dead at the age of 75 the Hall of Fame winner died at his San Francisco bay home of leukemia early today.
for more information see: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20039776/
dead at the age of 75 the Hall of Fame winner died at his San Francisco bay home of leukemia early today.
for more information see: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20039776/
Died at his home off the coast of Sweden today.
for more information see: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20031419/
Directly snipped from BoingBoing with many thanks for the information
http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/133216494/seeing_yellow_call_y.html
Cory Doctorow: Seeing Yellow wants you to call your printer's manufacturer and ask them to stop spying on you.
We've known that our printers are spying on us, ever since the Electronic Frontier Foundation cracked the secret codes in the output of color laser printers. These hidden codes -- apparently placed at the behest of the Secret Service -- identify the serial number, make and model of the printer that printed them, as well as a date and timestamp.
What we didn't know is that if you ask the manufacturer of your printer to stop spying on you, they respond by ratting you out to the Secret Service as a dangerous subversive, and a few days later, the SS will show up and ask you why you care about your privacy.
Seeing Yellow -- a project from the MIT Media Lab -- wants to put a stop to this by overwhelming the manufacturers with complaints from their customers, so many that they can't turn us all into the SS.
Link
When you print on a color laser printer, it's likely that you are also printing a pattern of invisible yellow dots. These marks exist to allow the printer companies and governments to track and identify you -- presumably as a way to combat money counterfeiting. When one person asked his printer manufacturer about turning off the tracking dots, Secret Service agents showed up at his door several days later.Upset? You should be!
Let's stand up to silent tracking and government bullying and send a strong message to printer manufacturers. Our privacy and our control over our own technology is far too important to give up over trumped up fears of photocopied money.
See also:
EFF cracks hidden snitch codes in color laser prints
Do forensic printer marks slow down printers?
Is Your Printer Spying On You?
Seeing Yellow: call your printer's manufacturer and ask why they spy on you