Edupage: Internet News

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23 January, 1997
26 January, 1997
28 January, 1997
30 January, 1997
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TOP STORIES ACLU Fights Political Restrictions On Academic Facilities Gartner VP Says Don't Throw Those PCs Out Yet AT&T WorldNet Benefits From AOL Logjam Internet Patent Numbers ALSO Superscape's 3-D Web-Within-A-Web CR Tackles Online Medical Help Virtual Pet Sweeping Japan Online Sex Sting Muppets Go To Microsoft ACLU FIGHTS POLITICAL RESTRICTIONS ON ACADEMIC FACILITIES American Civil Liberties Union lawyer David Rocah says it's "ridiculous" to think that a university's 501(c)3 nonprofit status could be jeopardized if its faculty, staff or students use e-mail or Web pages to send partisan political messages. "That's not the law, it can't be, and it never will be. The law prevents the university itself from indulging in political activity, not others using its property. With their logic, a professor using a Princeton phone in a Princeton office couldn't talk about who to vote for." Princeton University will now simply require that any personal political opinions be clearly identified as being those of the sender rather than of the university. (Reason Feb 97 p13) GARTNER VP SAYS DON'T THROW THOSE PCs OUT YET "Don't throw away your PCs. Network nirvana is not yet a reality," says the Gartner Group's VP of research. A study released this week by Gartner says network computers from Oracle, Sun Microsystems and IBM will result in only a 41% savings over regular PCs running Windows 95, far below the 80% number used by Sun when it debuted its machine last October. But Sun says it got its PC figures from an earlier Gartner study, and criticizes the latest report because it includes an analysis of the NetPC design (a joint product by Microsoft and Intel), which does not have any test models currently available. Both Gartner and Sun do agree on the annual costs of running the JavaStation -- roughly $2,500. (Investor's Business Daily 23 Jan 97 A6) AT&T WORLDNET BENEFITS FROM AOL LOGJAM AT&T is enjoying a recent boost in subscriber numbers, which it attributes to overload problems experienced by America Online. AT&T says the number of new subscribers has tripled this month from last, and in polling new users, found that 45% are also AOL members. "A lot of the increase in orders we're seeing is directly because of the publicity of AOL's problems," says the head of WorldNet. "People care a lot about the reliability of their Internet service. It's become a serious part of their lives." An AOL spokesman says AT&T's 600,000 subscribers don't present any threat to AOL's 8 million: "Our member retention is within historical norms." (Wall Street Journal 23 Jan 97 B6) INTERNET PATENT NUMBERS The Internet Patent News Service (IPNS) says that in the first half of 1996 there were 3,966 patents issued, of which 919 were in network software and 528 were in image processing patents. (Communications of the ACM Jan 97) =============================================== SUPERSCAPE'S 3-D WEB-WITHIN-A-WEB Palo Alto, Calif.-based Superscape Inc. operates a Virtual Web, comprising about 60 corporate sites that sport 3-D pages as part of their Web environment. "If you create an environment that's like an interactive game, people like it," says Superscape's CEO, who also touts the benefits of 3-D "test drive" shopping which, along with entertainment, is a prime aspect of the Virtual Web. Companies such as United News Media Group, Intel and Northern Telecom are among Superscape's Virtual Web clients. (Broadcasting & Cable 13 Jan 97 p131) < http://www.vww.com > CR TACKLES ONLINE MEDICAL HELP Consumer Reports spent two months exploring and evaluating the myriad medical information sites on the Web, and has concluded, "The wealth of useful medical information available online is well worth the initial difficulty of finding one's way around this new world -- and the constant need to be on guard against dubious material." Their recommendations? < http://www.ama-assn.org >, < http://www.medicinenet.com >, < http://medscape.com >, < http://www.oncolink.upenn.edu >, < http://parentsplace.com >, < http://pathfinder.com/thrive >. Also recommended are two sites that offer links to other sites: < http://www.arcade.uiowa.edu/hardin-www/md.html > and < http://www.slackinc.com/matrix >. Oh, and if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is. (Consumer Reports Feb 97 p27) VIRTUAL PET SWEEPING JAPAN The newest high-tech consumer fad in Japan is tamagochii, an electronic bird creature which starts life as an endearing, bird-like image on the screen of an egg-shaped key ring device, and then changes from a chick to a fully grown adult in around 10 days. However, the owner must push the right buttons to feed, groom and soothe the digital creature or else see it waste away and die from neglect. (Vancouver Province 23 Jan 97 A27) ONLINE SEX STING An Albany, New York, college business major was arrested yesterday in a cyberporn sting operation, on a charge of using America Online to transmit three dozen sexually explicit photos of children. (Vancouver Province 23 Jan 97 A37) MUPPETS GO TO MICROSOFT Jim Henson Productions, which created Kermit the Frog and all the other Muppets, has agreed to a three-year deal with Microsoft Network, under which the puppet company will develop nine shows for MSN. A Microsoft executive says: "It's a very big win for us. When you think of family programming, you think of Henson. This shows we can play with the big boys." The expectation is that the programs will make use of real-time, computer-controlled digital puppetry." (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 23 Jan 97 G3) TOP STORIES FCC Hearing Focuses On Internet Bottlenecks Internet Coalition Says, "What Gridlock?" Digital Libraries: The Future Digital Libraries: The Present ALSO Computer in a Coffee Cup Apple Wants "Most Compatibility In Industry" Kent State's Distributed Learning Program Internet For Life FCC HEARING FOCUSES ON INTERNET BOTTLENECKS The Federal Communications Commission met Thursday to discuss ways of easing congestion on the Internet by providing "a climate in which we can create the maximum incentives" for companies "to enable faster connections," said FCC Chairman Reed Hundt. Faster connections could be achieved by making advanced technologies such as ISDN, ADSL and cable links more available to residential customers. The telephone companies warn that increasing Internet usage could cause a breakdown in the public telephone network, but Internet companies contend that the congestion is attributable to growth in other communications services, not just the Internet. "If the commission awards large new fees to local telephone companies for access to the local networks, there will be a significant risk that the only winners will be the phone companies, while consumers and the entire Internet online industry will lose," says an America Online VP. (Tampa Tribune 24 Jan 97 B&F1) INTERNET COALITION SAYS, "WHAT GRIDLOCK?" The Internet Access Coalition has released a study that refutes telephone company claims that increased use of the Internet is jamming their lines. Rather, the increase in data traffic has produced just a few localized logjams, and has generated additional revenues for local exchange carriers that "far exceed" the costs of providing access. The study suggests that the main problem is the telephone companies' reliance on circuit switching equipment rather than packet switching gear for data transmission. Phone company officials dispute the findings: "The fact is Internet usage has grown more than 100% over the past 10 years, and is predicted to grow more than 700% by the year 2001. Someone has to pay for that usage, the subsequent wear and tear on the network, and the new equipment additions necessitated by this rapid growth," says the head of the U.S. Telephone Association. (BNA Daily Report for Executives 23 Jan 97 A25) DIGITAL LIBRARIES: THE FUTURE The vision of computers powerful enough to organize and index huge treasure troves of scientific literature using intelligent functions such as "vocabulary switching" -- classifying an article that mentions "Unix" under "operating systems" even if the words "operating systems" do not appear in the article -- is finally coming to fruition, 32 years after it was first outlined in J.C.R. Licklider's "Libraries of the Future" (1965). Large-scale simulations on the HP Convex Exemplar supercomputer at the National Center for Supercomputer Applications have resulted in generating concept spaces for 10 million journal abstracts across 1,000 subject areas covering all engineering and science disciplines -- the largest vocabulary switching computation ever achieved in information science. Future developments will require automatic indexing with scaleable semantics to coordinate searches among the one billion repositories likely in the next century. (Science 17 Jan 97 p327) DIGITAL LIBRARIES: THE PRESENT Kenneth E. Dowlin has been forced to resign his position after serving almost 10 years as head of the San Francisco Public Library, where he was a creative proponent of the use of information technology in the modern library. Critics charged that he favored technology over books. Peter Lyman, the University Librarian at the University of California at Berkeley, says in support of Mr. Dowlin: "It's so sad to be debating books versus computers, when the issues facing San Francisco are of literacy, of immigrant populations. The public library needs to be a place that helps children learn the basic skills of literacy, that helps immigrants become citizens. Ken was trying to create a sense of political community through technology, and the new library is in many ways successful on those grounds." (New York Times 26 Jan 97 p8) ================================================ COMPUTER IN A COFFEE CUP While a conventional computer stores its bits of information by assuming one of two possible states (a 1 or a 0), a quantum computer theoretically could store much more information by using all the potential states of an atom. Scientists are now proposing a new way to harness the power of quantum computing, using nuclear magnetic resonance devices to control the movement of millions of atoms within an evenly heated volume of material. By coordinating the nuclear spin of the particles, physicists could make them act collectively as qubits (quantum bits). A liquid with the right thermal properties (such as coffee, which is known for its unusually even heating characteristics) could hold up to 10 qubits, but scientists are still looking for ways to create a liquid computer that could hold up to 40 qubits -- perhaps out of "a really expensive cup of structured coffee," says a University of California, Santa Barbara researcher. (Science News 18 Jan 97 p37) APPLE WANTS "MOST COMPATIBILITY IN INDUSTRY" Apple CEO Gil Amelio concedes some "disappointments" in the past year and admits that "it has been tougher to turn Apple around than I had expected," but insists that within two or three years the company will "have the most compatible personal computer in the industry, able to run more software than anyone else -- period." Eleven days ago Amelio and top associates (Ellen Hancock and Steve Jobs) met with Microsoft CEO Bill Gates to discuss ways of cooperating, including the possibility of Apple licensing from Microsoft the Windows NT operating system for the corporate market. Amelio says: "We're not in the world by ourselves. We have to be able to support the commodity technology standard." In addition, a number of new Macintosh products are in the works, and next month will see the introduction of a new line of Powerbook notebook computers, which, at 200 megahertz, will run at faster speeds than most "Wintel" notebooks running on Windows software and Intel chips. (New York Times 26 Jan 97 p16) KENT STATE'S DISTRIBUTED LEARNING PROGRAM Kent State University's Distributed Learning Program is using LearnLinc, a PC-based distributed learning software environment developed by ILINC (Interactive Learning International Corp.). The software allows teachers to structure and control their distance learning courses, and also includes a LearnLinc Question & Answer component that allows professors to immediately assess student levels of course content knowledge by viewing their scores as they're quizzed online. An electronic hand raising feature lets the instructor or the students ask a question at any time. Instructors also control the students' screens at all sites. (Syllabus Jan 97) < http://www.ilinc.com >. An article related to this activity will appear in the March/April issue of Educom Review. INTERNET FOR LIFE Is California starting another new trend? Two small Internet service providers in San Jose are offering lifetime access to the Net for a one-time registration fee ($59.95 from TGGH Inc's "Bigger Net" or $29.95 from Hyper Net USA Inc.'s "Cyber FreeWay"). The companies plan to make money selling advertisements that will appear in a small window on the user's screen. Presumably the service could continue into the Afterlife at no extra charge providing the user remains amenable to looking at the ads. (Wall Street Journal 25 Jan 97 D2) TOP STORIES Informix Sues Oracle Over People Piracy Donkey Kong U. To Offer Degrees In Videogame Design FCC Rule Could Stymie Move To 56-Kbps IBM Teams With 3Com, Cascade On Networking Net Gains ALSO Microsoft Moving Up In Browser Battles Online Films AOL To Give Refunds To Customers Who Complain Amazon To Get Competition For Online Book-selling AT&T Reaches Out (Gently) Into Local Phone Business INFORMIX SUES ORACLE OVER PEOPLE PIRACY Informix Corp. filed a lawsuit in Portland, Ore., last week, charging that arch-rival Oracle Corp. "pirated away" 11 key engineering employees. The filings alleges that Oracle engaged in "a conspiracy to misappropriate Informix's intellectual property and gain an unfair advantage in the competitive market for database computer access systems." An Oracle senior VP called the charges "ludicrous" and says the defectors were hired only after they'd been rejected by Microsoft. He adds that the new employees were asked to purge their computers, cars and houses of any trade secrets before coming to work. "We have absolutely no interest in Informix's trade secrets or technology." (Wall Street Journal 27 Jan 97) DONKEY KONG U. TO OFFER DEGREES IN VIDEOGAME DESIGN The DigiPen Applied Computer Graphics School, nicknamed "Donkey Kong University" after the popular videogame, will open a four-year campus in Seattle next year, replacing the two-year program it's sponsored in Vancouver, B.C. for the last few years. DigiPen has already been approved as a nonprofit institution by the Washington State Higher Education Coordinating Board, and plans to admit the first class of 100 students, each paying $12,000 a year in tuition, next fall. The school says it's the first institution to offer a four-year degree in videogame design. Its only competitors are a few programs in Japan, all of which are two-year. (Chronicle of Higher Education 31 Jan 97) FCC RULE COULD STYMIE MOVE TO 56-KPBS An FCC rule that limits the amount of power that can be used to send data over a telephone line has makers of high-speed modems concerned that their new 56-Kpbs products won't perform as well as promised. The companies have petitioned the FCC to waive the rule, claiming it is based on out-of-date technologies, and a meeting is scheduled next month to discuss the matter. "You can still get 56-Kpbs even within the federal limits, but you'd get it more of the time without the rule," says a spokesman for Lucent Technologies' modem group. "It doesn't put a nail in the coffin of 56-Kpbs, it just means you won't get that speed so often." The FCC rule was made when telephone lines were almost exclusively analog, and was designed to prevent cross talk between cabled wire pairs in analog carrier systems. (InfoWorld Electric 24 Jan 97) IBM TEAMS WITH 3COM, CASCADE ON NETWORKING IBM is teaming up with networking companies 3Com and Cascade Communications to develop a new approach to IP switching that they say is five times faster than the current technologies being used. In the past year, numerous companies have called for using IP switching as a replacement for the routers that direct electronic messages to their proper destination. The problem is that no two companies have agreed on how the new IP switches would work -- IBM's pact with 3Com and Cascade is seen as a first step in that direction. (Wall Street Journal 27 Jan 97) NET GAINS A larger percentage of Japanese PC households are online compared to U.S. PC households (18% vs. 16%), says IDC/Link. But Western European PC households are the most willing to do business online, with more than a third saying they've used the Net to purchase goods and services (compared to 22% in the U.S. and 17% in Japan). (Investor's Business Daily 28 Jan 97) ================================================ MICROSOFT MOVING UP IN BROWSER BATTLES Microsoft is gaining ground in its war with Netscape over browser software penetration. In the business market, which numbers 30- to 34-million users, Netscape's share has dipped to 70%, down from 87% early last year, according to Zona Research Inc. And its share of the business server software is falling, too -- 75% last September, down from almost 100% the previous year. Netscape's strategy to reverse its fortunes is pinned on its new suite of Communicator software, which allows corporate workers to collaborate on documents and scheduling over company intranets. (Wall Street Journal 28 Jan 97) ONLINE FILMS The American Film Institute's OnLine Cinema debuted last week, presenting the 20-minute Charlie Chaplin comedy "The Rink" (1916) in its entirety, complete with musical score, over the Internet. The AFI uses VDOnet Corp.'s VDOLive "streaming" software to allow for instantaneous viewing. (Tampa Tribune 27 Jan 97) < http://www.afionline.org/cinema > AOL TO GIVE REFUNDS TO CUSTOMERS WHO COMPLAIN America Online will give refunds on a "case-by-case" basis to customers who complain about excessive busy signals caused by heavy subscriber activity that began after AOL recently introduced a flat-rate pricing plan. Refunds to customers who call the company may take the form of free online service instead of cash. (Washington Post 27 Jan 97) AMAZON TO GET COMPETITION FOR ONLINE BOOK-SELLING Amazon.com, Inc., which pioneered the business of using the Internet for book-selling, will soon face competition from online bookselling services being developed by traditional bookstore companies Barnes & Noble and the Borders Group Inc. The Barnes & Noble service will begin on AOL and will extend access to all Internet users in the Spring. The company will offer 30% discounts on the cover price of hardcover books, which is a steeper discount than its own stores offer. (Wall Street Journal 28 Jan 97) AT&T REACHES OUT (GENTLY) INTO LOCAL PHONE BUSINESS AT&T will soon offer local phone service to small- and medium-size business customers in California, but will use leased lines from Pacific Telesis rather than build its own local operation. In contrast, MCI has spent $1 billion to build network infrastructure in 18 cities around the country. (New York Times 28 Jan 97) TOP STORIES America (Trying To Get Back) Online Surfing For Porn, Paying In Phone Bills U.S. Says Indecent Material Will Ruin Educational Value Of Net Deloitte, Merchant Group To Deliver Secure E-Mail Documents Boeing's Jumbo Net FBI Cracks Down On Software Piracy ALSO Silicon Graphics To Make Software For Rival Machines E-Mail Forger Faces Jail Term Clinton Advisor Defends Encryption Plan Court Says University Can Restrict Internet Access Upside Looks Down On Wired's Downside AMERICA (TRYING TO GET BACK) ONLINE In an attempt "to do what it takes to fix the problems members are experiencing as a result of the extraordinary demand for AOL," caused by its energetically promoted flat-fee pricing plan, America Online CEO Steve Case says the company will give refunds in cash or time to customers who experienced difficulties connecting to AOL. The company has pledged to make various improvements in customer service, and to suspend advertising for new customers. AOL has been accused by some subscribers of fraudulently overselling their service beyond what it knew it was capable of accommodating. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 30 Jan 97) SURFING FOR PORN, PAYING IN PHONE BILLS A scam on the Internet has cost some Canadian victims up to $1,200 to download pornography from certain Web sites. In the scam, surfers are told that looking at nude pictures is free but that a "special image viewer" must be clicked on and downloaded to your computer. The viewer is actually a virus that disconnects your modem from the regular local Internet service provider and surreptitiously reconnects the call to a number in Moldavia, in the former Soviet Union, generating long-distance charges. Canadian federal police have ordered that all calls from Canada to the number in Moldavia not be connected. (Toronto Star 29 Jan 97) U.S. SAYS INDECENT MATERIAL WILL RUIN EDUCATIONAL VALUE OF NET A U.S. Justice Department legal brief filed with the Supreme Court last week cites the educational value of the Internet in its argument for banning "indecent" material: "Much of the Internet's potential as an educational and informational resource will be wasted," says the statement, "if people are unwilling to avail themselves of its benefits because they do not want their children harmed by exposure to patently offensive sexually explicit material." Therefore, it concluded the government has a "compelling interest in furthering the First Amendment interest of all Americans to use what has become an unparalleled educational resource... It is better to place some burdens and costs on those who disseminate patently offensive material through use of a new and rapidly changing technology than it is to leave children unprotected." A lawyer for the ACLU, which has challenged the law, called the government's argument "outrageous" and "oxymoronic." (Chronicle of Higher Education 31 Jan 97) DELOITTE, MERCHANT GROUP TO DELIVER SECURE E-MAIL DOCUMENTS Accounting firm Deloitte & Touche is teaming up with private merchant group Thurston Group to provide an electronic service called NetDox Inc., which will offer banks, insurance companies, law firms and others a means of transferring legal documents via a secure electronic system. NetDox will track the documents through delivery, will return a receipt to the sender, and will retain an electronic "thumbprint" of the document in case any questions regarding its authenticity or delivery time arise. The service should be operational by summer. (Wall Street Journal 30 Jan 97) BOEING'S JUMBO NET The Boeing Co. is known worldwide for its jumbo jets, but now its Boeing Internal Web is being held up as the best example of corporate intranet implementation in the country. "Boeing is the biggest corporate intranet," says a Netscape VP. "Boeing is one of the leading companies to see the benefits of standards-based computing and is ahead of the pack in truly leveraging that benefit." More than 50,000 employee workstations are wired to the system, and new users are being added at the rate of about 500 a week. The company's ultimate goal is to provide unrestricted access for up to 200,000 employees. The Internal Web is a conglomerate of 412 separate Web sites, some of them comprising as much as 17,000 pages. The sites are used for, among other things, group work on projects, eliminating the need to relocate some employees, and responsibility for site content is delegated downward, to the group or division responsible for that function. "They use a distributed management approach, and frankly that's the only way to do it," says the president of an information technology management consultancy group. "The issue is content. If you have IT people managing content they would do nothing else but manage phone lists, product descriptions and human resources information. The content has got to be delegated to the divisions, because that's where the accountability is." (Communications Week Interactive 24 Jan 97) FBI CRACKS DOWN ON SOFTWARE PIRACY Following an eight-month investigation, the FBI is mounting raids in seven states to nab software pirates who make illegally copied software available over electronic bulletin boards. In some cases the software was posted before it became commercially available. (Investor's Business Daily 29 Jan 97) ====================================== SILICON GRAPHICS TO MAKE SOFTWARE FOR RIVAL MACHINES Silicon Graphics, realizing that it must expand its horizons beyond the high-end workstation market, is adapting its 3-D Internet graphics software, Cosmo Worlds, to run on Intel-based PCs using Microsoft's Windows NT operating system. Silicon CEO Ed McCracken says the company also is looking "very seriously" at making a similar move with its special-effects software. The Cosmo Worlds software will be available on PCs by the end of the year. (Wall Street Journal 29 Jan 97) E-MAIL FORGER FACES JAIL TERM A former Oracle employee faces up to six years in prison for perjury, falsification of evidence, and breaking into a computer network, because she forged an e-mail message to support her charge that she was terminated from the company for breaking up a personal relationship with the company's chief executive. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 29 Jan 97) CLINTON ADVISOR DEFENDS ENCRYPTION PLAN The Clinton Administration's special envoy to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development told a computer security conference that the Administration's policy "in no way seeks to expand the powers of law enforcement nor reduce the privacy protections of individuals." The Clinton "key escrow" plans calls for creation of a de facto global communications standard in which the key algorithms needed for unscrambling messages would be placed "in escrow" with separate authorities. The president of the Information Technology Association of America, an industry trade group, says the plan "could have a detrimental effect on international trade and the world's ability to use the Internet for international commerce." (New York Times 29 Jan 97) COURT SAYS UNIVERSITY CAN RESTRICT INTERNET ACCESS A federal judge in Oklahoma has rejected a challenge made by a University of Oklahoma professor to the university's decision to restrict access to Internet news groups in order to protect itself against possible federal obscenity charges. The professor argued that the restriction violated his First Amendment right to free speech, but Judge Wayne E. Alley ruled against him, saying he had not demonstrated that he was "irreparably harmed" by the university's policy and had presented no evidence that anyone had ever tried to reach the news groups. (New York Times 29 Jan 97) UPSIDE'S LOOKS DOWN ON WIRED'S DOWNSIDE Upside and Wired, two magazines competing for a high-tech readership, seem to be stuck in a long-running feud. Responding to an Upside reporter's request for an interview with Wired cofounder Louis Rossetto, a Wired spokesman said that Rossetto "is in no mood to cooperate with Upside in any way. They've gone out of their way to trash us for no apparent reason." On Upside's Web site a columnist had characterized Wired Ventures' attempt at an initial public offering as a "mangy dog of a stock offering that deserved, if only for mercy's sake, to be taken out and shot," and in the current issue Upside says that, on a balance sheet basis, Wired Ventures should sell for about $6 million to $10 million -- "a far cry from the pie-in-the sky $447 million" the company claimed its value to be last May or "the nearly-as-silly $293 million it tried to get away with in the revised September offering." (Upside Feb 97)
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