Large peer-to-peer network by Nullsoft
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“The interesting thing about Napster was, you know, they built this really cool community and everyone had to upload their music to a server. So they controlled the servers. And because the music business doesn't understand it and because it wasn't their thing, they killed it. So the people who had designed that software were like, okay, then let's just make every computer a server. And then like Gnutella and LimeWire came out and it was like, it almost destroyed the industry. They were able to take that technology and bring it back into like, well, ‘let's just stream it to you now. We'll stream it to you back from our servers.' But then the artists paid the price on that.” -- Randy Sosin This is the second half of my conversation with filmmaker, music video producer, and visual storyteller Randy Sosin as we talk about how artists can engage more successfully with their fans, how he's working to overcome the bad reputation that NFTs have given blockchains, and his work in reinventing everything from music videos to concert performances for the digital-audio era.As always, if you have questions for my guest, you're welcome to reach out through the links in the show notes. If you have questions for me, visit www.audiobrandingpodcast.com where you'll find a lot of ways to get in touch. Plus, subscribing to the newsletter will let you know when the new podcasts are available. And if you're getting some value from listening, feel free to spread that around and share it with a friend, along with leaving an honest review. Both those things really help – and I'd love to feature your review on future podcasts. You can leave one either in written or in voice format from the podcast's main page. I would so appreciate that. A Whole Other WorldThe second half of our discussion starts with a look back at file-sharing apps like Napster and Limewire, and how the music industry missed an early opportunity to engage listeners and connect them more directly to the artists. He tells us how he's using the blockchain to create just that sort of connection now: “As an artist, if you do something and sell it, like if somebody buys something, it goes directly to your wallet. It's a fifteen-second transaction thing. And if you're selling it for a hundred dollars or two dollars or whatever, you don't have to wait.” We talk about the hit NFTs have taken in the news lately, and how he's working to separate the pioneering technology and potential behind them from their mixed reputation “So I'm trying to make it more like digital scrapbooks,” he says, “and clips from videos and stems, because there's a whole other world that I feel that's out there.” Wow, That's CheapOur conversation turns to audio jingles, logos, and the industry's ongoing reliance on licensed music from decades past. “They're trying to tap into the familiarity,” Randy explains, “so that you're watching that, you're like ‘oh, I love Stevie Wonder and I love the Beatles.' They're just trying to get you to engage with the brand.” We also talk about the limitations of this strategy, especially since more than one company might license the same song for a commercial. “People are like ‘oh, you know that song and it was in this commercial?'” he tells us. “It's like ‘no, it was in this commercial,' and then they Google and it's in both commercials. And then they're like, oh, wow, that's cheap.” The Fan ExperienceAs our conversation comes to a close, we talk about the growing role of audio branding in the future of digital music, from fans interacting with music video elements to concerts where fans can use tokens to interact with the...
In todays episode I spoke with Erik Cason about The Crypto Sovereignty Project. We also discussed why bitcoin is a vote against the fake democracy we live in today and how it can make war have a real cost to governments and potentially remove the incentive for them to kill innocent human beings. Cryptosovereignty is the personal power, economic liberty, and political praxis that exist in bitcoin directly, crypto assets generally, and the internet widely. It is the power of any single human — no matter their station of birth, class of wealth, or creed of faith — to choose to put their economic, social, and political rights into a new digital common-wealth that is inviolable and beyond the power of any and all governments to violate. "[We will not find a solution to political problems in cryptography] Yes, but we can win a major battle in the arms race and gain a new territory of freedom for several years. Governments are good at cutting off the heads of a centrally controlled networks like Napster, but pure P2P networks like Gnutella and Tor seem to be holding their own." –Satoshi Nakamoto It was a pleasure speaking to Erik and I urge anyone who has not yet read his work to check it out in the links bellow. If you enjoyed the episode, please let us know by liking and/or subscribing to the video and podcast. Do it now please you lazy fcuk. Show Sponsor: Foundation Devices Foundation builds Bitcoin-centric tools that empower you to reclaim your digital sovereignty. As a sovereign computing company, Foundation is the antithesis of today's tech conglomerates. Returning to cypherpunk principles, they build open source technology that “can't be evil,” Show Host: Max https://twitter.com/MaxBitbuybit Show Guest: @Erikcason Website - cryptosovereignty.org More writing - https://medium.com/@erikcason Ungovernable Misfits Socials https://www.ungovernablemisfits.com Twitter https://twitter.com/ungovernablemf As always please feel free to reach out and ask me any questions. Today you can exchange $1 for 3673 Sats (Sale ends soon.) Thank you Foundation Devices for sponsoring the show. Use code BITBUYBIT at check out for $10 off your purchase foundationdevices.com
22 years later on Tuesday 10 May 2022 Apple announced the end of production for the Apple iPod. The device had proven to be a real breakthrough digital device not just for Apple but for the music and the technology world. The iPod turned Apple from a nearly bankrupt company to an eventual $3 trillion behemoth. After 22 years since this product was designed and manufactured its chief architect, Tony Fadell, speaking at the Computer History Museum said “Apple iPod is the only reason why Apple is the company it is today”. The device inspired the creation of the iPhone. It also saved the music industry from piracy. Before the iPod, the music industry was plagued by a bestiary of piracy services - Napster, Grokster, Gnutella, Kazaa - that enabled people to get songs for free. Partly as a result, legal sales of CDs were down 9% in 2002. As the iPod bows out, the technology industry has to take lessons from the creation of this revolutionary product. One of those lessons is that it is not enough to just create a product the product has to make a difference. It's safe to say that the iPod made a difference in the music industry, the tech world, and our society. Since then no tech product has come closer to resembling what Apple created. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
IPFS is a distributed storage network. The content is accessible through peers located anywhere in the world that might relay information store it or both, and IPFS finds data by its content address rather than its locations. We discuss the main principles behind IPFS, the current use cases, and how it changes the basic unit economics of some businesses, as well as its interplanetary future.Chapters:00:00 Intros02:25 What is IPFS?13:58 Three Principles of IPFS15:01 Content-addressable URIs18:44 Content Linking in a DAG21:27 Distributed Hash Table for Discovery22:48 Pinning Content30:58 Censorship-resistance36:38 Used for NFTs39:04 Used for Video and Music Streaming42:56 Use for Package Manager49:14 Use for Machine Learning54:38 Interplanetary Linked Data56:37 A Key Building Block59:22 As a Public Good01:06:36 Developers Tools on top of IPFS01:10:07 Shifting Operational Burden01:18:15 The Interplanetary FutureLinks/Resources:Content Addressing https://simpleaswater.com/ipfs-cids/Linked Data https://ontola.io/what-is-linked-data/Distributed Hash Tables https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dga/15-744/S07/lectures/16-dht.pdfNapster, Kaaza, Gnutella https://www.slideshare.net/uschmidt/peertopeer-systems/20-Comparison_Napster_Gnutella_KaZaAType_ofJuan Benet of IPFS https://research.protocol.ai/authors/juan-benet/ProtoSchool https://proto.school/Marc Andressen's Blog Archive https://pmarchive.com/Left Pad Debacle https://www.davidhaney.io/npm-left-pad-have-we-forgotten-how-to-program/NPM as a private company https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MO8hZlgK5zc&t=46sTransfer Learning https://builtin.com/data-science/transfer-learningDeno Programming language https://deno.land/IPLD https://ipld.io/Jack Dorsey Regrets Shutting down API https://www.revyuh.com/news/software/developers/twitters-founder-admits-that-shutting-down-the-api-was-worst-thing-we-did-it-affected-users-and-developers/Datomic https://www.datomic.com/===== About “The Technium” =====The Technium is a weekly podcast discussing the edge of technology and what we can build with it. Each week, Sri and Wil introduce a big idea in the future of computing and extrapolate the effect it will have on the world.Follow us for new videos every week on web3, cryptocurrency, programming languages, machine learning, artificial intelligence, and more!===== Socials =====WEBSITE: https://technium.transistor.fm/SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/1ljTFMgTeRQJ69KRWAkBy7
9/11 rocks the world of gaming Gamecube launches in Japan Pokemon gets its own handheld These stories and many more on this episode of the Video Game Newsroom Time Machine This episode we will look back at the biggest stories in and around the video game industry in November of 2001. As always, we'll mostly be using magazine cover dates, and those are of course always a bit behind the actual events. Get us on your mobile device: Android: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly92aWRlb2dhbWVuZXdzcm9vbXRpbWVtYWNoaW5lLmxpYnN5bi5jb20vcnNz iOS: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/video-game-newsroom-time-machine And if you like what we are doing here at the podcast, don't forget to like us on your podcasting app of choice, YouTube, and/or support us on patreon! https://www.patreon.com/VGNRTM Send comments on twitter @videogamenewsr2 Or Instagram https://www.instagram.com/vgnrtm Or videogamenewsroomtimemachine@gmail.com Links: 7 Minutes in Heaven: Video version - https://www.patreon.com/posts/59955071 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Monkey_Ball_(video_game) https://sega.fandom.com/wiki/Monkey_Ball https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dole_Food_Company https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alex_Kidd Corrections: October 2001 Ep - https://www.patreon.com/posts/58914230 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Looney_Tunes#Figuren https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LimeWire https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gnutella https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MOD_(file_format) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Landlord%27s_Game https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgism https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Tristan-Donovan/dp/1250082722 2001: 9/11 gets games cancelled https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AEdge_UK_103.pdf&page=17 http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worldbiz/archives/2001/09/20/0000103826 https://www.devuego.es/pres/revista/hobby-consolas/121 pg. 11 https://media.moddb.com/cache/images/groups/1/1/897/thumb_620x2000/ra2box_0002pre911_rare.png Spiderman Teaser - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ozz8uxW733Q Gamecube launches in Japan https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AEdge_UK_103.pdf&page=6 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GameCube https://www.mobygames.com/game/luigis-mansion https://www.mobygames.com/game/wave-race-blue-storm https://www.mobygames.com/game/super-monkey-ball Microsoft postpones Japanese launch of Xbox https://archive.org/details/NextGen83Nov2001/page/n13/mode/1up May 2001 jump: https://www.patreon.com/posts/52306821 93% of PS2 owners use their machines to play DVDs https://www.devuego.es/pres/revista/hobby-consolas/121 pg. 7 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PlayStation_3 Spaceworld 2001 shows the future of Nintendo https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AEdge_UK_103.pdf&page=64 https://archive.org/details/NextGen83Nov2001/page/n14/mode/1up https://www.devuego.es/pres/revista/hobby-consolas/121 pg. 7 pg. 40 https://archive.org/details/NextGen83Nov2001/page/n31/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Smash_Bros._Melee https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Zelda:_The_Wind_Waker Early Zelda tech demo - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEF9Utdu-L0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Legend_of_Zelda:_Breath_of_the_Wild Pokemon gets its own console https://www.devuego.es/pres/revista/hobby-consolas/121 pg. 45 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pok%C3%A9mon_Mini https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamagotchi Euro-Man makes currency exchange fun https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File%3AEdge_UK_103.pdf&page=21 https://www.mobygames.com/company/engine-software-bv Troma tries its hand at games. https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:Edge_UK_103.pdf&page=22 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troma_Entertainment https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0462485/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1 https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117609/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0 https://store.steampowered.com/agecheck/app/279640/ Sam and Max are hitting the road again https://archive.org/details/MicromanaTerceraEpocaSpanishIssue82/page/n7/mode/1up https://samandmax.co.uk/games/plunge-through-space/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_%26_Max Books about the history of games abound https://retrocdn.net/index.php?title=File:Edge_UK_103.pdf&page=23 http://www.arcade-fever.com/ https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/supercade https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_IV:_The_History_of_the_Videogame_Industry https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Ultimate_History_of_Video_Games Games are rotting your brain https://www.eschoolnews.com/2001/08/29/study-computer-games-might-stunt-learning/ https://www.zdnet.com/article/scientists-link-computer-games-to-brain-damage-3002093389/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryuta_Kawashima https://archive.org/details/PC_Zone_108_November_2001/page/n29/mode/1up Tokyo Game show cancels Spring show https://archive.org/details/MicromanaTerceraEpocaSpanishIssue82/page/n7/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokyo_Game_Show https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Entertainment_Supplier%27s_Association Interplay gets last laugh https://archive.org/details/NextGen83Nov2001/page/n17/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interplay_Entertainment https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivendi https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titus_Interactive Bioware sues Interplay https://archive.org/details/pcgames200111/page/n17/mode/1up https://www.gamebanshee.com/news/67374-bioware-sues-interplay.html https://www.gamespot.com/articles/bioware-files-suit-against-interplay/1100-2813738/ http://www.ironworksforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=33641 Don Daglow Interview Part 2 - https://www.patreon.com/posts/39095819 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BioWare https://www.mobygames.com/game-group/baldurs-gate-series https://www.mobygames.com/game-group/neverwinter-nights-series https://www.mobygames.com/game/windows/pool-of-radiance-ruins-of-myth-drannor https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volition_(company) Konami buys 45% stake in Hudson Soft https://www.devuego.es/pres/revista/hobby-consolas/121 pg. 18 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Soft Activision buys Treyarch https://archive.org/details/MicromanaTerceraEpocaSpanishIssue82/page/n5/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treyarch https://www.mobygames.com/company/treyarch-corporation Correction: Treyarch only ported Spiderman to the Dreamcast. Jon Romero and Tom Hall are back! https://archive.org/details/MicromanaTerceraEpocaSpanishIssue82/page/n5/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkeystone_Games Dinamic Multimedia closes its doors https://archive.org/details/MicromanaTerceraEpocaSpanishIssue82/page/n6/mode/1up https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinamic_Software https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinamic_Multimedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microman%C3%ADa Recommended Links: The History of How We Play: https://thehistoryofhowweplay.wordpress.com/ Gaming Alexandria: https://www.gamingalexandria.com/wp/ They Create Worlds: https://tcwpodcast.podbean.com/ Digital Antiquarian: https://www.filfre.net/ The Arcade Blogger: https://arcadeblogger.com/ Retro Asylum: http://retroasylum.com/category/all-posts/ Retro Game Squad: http://retrogamesquad.libsyn.com/ Playthrough Podcast: https://playthroughpod.com/ Sound Effects by Ethan Johnson of History of How We Play and Enzo Maida.
TEMAS: Explicación de los “Clientes” en Ethereum y el Yellow Paper Ingeniería en Blockchain y código en Bitcoin Proyecto original del Web3 en Ethereum (Whisper, Swarm, Ethereum) Parity Hack Multisig wallet (DevOps159) Bitcoin Bug Overflow Blockchains y el Layer 0 de Gobernanza Social BitTorrent, Gnutella y la era del P2P File Sharing Proof of Work, inicios históricos Dark Coin y Digital Cash (Dash), Mastercoin Dark Wallet video Defense Distributed, Cody Wilson Entrega de NFTs Minando Dogecoin en 2013 Bitcoin mining con liquid cooling en 2021, Pepe MasterClass
Although it's not a Dark Web in itself, Gnutella comes from the same era of technology that led to the creation of all the Dark Webs we've covered so far. You're not gonna want to miss the crazy origin story behind this delicious sounding technology!
Mixtape: The Year that Was: 2019 Volume One We had quite a year here on the InSecurity podcast. From the opening bell of the year through RSA and SXSW then onto Hacker Summer Camp before closing out the year in DC with ICIT surrounded by the movers and shakers of cybersecurity in the Federal Government, we have had the enormous good fortune to speak with some of the most interesting people in our industry… What did we learn? Take a listen and find out for yourself Kip Boyle: Cybersecurity is a Business Problem, not a Technical Problem… How can companies reconcile the two? Marcus Carey: A young veteran with top security clearance… who faced a job market that knew exactly how much he had been paid… what now? Stephanie Domas: What are the unique issues we face securing medical devices? Greg Silberman: Are Privacy, Secrecy and Security the same thing? John Strand: What Security buzzwords need to be retired? Rob Capps: From Napster to Gnutella to Bit Torrent… How has the revolution started by Napster changed not just music, but the world at large? Kim Crawley: Autism… truths, misconceptions and the need for a diversity of brains in this world Richard Stiennon: Documenting the entirety of the Cybersecurity Industry for the first time (yes, that is a MiniDisc) About Matt Stephenson Insecurity Podcast host Matt Stephenson (@packmatt73) leads the Security Technology team at Cylance, which puts him in front of crowds, cameras, and microphones all over the world. He is the regular host of InSecurity podcast and video series at events all over the world. Twenty years of work with the world’s largest security, storage, and recovery companies has introduced Stephenson to some of the most fascinating people in the industry. He wants to get those stories told so that others can learn from what has come Every week on the InSecurity Podcast, Matt interviews leading authorities in the security industry to gain an expert perspective on topics including risk management, security control friction, compliance issues, and building a culture of security. Each episode provides relevant insights for security practitioners and business leaders working to improve their organization’s security posture and bottom line. Can’t get enough of Insecurity? You can find us at ThreatVector InSecurity Podcasts, Apple Podcasts and GooglePlay as well as Spotify, Stitcher, SoundCloud, I Heart Radio and wherever you get your podcasts! Make sure you Subscribe, Rate and Review
Financial markets, as said in my last post, took the heaviest losses in United States History. However, somewhere in the world was this many Satoshi formalizing what's going to take the world by storm.A day after publishing that white paper, Satoshi sent an email called "The Cryptography Mailing List".He later wrote: "you will not find a solution to political problems in cryptography....but we can win a major battle in the arms race and gain a new territory of freedom for several years. Governments are good at cutting off heads of centrally controlled networks like Napster, but pure P2P networks like Gnutella and Tor seem to be holding their own." - SatoshiOn the 9th of November in 2008, Bitcoin project was registered on SourceForge.net. Wall Street continued crumbling, Satoshi laid-low, and then nine days after that, the first ever transaction using bitcoin took place.Podcast - https://www.spreaker.com/show/arsenio...Podcast on iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/t...Podcast on Stitcher - https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/arse...Podcast on SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/arsenio-buck/g...YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzp...Facebook - The Arsenio Buck Show - Home | FacebookTwitter - https://twitter.com/arseniobuckshow?l...Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thearseniob...Website - https://thearseniobuckshow.com/Q & A - ArsenioBuck@icloud.comLinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/arsenio-b...Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thearseniobuckshow/?hl=en
** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com
** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com
** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com
Rob and Jason are joined by Vinnie Falco to talk about the Beast HTTP and Web Sockets library. Vinnie Falco started programming on an Apple II+ in 1982. He did significant work on Canvas, an early 1990s desktop publishing program that starting on the Macintosh. A while later he wrote BearShare - a Gnutella compatible file sharing program. After that Vinnie joined up with Ripple, a company that is developing a global financial settlement network built on top of a decentralized cryptocurrency and its associated ledger. Ripple has graciously given him the opportunity to develop and publish Beast, the HTTP and WebSocket library written in C++ and used in Ripple. News Winners of the 2016 Software Developer Podcast Awards The Salami Method g++7 is C++17 complete .NET Rocks: C++ for a New Generation with Kate Gregory Catch 1.6 release Order Your Members Vinnie Falco @falcovinnie Vinnie Falco's GitHub Links Beast Library CppCon 2016: Vinnie Falco "Introducing Beast: HTTP and WebSockets C++ library" Ripple Sponsor Backtrace
The fall of Napster (see Part I of this series) has left a vacuum in the world of file sharing - and as the saying goes, the Internet abhors vacuum... Various File Sharing programs such as Gnutella, Kazaa and others quickly filled the void. In this episode, we'll describe Grokster's legal battle against the Record Companies, the sinister poisoning of file sharing networks by OverPeer - and the rise of BitTorrent. The post The History of File Sharing, Part 2: Grokster & BitTorrent | Curious Minds Podcast appeared first on Curious Minds Podcast.
Doc-to-Help documentation software, saving web preferences, VPN basics, write protected USB drive, Profiles in IT (Justin Frankel, creator of Winamp media player and Gnutella), Wikileaks update (US to file spy charges, defectors forming competing site called OpenLeaks, military bans portable storage), Stuxnet worm revisited (first cyber weapon, effective against Irans nuclear program), Google Chrome OS (creating a notebook that is nothing but Net, another challenge to MS), and Geminid meteor shower (will peak Tuesday morning at 6 am, 60 to 80 meteors per hour). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 11, 2010, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Doc-to-Help documentation software, saving web preferences, VPN basics, write protected USB drive, Profiles in IT (Justin Frankel, creator of Winamp media player and Gnutella), Wikileaks update (US to file spy charges, defectors forming competing site called OpenLeaks, military bans portable storage), Stuxnet worm revisited (first cyber weapon, effective against Irans nuclear program), Google Chrome OS (creating a notebook that is nothing but Net, another challenge to MS), and Geminid meteor shower (will peak Tuesday morning at 6 am, 60 to 80 meteors per hour). This show originally aired on Saturday, December 11, 2010, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Protecting computer from malicious guests, installing a desktop PC power supply, upgrading Blackberry Storm OS, Profiles in IT (Frederick Phillips Brooks, father of the IBM System 360 and author of the The Mythical Man Month), Congressional security breach embarrasses Ethics Committee (file was shared inadvertently by Gnutella peer-to-peer file sharing client, staffer fired), Internet celebrates 40th anniversary (first message went 400 miles between UCLA and SRI, first three letters were LOG, network designed to share computer power between research labs), ICANN will permit non-Latin characters in domain names after 16 November, and Blooms cognitive taxonomy (anatomy of learning, six levels, remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, creating). This show originally aired on Saturday, October 31, 2009, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Protecting computer from malicious guests, installing a desktop PC power supply, upgrading Blackberry Storm OS, Profiles in IT (Frederick Phillips Brooks, father of the IBM System 360 and author of the The Mythical Man Month), Congressional security breach embarrasses Ethics Committee (file was shared inadvertently by Gnutella peer-to-peer file sharing client, staffer fired), Internet celebrates 40th anniversary (first message went 400 miles between UCLA and SRI, first three letters were LOG, network designed to share computer power between research labs), ICANN will permit non-Latin characters in domain names after 16 November, and Blooms cognitive taxonomy (anatomy of learning, six levels, remembering, understanding, applying, analyzing, evaluating, creating). This show originally aired on Saturday, October 31, 2009, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
Black Hat Briefings, Europe 2007 [Audio] Presentations from the security conference.
"The last years have seen the growth of botnets and its transformation inta highly profitable business. Most of the botnets seen until now have used the same basic concepts. This presentation intends tshow what are the major challenges faced by botnet authors and what they might try in the future tsolve them. The presentation will pass through some interesting solutions for botnet design challenges. A layered and extensible approach for Bots will be presented, showing that solutions from exploit construction (like metasploit), P2P networks (Gnutella and Skype), authentication (digital signatures) and covert channels research fields can be used tmake botnets more reliable, extensible and hard tput down." "Augustworks with Information Security since 2000. He worked for security consulting companies, Moduland Proteus, as security analyst and project manager. Augustalsworked in BankBoston, a Bank of America branch, as security manager, and now works as CSin a Credit Card processing company. In 2003, coined the term honeytoken during a discussion with other researchers on the focus-ids mailing list. In his last research, Augustbuilt a Proof of Concept Trojan horse that works against the most recent security measures from Brazilian online banks, presented at the CNASI Conference in 2005. He is an active blogger (http://www.paesdebarros.com.br/indexpb.html). Current president of the Brazilian ISSA Chapter, he alsgives Criptography and Ethical Hacking classes tthe post-graduation courses from IBTA University. He is finishing his Master in Computer Engineering at the Technology Research Institute (Institutde Pesquisas Tecnologicas de SoPaulo), working on a methodology for internal threats detection."
Daß das World Wide Web eine Menge Freunde hat, merkt man schon daran, daß so viel darüber geredet wird. Aber auch eine andere Dienstart erfreut sich wachsender Beliebtheit und steht gerade besonders im Mittelpunkt der Diskussion: Peer-To-Peer Networks. Peer-To-Peer Networking ist die direkte Verbindung einzelner Benutzer. Anstatt bittend vor einem großen Server zu stehen, steht bei dieser Art der Vernetzung der eigene Rechner im Mittelpunkt. Peer-To-Peer Networking hat viele Gesichter. Da ist natürlich die Plattenfreigabe und das File Sharing unter MacOS zu erwähnen. Much more sexy sind das MP3-Füllhorn Napster und andere Dateiverteiler wie Gnutella. Alternative Kommunikationswelten entstehen auch bei MojoNation. Chaosradio blättert durch den Datenwald und stellt Euch die Konzepte dahinter vor.