Archive for August 15th, 2008

Rays’ Garza flirts with no-no, shuts out Rangers

Friday, August 15th, 2008

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Gordon: I’ve played my last game with the Bulls

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Ben Gordon and the Chicago Bulls took a turn toward closure Friday night when the free-agent guard said he doesn’t think he’ll be a Bull next season.

U.S. coach back with men’s volleyball after attack

Friday, August 15th, 2008

U.S. volleyball coach Hugh McCutcheon has rejoined his team after his in-laws were attacked in Beijing.

Did you see that Phelps Victory in the 100m Butterfly?

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Cubs’ Ward dumps Marlins with 3-run shot in ninth

Friday, August 15th, 2008

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Slumping Phils visit Pads

Friday, August 15th, 2008

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Lan Steaming Live Now!

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Sorry about the delay, we had a bunch of technical issues, but the LAN cam is up and ready on the home page.

Hargrove wants to manage again: ‘Edge is back’

Friday, August 15th, 2008

A little over a year ago, Mike Hargrove shocked baseball by walking away from the Mariners. Now he says he’s ready to manage again in the majors.

DRM for Streaming Music Dies a Quiet Death

Friday, August 15th, 2008

Yet another nail has been driven into DRM’s coffin, this time for streaming audio (PCPro has a nice overview of the state of DRM for digital music).

Two of the leading on-demand streaming music sites, iMeem and LaLa, are not using DRM on their audio streams, instead sending the music as MP3s dusted with a dash of obfuscation. This is significant because both sites have been licensed by all the major record labels — the very same record labels that were just last year pushing Congress to require DRM on all noninteractive webcasts. So it looks like the RIAA companies have changed their minds, dropping DRM requirements for the on-demand streaming music services.

This should put an end to legislation to mandate DRM on noninteractive webcasters. After all, why should these webcasters be in a worse position than the free, on-demand music services like LaLa and iMeem?

This also undermines the argument that DRM for music is necessary for subscription services. If the major labels have given up DRM for free, ad-supported, on-demand streaming services like LaLa and iMeem, there’s no plausible reason to insist on DRM for paid subscription services like Rhapsody and Napster 2.0. After all, there’s no reason to think that those who prefer commercial-free subscriptions like Rhapsody are more likely to “pirate” streams than those who prefer ad-supported services like LaLa.

LaLa and iMeem each take slightly different approaches to streaming music. LaLa uses HTTP to download each requested song as an MP3 to your browser, but relies on aggressive “no-cache” headers and pre-expired date stamps to suggest that your browser not make a copy of the file on your hard drive. Using a packet sniffer to capture the entire HTTP session, however, easily reveals the complete MP3 embedded right after the HTTP headers.

iMeem also downloads and caches each requested song, but sends the MP3 as the audio track of a Flash Video file. This FLV file is typically saved (cached) on your hard drive as an obscurely named temporary file, which is overwritten when you request your next song (we mentioned iMeem’s approach back in January, and it’s essentially unchanged). Copy this temp file, however, and you can easily extract the audio track from the Flash video, saving it as a stand-alone MP3 file.

(The location of this TemporaryItems folder, and its equivalent on other operating systems, varies significantly depending on operating system and version. On some operating systems it’s buried deep within the directory hierarchy, but it can be found automatically with standard tools.)

While the light obfuscation used by iMeem and LaLa might create a “speed bump” of inconvenience for users who want to keep the MP3 files, it doesn’t rise to the level of a “technical protection measure” protected by the DMCA. In short, this is yet another example of why there is no legitimate business case for DRM on music — it doesn’t prevent piracy and it’s not necessary to enable “new business models” like subscription or ad-supported music. (Of course, as the movie industry has demonstrated, DRM can still be valuable for impeding competition and putting the brakes on disruptive innovation. But it’s hard to see how the law should protect those goals.)

Bush Rakes in Cash for GOP

Friday, August 15th, 2008

President Bush has personally raised more than $968 million for the Republican Party, GOP candidates and his own re-election campaign and inauguration during his two terms in office, including $70 million this year.

Hey! Where’s Everybody Going? [The Clip Show]

Friday, August 15th, 2008

· We said goodbye to Bernie Mac, yet another untimely casualty of the Billy Bob Thornton Co-Star Curse.
· We also bid farewell to Isaac Hayes and dusted his house for Scientology’s…

Stallone explores Soviet roots with vodka deal

Friday, August 15th, 2008

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Hollywood actor Sylvester Stallone, mighty destroyer of Soviet opponents in the “Rambo” and “Rocky” movies, now plans to advertise Russian vodka.