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Clips August 5, 2003
- To: "Lillie Coney":;, Gene Spafford <spaf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>;, John White <white@xxxxxxxxxx>;, Jeff Grove <jeff_grove@xxxxxxx>;, goodman@xxxxxxxxxxxxx;, David Farber <dave@xxxxxxxxxx>;, glee@xxxxxxxxxxxxx;, Andrew Grosso<Agrosso@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>;, ver@xxxxxxxxx;, lillie.coney@xxxxxxx;, v_gold@xxxxxxx;, harsha@xxxxxxx;, KathrynKL@xxxxxxx;, computer_security_day@xxxxxxx;, waspray@xxxxxxxxxxx;, BDean@xxxxxxx;, mguitonxlt@xxxxxxxxxxx;
- Subject: Clips August 5, 2003
- From: Lillie Coney <lillie.coney@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 05 Aug 2003 13:47:35 -0400
Clips August 5, 2003
ARTICLES
New warning: Electronic devices are suspect
Red Hat fires back at SCO in Linux fight
A Fight for Free Access To Medical Research
'Flash Mobs' Stage Wacky Public Stunts
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USA Today
New warning: Electronic devices are suspect
By Kevin Johnson and Mimi Hall, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON The Department of Homeland Security will issue a new terrorist warning Tuesday, advising commercial airlines and federal law enforcement officials of a potential threat posed by terrorists concealing weapons or explosives in small electronic devices.
A top-level law enforcement official said the warning would include such common devices as cameras and flashes, cell phones, radios and small stereos. The official said children's toys also would be included.
The advisory expands on an alert issued to airline officials more than a week ago. That warning indicated that al-Qaeda operatives might be planning a new wave of suicide hijackings similar to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
Authorities say the new advisory was not expected to trigger an immediate change in the national threat level. It now stands at Code Yellow, or increased threat of attack.
Department of Homeland Security spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said officials are "calling for greater scrutiny of modified electronic devices."
One official familiar with the advisory said the information was developed from a new review of items found in a safe house of a high-level al-Qaeda operative captured several years ago. Law enforcement officials have been reviewing past incidents, looking for clues to current activity.
At that location, authorities found a number of items that might be used as prototypes for weapons disguised as common household items or toys.
Other officials said the CIA has given the Homeland Security Department more information from interviews with al-Qaeda detainees, which has contributed to the decision to issue the warning. They emphasized that although the advisory is being given to federal law enforcement and state and local officials, there is no specific intelligence to indicate a plot to attack any federal buildings or other sites.
The latest advisory comes on the heels of a separate FBI alert issued late last week to more than 16,000 state and local police agencies. In it, the FBI said it was issuing the advisory after receiving reports that terrorists might be scouting ferryboat operators in advance of a possible attack.
On Sunday, Attorney General John Ashcroft said U.S. intelligence reports indicated that al-Qaeda operatives have never abandoned interest in American targets.
With the second anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks approaching, Ashcroft said it was important that the U.S. maintain a high level of vigilance.
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Computerworld
Red Hat fires back at SCO in Linux fight
The company said it wants SCO held accountable for 'deceptive' actions
By LINDA ROSENCRANCE
AUGUST 04, 2003
Red Hat Inc. said today that it has filed a formal complaint in the U.S. District Court of Delaware against The SCO Group Inc. in an effort to show that it hasn't infringed on SCO's intellectual property. It also said it hopes to hold SCO accountable for what it called "unfair and deceptive" actions.
The move follows a threat last month from SCO that it could file copyright infringement lawsuits against companies that use Linux if they don't license its UnixWare technology. Lindon, Utah-based SCO claims that IBM distributed Unix code that SCO owns in versions of the free Linux operating code, and it has filed a $3 billion suit against IBM.
"We filed this complaint to stop SCO from making unsubstantiated and untrue public statements attacking Red Hat Linux and the integrity of the open-source software development process," Mark Webbink, Red Hat's general counsel, said in a statement.
Bryan Sims, Red Hat's vice president of business affairs and general counsel, said the Raleigh, N.C.-based company has asked the court to determine that it hasn't infringed on SCO's copyright or misappropriated any of SCO's trade secrets.
"We also brought a claim under the Lanham Act for false advertising and unfair competition under federal law that the statements that SCO was making are deceptive and untrue," he said.
Sims said Red Hat also filed a complaint under the state of Delaware's deceptive trade practices act.
"We also filed three other claims [under state law], one for unfair competition, one for trade libel, meaning they disparaged our trademark by making these untrue and unfair statements, and one saying they intentionally and wrongfully interfered with our business relationships," Sims said.
Red Hat is also seeking a preliminary injunction barring SCO from continuing its claims that Red Hat's Linux violates SCO's intellectual property, he said.
In the statement, Red Hat said it has also established the Open Source Now Fund to cover legal expenses associated with any infringement claims brought against companies that run Linux.
Red Hat is pledging $1 million to the fund, which will help cover the legal costs of companies developing software under the General Public License and nonprofit institutions supporting those companies.
SCO officials couldn't be reached immediately for comment.
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Washington Post
A Fight for Free Access To Medical Research
Online Plan Challenges Publishers' Dominance
By Rick Weiss
Tuesday, August 5, 2003; Page A01
The family was poor, living on the Great Plains, and the child had a rare medical condition.
"Here's what we can do," the family doctor told them. But it didn't work, recalled Michael Keller, who oversees the libraries at Stanford University. "So the family went to the Internet."
Soon they were back at the doctor's office with a report of a new therapy. "They plunked it down and said, 'Hey, can we try this?' And guess what? It worked."
Such tales are becoming increasingly common, but the happy endings come at a cost -- literally. That is because the vast majority of the 50,000 to 60,000 research articles published each year as a result of federally funded science ends up in the hands of for-profit publishers -- the largest of them based overseas -- that charge as much as $50 to view the results of a single study online. The child's parents, Keller said, paid for several papers before finding the one that led them to the cure.
Why is it, a growing number of people are asking, that anyone can download medical nonsense from the Web for free, but citizens must pay to see the results of carefully conducted biomedical research that was financed by their taxes?
The Public Library of Science aims to change that. The organization, founded by a Nobel Prize-winning biologist and two colleagues, is plotting the overthrow of the system by which scientific results are made known to the world -- a $9 billion publishing juggernaut with subscription charges that range into thousands of dollars per year.
In its place the organization is constructing a system that would put scientific findings on the Web -- for free.
Scientists and budget-squeezed librarians have long railed against publishers' stranglehold on scientific literature, to little avail. But with surprising political acumen, the Public Library of Science -- or PLoS -- has begun to make "open access" scientific publication an issue for everyday citizens, emphasizing that taxpayers fund the lion's share of biomedical research and deserve access to the results.
"It is wrong when a breast cancer patient cannot access federally funded research data paid for by her hard-earned taxes," Rep. Martin O. Sabo (D-Minn.) said recently as he introduced legislation that would give PLoS a boost by loosening copyright restrictions on publicly funded research. "It is wrong when the family whose child has a rare disease must pay again for research data their tax dollars already paid for."
It remains to be seen whether the newly bubbling discontent among citizens and politicians will boil over into a full-blown coup, fulfilling scientists' longstanding goal of democratizing the scientific publication enterprise. But whether it succeeds or fails, historians of science say, the effort is a remarkable social experiment in itself. After all, publication is at the heart of the scientific system of rank, respect and power. So the movement to dissect and rewrite the rules of that system is, in effect, a rare opportunity to watch scientists experiment on themselves.
Research as Moneymaker
Historians peg the birth of scientific publication to 1665, when England's Royal Society began publishing its Philosophical Transactions -- the same journal that would later announce key discoveries by Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin and other icons of science.
Today the universe of scientific journals includes about 28,000 titles, but they fulfill the same four basic needs: communicating findings; controlling quality by "peer review," in which scientists check one another's work; creating a historical record; and documenting authorship for personal credit and professional recognition.
In recent decades, however, journals have found that scientific communication can be not only a service but also a potent moneymaker. Central to their success is that each journal publishes original research that appears nowhere else, so each is necessary for scientists in a given field.
"Scientific journals are monopolies in that there's the Journal of Artificial Intelligence, for example, and the Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research, and as long as they're both good there's no way a library can just say, 'We'll take the one that's most cost-effective.' They have to have both," said John McCarthy, a Stanford University professor emeritus of computer science and an authority on scientific publication. "And when there's a monopoly there's always the opportunity for extra profit."
Indeed, said Stanford's Keller, "over the course of the years several of these companies have become giants. And some of their price increases have been horrendous, sometimes 25 to 35 percent per year. It's been unbelievable."
Many commercial publishers -- the biggest include Elsevier and Wolters Kluwer, both of Amsterdam; Blackwell Publishers of England, and BertelsmannSpringer of Germany -- charge between $1,000 and $5,000 for a one-year subscription to their journals. One prestigious collection of journals called Brain Research costs subscribers about $20,000 a year.
Publishers defend their prices largely by pointing to the extra services they provide. Not only must they pay for publication and mailing, they say, but they also hire peer reviewers, editors and contributors to write commentaries and review articles. Some, including the premier journals Nature and Science, also have writers who produce news articles and scientific perspectives.
"We believe we add value to the research," said Jayne Marks, publishing director for Nature Publishing Group in London, a closely held company that publishes about 50 journals, including Nature.
Nature does not reveal financial details, but figures released by the largest publisher of scientific journals -- Amsterdam-based Elsevier -- help explain why many scientists and others are frustrated. Its 1,700 journals, which produce $1.6 billion in revenue, garner a remarkable 30 percent profit margin.
"I do realize that the 30 percent sticks out," Elsevier Vice President Pieter Bolman said. "But what we still do feel -- and this is, I think, where the real measure is -- we're still very much in the top of author satisfaction and reader satisfaction."
In October, critics say, the real test of that will begin, as PLoS begins the first of a series of journals dedicated to the free sharing of results. The aim is to get the world's best scientists to submit their best work to PLoS -- and force change by starving profit-oriented publishers of their earnings and prestige.
"Our goal," said PLoS's executive director Vivian Siegel, "is to transform the landscape completely."
Shift to Open Access
The PLoS plan is simple in concept: Instead of having readers pay for scientific results through subscriptions or other charges, costs would be borne by the scientists who are having their work published -- or, practically speaking, by the government agencies or other groups that funded the scientists -- through upfront charges of about $1,500 an article.
The shift is not as radical as it sounds, the library's founders argue. That is because government agencies and other science funders are already paying for a huge share of the world's journal subscriptions through "indirect cost" grants to university libraries, which are the biggest subscribers. The new system would radically increase the number of people who would have access to published findings, though, because results would be freely available on the Internet. By contrast, people today who do not subscribe to these journals must pay charges, typically $15 to $50, to get a reprint of -- or online access to -- a single article.
Those charges can add up quickly.
"When my father was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, for example, I must have glanced through 50-100 articles almost immediately" while searching for treatment information, Siegel wrote via e-mail. Physicians, professors, graduate students and others, including science journalists, face the same problem daily.
Some journals have already made the leap to open-access publishing. But for the most part they have not attracted the best science -- a key to success. Now, with a $9 million grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the PLoS hopes to lift open-access publishing into the scientific stratosphere, in part through the personal gravitas of its founders and friends.
In terms of scientific stardom, the critical mass is there. PLoS was founded by three highly respected scientists: Harold Varmus, who won a Nobel Prize in 1989 for his work with cancer viruses, headed the National Institutes of Health from 1993 to 1999 and is now president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York; Patrick O. Brown, a renowned genomics expert at Stanford University School of Medicine and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute; and Michael Eisen, a computational and evolutionary biologist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and the University of California at Berkeley.
Having hired a team of hotshot editors and reviewers -- in some instances wooing them away from prestigious journals -- the group will begin its first monthly open-access journal, PLoS Biology, in October. It plans to launch PLoS Medicine in 2004. Others may follow, but the group hopes that the need to keep creating journals will drop off as existing journals see how successful the model is and shift to the open-access system themselves.
For scientists, the benefits would extend well beyond being able to read scientific papers for free. Unlike their ink-on-paper counterparts, scientific papers that are maintained in open electronic databases can have their data tables downloaded, massaged and interlinked with databases from other papers, allowing scientists to compare and build more easily on one another's findings.
"In epidemiology and public health it would be an enormous leap forward," said Christopher Murray, a World Health Organization epidemiologist and health economist. "You can't imagine how much time researchers spend trying to get access even to old data sets to do new things or make new connections."
But pressure from consumers, whose taxes provide about $45 billion in federal research funding each year and who are increasingly asked to take on a larger role in their own care, may be the force that finally tips the balance.
"They've paid for the research," Eisen said. "And the fact that the primary results are not available to them is really crazy and grossly unfair and completely unnecessary."
Publishers Raise Red Flags
The bigger for-profit publishers say advocates of open access exaggerate the benefits.
"This is, in general, very esoteric material . . . not written for the public," said Elsevier's Bolman, adding that he doubts the business model will work. "Everybody is getting onto the open-access bandwagon. It reminds me of the enthusiasm and mania of the dot-com explosion, and it will pop, too."
But what Bolman and other publishers object to most of all are budding congressional efforts to force publishers to adopt open-access principles. The latest House appropriations report instructs the National Library of Medicine to look into ways to make federally funded research more available to the public. And Sabo's bill would require research "substantially funded" by the federal government to be in the public domain.
That is especially worrisome to the smaller, not-for-profit publishers -- most of them affiliated with scientific societies -- that say they are sympathetic to open-access principles but fear that the system will not work for them, with their tighter margins.
"Saying you're for free access is like motherhood and apple pie," said Ira Mellman, chairman of Yale's Department of Cell Biology and editor in chief of the highly cited but inexpensive and nonprofit Journal of Cell Biology. "But you have to recognize that this is an experiment in publishing, and the legislation seems to be trying to enforce one model before the conclusion of the experiment."
Several journal editors noted that they have moved in recent years to widen access. Many have agreed to make their papers available for free to scientists in developing countries, for example, and some release results freely to anyone six to 12 months after publication. But critics say that is not enough, arguing that even a six-month delay deprives scientists and others of the latest and best information.
Ironically, several observers said, the fate of open-access science publication may ultimately depend on something highly unscientific: the enigmatic quality of prestige. With scientists' professional standing still intimately linked to their latest paper in journals such as Science and Nature, will the best of them step up to the plate and start sending their hottest papers to open-access journals such as PLoS?
"With scientific journals, competition is not so much on the reader end but on the author's end," Bolman said. "When you get the best authors, then other authors tend to follow, and then you have an exciting journal, which really is your objective."
PLoS Biology started accepting its first submissions for its premiere issue last month, and Varmus said he is pleased with the quality of the work the journal is attracting.
One thing is certain: Among the countless scientists and others who will read PLoS Biology for free in October will be Bolman and other publishing executives, who will be looking for the first hints of an exodus.
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Associated Press
'Flash Mobs' Stage Wacky Public Stunts
Tue Aug 5, 1:16 AM ET
By BIPASHA RAY, Associated Press Writer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - About 200 people, mostly in their 20s and 30s, crowd into the card section of the Harvard Coop bookstore, pretending to look for a card for "Bill."
On cue, they burst into spontaneous applause.
It's another "flash mob" strike, wherein a crowd, organized by e-mail lists and Web sites, converges in pre-arranged location and performs a wacky, harmless stunt for a few minutes in public.
The crowd then abruptly disappears, leaving bystanders befuddled.
Some participants consider these acts of swarming to be art. Others fancy them social revolution. But for many it's just irreverent, silly fun.
The phenomenon, called smart flocking by some, is spreading across the globe along with the portable digital devices that enable it.
After the original flash mob coalesced in Manhattan less than two months ago, similar 21st century be-ins were staged from Minneapolis to Tokyo to Vienna.
In June, flash-mobbers crowded into a Manhattan Macy's and surrounded a large oriental rug, telling puzzled salespeople they all lived together and wanted the $10,000 "Love Rug."
In Rome, hundreds flooded a bookstore, asking employees for imaginary books and authors.
In San Francisco, a flock crossed a busy downtown crosswalk back and forth, waving their arms in the air and spinning in circles, as tourists stared agape.
The Cambridge crowd fascinated Melissa Krodman, a 24-year-old mobber.
"But to get the joke, you had to look at the woman there behind the counter, the expression on her face" when the crown materialized out of nowhere, Krodman said.
A flash mob is a lighthearted variation of the "smart mob" people who use digital technology to hastily mobilize, as activists did to protest the U.S. invasion of Iraq (news - web sites) or cell phone-equipped teenagers simply do to organize their evening on the spur of the moment.
Futurist Howard Rheingold unwittingly inspired the flash-mobbers, with his 2002 book "Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution," which examines how technology redefines social interaction.
Often, anonymous flash mob organizers send out e-mails and post on online "blogs" specifying a date and time for swarming. Word spreads quickly. And before you know it, hundreds are in New York's Central Park, making bird sounds.
What inspires participants?
"Everything makes a lot of sense nowadays, a bit too much sense. Then, for 10 minutes, you get to do something completely nonsensical. You get to be a kid for a few minutes," said a 30-year-old organizer of the San Francisco mob, who wanted to be known only as "The Governor."
Even friends who got his mob "summonses" didn't know he was the organizer, he says and that secrecy is part of what has people hooked.
Only organizers know the details. Participants are told to synchronize their watches and gather in nearby bars, organized in clusters according to their birth month.
Volunteers, who get cues only minutes prior by cell phone, hand out slips of paper with instructions the precise minute when the mob should appear and disappear.
The slips must be hidden after memorizing instructions and everyone must disperse no later than two minutes after it ends.
"It's all very 'spy novel,' very hush-hush," said 34-year-old New York City flash-mobber Fred Hoysted.
Numerous web logs (blogs), chat rooms and Yahoo group lists are devoted to the movement.
As soon as San Francisco blogger Sean Savage started recording flash mob events on his Web site www.cheesebikini.com traffic skyrocketed from 350 visitors a day to more than 9,000, he said.
A recent mention on the popular techie site, Slashdot.org, brought even more traffic, crashing Savage's server.
Savage, 31, says the phenomenon empowers citizens in a world controlled by "Big Government and Big Corporation."
"This interests people even if it's frivolous, totally for fun, and doesn't have a label attached to it because they see something can still happen from the grassroots without any help from the government and corporations," said Savage, a computer system designer and analyst at Stanford University.
Rob Zazueta, who is creating an online meeting place FlockSmart.com for organizers and wannabe participants, says the practice turns on its head arguments that evolving digital communications tools like text messaging or e-mail are depersonalizing.
"With smart mobs, these same tools that used to push us apart, are now bringing us back together," he said.
Zazueta, 28, hopes to see more instant physical gatherings not of anonymous pranksters but rather of like minds. They could be at a coffee shop to discuss anything from technology, to music to politics.
"It takes the concept of chat rooms," he said, "and brings it into the real world (news - Y! TV)."
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