Showing posts with label Could. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Could. Show all posts

New software could block robocalls

Federal agency launched competition to find a solution to nagging, automated callsNearly 800,000 eligible submissions received; private sector encouraged to reach out to winnersMore than 210,000 people complain to the Federal Trade Commission monthly about robocalls

Washington (CNN) -- We've all been there. You're in the middle of cooking a great meal or just sitting down to eat at a restaurant or in the last five minutes of a favorite TV show when your phone rings. You don't recognize the number, but you answer it anyway.

"This is Rachel from Cardholder Services." It's a robocall.

More than 210,000 people complain to the Federal Trade Commission monthly about robocalls, those annoying and frustrating illegal automated messages.

In the words of CNN contributor Bob Greene, they are "like cockroaches: irritating, despised, always multiplying, seemingly indestructible and undefeatable."

That was before the FTC announced last October it was launching a nationwide contest to get the public's help in solving a difficult problem.

Nearly 800 eligible submissions were received and two winners were announced on Tuesday.

Serdar Danis and Aaron Foss will each receive $25,000 for their "real breakthrough solutions" which focus on "intercepting and filtering out illegal prerecorded calls," according to the FTC.

The prize money will come from last year's agency funds.

They will use technology to "blacklist" robocaller phone numbers and "whitelist" numbers associated with acceptable incoming calls.

"We're hoping these winning proposals find their way to the marketplace soon, and will provide relief to millions of American consumers harassed by these calls," said Charles Harwood, acting director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The agency doesn't endorse either winner, but encourages the private sector to reach out to Danis and Foss to develop their proposals.

Foss's idea is called Nomorobo.

It is a "cloud-based solution that would use 'simultaneous ringing,' which allows incoming calls to be routed to a second telephone line. This second line would identify and hang up on illegal robocalls before they could ring through to the user," explained Harwood.

Danis's proposal, if nothing else, probably deserved an award for the longest name.

His winning entry was titled, "Robocall Filtering System and Device with Autonomous Blacklisting, Whitelisting, Graylisting and Caller ID Spoof Detection."

It would "analyze and block robocalls using software that could be implemented as a mobile app, an electronic device in a user's home or a feature of a provider's telephone service."

Additionally, the FTC handed out a non-monetary prize to Google for a robo challenge achievement award.

The judges considered whether an idea would work, was easy to use and could be rolled out for production.

More than 217 million Americans have joined the National Do-Not-Call Registry since June 2003. But that hasn't guaranteed calls will stop.

Many companies are using autodial technology that's capable of sending out thousands of calls a minute.

"Many calls get through the system," Harwood said. "Even if someone is not on the Do-Not-Call Registry, it's still illegal to place calls without expressed written authorization."

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Next iPhone could land this summer

Will Apple's Tim Cook be unveiling the next iPhone this summer? One report suggests yes.Will Apple's Tim Cook be unveiling the next iPhone this summer? One report suggests yes.Apple to begin production on latest iPhone model soon, The Wall Street Journal saysThe new model could be ready by this summerA cheaper, more colorful version of the iPhone might also be in production

(CNN) -- Let the iPhone 6 speculation begin.

Apple is kicking off production on a new iPhone in the coming months and could announce the device this summer, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal. The phone would have the same size and shape as the iPhone 5, and Apple might also be working on a cheaper model to sell in developing countries, the report said.

The Journal story contained no details about what features the next iPhone might contain, although each new iPhone model has historically boasted a more powerful processor and an upgraded camera.

It wouldn't be shocking for Apple to release an iPhone in the summer. The company has released a new iPhone model every year since the device debuted in 2007, and the release dates have all been in the summer or fall. The iPhone 5 came out in September 2012, the iPhone 4S in October 2011, and the three versions before that in the summer months.

var currExpandable="expand15";if(typeof CNN.expandableMap==='object'){CNN.expandableMap.push(currExpandable);}var mObj={};mObj.type='video';mObj.contentId='';mObj.source='bestoftv/2013/04/03/exp-early-myb-iphone-sec-samoa.cnn';mObj.videoSource='CNN';mObj.videoSourceUrl='';mObj.lgImage="http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/dam/assets/120629122146-phone-history-13-story-body.jpg";mObj.lgImageX=300;mObj.lgImageY=169;mObj.origImageX="214";mObj.origImageY="120";mObj.contentType='video';CNN.expElements.expand15Store=mObj;One possible launchpad for the as-yet-unnamed new device could be Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference, typically held each June in San Francisco. Exact dates for WWDC 2013 have not been announced.

The Journal report's more interesting nuggets are about the cheaper, more colorful iPhone version. The report says Apple has been "working on different color shells" for the less expensive model.

There have been rumblings about a cheaper iPhone for a while now. The company has often put quality above affordability, but to be competitive in the booming Asia and South America markets, it will need to drop the price of its lower-end phones. Older, less expensive iPhone versions continue to sell well but are still pricey when compared with the array of cheap Android handsets.

The Wall Street Journal cites people "familiar with the device's production" as sources for its report.

These periodic crumbs of leaked information about Apple launches may help the company, which presents itself as extremely secretive about future products. Such occasional Apple rumor stories keep the iPhone in the minds of smartphone buyers and could influence their decisions about what phone to buy next.

It's been six months since Apple released a major new product, and as Fortune recently noted, its fans may be growing restless. Apple may also feel pressure to release a new iPhone soon to compete with archrival Samsung, whose popular Samsung Galaxy S line has emerged as a credible competitor. Reports of new products also would probably look good to Apple investors.

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NASA: Mars could support life

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Why new anti-piracy system could be a nightmare

"Six strikes" is different from either SOPA or PIPA; it's an anti-piracy warning system managed by ISPs.There's a new anti-piracy warning system designed to track copyright infringers But "six strikes" is different from either SOPA or PIPA; it's a warning system managed by ISPs Participating providers include AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Cablevision and Time Warner CableBut who's responsible for each infraction? It's a delicate, thorny issue

(Time) -- No, "six strikes" isn't a phrase from some esoteric version of baseball played on Mars — it's a colloquialism for a new anti-piracy warning system designed to track copyright infringers and help internet service providers (ISPs) take progressively punitive measures to discourage or prevent said infringers from engaging in further copyright-violating activities.

It's essentially an industry workaround, after SOPA and PIPA — bills designed to give the government increased power to battle copyright violators — failed or stalled last year.

But "six strikes" is notably different from either SOPA or PIPA. For starters, it's not a bill. Instead of empowering the government to blacklist sites deemed illicit, it's an escalating warning system managed by ISPs independently. It employs a third-party tool, MarkMonitor, to identify users engaging in copyright-violating activities, then leaves it up to ISPs to take action. ISPs participating at this point include AT&T, Verizon, Comcast, Cablevision and Time Warner Cable.

Say an IP address associated with your account is identified as a violator. Your ISP would first send you a warning, then send further warnings for each infraction, at some point rolling out actual punitive measures, from throttling your bandwidth up to — in theory, a possibility — termination of your service.

The system was supposed to go live this week, but was delayed at the last minute by the Center for Copyright Information (CCI), the group working with the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America and several of the nation's biggest ISPs to roll "six strikes" out.

According to CCI executive director Jill Lesser, the delay, due to "unexpected factors," is mostly because of Superstorm Sandy, which "seriously affected" the group's final testing plans. CCI says it now expects what it calls the "Copyright Alert System" to kick off in early 2013, adding:

"Our goal has always been to implement the program in a manner that educates consumers about copyright and peer-to-peer networks, encourages the use of legal alternatives, safeguards customer privacy, and provides an easy-to-use independent review program for consumers to challenge alerts they believe they've received in error.

"We need to be sure that all of our "I"s are dotted and "T"s crossed before any company begins sending alerts, and we know that those who are following our progress will agree."

Regardless of when it goes live, I'm worried about some of those I's and T's — specifically what it's going to mean for me, speaking not as a copyright violator, but as someone whose somewhat unique residential situation poses some awkward, potentially nightmarish alert management issues.

My condo complex (I'm an owner) has 48 units. It was built in 2003, so it's relatively new. At the time, the builders had the foresight to wire each unit with Ethernet — a drop in each room, everything connected back to aggregate wire closets. Near my front door (and all the front doors of all the units) is a mini-wire closet with a switch/hub that connects my unit to a central switch/hub in a locked room on the property.

That, in turn, plugs into a high-speed cable modem — a cable modem that's shared across all 48 units. We're technically shielded from each other using a special box that "firewalls" each private IP and can control how much bandwidth it's allocated, etc. Whether we elect to use it or pay for our own service instead, all 48 units have access to this shared Internet.

You can probably see where I'm headed. With "six strikes," any of the residents in the complex who — knowingly or unknowingly — engage in an act of copyright violation, could incur an alert. Who's going to see that alert? Probably me, as the technical contact for the ISP (that, or our property management company, at which point it'll route back to me).

At this point I'm not sure what happens. The IP address MarkMonitor's software is going to see, presumably, is our public one, not the private address of the device that's been singled out on our condo complex's network. How do we identify the perpetrator? Should we identify the perpetrator? If our ISP says we're in violation, is it incumbent on us to run our own tracking software, somehow, to identify the person(s) involved? Are we supposed to somehow issue these warnings ourselves, since the ISP won't technically be able to?

See the problem? Who's responsible for each infraction? Who should be punished? The entire complex, by throttling or at some point terminating our Internet service? Each unit in the complex pays for shared Internet equally as part of our monthly association fees. We're not a business — there's no CEO. The few of us who manage the Internet on behalf of the rest can't act unilaterally to preempt potential infractions by blocking aspects of the service by introducing content filters the way a private company might.

It's a delicate, thorny issue. Anyone who's been on the board of a housing association knows how tough it can be to promulgate policies to owners, much less policies where the repercussions of violations can't be controlled locally, and where the punishment extends to everyone.

We could put it to a complex-wide vote, but even if a majority were in favor of taking action, say somehow shutting off file-sharing activity entirely, now we're talking about an all or nothing "fix" that also blocks legitimate file sharing — sharing anything not copyrighted, e.g. game or application demos, some music (freely released albums, for instance), public domain materials (Project Gutenberg's texts, for instance, or public domain art).

I wouldn't vote for neutering my Internet service, would you?

I'm assuming this scenario applies, more or less, anywhere you'll find shared Internet provided by a "six strikes"-participating ISP. We've heard nothing about exemptions. So what about hotels? Restaurants? Coffee shops? Fitness centers? Libraries? Bookstores? RV Parks? Airports? What about municipal initiatives to beam free Wi-Fi to anyone at all, citywide?

Maybe the "workaround" lies in the acknowledgment portion of the process. According to reports, users found in violation of "six strikes" will have to somehow acknowledge they've received and read the alert explaining their account was engaged in illicit activity. Some ISPs are said to be rolling this out as pop-ups (don't ask me how). I'm not sure what that entails for shared Internet access. Does everyone get the pop-up? What happens if you ignore it? What happens if, for whatever reason, the pop-up doesn't appear in the first place?

Like the proverbial tree in the forest, does an alert count as a strike if you don't see (or acknowledge having seen) it?

I'd like to see the CCI and participating ISPs lay all the details about "six strikes" on the table, proactively, instead of letting them trickle out in leaked documents and casual interviews. Don't just backdoor the policy and expect users, especially where Internet's shared, to somehow reverse-engineer what they're responsible for, what happens if they fail to meet some new policy threshold and so forth.

Be upfront with customers. Sure, they already know (or they should) that copyright violations are no-nos, per the terms of their user agreements (and the law), but they deserve to know when policies for policing those terms change, especially when those policies could seriously impact them whether they're personally responsible for a copyright violation or not.

Maybe "six strikes" isn't designed to produce lawsuits. Maybe it really is just an "educational" campaign to raise violation awareness among users. Maybe it's just to remind us that someone's watching (and possibly storing information for potential lawsuits).

Whatever the case, there's a transparency issue here. I'm worried that the absence of public engagement may be intentional — an attempt to manage the perception of what's about to happen by keeping it quiet (or at best, confusingly disclosed), in hopes of preventing another public relations fiasco, like the bill-killing blowup over SOPA and PIPA.

If CCI really wants this to work as claimed — to educate users — then it needs to work with ISPs to lay out the parameters beforehand, addressing scenarios like the one I've described above, "I's dotted and T's crossed."

© 2012 TIME, Inc. TIME is a registered trademark of Time Inc. Used with permission.



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Did Early Humans Could Sail

LAS VEGAS, KOMPAS.com — was not only a clever man sailing in ancient times. Early humans such as Neanderthals, allegedly also had been able to sail the seas of the Mediterranean by boat is simple.

Alan Simmons, an archaeologist from the University of Nevada at Las Vegas in publication in the journal Science, Friday (16/11/2012), outlining some of the artifacts that can be an amplifier the conjecture. Artifacts were thought to be older than the age of the Mediterranean lands were formed approximately 10,000 years ago.

One of the artifacts found are obsidian from Melos in the Aegean Islands are found in the soil layers of 11,000 years ago in Franchthi Cave. The excavations on the coast of Cyprus also found stone artifacts dating from 12,000 years ago.

"We found evidence that human hunting triggered the extinction of the dwarf hippos in Cyprus 12,000 years ago," said Simmons was quoted as saying Friday, Livescience today.

According to Simmons, artifacts and the extinction of the dwarf hippos became the amplifier that early humans did not have to be good at farming or ranching to get food source. They could be a hunter who has got the ability to sail.

Recently discovered artifacts also show that early humans were able to sail away, even down to the region of Crete.

In the Ionian Islands, found evidence of human sites aged 110,000 years ago. The investigation also found an axe, machete and pencungkil in stone which is thought to date from the 170,000 in Crete.

Crete and other inventions are separated from the Mainland at that time. Simmons says, evidence that suggests that a cruise is not made by modern humans, but humans such as Neanderthals or Homo erectus.

However, the allegations were to be tested. Currently, one of the problems in the archaeological research is the exact date. If carbon dating performed on artifacts that right, early humans proved to be sailing.



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