TidBITS#1104/28-Nov-2011
========================
  Issue link: <http://tidbits.com/issue/1104>


  If you’re worrying about what will happen to your photos in MobileMe
  Gallery come June 2012, there’s a new migration option — to the photo
  sharing site ZangZing that Adam has been using heavily. Also this
  week, Matt Neuburg explains Appalicious’s morphing into Appcuity in
  time for finding Mac App Store deals during the holiday shopping
  season, and Glenn Fleishman looks at how Amazon’s Kindle Fire provides
  a more coherent interface for finding and playing purchased media than
  Apple’s iOS apps. Finally, Adam explains how the Children’s Online
  Privacy Protection Act of 1998 is teaching children to lie about their
  ages online, often with the help of their parents. Notable software
  releases this week include Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.2 and Nisus Writer
  Express 3.4.1, VMware Fusion 4.1.1, SpamSieve 2.8.8, and MacBook Pro
  Video Update 1.0 (Snow Leopard).

Articles
    ZangZing Eases MobileMe Gallery Migration
    FileVault 2 Hides Data in Plain Sight
    Appcuity is the New, Better Appalicious
    Amazon Beats Apple at Ease of Media Access
    How COPPA Teaches Children to Lie
    TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 28 November 2011
    ExtraBITS for 28 November 2011


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ZangZing Eases MobileMe Gallery Migration
-----------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12645>
  6 comments

  In June 2012, when MobileMe draws its last virtual breath, among the 
  data that Apple will consign to rubbish heap of history are all the 
  photos you’ve stored in MobileMe Gallery. A number of alternatives 
  are obvious — you can move photos to Flickr or to Facebook 
  relatively easily from within iPhoto, and there are of course 
  numerous other photo sharing sites.

  However, another alternative has just appeared — the group photo 
  sharing site ZangZing, which I’ve used heavily the last few months 
  to allow parents of Tristan’s Ithaca cross country teammates to 
  upload photos of all the races (see “Group Photo Sharing Grows Up 
  with ZangZing,” 3 October 2011). Although ZangZing’s 
  differentiating feature is the way it enables multiple people to 
  share photos of the same event, its HTML5 underpinnings, modern 
  design sensibility, and integration with numerous photo sources make 
  it a fine personal photo sharing site as well.

<http://www.zangzing.com/>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12507>

  And that’s where ZangZing has just stepped up to the plate to help 
  MobileMe Gallery users looking for a new home for their photos. As I 
  noted about ZangZing when I was first writing about it, it’s 
  unusual in being able to read photos from other photo sharing 
  services, including Picasa, Facebook, Flickr, Shutterfly, and so on. 
  The newest addition is MobileMe, enabling you to transfer all your 
  photos from MobileMe Gallery directly to ZangZing, even if you 
  don’t have them in iPhoto (others could upload to your MobileMe 
  Gallery albums too, though I don’t get the sense that many people 
  took advantage of that feature).

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/MobileMe-in-ZangZing.png>

  All you have to do is click MobileMe when creating a new album, 
  confirm that you want to connect to MobileMe, enter your MobileMe 
  login credentials so ZangZing can log in to your account, and select 
  a MobileMe album to import.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/MobileMe-connect-to-ZangZing.png>
<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/MobileMe-albums-to-ZangZing.png>

  In my tests, the import process worked perfectly, and once the 
  photos are in ZangZing, you can share the link to the album as you 
  would anything else in ZangZing, opening it up to others to upload 
  photos or keeping it locked down as you desire. Sharing future photo 
  albums from iPhoto is trivially easy with ZangZing, perhaps even 
  easier than working with Flickr and Facebook within iPhoto’s 
  interface because you manage the entire process from ZangZing’s 
  Web site, which is where the final album ends up.

  ZangZing remains free for now, though it’s likely that a premium 
  account option in the future will provide additional storage space 
  or other features. The company has started down the path toward 
  financial stability by enabling users to purchase prints of photos 
  in a variety of finishes and formats.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/ZangZing-print-products.png>

  Now that ZangZing has rolled out the print products, other 
  enhancements are appearing as well. For instance, I had requested 
  the capability to download an entire album of photos at once, so as 
  to be able to archive the complete cross country season’s worth of 
  photos for the coaches and school library. That feature was on 
  ZangZing’s list of things to implement, and shortly after the 
  print products appeared, they contacted me to tell me that album 
  downloading was available. So, if there’s something you’d like 
  to see ZangZing do differently, be sure to submit feedback, since 
  they’re listening and reacting. 


  ----
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FileVault 2 Hides Data in Plain Sight
-------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12638>
  2 comments

  Apple significantly improved how your Mac’s vital data can be 
  protected in Mac OS X 10.7 Lion by taking the FileVault encryption 
  system that covered only user directories and expanding its scope to 
  full-disk encryption. FileVault 2 encrypts the entire contents of 
  your startup disk (the boot partition, that is). When you start up a 
  Mac with FileVault 2 enabled, you’re actually booting from 
  Lion’s Recovery HD partition; when you enter an account’s login 
  name and password (one you previously enabled as being accessible to 
  the FileVault login), the boot process activates the encryption key 
  used to protect the startup partition, and off you go.

  I recently wrote at length about using FileVault 2 for Macworld, 
  detailing the risks involved and how to prepare before turning on 
  encryption. I also explained how to encrypt non-boot partitions and 
  drives using Disk Utility and the command line in Terminal.

<https://www.macworld.com/article/162999/2011/10/complete_guide_to_filevault_2_in_lion.html>

  After I wrote that article, Apple released Mac OS X 10.7.2, which 
  includes iCloud support and the Find My Mac service. With the help 
  of a commenter, I discovered — and documented in a second article 
  at Macworld — that using FileVault 2 in conjunction with a new 
  Guest User account option at startup could trick a laptop thief into 
  connecting to a Wi-Fi network and revealing the Mac’s location. In 
  fact, just powering up the system will do the trick. In short, Apple 
  has crafted a honey pot to lure thieves into Find My Mac’s net.

<https://www.macworld.com/article/163387/2011/11/can_filevault_2_and_find_my_mac_foil_thieves_.html>


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Appcuity is the New, Better Appalicious
---------------------------------------
  by Matt Neuburg <matt@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12631>
  3 comments

  In “Appalicious Makes the Mac App Store Useful,” 1 September 
  2011, I described ProVUE’s clever application Appalicious, which 
  presents information from the Mac App Store far more helpfully, 
  neatly, and completely than Apple’s own App Store application. 
  Now, in response to threatened legal action, Appalicious has changed 
  its name to Appcuity, and its Web site has been renamed (and 
  helpfully reorganized). In addition, ProVUE has taken this 
  opportunity to implement some feature improvements.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12461>
<http://www.appcuity.com/>

  The Appcuity database now tracks Apple’s Top Charts rankings, 
  based on download counts for free apps and gross sales for paid 
  apps. App ranks are displayed as a column of numbers in the Appcuity 
  main window, along with historical information such as the highest 
  rank a given app has ever achieved, plus a more extended history in 
  the app’s detail window, so you can see how an app changes rank 
  over time.

  Equally intriguing are changes to Appcuity’s pricing model. 
  (Disclaimer: Some of these changes may have been implemented in 
  response to my suggestions.)

* Previously, if you didn’t purchase a subscription or extend your 
  subscription through recommendations to a friend, Appalicious 
  eventually stopped updating its data from the online master 
  database. Now, Appcuity keeps working even without a subscription, 
  updating itself from the master database once a week. At this level 
  (called Appcuity Lite), some customization features and certain 
  column and history displays are disabled. Thus, there is no serious 
  reason why you shouldn’t try Appcuity and keep using it for as 
  long as you like, for free; even at this Lite level, Appcuity will 
  _still_ be more informative than Apple’s App Store application.

* In addition to one-year and two-year subscriptions, the paid version 
  of Appcuity (now termed Appcuity Pro) is now available through a 
  one-time permanent license payment of $21.99, in effect bypassing 
  the subscription model altogether.

  ProVUE requests that existing Appalicious users download Appcuity 
  promptly, as the online database will soon cease accepting data 
  update requests from copies of Appalicious. The switch to Appcuity 
  is completely transparent; your Appalicious subscription is turned 
  into an Appcuity subscription automatically, behind the scenes. I 
  downloaded Appcuity and launched it, whereupon it immediately 
  displayed my existing Appalicious data and then updated that data 
  based on my existing subscription, just as if Appcuity and 
  Appalicious were the same application; since this was the same 
  machine, I didn’t even need to re-enter my license information.

  Appcuity is a 27.6 MB download. It requires a Mac that can access 
  the Mac App Store (meaning Mac OS X 10.6.6 or later). New users 
  automatically experience Appcuity as Appcuity Pro for a week; after 
  that, it becomes Appcuity Lite unless you buy a Pro subscription or 
  get a friend to try Appcuity.

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


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Amazon Beats Apple at Ease of Media Access
------------------------------------------
  by Glenn Fleishman <glenn@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12641>
  22 comments

  The Amazon Kindle Fire is by no means an iPad killer or even 
  precisely an iPad competitor. Based on specs and overall 
  capabilities, the iPad easily comes out on top. If the Fire succeeds 
  — and based on my early days with it, I believe it will — it 
  will create a new intermediate niche for those who want a device 
  with a bigger screen than a smartphone for reading, gaming, and 
  watching video, without the iPad’s bulk or price tag. (You can 
  read my brief review at The Economist.)

<http://www.economist.com/blogs/babbage/2011/11/tablet-computers>

  Where Amazon can compete with Apple, however, is with the interface 
  you use to reach media you have either purchased or loaded manually. 
  The Kindle Fire beats iOS hands down for finding what’s available 
  and, wherever you are, letting you play it, read it, or watch it. In 
  many ways, the Fire outpaces iOS even if you have subscribed to 
  Apple’s just-released iTunes Match service. Apple still has the 
  distinct upper hand in letting you sync your own content to a mobile 
  device, and in providing rich access over a local network.

  The difference between the two devices, without insulting the Fire, 
  is that Amazon has made something more akin to a “dumb” media 
  browser. It has relatively little storage, and treats the cloud (the 
  assemblage of Internet-accessible data) as interchangeable with 
  local storage for purchased items and music you’ve uploaded. While 
  it’s able to run apps (launched from their own screen), in general 
  it’s a dumb end-point for media. In contrast, iOS devices like the 
  iPad are “smart” browsers, and despite Apple’s best efforts, 
  require more management and tools to access media, because they are 
  _more capable_ of syncing, playing, and retrieving such content.

  Let’s start with the Kindle Fire’s strengths.


**Simplicity Everywhere versus Local Richness** -- On the Fire, the 
  home screen has tabs all in a row for four types of media 
  (Newsstand, Books, Music, and Video), as well as tabs for Docs, 
  Apps, and Web. Tap any category other than Docs or Web, and two 
  side-by-side buttons appear at the top of the screen: Cloud and 
  Device. Tap Cloud, and every digital media item you’ve ever 
  purchased from Amazon appears, ready for download (all types of 
  media), or streaming (music and video only). Tap Device, and you can 
  play, read, or open anything stored on your Fire. (There’s a 
  necessary footnote on music that I’ll discuss below.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/Kindle-Fire-top-menu.jpg>

  This consistency is what struck me immediately, since it passes the 
  mother-in-law test. I love my mother-in-law, but she is not a 
  computer person. The Kindle Fire is designed for her, since it 
  removes even more interface than Apple did in iOS. Someone who has 
  purchased content from Amazon in the past can buy a Fire, and, so 
  long as a Wi-Fi network is available, that person doesn’t have to 
  sort out any top-level setup or syncing tasks.

  Compare this to iOS 5, which suffers from the way Apple has added 
  new kinds of media over time without rethinking how the approaches 
  work...or don’t work. This is Apple at its most Microsoft-like, 
  sadly. On the desktop, iTunes is a bloated bag of unrelated features 
  bursting at the seams. But iOS doesn’t do much better by 
  separating the different forms of media into the individual Music, 
  Video, iBooks, and Newsstand apps in iOS 5.

  Consider this scenario. I’ve purchased a movie on my Mac laptop 
  that may be played only within a certain ecosystem, like Amazon’s 
  or Apple’s — that is, it’s shackled by DRM. I want to continue 
  watching this movie on a mobile device. With a movie purchased from 
  Amazon and a Kindle Fire, my steps from zero to watching are:

1. Wake and unlock the Fire.
2. If necessary, join a Wi-Fi network (not just one at home or at the 
   office).
2. Tap the Video tab.
3. If your library isn’t showing, tap Library.
4. If it’s not already selected, tap Cloud.
5. Tap the movie. 
6. Tap Play or Download.

  If you tap Download, you have to wait for enough footage to buffer 
  before it starts playing. Tapping Play uses a streaming mode that 
  allows for faster startup, although it seems to trade off against 
  quality — the ultimate amount of data transferred for streaming is 
  likely less than for a download of the same video file.

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/Kindle-showing-movie-page.jpg>

  With a movie purchased from iTunes and an iOS device, you can’t 
  make the transfer using any on-board app. You have three options. 

  First, you can stream media via Home Sharing, assuming you’ve 
  configured it in the copy of iTunes in question, although only if 
  you’re on the same local network as the computer running iTunes. 
  You’d follow these steps:

1. Wake and unlock your iOS device. This assumes you’ve previously 
   set up Home Sharing (Settings > Video > Home Sharing) using the 
   same account as the copy of iTunes with the movie.
2. Tap the Videos app.
3. Wait for the Shared item to appear at the top and then tap Shared.
4. Select the Shared system by name from the network.
5. Wait for the remote library to load.
6. Scroll through the list of movies, and tap one to start playing. 
   The media isn’t downloaded, but is streamed (at full quality and 
   bandwidth) over the local network.

  Second, if you want to copy the movie to your device, you’ll have 
  to work with iTunes to update the iOS device’s local storage:

1. Launch iTunes on the computer on which you manage purchased media 
   for that iOS device.
2. Select the iOS device in the sidebar’s Devices list. (Plug it in 
   via USB if you’re not using Wi-Fi Sync.)
3. Click the Movies tab.
4. Scroll through the Movies list to find the item you purchased, and 
   check the box next to it.
5. Click Sync.
6. Wait for the synchronization to finish.
7. Switch to the iOS device and tap the Videos app.
8. Find the movie in the list and tap it to play.

  Third and finally, you can enable automatic synchronization in 
  iTunes, so that recent or unwatched movies and other media are 
  copied automatically. Just plug your device into power (for 
  automatic Wi-Fi Sync) or USB (which works whether you’re syncing 
  via USB or via Wi-Fi Sync, as it powers the device), and wait for 
  the synchronization to occur. Or, using Wi-Fi Sync, you can force a 
  sync from the iOS device by visiting Settings > General > iTunes 
  Wi-Fi Sync, and tapping Sync Now. 

  Perhaps those first two options don’t sound as tedious to you as 
  they do to me. The third one, automatic synchronization, is best, 
  but you have to have enough storage and few enough unwatched videos 
  on your iOS device for it to work without manual intervention. (Some 
  iPhone and iPod touch models have only 8 GB of storage, but most 
  iPhones and all iPads have from 16 GB to 64 GB. The Fire has just 8 
  GB to store purchased media.) And consider further: Amazon lets you 
  perform its playback operation from _any_ Wi-Fi network to which you 
  can connect. All of Apple’s approaches require USB or local Wi-Fi 
  access to the iOS device’s host copy of iTunes.

  Of course, if you’re trying to play an unlocked movie — one you 
  ripped from a DVD or acquired from another source — Amazon can’t 
  help you at all over Wi-Fi, where Apple treats anything iTunes and 
  iOS can play back as available for synchronization or Home Sharing 
  streaming. (More on copying items to a Kindle shortly.)

  I said earlier that Amazon’s music setup requires a footnote, 
  since Apple’s approach with iTunes Match is definitely better for 
  music, apart from the inability to stream music without downloading 
  on an iOS device. Amazon offers 5 GB of free storage in the Cloud 
  Drive service that’s paired with your Amazon account, and music 
  files aren’t currently counted against that total. You can store 
  unlimited music at no cost, and play it via the Web (on the desktop 
  or via mobile browsers), an Android app, and the Kindle Fire.

<http://www.amazon.com/clouddrive/learnmore>

  When you buy music from Amazon, you can choose to add those 
  purchased items automatically into your Cloud Drive, but any music 
  that you don’t purchase and choose to add in that fashion must be 
  uploaded manually. There’s no match functionality, and no 
  synchronization as you continue to add music from sources other than 
  Amazon to your local music collection.


**One App for Each Purpose** -- Movies in iOS are a particularly bad 
  case for Apple, since they are handled differently than nearly all 
  other purchased media, which can be restored directly from iCloud. 
  But there’s still an interface hurdle for accessing other types of 
  media for copying or streaming. Nearly every kind of media is split 
  up among apps in iOS 5, a situation I expect Apple will remedy at 
  some point. The Music app manages music (and podcasts and 
  audiobooks) stored on an iOS device, and TV shows and movies live in 
  the Videos app. But to download music you purchased from iTunes 
  that’s not on the device, you launch the iTunes app, which is 
  where TV shows may also be downloaded. (As noted previously, you 
  can’t download purchased movies in this fashion.)

<http://tidbits.com/resources/2011-11/iOS-showing-tv-purchases.jpg>

  More coherently than with audio and video, you buy, update, and 
  download apps in the App Store app, and you use the iBooks app to 
  buy new books and download already purchased titles. (A tip: If a 
  book is ever updated, as Take Control ebooks often are, you must 
  re-download the book from the iBookstore to get the new version; 
  there’s no notification.) iOS 5’s new Newsstand app now holds 
  most periodicals unless they have a separate app that hasn’t yet 
  been integrated. The same is true on the Kindle Fire: Some 
  periodicals manage subscriptions and individual issue purchases 
  through the Newsstand view; others, like The New Yorker, require use 
  of a separate app.

  Apple’s launch of the $24.99-per-year iTunes Match makes this 
  situation both easier and more complicated, because iTunes Match 
  works only with music, not with books or video, and it allows only 
  downloading of your music to your iOS devices; you can’t stream 
  music without also storing it on the device. (That storage happens 
  automatically. Click an iCloud-available song in the desktop version 
  of iTunes, and it starts streaming. You have to click an iCloud 
  download icon to retrieve it into iTunes. In iOS, tapping a song 
  found in the cloud both starts it playing — after buffering — 
  and retrieves it into the iOS device’s media storage, at least 
  temporarily, since iOS can delete the downloaded songs later if it 
  wants to recover the space.)

  In contrast to Apple’s reliance on multiple apps, the entire 
  Kindle Fire interface revolves around media, with the home screen 
  providing top-level access to each media type and a consistent 
  interface as you navigate in. In part, this is a testament to why 
  the Fire isn’t even really designed to be competition for the iPad 
  or other Android tablets — it’s aimed at media consumption above 
  all else.


**Fire Sputters with Non-Purchased Media** -- Books, audio, apps, and 
  video acquired from sources other than Amazon are definitely a pain 
  to manage on the Kindle Fire. Apple lets you drag all manner of 
  things — so long as they are in a supported format and not wrapped 
  in DRM — right into iTunes, after which they’re synced like 
  anything you’ve purchased. 

  Amazon allows this, too, but there’s no management program. 
  Instead, you must connect your Kindle Fire via USB to your Mac, 
  where it shows up as a volume on the Desktop, and then manage the 
  media by dragging files in supported formats in and out of the 
  appropriate folders in the Finder. (Adding Android apps from 
  non-Amazon sources requires changing a setting, but it’s just a 
  simple software switch.)

  This is Amazon’s strength and weakness. By promoting how easy it 
  is to use media purchased from Amazon everywhere — via the Web, 
  apps, video devices (like the Roku and many Internet-enabled TVs), 
  and its own Kindle readers — people are encouraged to buy media 
  only from Amazon. Once you venture outside Amazon’s tent, the Fire 
  loses its brightness. Its interface is still a guiding light, but 
  using non-purchased media seems purposely made difficult.

  Of course, Apple has exactly the same goal, but it tries to convince 
  customers to purchase media from Apple by locking all other 
  manufacturers out of the FairPlay tent — a movie rented from 
  iTunes can’t play on any non-iOS device, for example. To Apple’s 
  credit, though, it’s happy to let you access DRM-free media from 
  other sources on Apple devices, so much so that simply copying items 
  into iTunes makes them easily available to sync. Plus, iTunes Match, 
  even though it requires an annual fee, doesn’t require nearly as 
  much tedious uploading as competing services and automatically 
  synchronizes any new music you acquire to your iCloud collection.


**Learn from the Best** -- The Kindle Fire certainly has a lot of room 
  to grow, and I like this first iteration. But I’m captivated by 
  Amazon’s simplicity in making purchased media available wherever 
  and whenever you want it. Apple may have enabled iOS devices to cut 
  the USB cable when syncing, but for most people, media management 
  involves four separate apps revolving around a desktop copy of 
  iTunes. The Fire is far from perfect, but it shows how Apple could 
  make it even easier to access purchased media — a rare challenge. 


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How COPPA Teaches Children to Lie
---------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12622>
  23 comments

  With the arrival last year of a tech-savvy superintendent in the 
  Ithaca City School District, we’ve started to see some welcome 
  changes in how our son Tristan’s 7th grade teachers are operating. 
  They’ve responded to the superintendent’s call for increased use 
  of technology by accepting many homework assignments electronically; 
  they’ve also created class blogs for summarizing what goes on in 
  class and for listing homework assignments. On the whole, we’re 
  tremendously happy to see Tristan checking the blogs for what to do, 
  submitting his homework in Google Docs, taking part in NaNoWriMo for 
  English class, asking out-of-class questions of the teachers via 
  email, and generally using the same kind of tools that we employ in 
  our day-to-day work.

  There has been one dark cloud in this otherwise bright picture. 
  Tristan won’t be 13 until January, but to participate fully in 
  these technology initiatives, he has needed to set up a number of 
  accounts, including a Google account and a Blogger account, among 
  others. Thanks to the 1998 Children’s Online Privacy Protection 
  Act (COPPA) in the United States, however, Google, Apple, and many 
  other companies, most notably Facebook, include a blunt line like 
  this in their terms of service:
      
      You must be at least thirteen (13) years of age to use the 
      Service.

<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children%27s_Online_Privacy_Protection_Act>

  Uh oh.

  In the past, that text was generally hidden in dense legalese behind 
  a link that, honestly, no one ever reads. Increasingly, though, 
  birthdate has become a required field in signup forms, such that a 
  simple bit of JavaScript math can prevent those under 13 from 
  registering. Of course, the workaround is simple — you lie about 
  your date of birth, and we’ve helped Tristan do just that on 
  several occasions this year. 

  (In a move that has caused much online distress, if a child with a 
  pre-existing Gmail account now provides an under-13 birthdate to 
  another Google site, like YouTube, Google disables that account and 
  threatens to delete it entirely unless the parent takes over 
  ownership.)

<http://www.google.com/support/accounts/bin/answer.py?answer=1333913>

  The drafters of COPPA were aware that there would be legitimate 
  reasons for parents to want their under-13 children to have accounts 
  with certain online services, of course, so they provided for a way 
  out via “verifiable parental consent.” Therein lies the problem. 
  The allowed approaches include:

* Giving parents a form to print, fill out, sign, and return via mail 
  or fax.

* Require the parent to use a credit card in connection with a 
  transaction.

* Obtain consent via email accompanied by a digital signature or 
  digital certificate verified by a physical form or credit card.

  I can hear those familiar with Internet services giggling already. 
  Even if parents could be induced and trained to jump through such 
  hoops, Web sites whose primary audiences are adults won’t spend 
  the money to process physical forms, invent unnecessary charges, or 
  deal with the support related to helping novices with digital 
  signatures. Sites focused on children are willing to go through the 
  trouble, since that’s their business, but general audience 
  services like Google, Apple, and Facebook find it far simpler to 
  require accountholders to be 13 or older. Interestingly, Twitter now 
  has a clever way of phrasing the restriction (in its privacy policy, 
  rather than its terms of service) that enables Twitter to terminate 
  accounts, but doesn’t restrict account creation by age upfront, a 
  change from an earlier revision of the company’s terms of service.
      
      Our Services are not directed to people under 13. If you 
      become aware that your child has provided us with personal 
      information without your consent, please contact us at 
      privacy@twitter.com. We do not knowingly collect personal 
      information from children under 13. If we become aware that a 
      child under 13 has provided us with personal information, we 
      take steps to remove such information and terminate the 
      child’s account.

  But the blunt rejection of underage children by most sites is how 
  we’ve ended up in a situation where parents are being asked to 
  teach their children that it’s not just acceptable, but often 
  necessary, to lie on the Internet. That certainly wasn’t the 
  intent of COPPA, but a recently released study from danah boyd of 
  Microsoft Research; Eszter Hargittai of Northwestern University; 
  Jason Schultz of the University of California, Berkeley; and John 
  Palfrey of the Harvard Law School looks in more depth at just what 
  parents do and don’t do in relation to COPPA’s age restrictions, 
  focusing on Facebook.

<http://www.uic.edu/htbin/cgiwrap/bin/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3850/3075>

  For instance, they found that:

* 55 percent of 12-year-olds have a Facebook account (along with 32 
  percent of 11-year-olds and 18 percent of 10-year-olds). In short, 
  there are a lot of underage Facebook users. I’m sure that there 
  are also tons of underage users of services from Google, Apple, 
  Yahoo, and Microsoft.

* 82 percent of parents were aware that their children had created 
  Facebook accounts, and of those, 64 percent helped to create the 
  account, with even higher percentages of parents participating when 
  the children were underage. The point here is that the vast majority 
  of parents were notified of the age limit, and, in fact, 90 percent 
  of parents helping underage children to create accounts acknowledged 
  being aware of the age limit.

* 35 percent of parents thought that the age limit was a 
  recommendation (like the PG-13 MPAA movie rating), not a 
  requirement. And 78 percent felt that it was acceptable to allow an 
  underage child to sign up for a service for a variety of reasons, 
  largely bolstered by parental monitoring of online activities. So we 
  can see that many parents don’t take the age limit seriously, 
  either not seeing it as a requirement or seeing it as a rule that 
  can be broken.

<http://www.mpaa.org/ratings>

* Most tellingly, in response to the question, “Who should have the 
  final say about whether or not your child should be able to use Web 
  sites and online services?” 93 percent of respondents said the 
  parent should. 3 percent felt the company providing the service 
  should have the final say. And amusingly, only 2 percent said that 
  the government should have the final say, which matched exactly with 
  the 2 percent of parents who said that the child should have the 
  final say. (Snarky logic would thus conclude that parents trust the 
  government and their children equally in this regard. Speaking as 
  the parent of a 12-year-old who can’t be relied on to tie his 
  shoes, that’s not a ringing endorsement of governmental 
  regulation.)

* Finally, when asked what role government should play in setting age 
  limits on the use of Web sites, 48 percent felt that the government 
  should require a recommended age rating, like movie ratings. 35 
  percent felt the government shouldn’t do anything, and only 18 
  percent felt the government should be enacting laws like COPPA. 

  With regard to the requirement for deception, the study’s authors 
  point out that although adults may provide inaccurate information in 
  online profiles (such as on dating sites), parents are uncomfortable 
  with encouraging children to lie online. They write:
      
      Providing inaccurate age information can also violate Web 
      sites’ Terms of Service and enable risky interactions. 
      Parents of elementary- and middle-school-aged children may not 
      want their children to pretend as though they are in high 
      school when interacting with other teenagers and, yet, 
      providing a false age on Facebook conveys this incorrect 
      impression. Because of this, strict age requirements often put 
      parents in an uncomfortable position. So long as deception is 
      the only means of access, parents are forced to choose between 
      curtailing their children’s access and condoning lying. This 
      is not an easy choice for many parents to make.

  Ironically, danah boyd said in an interview with On the Media that 
  police officers lecturing students in online safety also sometimes 
  recommend that children lie about their location, which has resulted 
  in there being more people online claiming to be from Afghanistan 
  and Zimbabwe (the first and last countries when listed 
  alphabetically) than there are people in those countries.

<http://www.onthemedia.org/2011/nov/04/parents-helping-kids-lie-online/>

  In the end, Tonya and I come down squarely in agreement with the 
  majority of parents. Tristan hasn’t wanted a Facebook account, but 
  we signed him up for Twitter several years ago so we could 
  communicate with him in brief bursts when we were travelling (now he 
  has a text message-enabled cell phone for arranging pickups from 
  school events), and we certainly wouldn’t prevent him from getting 
  school-related accounts because of COPPA. In fact, for any account 
  that Tristan sets up online, whether it’s with Pandora, Edmodo, or 
  Google, we ask that he get our permission if he must lie about his 
  age and that he write down all the login information on a sticky 
  note (which we keep handy in case he forgets it — this has already 
  resolved one late-night homework crisis). Eventually, we’ll have 
  to move all those sticky notes into a system that Tristan maintains 
  himself, although password wallet software isn’t currently a 
  realistic option given the variety of computers he uses but cannot 
  control.

  Like many other parents, we think he’s mature enough to handle the 
  places online where he’s going to end up, we monitor what he does 
  online, and we feel that a clearly worded recommendation (and 
  encouragement for parents to stay involved) would be far more 
  effective than COPPA’s age limits and accompanying unintended 
  consequences. 


  ----
  read/post comments: <http://tidbits.com/e/12622#comments>
  tweet this article: <http://tidbits.com/t/12622>


TidBITS Watchlist: Notable Software Updates for 28 November 2011
----------------------------------------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12649>

**Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.2 and Nisus Writer Express 3.4.1** -- Nisus 
  Software has released Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.2 and Nisus Writer 
  Express 3.4.1, updates to the company’s word processors. Both 
  feature a similar set of improvements, including a Brazilian 
  Portuguese localization and the capability (in Nisus Writer Pro) to 
  change the active TOC style in the table of contents navigator pane. 
  More of the effort was focused on bug fixes; along with elimination 
  of crashes and a number of tweaky changes, Nisus Writer Express 
  users using Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger can now import Microsoft Word 
  documents, while the WordPerfect import facilities in Nisus Writer 
  Pro have been improved. (Free updates; for Nisus Writer Pro: 146 MB, 
  release notes; for Nisus Writer Express: 42 MB, release notes)

<http://nisus.com/pro/>
<http://nisus.com/Express/>
<http://nisus.com/pro/releasenotes/releasenotes202.php>
<http://nisus.com/Express/releasenotes/releasenotes341.php>

  Read/post comments about Nisus Writer Pro 2.0.2 and Nisus Writer 
  Express 3.4.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12644#comments>


**VMware Fusion 4.1.1** -- VMware has released VMware Fusion 4.1.1, 
  which brings a couple of new features and a brief spate of 
  controversy to its popular virtualization package. The most 
  interesting change is one that was introduced in version 4.1 but 
  quickly rolled back in 4.1.1: virtualization support for both the 
  desktop and server versions of Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. Apple’s 
  End-User License Agreement allows virtualization of Snow Leopard 
  Server, but not the desktop version; virtual copies of Mac OS X 10.7 
  Lion can be run legally. Initially, this was welcome news to those 
  who need Snow Leopard because of its support for Rosetta, which was 
  dropped by Apple with the introduction of Lion (see “Preparing for 
  Lion: Find Your PowerPC Applications,” 6 May 2011). However, in a 
  tech note published shortly after version 4.1 became available, 
  VMware notes that Fusion 4.1.1 update reinstates the version check 
  and will not launch virtual machines using the desktop version of 
  Snow Leopard. Additional changes in version 4.1 include “smart” 
  support for Lion’s full-screen mode, as well as a number of bug 
  fixes and performance improvements, particularly when it comes to 
  graphics, animations, and startup times. ($79.99 new, on sale for 
  $49.99, free update, 181 MB, release notes)

<http://www.vmware.com/products/fusion/overview.html>
<http://tidbits.com/article/12156>
<http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd=displayKC&externalId=2009990>
<http://www.vmware.com/support/fusion4/doc/releasenotes_fusion_41.html>

  Read/post comments about VMware Fusion 4.1.1.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12643#comments>


**SpamSieve 2.8.8** -- C-Command Software has released SpamSieve 
  2.8.8, which gives the company’s popular spam-filtering software 
  support for Postbox 3.0 and Growl 1.3. The app also improves 
  compatibility with Apple Mail by providing better resilience to 
  permission errors, and comes with an improved filter that is better 
  able to detect unwanted email messages. Tweaks to the French 
  localization and several bug fixes round out the update. ($30 new, 
  free update, 8.8 MB, release notes)

<http://c-command.com/spamsieve/>
<http://c-command.com/forums/showthread.php/3393-SpamSieve-2-8-8>

  Read/post comments about SpamSieve 2.8.8.

<http://tidbits.com/article/12642#comments>


**MacBook Pro Video Update 1.0 (Snow Leopard)** -- Several weeks ago, 
  Apple released the MacBook Pro Video Update 1.0 to address problems 
  that could cause the 15-inch MacBook Pro (Mid 2010) to freeze or 
  stop displaying video (see “Apple Releases Multiple 
  Hardware-Related Updates,” 27 October 2011). Oddly, that update 
  was available only for people running Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion, and 
  those running 10.6 Snow Leopard were referred to a support article 
  suggesting that hardware service might be necessary. Now Apple has 
  released the same MacBook Pro Video Update 1.0 for Snow Leopard 
  users; presumably Software Update will do the right thing in 
  providing it to Macs that need it. (Free, 51.45 MB)

<http://tidbits.com/article/12591>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/TS4088>
<http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1475>

  Read/post comments about MacBook Pro Video Update 1.0 (Snow 
  Leopard).

<http://tidbits.com/article/12640#comments>




ExtraBITS for 28 November 2011
------------------------------
  by TidBITS Staff <editors@tidbits.com>
  article link: <http://tidbits.com/e/12648>

  If you have some podcast-listening time, you can queue up a couple 
  of Adam’s recent appearances, or, for quiet-time reading, we link 
  to an academic paper talking about the cost of patent trolls and a 
  Macworld article explaining what the iTunes Match status messages 
  mean.


**Listen in on Adam Speaking to Two MUGS** -- With MacNotables host 
  Chuck Joiner keeping the conversation moving, Adam presented to both 
  the Bay Area Macintosh Users Group and the Hershey Apple Core via 
  Skype, talking about the loss of Steve Jobs, what Adobe’s 
  discontinuation of Flash for mobile devices means, where Mac users 
  should look for databases other than FileMaker, why aspects of Lion 
  may be troubling for long-time Mac users, and more.

<http://www.macnotables.com/macnotables-1123-adam-engst-talks-to-bam-and-hac-about-losing-steve-jobs-flash-databases-and-lion-wierdness/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12647#comments>


**Adam Discusses iTunes Match on Tech Night Owl Live** -- iTunes Match 
  features in this podcast, along with the Kindle Fire, how 
  Android-using smartphone manufacturers think about updates, and more 
  about the problems with COPPA-driven age requirements on common Web 
  sites.

<http://www.technightowl.com/radio/podcast/now-playing-november-19-2011-dan-moren-adam-engst-and-sascha-segan/>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12646#comments>


**The Real Cost of Patent Trolls (PDF)** -- In this academic paper 
  from the Boston University School of Law, the authors show that 
  patent trolls have cost defendants — mostly large technology 
  companies who invest heavily in R&D — $500 billion from 1990 
  through 2010, and over the last 4 years, the cost has averaged $80 
  billion per year. Moreover, very little of this money ever makes it 
  to the actual inventors, meaning that the money lost by defendants 
  doesn’t incentivize other inventors. In short, software patents 
  (for most of this behavior surrounds them) are simply a drag on 
  innovation and real progress.

<http://www.bu.edu/law/faculty/scholarship/workingpapers/documents/Bessen-Ford-Meurer-no-11-45rev.pdf>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12636#comments>


**iCloud Status Messages for iTunes Match Decoded** -- Over at 
  Macworld, Jason Snell decodes the messages that appear in iTunes 
  10.5.1’s new iCloud Status column to explain each song’s status 
  in your iCloud storage.

<https://www.macworld.com/article/163606/2011/11/check_your_musics_icloud_status.html>

  Read/post comments

<http://tidbits.com/article/12633#comments>




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