PG Weekly Newsletter (2002-01-09)

by Michael Cook on January 9, 2002
Newsletters

========
Subject: [gweekly] Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter
From: Michael Hart <hart@beryl.ils.unc.edu>
To: "Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter" <gweekly@listserv.unc.edu>
Date: Wed, 9 Jan 2002 13:47:36 -0500 (EST)


The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, January 9, 2002

*Last week ended our 52nd week of production for 2001, now on to 2002*

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And now the weekly Etext update:

Total PG ebooks available online **AS OF 01/09/02**:  4,335
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--=={ PROJECT GUTENBERG OF AUSTRALIA:  3 NEW POSTS }==--

Jan 2002 Coming up for Air, by George Orwell[GO#06]       [020003xx.xxx]0037A
Jan 2002 Keep the Aspidistra Flying, by G Orwell   [GO#05][020002xx.xxx]0036A
Jan 2002 A Clergyman's Daughter, by George Orwell  [GO#04][020001xx.xxx]0035A
To access these etexts, go to http://gutenberg.net.au/plusfifty

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--=={ REVISIONS, CORRECTIONS AND NEW FORMATS }==--

Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, xxxxx11.txt.
VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, xxxxx10a.txt.

Please note various changes, corrections and improvements:

There were some problems with the following recently posted file, now fixed.
Jul 2003 Ruth, by Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell  [Gaskell #13][gruthxxx.xxx]4275

Corrections:
Jul 2003 A Modern Telemachus, Charlotte M Yonge  [Yonge#18][mdtelxxx.xxx]4271
The file name should be "mdtel", not "abchr".  Corrected index line is above.

Aug 2003 The New Book Of Martyrs, by Georges Dunhamel      [nbmrtxxx.xxx]4325
is by DUHamel, and should read:
Aug 2003 The New Book Of Martyrs, by Georges Duhamel       [nbmrtxxx.xxx]4325


Updates:
The following etext is now available in both 7-bit & 8-bit formats,
as noted:
Jul 2003 Miscellanies upon Various Subjects, J. Aubrey [#1][7miscxxx.xxx]4254
Jul 2003 Miscellanies upon Various Subjects, J. Aubrey [#1][8miscxxx.xxx]4254
[Author's name: John Aubrey]

May 1997 The White Company, by Arthur Conan Doyle[Doyle#12][whtcoxxx.xxx] 903
(This update includes the following files, not all of which were included
  in version 10:  7whtco11.txt, 7whtco11.zip, whtco11.txt whtco11.zip)

The text in the version 11 of the following etext has only minor changes,
however the .zip file now contains numerous picture files from the book:
May 1997 Wonderful Balloon Ascents, by F. (Fulgence) Marion[wonbaxxx.xxx] 899


And we have posted a significantly improved and/or corrected 12th editions of:
Oct 1997 Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant [US President] V2 [2musgxxx.xxx]1068


And we have posted a significantly improved and/or corrected 11th editions of:

Oct 1997 Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant [US President] V1 [1musgxxx.xxx]1067

Jan 2001 Beyond, by John Galsworthy    [John Galsworthy #3][byondxxx.xxx]2453
Sep 2000 The Freelands, by John Galsworthy  [Galsworthy #2][frndsxxx.xxx]2309
May 2000 The Dark Flower, by John Galsworthy               [dkflrxxx.xxx]2192


-={ 40 NEW U.S. POSTS }=-

***New eBooks For Project Gutenberg Readers This Week***

Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, all     [GM#26][gm26vxxx.xxx]4420
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v7      [GM#25][gm25vxxx.xxx]4419
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v6      [GM#24][gm24vxxx.xxx]4418
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v5      [GM#23][gm23vxxx.xxx]4417
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v4      [GM#22][gm22vxxx.xxx]4416

Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v3      [GM#21][gm21vxxx.xxx]4415
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v2      [GM#20][gm20vxxx.xxx]4414
Sep 2003 Sandra Belloni by George Meredith, v1      [GM#19][gm19vxxx.xxx]4413

***

Aug 2003 The Ghetto and Other Poems, by Lola Ridge[Ridge#2][ghttoxxx.xxx]4332
Aug 2003 Sun-Up and Other Poems, by Lola Ridge    [Ridge#1][snppmxxx.xxx]4331

Aug 2003 Expeditions to Sth. Australia,by Charles Sturt[#3][xpss1xxx.xxx]4330
[Full: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Complete]
Aug 2003 ExpeditioNs to Sth. Australia II,Charles Sturt[#2][xpss1xxx.xxx]4329
[Full: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Volume II]
Aug 2003 Expeditions to Sth. Australia I, Charles Sturt[#1][xpss1xxx.xxx]4328
[Full: Two Expeditions into the Interior of Southern Australia Volume I]
Aug 2003 The Valley Of Decision, by Edith Wharton   [EW#10][vldcnxxx.xxx]4327
Aug 2003 The Expansion Of Europe, by Ramsay Muir           [xpnrpxxx.xxx]4326

Aug 2003 The New Book Of Martyrs, by Georges Dunhamel      [nbmrtxxx.xxx]4325
Aug 2003 Fifty Famous Fables, by Lida Brown McMurry        [fffblxxx.xxx]4324
Aug 2003 The Heart-Cry of Jesus, by Byron J. Rees          [hcrjsxxx.xxx]4323
Aug 2003 My Three Days In Gilead, by Elmer U. Hoenshel     [tdgldxxx.xxx]4322
Aug 2003 Margot Asquith, An Autobiography: Volumes I & II  [mrgsqxxx.xxx]4321

Aug 2003 The Principles of Morals, by David Hume           [nqpmrxxx.xxx]4320
[Full title: An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Morals]
Aug 2003 The Gospels in Four Part Harmony, J. Clontz       [gfourxxx.xxx]4319C
[gfour10.txt gfour10.zip gfour10h.htm gfour10h.zip gfour10r.rtf gfour10r.zip]
Aug 2003 Educators & Librarians, US Copy. Office  [USCO #3][rcwelxxx.xxx]4318
[Full title: Reproduction of Copyrighted Works by Educators and Librarians,
US Copyright Office]
Aug 2003 Prophetia Ionae(Jonah), Latin Vulgate Bible[Latin][prphtxxx.xxx]4317
Aug 2003 The Romance of the Colorado River, F. Dellenbaugh [romcoxxx.xxx]4316
[Author's name: Frederick S. Dellenbaugh][Illustrations are in the .zip file]

Aug 2003 The Life of Sir Richard Burton, Thomas Wright      [xlsrbxx.xxx]4315
[7-bit version with non-accented characters in 7lsrb10.txt and 7lsrb10.zip]
[8-bit version with accented characters in 8lsrb10.txt and 8lsrb10.zip]
Aug 2003 Appendicitis, by John H. Tilden, M.D.             [atehdxxx.xxx]4314
Aug 2003 The Odd Women, by George Gissing     [Gissing #18][toddwxxx.xxx]4313
Aug 2003 A Life's Morning, by  George Gissing [Gissing #17][alifexxx.xxx]4312
Aug 2003 The Emancipated, by George Gissing   [Gissing #16][thmncxxx.xxx]4311

Aug 2003 Will Warburton, by George Gissing    [Gissing #15][wllwrxxx.xxx]4310
Aug 2003 Demos, by George Gissing             [Gissing #14][demosxxx.xxx]4309
Aug 2003 The Town Traveller, by George Gissing[Gissing #13][tttllxxx.xxx]4308
Aug 2003 In the Year of Jubilee, by George Gissing    [#12][iyjeexxx.xxx]4307
Aug 2003 Veranilda, by George Gissing         [Gissing #11][vrnldxxx.xxx]4306

Aug 2003 The Unclassed, by George Gissing     [Gissing #10][thnclxxx.xxx]4305
Aug 2003 Our Friend the Charlatan, George Gissing      [#9][rfrndxxx.xxx]4304
Aug 2003 Denzil Quarrier, George Gissing       [Gissing #8][dnzlqxxx.xxx]4303
Aug 2003 Thyrza, George Gissing                [Gissing #7][thyrzxxx.xxx]4302
Aug 2003 The Nether World, George Gissing      [Gissing #6][thnthxxx.xxx]4301



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With 4,335 eTexts online as of January 9, it now takes an average
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This "cost" is down from $3.10 when we had 3225 Etexts on Mar 7
This "cost" is down from $3.17 when we had 3150 Etexts on Feb 6
This "cost" is down from $3.23 when we had 3100 Etexts on Jan 3, 2001

***

[Please try to contact him. . .he never has answered our attempts]
BILL AIMS AT PROTECTING RIGHT TO COPY DIGITAL FILES
Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.) says he will introduce legislation that would
amend the Digital Millennium Copyright Act to protect consumers' right to
make copies of digital files, such as songs on a CD. Boucher also has
written a letter to the Recording Industry Association of America,
suggesting that copy-protected CDs may violate the 1992 Audio Home
Recording Act. Under that law, consumers pay a few cents extra each time
they buy a blank CD, with the money going toward the recording industry to
compensate them for potential losses caused by unauthorized copying.
Boucher says, "I am particularly concerned that some of these technologies
may prevent or inhibit consumer home recording." (Los Angeles Times 8 Jan 2002)
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-000001793jan08.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2D
technology

MICROSOFT'S PRACTICE OF NOT PAYING DIVIDENDS EARNS NADER'S IRE
Consumer activists Ralph Nader and James Love have written a letter to
Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates in which they call Microsoft's "failure to
pay dividends year after year" an "inappropriate and we believe unlawful
device" to shield Microsoft's profits from taxes. Microsoft is currently
sitting on a cash pile of about $36 billion, which has caught the attention
of some analysts and investors who say that it's simply too much, and
should be put to better use, including a possible dividend payout. "It's a
tax-avoidance scheme for the big shareholders," said Nader in an interview.
"This thing is out of control. Has any company in history ever accumulated
so much cash?" Microsoft said in a statement that the U.S. tax code
"recognizes the need for companies to retain cash to fund their businesses,
and high-tech companies commonly maintain significant cash balances to
support their business objectives." (Wall Street Journal 7 Jan 2002)
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1010359428628772440.htm (sub req'd)

AOL TO BUY OUT BERTELSMANN STAKE IN AOL EUROPE
AOL Time Warner is paying cash to buy out Bertelsmann's $6.75 billion stake
in AOL Europe in response to Bertelsmann's decision to exercise its option
to sell its stake for the pre-arranged amount. AOL plans to pay in two
tranches -- $5.25 billion in January and $1.5 billion next July. "AOL's
shares have been under pressure and there's quite a bit of volatility in
the stock, so AOL Time Warner looked at its bank facility and decided it
could absorb a cash payment comfortably," said one source close to the
deal. (Reuters/CNet 7 Jan 2002)
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-8391431.html?tag=nbs

INTEL INTRODUCES TWO NEW PENTIUM CHIPS
Intel is introducing two Pentium 4 chips that will run at speeds of 2.0
gigahertz and 2.2 gigahertz, support a more common memory standard (DDR, or
digital data rate), and be designed using the 0.13 micron technology that
allows a greater number of transistors to be placed on each chip. The chips
were previously code-named Northwood. (San Jose Mercury News 7 Jan 2002)
http://www.siliconvalley.com/docs/news/svfront/intel010702.htm

HOME PCs -- THE NEXT HACKER TARGET
Computer hackers are turning their sights to the humble home PC, which is
now faster, more powerful and less secure than ever before. Fueling the
onslaught are several factors, including the trend toward home-based DSL or
cable connections that are "on" all the time, and the lackadaisical
attitudes of most home PC owners who generally don't keep up to date with
the latest antivirus and firewall software. In addition, many home users
are naive about the potential threat and willingly click on unsolicited
e-mails that could be infected with malicious programs. "Home users have
generally been the least prepared to defend against attacks," warns
Carnegie Mellon's Computer Emergency Response Team Coordination Center. "In
many cases, these machines are then used by intruders to launch attacks
against other organizations." Antivirus firm Message Labs reported that it
detected one virus per 370 e-mail messages in 2001, double the rate of the
previous year. Meanwhile, Amit Yoran of computer security firm Riptech says
the advent of wireless networking will increase the risk of attack
significantly: "The standard itself is insecure."  What we're faced with is
the widespread adoption [of wireless networks] throughout corporate America
and throughout consumer markets and people haven't really thought through
how to protect." (AP/Wall Street Journal 4 Jan 2002)
http://interactive.wsj.com/articles/SB1010104082304162760.htm (sub req'd)

SEND ME ASCII: A DAY IN THE WIRED LIFE
Sun chief executive Scott McNealy, like the rest of us, gets a lot of
e-mail messages: "I get hundreds a day, I review them all, answer many,
forward many for response, hate the junk, I type really fast, ignore
perfect grammer and typin, getting more over time, but can read e-mail from
any browser, have T1's into my homes and read all that is left from the day
before I go to sleep after the boys go down and get up before they do to
read what came in while sleeping... I HATE attachments, MSFT docs are the
WORST! I send them back. Send me ascii." (USA Today 4 Jan 2002)
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/2002/01/04/email-overload.htm

APPEALS COURT UPHOLDS ANTI-SPAM LAW
Commercial e-mails, or spam, must contain valid return addresses
and other identifiers that make it easier for consumers to remove
themselves from mailing lists, according to a ruling upheld
recently by a California appeals court. The defendants in that
case, two Palo Alto-based companies, had argued that the previous
ruling violated the commerce clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Because Congress has yet to settle on any comprehensive anti-spam
law, consumers must rely on state law. But that could result in
a hodgepodge of restrictions on legitimate Web-based businesses.
The California ruling requires that commercial e-mailers also
mark their messages with an "ADV:" in the subject heading, and
a special "ADV:ADLT" for messages linked to adult content. The
Supreme Court in October refused to hear a challenge to a
Washington state law that stringently regulates spam in that state.
(Cnet, 7 January 2002)

["Big Brother Is Watching YOU!"]
JUDGE OKAYS FBI KEYBOARD SNIFFING
U.S. District Judge Nicholas Politan ruled that the FBI acted
legally when it installed a keystroke logger in the PC of alleged
mobster Nicodermo S. Scarfo in order to root out a password needed
to decrypt confidential business data. Within the encrypted file
is evidence of a gambling and loansharking operation, according
to the Justice Department. Scarfo's defense contended that this
constituted a violation of both wiretap law and the Fourth
Amendment's outlawed "unreasonable" searches, but Politan's
decision upheld assistant U.S. Attorney Ronald Wigler's argument
that neither was circumvented. Wigler said this is the first case
of its kind to employ the keystroke logger, but privacy advocates
are worried that the judge's decision will expand the government's
surveillance powers over its citizens. Also troubling is the fact
that the government did not fully detail the keystroke logger's
operation to the defense, noted Electronic Privacy Information
Center general counsel David Sobel.
(Wired News, 4 January 2002)

You have been reading excerpts from NewsScan Daily
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HACKERS DISCOVER HOLE IN AOL'S INSTANT MESSENGER
America Online has verified that an international group of
hackers has exploited a buffer-overflow security flaw in its
Instant Messenger program that enables them to commandeer
computers. Only users of the Windows version are threatened,
but there are more than 100 million users of that version.
AOL's Andrew Weinstein said that the company has already
developed a remedy that will be implemented within the next few
days. Utah college student and hacker group founder Matt Conover
advised Instant Messenger users only to accept messages from
those on their "Buddy Lists."
(Wall Street Journal, 3 January 2002)

[Harvard Acceptance Letters are Major Spam?]
E-MAIL GLITCH HITS HARVARD APPLICANTS
In the wake of the anthrax scare, Harvard University admissions
officials decided to inform early applicants of their decisions
by e-mail, but a server glitch caused America Online to reject
between 75 and 100 of these instant messages in December.
However, the majority of the applicants eventually received their
notifications. Nevertheless, AOL officials have not been able to
explain why the rejected messages were classified as junk mail
by the servers. AOL's Nicholas Graham said the servers are
designed to block e-mails of a certain size, quantity, or
address. Admissions officials have elected to post a note on
Harvard's Web site suggesting that students ensure that their
ISPs do not block electronic messages from the school.
(Boston Globe Online, 1 January 2002)

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pgweekly_2002_01_09.txt

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