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December missing in Android flaw

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 20 November 2012 | 23.43

19 November 2012 Last updated at 05:38 ET

A flaw in the latest version of the Android operating system has resulted in the month of December disappearing from an app for storing information about contacts.

The flaw affects the "People app", which is the default app for keeping contact information on Android devices.

The People app calendar goes from November 2012 straight to January 2013.

Android is Google's operating system. Version 4.2 was launched in October 2012.

Other Google calendars are unaffected by the flaw.

Google's Nexus 4 smartphone and Nexus 10 tablet, which went on sale in the UK last week, run on the Android 4.2 Jelly Bean version of the operating system.

The Nexus 4 was reported to have sold out within an hour of appearing on the Google Play website.

The flaw was reported by an Android news website called Android Police.

"Christmas is ruined. Santa is dead. At least we'll save money on buying presents, right?" wrote Android Police's Artem Russakovskii.

"If you're an early adopter you're affected by it, but they will rush out an update very quickly," said Stuart Miles, editor of technology news and reviews website Pocket-Lint.

"It's quite a small bug. It's the equivalent of spelling something wrong on the front page of a newspaper - it's embarrassing and frustrating but ultimately it's not going to end the world."

Google declined to comment but according to Android Police the issue has been noted by Android developers.


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AC/DC release catalogue on iTunes

19 November 2012 Last updated at 08:37 ET By Zoe Kleinman Technology reporter, BBC News

Rock band AC/DC has released their music on Apple music store iTunes.

They had previously voiced strong opposition to the digital service.

Until now its members maintained their songs should not be made available for individual download because they were all integral parts of various albums.

But the Australian band's 16 studio albums, four live albums and three compilations, which have sold more than 150 million physical copies worldwide, are now available in the iTunes store.

AC/DC's music videos were already viewed about 600,000 times a week online, their record label, Columbia Records, said.

"This iTunes, God bless 'em, it's going to kill music if they're not careful," lead singer Brian Johnson told Reuters on the release of their last album, Black Ice, in 2008.

"It just worries me. And I'm sure they're just doing it all in the interest of making as much... cash as possible. Let's put it this way, it's certainly not for the... love."

Money talks

Alice Enders, from media analysts Enders Analysis, said she believed the band's decision was ultimately a commercial one.

"AC/DC probably now understand that their future sales reside on iTunes given the steep decline of the CD in the US, long its top market," she told the BBC.

"If you can't get your music in front of people in the retail outlet, then you have no choice but to embrace digital sales."

The band has just released their first live album in 20 years and have a 40th anniversary tour planned for 2013.

But Ms Enders pointed out the band's recordings were still not available on Spotify.

"It's not embraced access services yet," she said.

Royalty issues

AC/DC is among the last of the high profile "refuseniks" to make themselves available on iTunes.

The Beatles back catalogue was released for download in 2010 after years of disputes between rights holders.

Some musicians are taking legal action against their record labels over the royalties they earn from download sales.

James Taylor, Eminem and Sister Sledge are among those who have filed complaints.


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Quantum code sent on common fibre

20 November 2012 Last updated at 03:22 ET By Jason Palmer Science and technology reporter, BBC News

The "uncrackable codes" made by exploiting the branch of physics called quantum mechanics have been sent down kilometres of standard broadband fibre.

This "quantum key distribution" has until now needed a dedicated fibre separate from that used to carry data.

The technique, reported in Physical Review X, shows how to unpick normal data streams from the much fainter, more delicate quantum signal.

It may see the current best encryption used in many businesses and even homes.

The quantum key distribution or QKD idea is based on the sharing of a key between two parties - a small string of data that can be used as the basis for encoding much larger amounts.

Continue reading the main story

Certainly in a corporate environment it's already affordable, and as time goes on I'm sure we'll see the technology get cheaper"

End Quote Andrew Shields Toshiba Cambridge Research Centre

Tiny, faint pulses of laser light are used in a bid to make single photons - the fundamental units of light - with a given alignment, or polarisation. Two different polarisations can act like the 0s and 1s of normal digital data, forming a means to share a cryptographic key.

What makes it secure is that once single photons have been observed, they are irrevocably changed. An eavesdropper trying to intercept the key would be found out.

Sending these faint, delicate quantum keys has until now been done on dedicated, so-called "dark fibres", with no other light signals present.

That is an inherently costly prospect for users who have to install or lease a separate fibre.

So researchers have been trying to work out how to pull off the trick using standard, "lit" fibres racing with data pulses of millions of photons.

Slice of time

Now Andrew Shields of Toshiba's Cambridge Research Laboratory and his colleagues have hit on the solution: plucking the quantum key photons out of the fibre by only looking in a tiny slice of time.

Dr Shields and his team developed detectors fit to catch just one photon at a time, as well as a "gate" that opens for just a tenth of a billionth of a second - at just the time the quantum key signal photons arrive, one by one.

The team achieved megabit-per-second quantum key data rates, all the while gathering gigabit-per-second standard data.

"Trying to use such low-level signals over 'lit fibre' has been rather like trying to see the stars whilst staring at the Sun," said computer security expert Alan Woodward from the University of Surrey.

"What these researchers have developed is to use a technique that rapidly switches between the various light sources using the fibre such that one source isn't swamping the other," he told BBC News.

Paul Townsend of University College Cork led research published in the New Journal of Physics in 2011 aiming to do the same trick over 10km of fibre - but the new work was carried out over 90km of fibre at data rates hundreds of times higher.

"The work of this group, our own and others is showing how to address some of the critical practical problems that have to be addressed in order to get QKD out of the lab and into real fibre networks," he told BBC News. "This is a major advance in this respect."

Financial institutions are likely to be the first who are interested in the technology when it does escape the lab, senior author of the paper Dr Shields told BBC News.

"We're not too far away from that type of application already," he said.

"QKD isn't so expensive, probably comparable to a high-grade firewall - in the range of tens of thousands of pounds. So certainly in a corporate environment it's already affordable, and as time goes on I'm sure we'll see the technology get cheaper and cheaper."

However, not everyone is convinced that the wider world needs QKD.

"This is of academic interest only," Bruce Schneier, chief security technology officer at BT, told BBC News.

He referred to a 2008 article for Wired magazine arguing that the security of the codes themselves was not the weakest link in the security chain.

In it, he wrote, "it's like defending yourself against an approaching attacker by putting a huge stake in the ground - it's useless to argue about whether the stake should be 50 feet tall or 100 feet tall, because either way, the attacker is going to go around it".

But both Prof Woodward and Dr Shields suggest that coming advances in quantum computing - while perhaps not reaching consumers either - could see the end of the "public key encryption" that the internet currently depends upon. That could make the distribution of keys the new weak point.

Prof Woodward said: "The irony is that quantum techniques might lead to the demise of modern internet-based encryption, but quantum techniques could provide an alternative that is fundamentally more secure anyway."


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New net names to face objections

20 November 2012 Last updated at 05:34 ET

A panel representing about 50 of the world's governments is set to reveal to which of the proposed new internet name address endings it objects.

A total of 1,930 applications for new suffixes were lodged in June.

They included .bet, .islam, .gay and .news as alternatives to existing generic top-level domain (gTLD) names such as .com and .org.

Some countries have already registered individual complaints, but the latest move represents collective concerns.

Objections raised by the panel - the Government Advisory Committee (Gac) - will not be binding on net address regulator Icann (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), but the organisation must produce "well reasoned arguments" if it decides to deny any request.

Public interest issues

Concerns raised by the Gac at this point will act as "early warnings", offering applicants a chance to address the concerns or withdraw their proposal and recover the bulk of their $185,000 (£116,300) registration fee.

If the matter is not resolved amicably, the Gac can lodge a formal complaint in April.

Bruce Tonkin, vice-chair of Icann's board, said the committee had already "telegraphed" some of the public interest issues it planned to put forward.

"They are looking for strings that have broad uses and where one entity is seeking exclusive use," he told the BBC.

"What that means is that they are worried about things like Google running .search, or Amazon running .book.

"They are also indicating [problems with] religious terms... there have been some applications for .islam, .bible and .church.

"The question is whether the people affected by the word .islam, for instance, broadly support the application or not - and that's always going to be hard because a local mosque may support you, but it's hard to say you have the backing of a global religion."

Web address domain names

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Rory Cellan-Jones asks bidders why they applied for web address endings

Mr Tonkin added that another issue might be cases where a word had two uses.

For instance, he said, the Patagonia clothing company had lodged an application for a suffix with its name - but that might be objected to on the grounds that it also refers to a large region of Argentina and Chile.

Resignation

The Gac's announcement - which could come as soon as this Tuesday - follows a period of tumult at Icann.

The organisation's chief strategy officer, Kurt Pritz, resigned last week citing a "recently identified conflict of interest".

Mr Pritz had been the face of the gTLD extension, explaining the next steps of the process at Icann's recent international meeting in Toronto.

He had also represented the organisation at US Senate hearings into the roll-out last year, playing down claims that the move might result in more fraud and cyber-squatting on the internet.

Icann has yet to detail what the conflict of interest involved - although Mr Tonkin signalled it was his personal view that it might have to do so soon.

"Let me just say there was nothing sinister about it," he said. "But the reality is that people are speculating and often in these situations it's better to give the actual detail, and then that's the end of it."


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Legal battle over 4Chan nickname

20 November 2012 Last updated at 06:04 ET

Chris Poole, founder of the image-sharing site 4Chan, has clashed with a US start-up over using the word "moot".

The row has blown up because Mr Poole has been known online by his online alias of Moot since 2003.

Oregon-based Moot.it said it chose the name because it plans to set up discussion forums for businesses and online communities.

Mr Poole has sent a legal letter to Moot.it saying its use of the name will cause confusion.

The alias "Moot" had become part of Mr Poole's "protectable right of publicity" said his lawyer in the letter, which was published on the Betabeat website.

The letter said confusion was "unavoidable" as there was a "strong association" among many internet users with Moot aka Chris Poole and discussion on 4Chan.

The 4Chan bulletin board on which people share images and post comments has a reputation for being raucous and anarchic - the Anonymous hacktivism group emerged from one of its forums.

Given that Moot.it had yet to launch, the letter "respectfully suggests" the company pick a name that cannot be confused with Mr Poole's online identity.

If Moot.it stuck with the name through to its launch and start to use the name as a trademark, Mr Poole would investigate "all options" available to him, it said.

Lawyers acting for Moot.it told Betabeat that it refuses to give up the right to use the name. Any further letters from Mr Poole and his legal team would be met with a lawsuit for malicious prosecution, they warned in comments given to Betabeat.


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Facebook arrest woman 'shocked'

20 November 2012 Last updated at 06:42 ET

An Indian woman who was arrested on Monday over a comment on Facebook has said she was "shocked" by the incident.

Shaheen Dhada was arrested for criticising the shutdown of Mumbai after the death on Saturday of controversial politician Bal Thackeray.

Her friend, Renu Srinivasan, who had "liked" the comment was also arrested. The two were later freed on bail.

Recently, police have arrested a number of people in cases which campaigners call a breach of freedom of speech.

Apology

On Tuesday, Ms Dhada spoke to the BBC Hindi service by telephone from the town of Palghar, near Mumbai.

"I'm not angry, I'm not sad, but I'm just shocked. It was just my point of view, I'm shocked that it was my post because of which all this happened," she said.

Ms Dhada also apologised for the post because, she said, she did not want to "hurt anyone's sentiments".

Her friend, Renu Srinivasan, apologised too.

"We are apologising just to keep everything in place. We don't want any violence. We want ourselves and our families to be safe," she told the CNN-IBN television channel.

The women were charged with "creating or promoting enmity, hatred or ill-will between classes". They were also charged under the Information Technology Act.

After Ms Dhada's comment appeared on Facebook, a mob attacked and vandalised her uncle Abdul Dhada's clinic in Palghar on Sunday.

Police said on Tuesday that they had arrested nine people in connection with the attack and were "looking for some more people".

The death of Bal Thackeray, the Hindu nationalist politician who founded the Shiv Sena party, brought Mumbai to a halt for most of the weekend.

In her Facebook comment on Sunday, 21-year-old Shaheen Dhada wrote: "People like Thackeray are born and die daily and one should not observe a 'bandh' [shutdown] for that."

The arrests led to outrage in India, with many accusing the government of "abuse of authority".

Press Council of India Chairman Markandey Katju has written a letter to the Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan criticising the arrests.

"We are living in a democracy, not a fascist dictatorship. In fact, this arrest itself appears to be a criminal act, since... it is a crime to wrongfully arrest or wrongfully confine someone who has committed no crime," Mr Katju, a former Supreme Court judge, said.

Telecommunications Minister Kapil Sibal said that he was "deeply saddened" by the arrests.

In recent months, India has been criticised for being "over-sensitive" to comment on social media.

In October, Ravi Srinivasan, a 46-year-old businessman in the southern Indian city of Pondicherry, was arrested for a tweet criticising Karti Chidambaram, son of Indian Finance Minister P Chidambaram. He was later released on bail.

Other cases have also raised concern about freedom of expression. In September, there was outrage when a cartoonist was jailed in Mumbai on charges of sedition for his anti-corruption drawings. The charges were later dropped.

In April, the West Bengal government arrested a teacher who had emailed to friends a cartoon that was critical of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. He too was later released on bail.


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Wii U update 'bricking' warning

20 November 2012 Last updated at 08:00 ET

Owners of Nintendo's new Wii U console have been facing lengthy waits to make full use of it because they need to install a large firmware update.

The software - which adds features including access to the Miiverse social network - is about one gigabyte large, and must be downloaded via the net.

There are reports that some machines became "bricked" - or unusable - because the update was interrupted.

Nintendo has warned users not to "power off your system" during the process.

The Japanese games company has acknowledged that the data required "an hour or more" to download and install.

The Wii U launched in the US on Sunday.

Frozen consoles

Los Angeles Times business reporter Ben Fritz was one of the first to report problems with his newly purchased console after trying to cancel the update.

"Wii U has stopped functioning before I managed to play a single game. I tried to stop an interminable software update and now... nothing," he tweeted.

"On a related note, anybody in the market for a big black paperweight?"

He added that several other users had messaged him to say they were facing a similar problem.

Nintendo's Wii U

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BBC Click's Marc Cieslak previews Nintendo's latest home console

Users have also reported on Nintendo's own tech forums "bricking" the machine after unplugging it during the update, while others said they were having had trouble downloading the code in the first place.

Any frozen machines should be covered by the company's standard 12-month warranty.

'Buyer beware'

The games console does not launch in Europe until 30 November and 8 December in Japan, providing Nintendo an opportunity to add the software to the machines before they go on sale in other territories - although a spokeswoman was not able to confirm if this would be the case.

In the meantime, early purchasers in the US face the prospect of another significant update next month when the firm adds its TVii service - offering access to pay-to-view television shows and films - which was not ready as planned for last week's release.

One tech expert said the problems with the Wii U were only to be expected.

"Anybody who is an early-adopter has to understand there will be a degree of pain and inconvenience when buying a console - not least because bugs will be discovered and fixed as tens of thousands of people start using the new machine," said Chris Green, technology analyst at Davies Murphy Group.

"People shouldn't be put off by the initial update file size - it's not that big when compared to doing a full firmware update on an iPad, for example.

"And I'm afraid it's a case of buyer beware to those who try to cancel the update part way through - that would mess up any hardware."


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4G tests reveal patchy coverage

20 November 2012 Last updated at 09:23 ET By Jane Wakefield Technology reporter

The first large-scale test of EE's new 4G network has indicated less than half of Manchester city centre is able to take advantage of its high speeds.

Data collected by mobile coverage firm RootMetrics and shared exclusively with the BBC reveals just 40.2% of its test locations had access to the 4G network.

Outside the city centre there was no 4G coverage, according to the tests.

RootMetrics also found 4G provided much faster speeds indoors, something EE's rivals had questioned when it launched.

Quick song

In test locations that had access 4G, users were getting speeds averaging 17Mbps (megabits per second), according to the survey.

Across all test locations, including those where 4G was unavailable, EE averaged download speeds of 7.6Mbps.

That is still double the average speed of the next fastest operator in the area - Vodafone - which recorded average download speeds of 3.1Mbps in previous tests.

It means that, for example, downloading a song would take less than 15-25 seconds compared with the minute or so it would take on a typical 3G network.

The survey also found:

  • 31% of tests were achieving speeds of more than 10Mbps
  • 9% achieved speeds of 6-10Mbps
  • 18% speeds of 3-6Mbps
  • 23% speeds of 1.5-3Mbps.

That left 19% achieving speeds of less than 1.5Mbps, which actually compares favourably with EE's rivals.

In previous tests, 46% of all the tests for other mobile operators performed at these low speeds, according to RootMetrics.

Continue reading the main story

At a press event recently Three's chief executive David Dyson surprised some by revealing that the firm was not focused on 4G.

Instead it is concentrating on upgrading its network using a 3G/4G hybrid technology called DC-HSPA, which can offers speeds of up to 20Mbps.

Mr Dyson revealed that, despite past insistence that Three needs new spectrum urgently because it is running out of space, its network is actually running at just 17% capacity.

While Everything Everywhere's slick transformation to EE has grabbed media attention, there will definitely be no such marketing make-overs at Three.

The name was more about performance than technology, he said, even after it acquired 4G spectrum.

While the patchy coverage may frustrate users, it mirrored rollouts in the US, where deployments had typically launched with 30% to 60% coverage, said RootMetric's chief executive Bill Moore.

"Although EE's 4G service is much faster than any network currently available in the UK, our testing shows that 4G connections are not consistent even within a nominated area," he said.

"Customers need to be aware of this as there will be an expectation of blistering fast mobile internet speeds whenever they use their phones," said Mr Moore.

EE told the BBC the rollout was "ongoing".

"Every day we expand coverage," said a spokesman.

EE has currently deployed 4G in 11 UK cities, with a plan to increase this to 16 by the end of the year.

Indoor coverage

When EE's network launched, rivals questioned whether the spectrum band that it was using - 1800MHz - would provide good indoor coverage.

But the results suggest that it is not significantly worse - 93% of tests conducted indoors were successful, compared with 97% of outdoor tests.

The survey suggests that 4G has actually offered an uplift to typical indoor speeds.

In fact, RootMetrics found that indoor download speed was higher than its download speeds outdoors - averaging 97Mbps versus 8.6Mbps. The caveat to this is that the test did not separate 4G coverage from 3G.

"You would never get the indoor speeds we have seen without 4G. The figures are far in excess of what 3G is capable of on average," said Mr Moore.

Both coverage and speed tests were conducted in Manchester during November using off-the-shelf Samsung Galaxy S3's.

The firm will be testing more 4G services in other cities around the UK and the findings will be published on its website.


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Rural broadband gets EU approval

20 November 2012 Last updated at 10:13 ET

The UK's plans to roll out broadband to rural areas has received EU approval.

Such approval was needed because the project is partially state-aided.

The green light means councils can now begin laying cables that will bring super-fast speeds to rural areas although many are yet to choose a network provider.

Culture secretary Maria Miller intervened last week after several months of delays in Europe.

"Finally getting the green light from Brussels will mean a huge boost for the British economy," she said.

"Today's announcement means that we can crack on with delivering broadband plans, boosting growth and jobs around the country," she added.

Slow start

The government has pledged to connect everyone to speeds of at least 2Mbps by 2015.

It has set aside £530m to help fund rural roll-outs. Councils must also contribute funding as will the provider they choose to lay the networks.

Some believe the government faces an uphill job to hit its 2015 target.

Just a handful of councils have chosen a provider to roll out fast broadband. The bidding process has been open to all but, so far, BT has won in every case.

The first to start superfast broadband projects will be Wales and Surrey. Projects in Cumbria, Rutland, Hereford and Gloucestershire are expected to follow shortly.

The rest are expected to complete their procurements by summer 2013, according to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.


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Autonomy 'misled HP on finances'

20 November 2012 Last updated at 11:06 ET

Computer maker Hewlett Packard has asked US and UK authorities to investigate alleged misrepresentations of Autonomy's finances before HP took over the UK software group last year.

HP said Autonomy appeared to have "inflated" the value of the company prior to the takeover as part of a "wilful effort to mislead".

This led to a $5bn (£3.1bn) charge in its latest quarterly accounts.

The former management team of Autonomy "flatly rejected" the allegations.

The former employees said they were "shocked" to see the statement.

"HP's due diligence review was intensive," it added, referring to the process of investigating a firm prior to purchase.

"It took 10 years to build Autonomy's industry-leading technology and it is sad to see how it has been mismanaged since its acquisition by HP," the statement said.

During a conference call following the announcement, HP chief executive Meg Whitman said: "We did a whole host of due diligence but when you're lied to, it's hard to find.

"[Autonomy] was smaller and less profitable that we had thought," she said.

She said HP's investigations suggested that the UK firm had misstated its revenues and growth rate.

Taking into account recent falls in HP's share value and lower-than-anticipated returns from the merger, the total one-off charge recorded in HP's accounts for the three months to the end of October was $8.8bn, pushing the company to a $6.85bn net loss.

'Questionable accounting'
Continue reading the main story

HP's allegations... are shocking if true - not least because for years Autonomy was regarded as that rarest and most precious of British companies, a global hi-tech success"

End Quote

HP said during the conference call that "a very senior person" from Autonomy had come forward "with specific details [of accounting misrepresentations]". That person was still at the company, it said.

Ms Whitman said HP had discovered a number of irregularities, including hardware sales that had been reported as software revenues, which inflated both overall revenues and profit margins.

She said margins of between 40% and 45% had been reported, whereas HP now believed them to be between 20% and 28%.

She added that as well as referring the matter to the regulatory authorities, the company would be "aggressively pursuing individuals responsible for this wrongdoing".

This would involve trying to recover money for HP shareholders.

HP shares fell 13% in early trading in New York following the announcement.

Criticism

HP completed the takeover of Autonomy for $12bn in October last year.

Autonomy was founded by Mike Lynch in 1996 and grew to become one of the largest software companies in the UK.

Mr Lynch is a non-executive director of the BBC, which said in a statement: "We expect to discuss these reports with Dr Lynch imminently."

Autonomy gained a listing on the US Nasdaq exchange in May 2000, at the height of the technology boom, and was listed in London six months later.

The firm has often been cited as an example of how academic research can be turned into a profitable business, although it has attracted criticism from the City, particularly when, in October 2010, it warned there had been unexpected volatility in its customers' "purchasing behaviour" and lowered its full-year forecasts.

HP's decision to buy the company was part of the US firm's long-term plan to move away from making computers into the more profitable software business.


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