The new XP Starter Edition only allows three apps to run
simultaneously.
Do viruses and spyware count toward your limit?
"We're sorry, but you can't log in, because you've already reached
your process limit."
Tags: humor
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19:40 Aug 17, 2004
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The Register had
an
article on the copy protection in the Beastie Boys' new CD.
The relevant bit: the copy protection is only for Windows PCs
(it uses a data track with an autorun file) and even then, it
does nothing if autorun is disabled. For linux and mac users,
it does nothing at all, and works as a normal CD. And Windows
third-party CD burning apps can burn copies of the CD just fine.
The CD publisher, EMI Italy, was asked about this, and said they
weren't worried at all about linux and mac users, or PC users who
know enough to disable autorun (or use a CD burning app?);
they think the majority of PC users will be stopped by this.
Assuming that Windows users who know enough to rip a CD and then
distribute it online, but not enough to google for how to disable
autorun, may seem a bit weird. But I guess if that's the kind of
copy protection they want, we should be happy for it. Personally
I still wouldn't buy a copy protected disc (I don't buy CDs from
RIAA publishers anyway, a little personal boycott) and of course
there's no guarantee, knowing the RIAA's history, that they won't
decide to come after linux and mac users later; but for now, I
suppose we should be happy that if we accidentally happen on this
sort of disc, we don't have to worry about the Windows-oriented
copy protection getting in our way.
(Would this constitute an anti-DMCA argument that the protection
is not "effective"? It certainly should, but I'm still not entirely
clear on the legal definition of "effective" except that it means
something different from what the word means in normal English.)
Tags: politics, rights
[
18:04 Aug 17, 2004
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