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3D printer 'could use Moon rocks'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 01 Desember 2012 | 23.52

29 November 2012 Last updated at 09:05 ET

Future Moon colonists should be able to use lunar rocks to create tools or spare parts, according to a study.

US researchers have used a 3D printer to make small objects out of melted simulated lunar rocks.

They say the technique could help future missions to minimise the weight and the expense of carrying materials into space as a digital file would be enough.

But one expert says such a printer would have to be extremely precise.

In 2010, Nasa asked a team from Washington State University to see whether it was possible to use lunar rocks for 3D printing.

It supplied the researchers with simulated Moon rocks, or lunar regolith simulant, containing silicon, aluminium, calcium, iron and magnesium oxides.

Many hundreds of kilograms of Moon rocks were collected during Nasa missions, but the scientists did not use them because they are considered a national treasure in the US.

Lunar regolith simulant is commonly used for research purposes at Nasa.

"It sounds like science fiction, but now it's really possible," said Prof Amit Bandyopadhyay, the lead author of the study, published in the Rapid Prototyping Journal.

His team created simple 3D shapes by sending a digital file or scan to a printer which then built the items layer by layer out of melted lunar regolith, fed via a carefully controlled nozzle to form a shape. The process is known as "additive manufacturing".

A laser was used to melt the material.

"As long as you can have additive manufacturing set up, you may be able to scoop up and print whatever you want. It's not that far-fetched," said Prof Bandyopadhyay.

The research demonstrates the latest advances in 3D printing technology, which is already in use in medicine, fashion, car manufacturing and other industries.

Sophisticated

But Prof Colin Pillinger, the scientist behind the ill-fated Beagle-2 mission to Mars, said the printer would have to be really precise to be able to fabricate complex parts that usually make up the body of a spacecraft.

"It would be nice if you could do that but I'm not sure it would work - it depends whether it is a simple mechanical component or something more complex," Prof Pillinger, who now works at the Planetary and Space Sciences department at the Open University, told BBC News.

"If you break your car on a motorway and have to replace your wheel, and you just print one it's a mechanical component, but if it's something more sophisticated like an electrical component to run your car, it's a different story.

"Of course, if you don't have to take a wheel to the Moon its great, but if it's not a mechanical part that breaks but something more sophisticated then I'm not sure it would work."

However, David Woods, author of How Apollo Flew to the Moon, was more positive.

"The important thing to consider is that the Earth has a very deep gravity well so anything you can make in situ on the Moon will save an awful lot of energy and therefore money," he said.

"So it's better to be able to live off the land. That's why scientists are so interested in water at poles, and the fact Moon dust works well with microwaves and could theoretically be used to make a paved surface if you created roads.

"Such technologies are untested but they do open up the possibility of future colonisation of the Moon, even if only for scientific purposes."

But putting the theory into practice may be some way off. A project to put astronauts back on the Moon by 2020 was cancelled by President Obama on cost grounds, though Nasa still has longer-term plans for a lunar return.


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Internet 'cut off across Syria'

29 November 2012 Last updated at 13:02 ET

The internet has been cut off and mobile phones have been disrupted in Syria, monitoring firms have said.

Networking firm Renesys said the country's connection protocols were unreachable, "effectively removing the country from the internet".

Local reports suggested that the internet had been down since early afternoon, and that telephone lines were only working intermittently.

The Syrian government has blamed "terrorists" for the disconnection.

"The terrorists targeted the internet lines, resulting in some regions being cut off," Syria's minister of information told a pro-government television station.

According to activists, it has been known for similar communication cuts to occur in isolated areas before military operations.

Amnesty International has described the reports as "very disturbing".

Renesys, a US-based company which tracks internet connectivity worldwide, said on its blog: "In the global routing table, all 84 of Syria's IP address blocks have become unreachable."

According to its systems, access was disconnected at 12:26pm local time (10:26 GMT).

'Started to dive'
Jim Cowie

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Another US firm, Akamai, also confirmed it was unable to connect with Syria's internet.

Activists were using satellite phones to make contact with the outside world, Reuters reported.

Search giant Google noted that Syrians were unable to access any of its services including YouTube. The video sharing website is a popular place for activists to upload footage from the country.

Psiphon, a Canadian company that produces advanced computer systems for circumventing censorship systems, told the BBC that its monitoring showed the number of people connecting from within Syria had "started to dive" from around midday local time.

Psiphon's system - which requires specialised software - has throughout November been seeing 13-15,000 log-ins per day.

However, at the time of the reported outage, none of its users were able to get online.

Syria has previously seen large outages in July and August this year, each lasting less than an hour and only affecting targeted areas.

During the uprising in Egypt, four major internet service providers were cut off in the country during mass protests against the then-President Hosni Mubarak.

Breaking connections

Egyptians quickly found ways around the blocks, and Google introduced a "speak-to-tweet" service which allowed people to connect to Twitter via the telephone.

In Libya, internet blackouts were common in areas that were at the time still controlled by Colonel Gaddafi.

The exact method being used to cut off the internet in Syria is unknown, one security expert said, but there are clues.

"It looks like they are using the same approach as Libya did," explained Rik Ferguson, vice president of security research at Trend Micro.

"Requests for Syrian addresses are simply timing out - so it's likely to be 'blackholing' or even breaking connections physically by cutting cables or switching things off."

Blackholing is a tactic which involves sending internet traffic into a dead end - rather than its intended destination.


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Microsoft prices 'pro' Surface

29 November 2012 Last updated at 15:33 ET

Microsoft has revealed it will charge $899 (£560) for the basic version of its Surface with Windows Pro tablet.

The device will be released in January and features an Intel chip allowing it to run the full version of the Windows 8 operating system.

The price is $400 more than the existing Surface with Windows RT tablet, which is less powerful and does not run programs such as Photoshop.

The devices are intended to challenge the iPad and Android-based tablets.

Faster, heavier

Microsoft's chief executive, Steve Ballmer, told shareholders this week that the fact his firm was releasing its tablets more than two years later than Apple might have contributed to its share price being outpaced by its rival.

"Maybe we should have done that earlier," he said.

He had earlier suggested that he was certain sales of the original Surface would grow.

"We've had a modest start because Surface is only available on our online retail sites and a few Microsoft stores in the United States," he told French newspaper Le Parisien.

Both versions of the Surface can be operated as a 10.6in (26.9cm) touchscreen tablet, or snapped into one of the firm's keyboards to mimic the functionality of a notebook computer.

The Windows RT version - which is powered by an ARM-based chip from Nvidia - is expected to offer longer battery life, but can only run the limited number of third-party programs available from Microsoft's own online store.

The Windows Pro version avoids this restriction but is heavier in part because it features a higher capacity battery to run its more power-hungry processor.

It will be offered with 64GB of storage for $899 or 128GB of storage for $999. Neither price includes one of Microsoft's keyboards, which add at least another $99.

One industry watcher noted that the new computer would face more competition due to the fact more Window 8-powered computers have been announced than Windows RT ones by other manufacturers.

"The Intel-based version of Windows 8 is far more attractive to the market than the Windows RT version as consumers today can't ignore the fact that they may just be a version of a program that they want to run built on the old architecture which the ARM-based version doesn't support," Ken Dulaney, a mobile technology analyst at consultants Gartner, told the BBC.

"But there will be a lot of other Windows 8 hybrids out there that also allow their screens to be detached from their keyboards.

"So I'd suggest that buyers sit back and wait for other products which may be even more compelling or cheaper and not become too fixated on what is a first-generation Microsoft device."


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BPI demands pirate proxy closure

29 November 2012 Last updated at 15:55 ET By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

The UK's music industry body is demanding that a service offering a workaround to access banned site The Pirate Bay is shut down by its owner.

Pirate Party UK, a political group, has set up a proxy that can be used to reach the piracy site even though it has been blocked by the UK courts.

The British Phonographic Industry (BPI) has written to the party's leader Loz Kaye to request the proxy's removal.

Mr Kaye told the BBC his party was "seeking legal advice".

"We've been clear all along, the reasons for the proxy," Mr Kaye added.

"It is a legitimate tool, for a legitimate political end."

Pirate Party UK - which is not affiliated with The Pirate Bay - said it created the proxy website as an act of "freedom of expression" and to support "the right to share information and ideas without interference and that censorship is never the right answer".

However, in a letter seen by the BBC, BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor told Mr Kaye: "Freedom of expression is not an absolute right.

"It comes with a duty to respect the rights of others, including those whose talent, hard work and investment help to create music and other entertainment."

'Passionate believers'

Since launching the proxy, the Pirate Party UK's website has rocketed in popularity.

According to web metrics firm Alexa, the party's site was ranked 1,943 in the UK prior to the Pirate Bay ban.

The site is now ranked 147 - higher than the likes of Netflix, the Huffington Post and the NHS. Mr Kaye has previously boasted that it sent more than two million hits to the Pirate Bay every day.

Mr Taylor argued that the Pirate Party UK's arguments to support the proxy were a "complete red herring".

"We are passionate believers in freedom of speech," Mr Taylor said.

"But it doesn't justify The Pirate Bay helping themselves to other people's work.

"The human rights implications of blocking this illegal site have been fully considered by the High Court.

"Whatever their views, Pirate Party UK are no more above the law than anyone else."

Mr Taylor has requested that the Pirate Party UK respond to the BPI's letter by 6 December.

Mr Kaye told the BBC he intended to honour that request.


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Facebook and Zynga cut their ties

30 November 2012 Last updated at 06:31 ET

Facebook and Zynga have amended an agreement that gave the games developer strong access to the social network's one billion users.

Zynga is the developer behind Farmville, a game once mostly played on Facebook, which at its peak attracted 82 million players a month.

Zynga now has its own games platform, but players will no longer be able to share their progress on Facebook.

Zynga's share price fell by 13% in after-hours trading following the news.

It is the latest blow for the company, which last month announced job cuts and studio closures.

The change, which will take place from 31 March 2013, ends Zynga's ability to promote its Zynga.com platform on Facebook.

The move also means it will no longer be required to display Facebook advertising on its own site.

"There was plenty of speculation Zynga was getting referrals within the Facebook community that other gaming companies weren't getting which helped drive web traffic to Zynga games," Digital World Research chief executive PJ McNealy said.

Facebook said the move would bring its relationship with Zynga in line with other games studios.

"We have streamlined our terms with Zynga so that Zynga.com's use of Facebook Platform is governed by the same policies as the rest of the ecosystem," the social network giant said in a statement.

"We will continue to work with Zynga, just as we do with developers of all sizes."

Facebook has not announced plans to build its own games platform.

Recent figures suggest 80% of Zynga's revenue comes from Facebook users.

In an email to staff in October 2012, Zynga founder Mark Pincus said the company would close its Boston studio and consider closing studios in the UK and Japan as part of an "overall cost reduction plan".


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Police raid 'dark net' servers

30 November 2012 Last updated at 07:27 ET

Austrian police have seized servers that were part of a global anonymous browsing system, after images showing child sex abuse were found passing through them.

Many people use the Tor network to conceal their browsing activity.

Police raided the home of William Weber, who ran the servers, and charged him with distributing illegal images.

Mr Weber denied the charges and said he had no knowledge of what people did via the servers, which supported Tor.

'Anything goes'

The Onion Router (Tor) was invented by the US military as a way to conceal official use of the net. It pipes data through many different nodes, like the layers of an onion, to hide who is browsing what site.

Mr Weber operated part of the Tor network known as an "exit node". These powerful servers act as a link between the wider net and the cloud of computers forming the core of the Tor network.

In total, Mr Weber had operated seven Tor exit nodes that had piped terabytes of data every day between the two networks, he revealed in an interview conducted after the raid.

"I mainly run the exit nodes to make it possible for the not-so-privileged folks to have uncensored access to the internet, without fear of government prosecution," he said.

The police raided Mr Weber's flat and took away the 20 computers he had there. However, he said, the server police had said had been used to distributed the illegal images was in Poland and was currently offline following complaints from Polish police about it being used in hack attacks.

After the raid Mr Weber was interviewed by police who, he said, had become "more friendly" after he had explained how Tor worked and that he was not responsible for what people did via the anonymising system and had kept no "logfiles" of activity.

Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at security firm F-Secure, said although Tor had many laudable uses, others were content to abuse it.

"It reminds me of the web in 1995," he said. "In those early days, once people got the hang of it, anything goes as there seemed to be no law, no police and no regulation."

"People trust they will never be found when they are on Tor," he said.

Mr Weber is appealing for donations to help fund his legal defence and establish a legal precedent to help protect other operators of Tor exit nodes from similar police attention.

He potentially faces a lengthy prison sentence if found guilty of distributing images of child sex abuse.


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'Bring your own' laptop to work

30 November 2012 Last updated at 08:46 ET By Gavin Stamp Political reporter, BBC News

Most people are well-acquainted with the concept of BYOB (bring your own bottle).

But could the acronym BYOD (bring you own device) be about to revolutionise the way councils and other public bodies operate?

One in five local authorities in England are reported to be looking at the idea of allowing their staff to use their own mobile phones, laptops and other devices at work while IT managers say the concept has risen up their agenda with "astonishing speed".

Steve Halliday, head of information communications technology at Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council, suggests it is a natural step.

"You would not expect your company to provide your own suits or shoes and the company car has become much less prevalent than it used to be," he says.

"Your personal device is quite intimate and people will choose and want to use the devices they want."

'Pleasant experience'

In the past six months, he says 12% of his staff have shifted to using their own devices at work - as well as 9% doing the same from home - and he expects this number to rise.

As well as giving staff a "richer experience", he says it has led to quicker and more efficient decision-making, citing the council's ability to co-ordinate its response to the recent floods in the west Midlands.

Continue reading the main story

"Start Quote

I think it is a more pleasant experience being able to use the device you want rather than whatever the council can afford to buy you"

End Quote Steve Halliday Solihull Borough Council

The process is being driven by staff - some of whom want to use "the squeaky toys they got for Christmas" at work and others who are fed up having to go through the log-in protocol of office computers or simply want to be less tied to their desks.

"Nobody is being forced to do so," he adds. "But I think it is a more pleasant experience being able to use the device you want rather than whatever the council can afford to buy you."

This is not a purely money-saving exercise, he insists, although it is clearly less expensive than other options.

The council will not pay for staff to buy the device of their dreams - but it is considering how those who use their own technology to the benefit of the council and taxpayers can be rewarded.

Surrey County Council and the Essex Online Partnership - a consortium of county and districts councils - are among the other public sector organisations pioneering the use of BYOD.

In a recent report, the body which represents IT managers in the public and voluntary sectors - Socitm - set out some of the potential benefits and pitfalls involved.

It warns that councils wanting to buy devices and lease them - or offer allowances to staff to buy them - face potential tax liabilities.

Organisations also need to consider how they can support multiple software platforms and deal separately with corporate and personal information in the inevitable event of devices being lost.

As for security, it acknowledges the "obvious" risk of running business and personal applications side-by-side and urges councils to upgrade their "conditions of acceptable use" policies for employees.

'Reduced risk'

It also points out that staff must be protected if devices are infected or hacked into while being used for work and thought must be given to contingency plans when employees change jobs.

Continue reading the main story

POTENTIAL BENEFITS FOR STAFF AND EMPLOYERS

  • Familiarity with technology
  • Remote access to work email
  • Increased productivity and better morale
  • Greater freedom to manage work-life balance
  • Ability to better track staff on off-site visits

It advises that initially limiting BYOD usage to smart phones and tablet devices would "minimise complexity" as allowing staff to use their own laptops at work would involve more controls that could make the move "unattractive" to people and limit its usefulness.

The tendency for big companies and public bodies to lose memory sticks and computer disks with sensitive personal information on has been a regular sources of embarrassment in recent years.

Solihull Council says the system it is using operates a "secure container" to separate business and personal mobile application data. The files on which business data are stored are encrypted and password protected.

While acknowledging that no system is risk-free, Mr Halliday maintains "the risk is as reduced as it is possible to be and the benefit and the flexibility is huge."

Andy Jacques, general manager of Good Technology, which makes "secure containers", says they can cut down on the time employees spend downloading data on to their own phones, tablets or laptops as well as preventing leaks of sensitive data.

The "containers" are also designed to prevent data being lost by careless workers.

"If your Iphone gets left in the back of a taxi, the IT department can remotely wipe data that may be sitting in the phone without touching personal photos and other information," he says.

Adrian Hancock, Socitm's chief executive and formerly of Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council, says BYOD is "fashionable" but organisations need to consider the merits to their operations, thoroughly test the benefits and "proceed with caution".

"You should not drive a business case for this simply because people want to without much more serious analysis," he says. "Is it true that people want to? If so, why and why and have they thought through the implications."


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Girl, 9, accused of music piracy

30 November 2012 Last updated at 11:05 ET

The father of a child accused of illegally downloading music in Finland has paid a 300 euros (£243; $390) fine to a Finnish anti-piracy group.

He had refused to pay the original settlement of 600 euros and sign a non-disclosure agreement.

A police warrant was then issued to confiscate the laptop of the girl, who was aged nine at the time.

The anti-piracy group said it was acting "within the boundaries of Finnish legislation".

The girl had searched blocked torrent site The Pirate Bay for an album by Finnish popstar Chisu.

Her father claims they were unable to download the album and purchased it legitimately the following day.

The action was taken by the country's Copyright Information and Anti-Piracy Centre (CIAPC), known locally as TTVK, which contacted the father after it discovered his ISP account had connected with The Pirate Bay.

"We have now reached a settlement in the matter. The police investigation has stopped and the rights holders have been compensated. All parties involved are satisfied with the settlement," a spokesperson told the BBC.

"We agree that individual lawsuits against file-sharers are a slow and ineffective process. We can only act within the boundaries of current Finnish legislation which does not permit rights holders to tackle piracy in softer and more efficient ways."

The girl's father described the situation as "the pinnacle of absurdity" when speaking to website Torrentfreak.

"I can see artists are in a position, but this requires education and information, not resource-consuming lawsuits," he said.

Chisu herself suggested in a statement that her fans should listen to her music for free on Spotify.

"I hope that the matter will be resolved soon and sorry to my nine-year-old girls," she said.

According to its website, several national film and music groups are members of the CIAPC, including the Finnish Musicians' Union and the Finnish Film Distributors Association.

"A joint anti-piracy association benefits all parties involved by reducing costs, co-ordinating more efficient anti-piracy strategies and giving authorities an effective point of contact," CIAPC says online.


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Tech investor in Tube sex assault

30 November 2012 Last updated at 12:50 ET

Stefan Glaenzer has admitted in court to sexually assaulting a female passenger on the London Tube network.

He will be sentenced on 20 December and is now on unconditional bail.

Glaenzer, tech investor and former chairman of Last.fm pleaded guilty to one count of sexual assault, which was witnessed by police.

Two similar incidents had also been reported. He said he was a long-term cannabis user and had been on "a drugs binge" at the time of the assault.

The multi-millionaire investor in technology start-ups must now sign the sex offenders register.

"This conviction has devastated him personally and professionally. He has lost his good character that he has maintained for his entire life," said Sallie Bennett-Jenkins QC in his defence.

Glaenzer told Westminster Magistrates Court he would seek help for his drug dependency.

However magistrate Jessica Baldwin told him that his drug use was "an aggravating feature" rather than "mitigation", reports the Evening Standard.

The case has been adjourned for pre-sentence reports.

"I am simply shocked and saddened," wrote TechCrunch's European editor Mike Butcher.

"As for his professional life as an investor and respected player on the internet start-up scene in London, one cannot predict the reaction of the community.

"Some will rally around him, conscious of his high standing and - till now - good reputation. Others will feel unable to based on this conviction and the sordid details of the case."


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Yahoo 'ordered to pay $2.7bn'

30 November 2012 Last updated at 17:36 ET

Internet group Yahoo says it has been ordered to pay $2.7bn (£1.68bn) by a Mexican court.

The reported ruling follows a lawsuit stemming from allegations of breach of contract and lost profits related to a yellow pages listing service.

Yahoo said it "believes the plaintiffs' claims are without merit and will vigorously pursue all appeals".

The lawsuit had been brought by Worldwide Directories SA de CV and Ideas Interactivas SA de CV.

In a statement on its website Yahoo said the 49th Civil Court of the Federal District of Mexico City had "entered a non-final judgment of US $2.7 billion against Yahoo! Inc. and Yahoo de Mexico" in the case.

Shares in Yahoo, which is based in Sunnyvale, California, fell by 1.4% in after-the-bell trading following the news.


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