At last — a file-sharing music chart

At last — a file-sharing music chart

I was asked to write a piece recently about the agreement between the BBC and UK record companies that will allow the Beeb to publish a top-20 legal downloads chart from September. I wondered then what the difference would be between the legal download chart and the most popular tracks being shared on P2P networks, but didn’t know if anyone was doing that kind of monitoring. Well, it seems that at least one company is. Interesting technical challenge that. Wonder how they do it.

Bobby Fischer’s descent into madness

Bobby Fischer’s descent into madness

Not being a chess buff, I paid no attention to the media reports of Bobby Fischer’s arrest in Japan. But then I read this appalling, fascinating, account in The Atlantic of his descent into deranged anti-semitism. Here’s a short quote:

But even the Fischer apologists had to throw up their hands when he took to the Philippine airwaves on September 11, 2001. In an interview broadcast this time by Bombo Radyo, a small public-radio station in Baguio City, Fischer revealed views so loathsome that it was impossible to indulge him any longer. Just hours after the most devastating attack on the United States in history, in which thousands had died, Fischer could barely contain his delight. “This is all wonderful news,” he announced. “I applaud the act. The U.S. and Israel have been slaughtering the Palestinians, just slaughtering them for years. Robbing them and slaughtering them. Nobody gave a shit. Now it’s coming back to the U.S. Fuck the U.S. I want to see the U.S. wiped out.”

Fischer added that the events of September 11 provided the ideal opportunity to stage a long-overdue coup d’état. He envisioned, he said, a “Seven Days in May scenario,” with the country taken over by the military; he also hoped to see all its synagogues closed, and hundreds of thousands of Jews executed. “Ultimately the white man should leave the United States and the black people should go back to Africa,” he said. “The white people should go back to Europe, and the country should be returned to the American Indians. This is the future I would like to see for the so-called United States.” Before signing off Fischer cried out, “Death to the U.S.!”

For once, words fail me…

Apple profits rise

Apple profits rise

From today’s NYT: Apple Computer said on Wednesday that its fiscal third-quarter profit tripled, led by surging demand for the iPod portable music player and higher sales of its Macintosh computers.

“It was an outstanding quarter – our highest third-quarter revenue in eight years,” Apple’s chief executive, Steven P. Jobs, said. “Our Mac sales were up 19 percent, and we’re thrilled with that.”

I’m not surprised profits are up, given what the Naughton household spends on Apple kit. Thinks… I’m still waiting for that Airport Express I ordered…

Instant Messaging systems inch towards interoperability…

Instant Messaging systems inch towards interoperability…

Interesting news:

“After years of mudslinging, Microsoft, America Online and Yahoo on Thursday made a surprising overture toward peace in the instant-messaging wars.

The companies announced that later this year Microsoft’s Live Communications Server (LCS), which offers instant messaging for corporate users, will connect with AOL Instant Messenger, Yahoo Messenger and its own MSN Messenger.

However, the three public IM clients will still not connect with one another for public users. Instead, it means corporations that use LCS will allow employees to chat with the Big Three public IM services as well.”

Hmmm… Two things missing from this report. First, this cosying-up represents not so much an outbreak of common sense among bitter rivals as a pre-emptive move against Reuters’s plans to create an interoperable IM system for financial services professionals. And second, the deadly implications of this for malware dissemination. Viruses spread by IM make email infection rates look like slow motion. One of the anti-virus companies (can’t remember which just now) has done a simulation model of malware propagation via IM. It’s a scary prospect.

The perils of Internet Explorer

The perils of Internet Explorer

From today’s edition of Good Morning, Silicon Valley:

“In 1997, Microsoft’s Charles Fitzgerald, bristling over complaints about vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer’s active scripting functionality, told a group of Web application developers that if they wanted security on the Internet, they should unplug their computers. But what he really should have told them to unplug was IE, because seven years later Active X is still inherently flawed. In an advisory posted to its Web site Tuesday morning, security outfit Secunia announced four new potential security flaws in IE’s active scripting functionality, all of them rated ‘extremely critical.’  News of the new vulnerabilities, coming as it does on the heels of last week’s IE security cockup, is more bad news for Microsoft and one more good reason to switch to a browser other than IE or, at the very least, disable Active X.  ‘I think that the Internet security issues are so poorly handled that only particular forms of insanity would suggest that it has ever made sense to allow client-side scripting,’ said Joseph Newcomer, a security consultant and founder of FlounderCraft Ltd., in Pittsburgh. ‘[ActiveX] is a no-brainer. It is so wonderful for staging attacks. I would no more allow this than a Manhattan resident would consider leaving their apartment unlocked.'”

Interestingly, IE’s market share seems to have dropped for the first time since 1998. The drop is tiny — just 1.32 percentage points — but still… I haven’t used the product since 1999, except when it’s been the only browser available in Internet cafes..