) to hit the cap described. Bear in mind, too, that these reports are based on the word of an unnamed "insider," rather than an officially announced policy. Comcast floats a 250gb monthly bandwidth limit
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| Google's audio captcha falls to automated attack SkiifGeek writes "Early in March, Wintercore Labs published proof of a generic approach to defeating audio CAPTCHAs, using Google's as the case study for their demonstration. With claims of over 90% success rate and expectations that this can be significantly improved with the right mix of filtering algorithms, the in-house tool remains unreleased. But it shouldn't take long for other developers to create their own tools and start targeting not only Google, but other sites that use audio CAPTCHAs for the vision-impaired. It isn't the first time that major sites (significantly major webmail providers) have had their CAPTCHAs broken, but it is the first reporting of defeating an audio CAPTCHA using a generic software approach. News about the discovery is slowly starting to spread." Google's audio captcha falls to automated attack
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| Is ubuntu selling out or growing up? AlexGr notes an article by Jeff Gould where he says " Sometimes I wonder whether Ubuntu is really an open source software company any more. Yes, yes, I realize Ubuntu is not a company at all but a free Linux distribution, GPL'd and open source by definition. But still, the Ubuntu distro is sponsored by a traditional for-profit company. The answer that has recently emerged to this question is, "yes and no." Yes, of course, because Ubuntu's web site promises that the distro "will always be free of charge, including enterprise releases and security updates." But Ubuntu the enterprise ecosystem — understood as the collection of desktops and servers running Ubuntu in a given organization — is not." Is ubuntu selling out or growing up?
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| At&t denies resetting p2p connections betaville points out comments AT&T filed with the FCC in which they denied throttling traffic by resetting P2P file-sharing connections. Earlier this week, a study published by the Vuze team found AT&T to have the 25th highest (13th highest if extra Comcast networks are excluded) median reset rate among the sampled networks. In the past, AT&T has defended Comcast's throttling practices, and said it wants to monitor its network traffic for IP violations. "AT&T vice president of Internet and network systems research Charles Kalmanek, in a letter addressed to Vuze CEO Gilles BianRosa, said that peer-to-peer resets can arise from numerous local network events, including outages, attacks, reconfigurations or overall trends in Internet usage. 'AT&T does not use "false reset messages" to manage its network,' Kalmanek said in the letter. Kalmanek noted that Vuze's analysis said the test 'cannot conclude definitively that any particular network operator is engaging in artificial or false [reset] packet behavior.'" At&t denies resetting p2p connections
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| Comcast.net and comcast email hacked Comcast.net and Comcast webmail accounts have been compromised after the site was hacked earlier this evening. Comcast.net and comcast email hacked
Thu, 29 May 2008 15:22:08 GMT,Huliq.com
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| Debt may restrict time warner cable Time Warner Cable might not be in acquisition mode after its split from media parent Time Warner . Debt may restrict time warner cable
Wed, 28 May 2008 16:04:14 GMT,Investor's Business Daily
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| Comcast buys social site plaxo Comcast, the largest U.S. cable-TV company, will buy social-networking site Plaxo to "bring the social-media experience to mainstream consumers." Comcast and Plaxo have been working together and Plaxo will ... Comcast buys social site plaxo
Mon, 26 May 2008 02:49:52 GMT,NewsFactor Network
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| In the papers 15 may Read the full story on ENN . The paper also says that the use of illegal software in Ireland fell by 2 percent last year, as reported by ENN on Wednesday. In the papers 15 may
Thu, 15 May 2008 07:00:00 GMT,ElectricNews.net
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| Comcast looks to mix web, tv with plaxo purchase By Todd Spangler -- Multichannel News, 5/15/2008 5:45:00 AM Comcast announced plans Wednesday to acquire social-networking site Plaxo, with the operator looking to eventually bring Web-style content-sharing ... Comcast looks to mix web, tv with plaxo purchase
Thu, 15 May 2008 11:45:00 GMT,Multichannel News
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| Plaxo users worried about privacy in wake of comcast buyout Popular online address book and social networking site Plaxo announced yesterday that it had reached a deal to be acquired by Comcast. Plaxo users worried about privacy in wake of comcast buyout
Thu, 15 May 2008 07:00:00 GMT,Ars Technica
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| Comcast acquires plaxo - the end of data interoperability? The End of Data Interoperability? It's a secret how much it cost them exactly, but Comcast officially confirmed it has acquired Plaxo, the social content and address book provider. Comcast acquires plaxo - the end of data interoperability?
Fri, 16 May 2008 15:39:40 GMT,CMSWire
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| Technology: comcast to acquire web-networking partner plaxo Comcast Corp. said on Wednesday that it will acquire networking Web site Plaxo, in an effort by the cable operator to broaden its range of services. Technology: comcast to acquire web-networking partner plaxo
Thu, 15 May 2008 07:00:00 GMT,Media Info Center
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| In the papers 15 may IN THE PAPERS In the papers 15 May 15-05-2008 by Sylvia Leatham Comcast to acquire Plaxo Samsung unveils corporate reshuffle The Irish Times reports that average monthly revenue per user at mobile operator O2 ... In the papers 15 may
Thu, 15 May 2008 20:58:23 GMT,ElectricNews.net
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| Comcast buys plaxo: will social networking and tv fly? Comcast has acquired Plaxo in a move that aims to make the cable giant's interactive portfolio more social and potentially bring a little Web 2.0 to your set-top box. Comcast buys plaxo: will social networking and tv fly?
Wed, 14 May 2008 07:00:00 GMT,ZDNet
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