TidBITS#878/07-May-07
=====================
  Issue link: <http://db.tidbits.com/issue/878>

  The personal blog of Steve Jobs - that would be Apple's Web site - 
  saw its second entry last week, an open letter about the company's 
  environmental practices that appears to be a response to a 
  Greenpeace campaign. Adam examines what Jobs wrote and the role that 
  PR spin can play when it comes to environmental protection. He also 
  contemplates audio-enhanced swim training with the SwimMan 
  waterproof iPod shuffle, and looks at an egregious case of patent 
  insanity whose solution might lie in the depths of Mac history. 
  Elsewhere in this issue, Glenn Fleishman sees a promising future in 
  connecting to public wireless hotspots thanks to Devicescape, and we 
  note the releases of QuickTime 7.1.6, AirPort Extreme Update 
  2007-003, and Security Update 2007-004 v1.1.

Articles
    QuickTime, AirPort, Security Updates Released
    SwimMan Waterproofs the iPod shuffle
    Steve Jobs Talks Green
    Devicescape Aims to Ease Wi-Fi Hot Spot Connection Pain
    Busting the Disc Link CD-ROM Patent
    Take Control News/07-May-07
    Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-May-07


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QuickTime, AirPort, Security Updates Released
---------------------------------------------
  by Jeff Carlson <jeffc@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8975>

  Responding to a security flaw discovered two weeks ago (see "Money 
  Meets Mouth on Mac Exploits," 2007-04-23), Apple has released 
  QuickTime 7.1.6 for Mac (43.6 MB) and Windows (19.1 MB), available 
  as stand-alone downloads or via Software Update. The update patches 
  a flaw in QuickTime for Java that could enable a maliciously crafted 
  Web page to gain access to a computer. QuickTime 7.1.6 also adds the 
  capability to display timecode and closed captioning in QuickTime 
  Player, adds support on the Mac for the upcoming Final Cut Studio 2, 
  and fixes unspecified bugs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8957>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime716formac.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/quicktime716forwindows.html>
<http://www.apple.com/finalcutstudio/>

  AirPort Extreme Update 2007-003 is a release for Intel-based Macs 
  that "includes compatibility updates for certain third-party access 
  points configured to use WPA or WPA2 security." It's a 3 MB 
  download, and is also available via Software Update.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/airportextremeupdate2007003.html>

  Apple also released Security Update 2007-004 v1.1 for Intel-based 
  Macs (15.7 MB), PowerPC-based Macs (9.1 MB) and Macs running Mac OS 
  X 10.3.9 (36.7 MB). According to Apple, this update includes the 
  contents of Security Update 2007-004, which arrived a couple of 
  weeks ago (see "Security Update 2007-004 Released," 2007-04-23), but 
  also delivers two specific fixes. An AirPort update corrects a 
  glitch under Mac OS X 10.3.9 that appeared with the last security 
  update, and an FTPServer update fixes problems with FTP under Mac OS 
  X Server 10.4.9.

<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007004v11universal.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007004v11ppc.html>
<http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/securityupdate2007004v111039client.html>
<http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305445>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8958>


SwimMan Waterproofs the iPod shuffle
------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8977>

  Although I run regularly and enjoy splashing around in our pond, I'm 
  a thoroughly mediocre swimmer. The summer after my freshman year of 
  Cornell, when I was 18, I did lap swimming several times a week with 
  a friend who worked with my mother. At 36, Anne was twice as old as 
  I was, and having been the Alaska state backstroke champion, she was 
  also twice as fast. She could swim a mile in 30 minutes at lunch 
  while I flailed hard to cover half that distance.

  I've never done lap swimming since, because you can't have 
  conversations with friends while doing it, and also because looking 
  at the bottom of a blue pool for 30 minutes while trying not to 
  inhale chlorinated water simply doesn't give me a rush like running 
  through wooded trails. But I'm contemplating a triathlon next year, 
  when I turn 40, so some lap training in the pond might be in order, 
  and an iPod could help while away the repetitive back-and-forth 
  time. I haven't tried this yet, since the pond is still good only 
  for cryotherapy. 

<http://www.tidbits.com/resources/2007-05/Adam-in-cryo.jpg>

  "But but but," you sputter, "you can't swim with an iPod!" Ah, but 
  it turns out you can, thanks to a company called SwimMan, which 
  sells waterproofed second-generation iPod shuffles ($150) and 
  waterproof headsets ($100), separately or in a bundle ($250). If you 
  already own a second-generation iPod shuffle, you can send it to 
  SwimMan and have it waterproofed for $75. SwimMan claims that a 
  waterproofed iPod shuffle looks and works exactly like a normal one, 
  but since the waterproofing is entirely on the inside of the case, 
  the On/Off button and the Shuffle button will be rendered 
  inoperative, and the other buttons will be a bit stiffer. The 
  company says you can replicate the function of the on/off button by 
  pressing the center button for On and disconnecting the headphones 
  for Off; the Shuffle button's functionality can reportedly be 
  controlled from iTunes when the iPod is connected to your computer.

<http://www.swimman.com/main.html>


Steve Jobs Talks Green
----------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8974>

  Steve Jobs has done it again, posting an open letter on the Apple 
  Web site. The previous "Thoughts on Music" letter generated much 
  discussion and coverage of Apple (see "Steve Jobs Blasts DRM," 
  2007-02-12), and foreshadowed the Apple/EMI deal to drop DRM that 
  followed shortly afterwards (which we covered in "Apple and EMI 
  Offer DRM-Free Music via iTunes," 2007-04-02).

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughtsonmusic/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8856>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8937>

  In "A Greener Apple," Jobs turns his attention to the criticism that 
  Apple has received from environmental groups - most notably 
  Greenpeace - regarding Apple's manufacturing and recycling 
  practices. In it, he runs down what Apple is doing to reduce or 
  eliminate toxic chemicals from the manufacturing process and then 
  explains Apple's recycling programs. In a departure from the norm, 
  he also discusses Apple's goals for the future with regard to 
  further reductions in toxic manufacturing chemicals and increased 
  recycling efforts.

<http://www.apple.com/hotnews/agreenerapple/>

  Greenpeace's Green Electronics Guide and accompanying Green My Apple 
  campaign have garnered a great deal of media attention, and the 
  organization's sometimes-confrontational tactics at Macintosh 
  conferences has been a source of, well, more media coverage. 
  Although Greenpeace may have other data, my impression from talking 
  with Mac users is that Greenpeace's tactics have generally worked 
  more to polarize than to persuade, with diehard environmental 
  activists becoming all the more vocal about Apple's ills and 
  longtime Mac users rising to defend the company (as they've become 
  accustomed to doing in response to criticism from PC users for so 
  many years).

<http://www.greenpeace.org/international/campaigns/toxics/electronics/how-the-companies-line-up>
<http://www.greenpeace.org/apple/>
<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/996/>

  Adding confusion to the situation is the fact that neither 
  Greenpeace nor Apple is necessarily motivated by the most noble of 
  principles, despite what both say. And oddly, much of Greenpeace's 
  complaint and Apple's response revolve not so much around what is 
  being done in the here and now, but what will or should be done. Put 
  another way, it's largely a war of words, of plans, and of policies.


**Orthogonal Motivations** -- An entirely rational outside observer 
  might say that Greenpeace is acting in line with traditional 
  environmental principles in its attempts to reduce toxic chemical 
  usage and encourage increased recycling. I don't think anyone 
  questions that Greenpeace does have that as the overall goal. But it 
  also feels as though Greenpeace is targeting Apple not because Apple 
  is necessarily worse than other, much larger companies, but because 
  anything surrounding Apple generates media attention and 
  controversy, and that attention is good for Greenpeace's ultimate 
  goal. Therein, I think, lies the reason why many Mac users have 
  reacted so defensively to Greenpeace's attacks; it seems as though 
  Greenpeace is specifically targeting Apple for other-than-stated 
  reasons.

  Apple isn't entirely free of culpability here either. As much as 
  Apple fans sometimes lose track of this fact, Apple is a public 
  company, and a big one at that. Above all else, Apple's loyalties 
  lie with serving its shareholders by improving the bottom line. 
  There's no question that many of the individuals who make up the 
  company believe strongly in the goals of the environmental movement, 
  but Apple as a company will always put the health of the company 
  before the health of the environment.

  That doesn't mean that Apple as a company gives no thought to the 
  environmental impact of its actions, nor does it mean that Apple 
  will always take the cheapest approach, regardless of impact. That's 
  because Apple, much more so than companies like HP or Dell, lives 
  and dies by its public image. Buying an iPod, and even a Mac these 
  days, is considered cool, and any tarnish on Apple's highly polished 
  brand could drastically hurt the company's fortunes. Thus, Apple 
  must play a balancing act between trying to produce goods as cheaply 
  as possible to bolster the bottom line and spending more to protect 
  the environment and the company's reputation.


**He Said/She Said** -- When you read Greenpeace's rating of Apple, 
  the latest version of which predates Jobs's letter, the most 
  striking aspect is how many of the scores are based not on any 
  quantitative measurement, much less on one that would be verifiable 
  by an independent auditor, but on what the company has said it will 
  do. Greenpeace was concerned that Apple hadn't previously given a 
  timeline for the elimination of brominated flame retardants and 
  polyvinyl chloride, that Apple's published definition of the 
  Precautionary Principle didn't meet Greenpeace's standards, that 
  Apple hasn't described its approach to "Individual Producer 
  Responsibility" sufficiently explicitly, and so on.

  What I find troubling about this approach is that, speaking as a 
  writer, words are cheap. A company can say anything it wants. 
  Realistically, how many people will notice if, several years down 
  the road, those promises don't come to pass? Heck, we (at least the 
  cynical or realistic among us) assume that many promises made by 
  politicians during their campaigns will never be fulfilled. 
  Greenpeace itself might notice, assuming this thrust to reduce 
  pollution from the electronics industry continues for the next few 
  years. To continue down the cynical track, a clever company could 
  essentially play with its public statements to spin the situation in 
  its favor. Or, worse, the company could simply lie, saying it was 
  meeting certain standards without actually doing so. In today's 
  Internet, keeping that lie going might be harder than in the past, 
  but there are certainly plenty of instances of companies sweeping 
  inconvenient facts under the rug.

  I am by no means accusing Apple of having done this in the past, nor 
  am I suspecting that Apple will do so in the future. In general, I 
  tend to believe that Apple is a pretty good corporate citizen, 
  despite the company's now-famous level of secrecy. But such 
  corporate slipperiness has happened before at other companies and 
  certainly could happen again, and I worry that even Greenpeace's 
  well-meaning scorecard could be subverted in this way. Perhaps the 
  situation is simply too complicated, but I'd prefer to see an 
  approach that would provide quantitative rankings that could be 
  objectively and independently verified.

  In the meantime, though, I'm pleased to see Apple deviating from 
  tradition and being more forthcoming about the company's current 
  reality and future plans regarding manufacturing and recycling 
  practices. Particularly interesting will be Greenpeace's next 
  scorecard. Apple is currently dead last, with only 2.7 points out of 
  10, although the main page for the Green My Apple campaign now 
  features an interactive Flash animation that, when you mouse over 
  the appropriate spot, claims a "preliminary calculation" of 5 
  points. (The fact that a public letter on a Web site could change a 
  company's environmental ranking in a significant way supports my 
  claim that it's all about rhetoric.) The main criticism Greenpeace 
  has made in the wake of Jobs's letter is that Apple's recycling 
  program operates only in the United States. However, Jobs claims 
  that it operates in countries that account for more than 82 percent 
  of all Macs and iPods sold.

<http://www.greenpeace.org/usa/news/tastygreenapple>

  Let me leave you with what I felt were the two most interesting 
  details in Jobs's letter. First, for the Apple product watchers, he 
  said that Apple plans to introduce the first Macs with LED-backlit 
  displays in 2007, and the speculation is already rampant as to which 
  product will include such a display first. From the usability 
  standpoint, of course, it's mostly a detail; I don't care much about 
  how my LCD screen is backlit, just that it is, although if switching 
  to LED-based backlighting results in reduced power consumption and 
  increased battery life on laptops, I'm all for it. Second, while the 
  entire letter is a textbook exercise in controlling the PR message, 
  there's an unusual sentence at the end, something you won't often 
  hear from Apple: "We apologize for leaving you in the dark for this 
  long."


Devicescape Aims to Ease Wi-Fi Hot Spot Connection Pain
-------------------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8931>

  I tire of hitting gateway pages at Wi-Fi hot spots that ask me to 
  enter account information I've already set up. Shouldn't there be a 
  simpler way than what feels like a 1995 interface - you know, maybe 
  some software that makes the connection easier? Devicescape has my 
  number: Their eponymous Devicescape software and ecosystem lets your 
  Mac connect with less tedium to Wi-Fi networks at which you have 
  accounts. But there's a lot more to their approach.

<http://www.devicescape.com/>
<http://www.devicescape.com/download/>

  Boingo Wireless has long offered a software client for Wi-Fi network 
  connection, although it came to Mac OS X several years after its 
  introduction for Windows. Boingo aggregates many different hot spot 
  networks worldwide and repackages 60,000 combined locations for a 
  uniform per-session price (usually $8) or a flat monthly rate of $22 
  for unlimited access at North American locations and negotiated 
  metered access in most of the rest of the world. Their client 
  software recognizes Boingo partners and connects you with a single 
  menu selection or automatically. (Boingo doesn't yet support Macs 
  with Intel Core 2 Duo processors.)

<http://boingo.com/>
<http://boingo.com/download_mac.html>

  Devicescape has thrown out a rather larger net that aims to catch 
  every possible piece of electronics that might want to make a Wi-Fi 
  network connection. (Don't count Boingo out, however; more on that 
  in a moment.) 


**Browser-less Devices, Frustration-free Connections** -- Devicescape 
  wants to make it simple for mobile devices to hop onto Wi-Fi 
  networks without that tedious entry of user name and password, made 
  even more tedious by the lack of an interface or a Web browser on 
  most handheld devices. Devicescape sees a world full of 
  Wi-Fi-enabled phones, cameras, game consoles, PDAs, and other 
  devices that don't even exist yet, and a world of frustration in 
  connecting.

  I share this frustration. I've tried some early Wi-Fi phones and 
  music devices, and the pain in entering WPA network keys or logging 
  onto hot spot networks - especially open networks that require a 
  click-through on a Web page to agree to the terms of service - show 
  me that there's no way average users will make it past the first 
  steps.

  Connecting to a public Wi-Fi hot spot almost always involves a 
  gateway page that intercepts your attempt to reach the Internet via 
  a Web browser. Until you go through the gateway page in your Web 
  browser, no other application can access the Internet. That gateway 
  page is a login screen to which your browser is redirected and on 
  which you enter account information, if you have it, or payment 
  details if a fee is required, or sometimes just agreement to terms 
  of service. If you don't have a Web browser embedded in the device 
  you're using, you can't get to the login page; if you have a 
  browser, and you're using a mobile device, it might be cumbersome to 
  navigate and enter appropriate details.

  Devicescape's software and system go even further than just getting 
  rid of hassle. The idea of one person, one account seems antiquated 
  to them, when you might wind up with (or may already be carrying) 
  several devices of varying sorts that each might need unique network 
  access. In that device-centric approach, you might have a single 
  overarching account with a network, and then a profile that lists 
  all your associated devices under that account. Why would anyone pay 
  $20 to $40 per month per device for unlimited Wi-Fi on for-fee 
  networks? That adds up fast. In the Devicescape model, you might pay 
  a small amount per month for each device or its usage, making 
  networks affordable to use, while still profitable for the hot spot 
  or network operators. (A not-so-big secret in the services world is 
  that managing accounts, presenting bills to users, and collecting 
  payment costs as much as $10 to $20 per month; additional services 
  added to existing accounts are gravy beyond the overhead of the 
  service itself.)

  In Devicescape's outlook, you store all your authentication 
  information, such as a user name and password or other tokens that a 
  network might employ, on an account that you maintain via their Web 
  site. You then use devices that have Devicescape software embedded. 
  You pair these devices with your account in some simple manner, and 
  then, when you roam, these devices communicate with Devicescape's 
  servers through a secured means to retrieve your account information 
  and log your device onto a hot spot network.


**Embedding the Software** -- There are a lot of stumbling blocks for 
  Devicescape, which makes it all the more impressive how they have 
  wired together their beta test so that it works.

  The first stumbling block is getting software on so-called embedded 
  operating system (OS) platforms. An embedded OS is what powers a 
  piece of electronics that's not designed to be a general-purpose 
  computer. Typically, it's a stripped-down or optimized version or 
  offshoot of a larger OS, like Windows Mobile/Pocket PC or Linux - or 
  an OS designed from the ground up, like those from VxWorks. 

<http://www.microsoft.com/windowsmobile/pocketpc/>
<http://www.linuxdevices.com/>
<http://www.windriver.com/vxworks/>

  Devices that used embedded platforms are often closed to additional 
  software, even if the platform they use supports third-party 
  development. These closed devices require close cooperation with the 
  maker of a device if you want to get your software into their 
  product. Apple's iPhone leaps to mind. The iPhone isn't unusual in 
  the larger device world, but it is strange in the smartphone 
  segment, in which the major platforms like Symbian, Windows Mobile, 
  and Palm OS allow arbitrary third-party-developed software to be 
  installed by end users.

<http://www.apple.com/iphone/>
<http://www.symbian.com/symbianos/>
<http://www.palm.com/>

  It's the true gadgets that are hard nuts to crack. Devicescape has a 
  proof-of-concept package with the Linksys WIP300 Wireless-G IP 
  Phone, an expensive wireless IP phone designed for 
  metropolitan-scale Wi-Fi network service providers to resell. This 
  is the only closed mobile device for which Devicescape currently 
  provides embedded software. To make real inroads in this market, 
  Devicescape will have to form partnerships with companies like 
  Nintendo, Kodak, and Nokia to get the Devicescape software 
  pre-installed. 

<http://www.linksys.com/servlet/Satellite?c=L_Product_C2&childpagename=US%2FLayout&cid=1139845857386&packedargs=site%3DUS&pagename=Linksys%2FCommon%2FVisitorWrapper>

  In these early stages, Devicescape's software works on a handful of 
  handheld devices, including Windows Mobile 5 smartphones and some 
  Nokia tablets. They've also released software for computer operating 
  systems, adding Mac OS X and Windows Vista support to existing 
  Windows XP releases.

<http://www.devicescape.com/learnmore/devices.php>

  Smartphone users are a great audience, because they will be able to 
  install Devicescape's software directly, but smartphone users may 
  also be bound to existing Wi-Fi networks run by their cellular 
  providers through bundled deals, like T-Mobile HotSpot or AT&T 
  Wi-Fi.

<http://hotspot.t-mobile.com/>
<http://www.att.com/gen/general?pid=5949>


**Sneaking onto the Network** -- The next nut to crack is the hot spot 
  networks. Devicescape currently supports or is testing support for 
  accounts that you may already have on a large array of major 
  networks, including the two just mentioned, the grassroots network 
  Fon, the major U.S. operator Wayport, the UK giant The Cloud, and 
  several others.

<http://www.devicescape.com/learnmore/services.php>

  Devicescape makes an interesting end run around the fact that they 
  don't have formal partnerships with these networks. When I was first 
  briefed by the company in December 2006, I asked, "If you don't have 
  a relationship with a network, how do you get the software on your 
  device to communicate over the Internet with your servers to 
  retrieve the authentication information that logs that user's device 
  in?"

  They hemmed and hawed, but I figured out what their trick was, and 
  they confirmed it; it's not illegitimate, just clever. They use DNS, 
  the method by which any Internet-connected computer turns 
  human-readable domain names into IP addresses. Hot spot networks 
  block nearly all Internet traffic, but they do pass DNS queries to 
  decentralized DNS servers, and thus Devicescape can pass small 
  amounts of encrypted data back as a response from the DNS server. 
  (At least two software packages exist that let you tunnel traffic 
  via DNS queries to bypass this approach to access control!)

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domain_name_system>
<http://thomer.com/howtos/nstx.html>


**Many Networks, How Many Accounts?** The final issue is the 
  heterogeneity of hot spot networks, something Devicescape can't 
  control. There are now hundreds of thousands of Wi-Fi hot spots in 
  the world, a good majority available on a for-fee basis. To use any 
  arbitrary hot spot, you typically have to pay a walk-up rate or be a 
  subscriber, paying recurring monthly fees that often come with a 
  term commitment. Free hot spots have lower or no bars to usage; the 
  highest bar might be viewing an advertisement or clicking on a usage 
  agreement to gain access - something often difficult or impossible 
  on a mobile device.

  This melange of networks means that users can't always predict where 
  they will have access, nor what it might cost. Devicescape has the 
  notion that by centralizing your account information on their 
  servers they could aggregate access to networks and sell you 
  discounted access without you re-entering credit card information at 
  the network venue - the transaction would happen between their 
  servers (where you'd stored payment information) and the hot spot 
  network, reducing friction in gaining access in a strange location. 

  One scenario: You're on vacation and want to upload photos from your 
  Wi-Fi capable camera. You fire up the camera, which has Devicescape 
  software installed, use arrows and a select button to choose "Find a 
  network," and then select "Pay $3 for 24 hours access" to use the 
  network. Easy as pie, perhaps.

  Another is the "obscene calling rate" problem: Your plane lands in 
  London, and you find you have a five-hour layover. Making a call 
  with your cell phone would cost $2.35 per minute or something 
  equally insane. But with Skype and a Wi-Fi-enabled handheld, it's 
  just $0.02 per minute. You bring up the Devicescape software on the 
  handheld, accept an 8 euro charge - seemingly cheap compared to the 
  metered phone rates - and Bob's your uncle. Rather, Bob's on the 
  other end of the line, hearing you clearly.


**Devicescape and the Competitive Landscape** -- Devicescape will face 
  competition, of course. Boingo has already entered the fray with 
  their Boingo Mobile option, a new direction for the company that 
  offers voice over IP (VoIP) access with Wi-Fi IP phones over their 
  worldwide aggregated network for $8 per month. Where Boingo's laptop 
  access runs $22 per month for unlimited service in North America, 
  most locations elsewhere in the world charge a metered rate for 
  access by computer. The Boingo Mobile plan, by contrast, includes 
  all voice usage in every supported location for that one $8 per 
  month rate. (Not all Boingo laptop locations are included in their 
  mobile plan yet, but they're working on it.)

<http://mobile.boingo.com/>

  Skype has worked with many handset makers to embed their software in 
  Wi-Fi and cordless IP phones, and they also work with Boingo. I've 
  tested an early phone from Belkin that combines Skype calling with 
  Boingo service. You pay $200 for the phone and $8 per month for 
  unlimited Boingo calling. (Skype charges nothing for intra-network 
  calls, $30 per year for unlimited calls to numbers in the United 
  States and Canada, and $38 per year for unlimited incoming calls to 
  a "real" phone number; this includes voicemail.)

<http://www.belkin.com/skype/howitworks/>
<http://www.skype.com/products/skypeout/>
<http://www.skype.com/products/skypein/>

  The ultimate result of Devicescape's approach and the simultaneous 
  emergence of cooperating partners and competing firms will be that 
  it should become ever easier for these new devices with their fancy 
  high-speed wireless adapters to, you know, actually do something.

  I can't tell you the frustration I experienced when I read that 
  Microsoft's Zune had Wi-Fi - but couldn't connect to Wi-Fi networks, 
  download music over Wi-Fi, or even synchronize over Wi-Fi (see "Zune 
  Doom," 2006-11-13). Apple is poised to force on us the same 
  limitations for music (not Web browsing or email) and syncing with 
  the iPhone (see "iQuestion the iPhone," 2007-01-22). Devicescape 
  wants to make sure that those crimes against technology don't become 
  the norm.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8750>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/8822>


Busting the Disc Link CD-ROM Patent
-----------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8976>

  As the last president of the now-extinct Info-Mac Network, I have 
  several times in the last few years received requests from lawyers 
  or their staffs for certain CD-ROMs, originally produced by a 
  company called Pacific HiTech, containing snapshot copies of the 
  Info-Mac Archive at various points in its history. (There were eight 
  of these CD-ROMs, the first created in August 1992, the last in May 
  1996; TidBITS noted the first in "Internet CD-ROMs" 1992-10-19, and 
  published a fairly extensive and historically quite interesting 
  review of the second one in "Info-Mac CD-ROM II: The Monster 
  Archive," 1993-07-05.) I don't have any of those CD-ROMs, but 
  TidBITS Contributing Editor Matt Neuburg, an inveterate collector, 
  has the complete set, and he has on several occasions provided the 
  lawyers a copy of a particular CD in which they were especially 
  interested, namely Info-Mac CD-ROM III, from January 1994.

<http://db.tidbits.com/article/2872>
<http://db.tidbits.com/article/2516>

  We have of course been curious about why these lawyers wanted this 
  CD. We knew it had something to do with the presence of hyperlinks 
  in documents on the CD; those hyperlinks are there because the CD 
  contains, among other things, the ReadMe for Chuck Shotton's Web 
  server MacHTTP, which itself is an HTML document, as well as some 
  issues of the Trincoll Journal, a Web-based magazine. These 
  documents date from the very beginnings of the Web (HTML itself was 
  invented about 1990, and the earliest Web browsers, such as NCSA 
  Mosaic, were released in 1993), and thus this particular CD is one 
  of the earliest known to contain a hyperlinked document. But the 
  lawyers have always been circumspect about the exact details, merely 
  saying that they wanted the CD in order to defend against a spurious 
  patent, and never identifying the client or acknowledging that a 
  lawsuit had been filed. Attorney-client privilege and all that.

  Thanks to a recent Information Week article, we've finally learned 
  what's going on. A patent infringement lawsuit was filed in April 
  against a number of companies, including Avid Technology, Borland, 
  Corel, Eastman Kodak, EMC, Novell, Oracle, and SAP, among others, by 
  a company called Disc Link. 

<http://www.informationweek.com/internet/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=199100199>
<http://dockets.justia.com/docket/court-txedce/case_no-5:2007cv00058/case_id-102385/>

  The lawsuit claims that these companies are infringing U.S. patent 
  6,314,574, which describes an "information distribution system." The 
  description is in nearly incomprehensible legalese - here's the 
  abstract:

  "An information distribution system encodes a first set of digital 
  data on a plurality of portable read-only storage devices. 
  Additional information is stored in a database that is accessible by 
  using a bi-directional channel. The first set of digital data 
  contains a plurality of special displayable terms, a first 
  non-displayable symbol, a plurality of linkage references, and a 
  second non-displayable symbol. A user can select at least one 
  special displayable term. The linking reference associated with the 
  selected special displayable term is sent to the database via the 
  bi-directional channel. The database uses the linking reference to 
  search for information, and returns the resulting information to the 
  user."

  If you're a masochist with time on your hands, you can read the rest 
  yourself at FreePatentsOnline. The translation would seem to be that 
  the patent describes the use of hyperlinks to network-based 
  resources from files or programs distributed on CD-ROM. Oddly, when 
  you get down to the diagrams and the part of the patent that 
  resembles English, the examples involve a satellite-based system for 
  distributing newspaper content.

<http://www.freepatentsonline.com/6314574.html>


**Making Connections** -- Disc Link turns out to be a subsidiary of 
  Acacia Research, a company that buys up existing patents in order to 
  make money licensing the technology. According to critics of the 
  company, Acacia Research has developed a reputation as a "patent 
  troll," meaning that their approach to licensing revolves around 
  suing companies who will agree to a licensing deal instead of 
  suffering through a long and expensive court battle.

<http://www.acaciaresearch.com/>
<http://www.eff.org/patent/wanted/patent.php?p=acacia>

  The inventor listed in the patent is a Dr. Hark Chan, an engineer 
  and lawyer who has been granted a number of information technology 
  patents, at least some of which have been purchased by Acacia 
  Research. One of those patents - possibly this very same one - was 
  used in a 2003 case surrounding updating a CD-ROM-based database 
  over the Web. But Dr. Chan isn't just an engineer who has sold 
  patents to Acacia Research; according to the Web site of a company 
  called TechSearch, he's a member of their Board of Advisers. And 
  although TechSearch describes itself as "a private company primarily 
  engaged in the business of purchasing, owning and 
  licensing/enforcing patents," if you click the Homepage link on the 
  TechSearch Web site, you go to... Acacia Research's Web site. It 
  would seem that both Disc Link and TechSearch are essentially fronts 
  for Acacia.

<http://www.techsearch-llc.com/board/chan.html>
<http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/200311/msg00020.html>

  This isn't even the first suit Disc Link has filed in relation to 
  this patent. Back in December 2006, Disc Link sued Adobe, H&R Block, 
  McAfee, Sage Software, and others for infringement of the same 
  patent. Both Sage Software and McAfee settled with Disc Link in 
  favor of contesting the patent in court, but other defendants are 
  fighting the patent. An Ars Technica article quotes H&R Block as 
  saying that Disc Link "sought to construe the '574 patent in an 
  overbroad and impermissible way to cause an anti-competitive effect" 
  and that Disc Link "knew of the invalidity and/or unenforceability 
  of the patent-at-issue when this suit was filed." 

<http://dockets.justia.com/docket/court-txedce/case_no-5:2006cv00295/case_id-100564/>
<http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070418-acacia-claims-patent-on-cd-hyperlinks-sues-for-billions.html>


**Putting the Pieces Together** -- So all becomes clear. Although this 
  patent was filed in November 1998, it's a "continuation" of earlier 
  filings that date back to April 1993; it will be up to the court to 
  determine how those earlier filings affect the issue of prior art. 
  The Info-Mac CD-ROMs are some of the earliest CD-ROMs that were 
  widely distributed, and they contain software from the online 
  Info-Mac Archive, some of which may have had programmatic or 
  documentation links to the Internet. Clearly, the hope is that the 
  Info-Mac CD-ROMs constitute prior art.

  One potential problem is the software developers who submitted their 
  work to Info-Mac intended it to be made available at the Info-Mac 
  FTP site, and only contingently on the Info-Mac CD-ROMs produced by 
  Pacific HiTech. However, developers were certainly aware that the 
  Info-Mac CD-ROMs were being produced, because Pacific HiTech went to 
  the trouble of contacting all authors of Info-Mac materials, 
  explicitly requesting redistribution permission for each CD. Thus, 
  it is possible that intent to put such Web-linked documentation on 
  the CD-ROM could be proven.

  We've finally touched base with a lawyer involved in the case, and 
  after discussions with him, it appears that there may be three ways 
  in which this spurious patent can be attacked with prior art, 
  relating to the three basic aspects of the patent: CD-ROMs, 
  hyperlinks, and a network.

* Finding a CD-ROM from that time period that provides hyperlinks to a 
  networked resource is proving a bit difficult, in part because it 
  was nearly 15 years ago, and CD-ROMs weren't all that common back 
  then. But is a CD-ROM necessary? What, conceptually speaking, is the 
  difference between a CD-ROM and a read-only floppy disk? Those were 
  common back in the early 1990s, and finding one with hyperlinks on 
  it might be significantly easier.

* The question of what is meant by a hyperlink would also seem 
  relevant. There were plenty of network-based games in those days, 
  and tons of network-enabled databases. Would a FileMaker database 
  that could communicate with a server over a network constitute prior 
  art? What about the FTP bookmarks that shipped with the earliest FTP 
  programs like Fetch from Jim Matthews and, even earlier, the 
  Hypercard-based HyperFTP that was written by Cornell's Doug Hornig?

* Similarly, what counts as a networked resource? Early online 
  services like CompuServe and AppleLink had graphical front ends that 
  ran on personal computers and provided links to resources available 
  only online. Apple even had a bug reporting program of some sort 
  that integrated with AppleLink, and Apple Developer Relations 
  shipped CDs to all Apple developers regularly during this time.

  If you'd like to participate in invalidating this patent with prior 
  art, the holy grail is a CD-ROM that was distributed before April 
  1993 containing an application with links to the Internet or another 
  network. The links should consist of a visible portion (like the 
  text of a link in HTML or a menu item) and an invisible portion 
  (such as the hidden HREF tag in HTML, or the underlying code for a 
  Go to Web Site menu item in a program). Apparently, it's somewhat 
  better if the application is meant to be copied to the hard disk 
  instead of being run from the CD. If you have such a beast, let me 
  know and I'll make the appropriate introductions. 

  There is one other possible defense. In a very recent Supreme Court 
  ruling in another case the Court said, "Granting patent protection 
  to advances that would occur in the ordinary course without real 
  innovation retards progress and may, for patents combining 
  previously known elements, deprive prior inventions of their value 
  or utility." That's a significant point, since many of today's 
  software and business model patents feel wrong because they 
  encapsulate ideas that were in wide dissemination. Disc Link's claim 
  that it "invented" the concept of hyperlinks on CD-ROM certainly 
  doesn't deserve any protection as a unique invention - it's merely a 
  lumping together of commonplace ideas and technologies of the time. 
  Heck, thanks to my status as the author of "Internet Starter Kit for 
  Macintosh" around that time, I once made a presentation to the 
  publishers of all the Macmillan imprints proposing a CD-ROM-based 
  visual interface to the most interesting Internet resources.

<http://www.supremecourtus.gov/opinions/06pdf/04-1350.pdf>

  No matter what, it will be fascinating to follow this court case as 
  all parties attempt to pull meaning from the nearly incomprehensible 
  patent and the claims made by Disc Link.


Take Control News/07-May-07
---------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8979>

**Learn Smart Ways to Buy Cheap Airline Tickets** -- If you're like 
  us, nearly every airplane trip involves hours spent searching the 
  Web to find a good deal, only to end up paying more than you wanted 
  or feeling that the money you saved wasn't worth the time and 
  aggravation. To avoid this problem next time, check out the updated 
  version of Sam Sellers's "Take Control of Booking a Cheap Airline 
  Ticket," a 148-page ebook that helps you efficiently navigate the 
  maze of travel-related sites in order to find the best deal without 
  wasting a lot of time.

<http://www.takecontrolbooks.com/airline-ticket.html?14@@!pt=TRK-0039-TB878-TCNEWS>

  We just released version 1.1 of the ebook, which now includes 
  detailed information on when and how to use Farecast to book U.S. 
  domestic flights. Farecast, though still in beta, was rated by 
  Popular Science as being among the best of what's new in 2006, and 
  the site received similar accolades from Frommers.com, PC World, 
  Time Magazine, and Business Week. The ebook covers international and 
  domestic flights originating in the United States.

  Updates are free for current owners of the ebook; click the Check 
  for Updates button on the first page of the ebook to access the free 
  update.


Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/07-May-07
------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://db.tidbits.com/article/8978>

**Improving Services** -- Want to de-clutter your Services menu? 
  Service Scrubber will do the job for you. Have other ideas for how 
  Services could be improved? Post them here. (1 message)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1264/>


**Unable to empty trash** -- A reader who purchased a used Mac can't 
  get the Trash to empty, leading to suggestions for solving the 
  problem and other instances of files that refuse to go gently into 
  that good bin. (9 messages) 

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1266/>


**Step on a WEP Crack, Break Your Network** -- Troubles activating WPA 
  on an old AirPort Base Station branch off into questions of wireless 
  security and the risks involved in running an open network. (19 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1267/>


**Stock Options at Apple** -- The SEC's investigation into Apple's 
  stock option backdating could be construed as clearing Steve Jobs, 
  but that isn't necessarily the last word. (2 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1268/>


**Address Book/.Mac --> Outlook?** Is there an easy solution for 
  transferring contact data from the Mac's Address Book to Outlook? It 
  turns out Entourage can help. (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1269/>


**iMac 24" as a display?** When the time comes to replace a reader's 
  24-inch iMac, can its beautiful display be used as an external 
  monitor? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1270/>


**Flash player install problems** -- Can logging in as root solve an 
  installation problem, or is that just opening up a different box of 
  problems? (6 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1271/>


**Moving Apple Mail Folder** -- A reader's Mac still thinks the Mail 
  folder is in the same place after a move, so how do you point it in 
  the right direction? (3 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1272/>


**APPLE-SA-2007-05-01 QuickTime 7.1.6** -- The latest QuickTime update 
  reveals an installation bug in Windows - dating back to Windows 95. 
  (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1273/>


**Jobs posts about Apple's "green" credentials** -- Readers react to 
  last week's open letter from Steve Jobs, including discussions of 
  computer equipment recycling and LED-based lighting systems. (15 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1275/>


**Quicken 2004 "Sunsets"** -- As of 30-Apr-07, Quicken 2004 apparently 
  won't perform online transactions, a limitation built into the 
  software. Is it a reasonable step to focus support on recent 
  software, an annoying way to force upgrades, or both? (5 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1277/>


**Filtering in Eudora based on Mac OS X Address Book Group** -- The 
  latest version of Eudora can work with addresses from Address Book, 
  but a reader is having trouble using the group features. (3 
  messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1278/>


**Accessing Financial Web Sites on a Public Connection** -- Is Walt 
  Mossberg being paranoid when he recommends not accessing some Web 
  sites on public networks? Once again, we learn that paranoia is all 
  relative. (4 messages)

<http://emperor.tidbits.com/TidBITS/Talk/1279/>


$$

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