To:mswier@YAHOO.COM
Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 16:29:11 -0500 (EST)
From:"Linux Pipeline Newsletter" <linuxed@techwire.com>
Subject: [LXP] Linux Pipeline - 03.22.2006 - Google Wins One For The Team Linux Pipeline Newsletter | Google Wins One For The Team | 03.22.2006
Linux Pipeline Newsletter
www.LinuxPipeline.com
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 2006


In This Issue:
  • Editor's Note: Google Wins One For The Team
  • Top Linux News
        - Mozilla Readies Firefox 2.0 Alpha Release
        - Novell Launches SUSE Linux 10, Lays Out OES Roadmap
        - Judge Slashes Government Request For Google Data
        - More News...
  • Editor's Picks
        - Six Options For Open-Source Support
        - Review: The Beat Goes On For Internet Explorer
        - Novell CEO Looks To Fuel Enterprise Linux Push
        - More Picks...
  • Voting Booth: Firefox Faces The Future
  • Get More Out Of Linux Pipeline
  • Manage Your Newsletter Subscription


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    Editor's Note: Google Wins One For The Team

    Google deserves credit this week for fighting, and winning, an important legal battle. Think of it as yet another free ride, courtesy of a company that has earned a fortune giving away its services.

    It's ironic that Google's competitors will also benefit -- even if none of them were willing to stand up for their shareholders' or customers' true best interests by picking a high-profile fight over the Justice Department's demands. Instead, when the Feds came calling, Yahoo, Microsoft, and AOL decided upon a somewhat less challenging response: they covered their butts, showed their bellies, and coughed up their data.

    Google did not get everything it wanted: The judge allowed the government to ask for 50,000 randomly-selected URLs from the company's Internet search-and-indexing data, to serve as research fodder in its efforts to defend the utterly appalling Child Online Protection Act.

    In relative terms, however, it's hard to imagine a more satisfying outcome for the company. As it stands, the government's original subpoena demanded that Google turn over billions of URLs, along with millions of search terms mined from the company's data-storage systems. Now, the feds will get a tiny fraction of their original request in one case, and nothing in the other case: the judge denied the government's request for search terms, in part due to the more proprietary nature of this data.

    Google was lucky in at least one respect: James Ware, the presiding U.S. District judge, was more than equal to the task of assessing the technologies involved in the case. As a result, he never lost sight of the single most important issue at stake: Whether the government should feel free to help itself to private data repositories that will, in many cases, yield information unrelated to its original request, but which is bound to tempt investigators who stumble across it. This is our modern-day encounter with the dreaded "slippery slope" -- and it's a long way to the bottom, given the sheer volume of data being collected and warehoused these days, often without our consent or knowledge.

    Google's competitors, including Microsoft and Yahoo, claim they negotiated with the government to turn over less data than they were initially asked to provide, even though they did not see fit to mount formal legal challenges. Even if it's true, it's a tactic that is worse than useless in one crucial respect: It does nothing to limit the government's ability, through both public exposure and legal precedent, to show up in the future, again and again, expecting free access to whatever data it sees fit to troll for "research purposes."

    Google may or may not have fought this legal battle as a matter of principle: It's enough to note that the company protected its shareholders' best interests. Unlike its competitors, however, Google played this game from the very beginning with a long-term, strategic goal in mind: making the government think twice before it launches any future fishing expeditions to the company's data well.

    By fighting what could easily have been a costly and damaging legal battle, Google also presented all of us with a gift that will keep on giving for many years to come: a legal precedent that will force the government to weigh similar, future requests for information far more carefully than it would have otherwise. In the process, the company has proved that, now as always, the only way to protect one's rights is to stand up and fight for them.

    Enjoy the rest of your week, and stay in touch.

    Matt McKenzie
    Editor, Linux Pipeline
    mattcmp@sonic.net
    www.LinuxPipeline.com


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    Top Linux News

    Mozilla Readies Firefox 2.0 Alpha Release
    The Mozilla Foundation is close to releasing the first alpha edition of the next Firefox, the group's Web site announced, with a Tuesday unveiling likely.

    Novell Launches SUSE Linux 10, Lays Out OES Roadmap
    At Brainshare, Novell formally unveiled SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 10, and the company also detailed plans for the next Open Enterprise Server release.

    Judge Slashes Government Request For Google Data
    A federal judge pares down a Department of Justice demand for data from the search engine giant that could have encompassed billions of records, approving a request for just 50,000 random URLs and turning down completely a request for search-query terms.

    Gates Commits Internet Explorer To Yearly Updates
    Bill Gates promises to update IE as often as every nine to 12 months to keep pace with quickly evolving Web technologies and programming tools.

    Sun Releases Open-Source Processor
    The OpenSparc T1--formerly called Niagara--is a 64-bit, 32-thread processor design for which Sun will provide both hardware and software specs.

    Microsoft Refreshes IE 7 Beta 2 Preview
    Microsoft issues another update to its Beta 2 preview of Internet Explorer 7, and the company declares the next-generation browser's rendering engine to be "layout complete."

    Novell Plans SUSE Linux 11 For 2008
    Just as version 10 is shipping, a Novell exec provided a sneak preview of the next version, which will offer virtualization for servers and storage, enhanced security, a compiler and run-time, and identity management and provisioning.

    Linux Tools Tackle Network-Management Challenges
    Open Country expects to officially launch OCM 3.0 Universal Linux System Management Suite, with coverage for most Linux packages.

    Novell, SpikeSource Partner On LAMP Stack
    Novell has formed an alliance with SpikeSource, focusing on better integration between the firms' enterprise Linux and LAMP-stack products -- a relationship that both firms hope to use to gain competitive leverage versus Microsoft.

    EclipseCon To Spotlight New Members, Projects
    Sun Microsystems remains a holdout, but software companies Salesforce.com, SugarCRM and MySQL plan to announce their membership in the Eclipse Foundation this week as the open-source community holds its annual EclipseCon meeting.


    Editor's Picks

    Six Options For Open-Source Support
    Support is a key issue for any firm considering open-source software, and it can vary wildly, depending on the maturity of a particular open-source project. We'll show you the most common open-source support options, and discuss how to choose the best one to suit your organization's needs.

    Review: The Beat Goes On For Internet Explorer
    Microsoft's browser, after years of neglect that earned it a well-deserved reputation as a source of security problems, has changed its ways: IE 7 is already far more secure, cleaner, and easier to use than its predecessor, with still more improvements in the works.

    Novell CEO Looks To Fuel Enterprise Linux Push
    At Brainshare 2006 in Salt Lake City, Novell CEO Jack Messman discussed the Waltham, Mass.-based software company's launch of Suse Linux Enterprise Server 10, its prospects against Microsoft Windows, and a number of related topics.

    Review: Gcast Podcasting Service
    Want to be a radio star? Gcast offers beginners the chance to try out basic podcasting for free.

    Disney's Iger: No Net Neutrality Laws Needed
    Walt Disney CEO Robert Iger weighed in on the network neutrality debate with an opinion guaranteed to please his hosts at the TelecomNext show -- he doesn't think any new legislation is needed.


    Voting Booth: Firefox Faces The Future

    Cast Your Vote Now!
    This week's poll question: What will happen to Firefox when Internet Explorer 7 is released later this year? Will Microsoft finally squash Mozilla with a quality Web browser, or does Firefox still have plenty of tricks to keep Redmond second-guessing? Let us know, cast your vote!


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