Jerome Rota, better known as Gej, never thought he'd find himself sitting among the suits and PowerPoint presentations showing off his software at a swanky hotel just minutes from the heart of Hollywood. But the once-underground creator of DivX joined his colleagues this week here at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel. . .. Jerome Rota, better known as Gej, never thought he'd find himself sitting among the suits and PowerPoint presentations showing off his software at a swanky hotel just minutes from the heart of Hollywood. But the once-underground creator of DivX joined his colleagues this week here at the Westin Bonaventure Hotel to launch DivX 5.0, compression technology that promises to be to video what MP3 is to music. Granted, Gej stood out from the buttoned-down Hollywood types with his ponytail, geek glasses and black jeans. The 28-year-old technologist gave only a shy wave and shrug to the crowd when he was introduced during the formal presentation, letting the executives from DivXNetworks do most of the talking. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . Cassandra Reed, often called Cass, couldn't imagine she'd present H.264 video compression to top-tier producers at a glamorous gala.. DivX, video technology, Jerome Rota, Hollywood, digital media. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Mathematician Phil Carmody, who in March of this year managed to encode the DeCSS source in a prime number, has upped the ante by producing a prime number which represents an executable version of the banned CSS descrambler.. . .. Mathematician Phil Carmody, who in March of this year managed to encode the DeCSS source in a prime number, has upped the ante by producing a prime number which represents an executable version of the banned CSS descrambler. Legally this is all a bit squishy, as the DMCA forbids us to make available an access-control circumvention device. All well and good, not that we've tended to care what the DMCA allows or forbids; but this item is also the fruit of mathematical research which the public certainly has a right to see. It's a fine legal paradox for the recording industry to chew on. Is research illegal because it could in some tiny degree weaken their monopoly over the production and distribution of digital media? Or does the public's right to be informed of academic developments make a circumvention device legal when it also exhibits academic value? The link for this article located at TheRegister is no longer available. . Coder Alex Johnson embedded the AES algorithm within a Fibonacci sequence, illustrating a remarkable blend of cryptography and artistry.. DeCSS, Prime Number, Digital Media, Legal Issues, Access Control. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A small Austin start-up run by intelligence community alums is parachuting into the burgeoning, post-Napster, copy-protection market with a remarkably thin, invisible software product that claims to offer nearly invincible armor for music, video, film and e-books alike. But the most . . . . A small Austin start-up run by intelligence community alums is parachuting into the burgeoning, post-Napster, copy-protection market with a remarkably thin, invisible software product that claims to offer nearly invincible armor for music, video, film and e-books alike. But the most remarkable part is, it fights back at would-be pirates. "If you try to hack it, it destroys itself," explains company CEO George Friedman. Hasta la vista, John Perry Barlow! Friedman's company, Infraworks Corporation, has its roots in the military, where the operating motto certainly has never been "Information Wants to Be Free," but something along the lines of "Loose Lips Sink Ships." Infraworks is chaired by former Secretary of Defense and National Security Adviser Frank Carlucci, who also chairs The Carlyle Group merchant bank and Nortel Networks, the global communications firm. Friedman's own background is "in intelligence and computer security," he says. The author of books on business intelligence and the use of technology in warfare, Friedman currently chairs the business intelligence Web site Stratfor.com (intelligence-speak for strategic forecasting). . In Austin's vibrant tech scene, a start-up is creating self-destructing software to revolutionize copy protection with advanced encryption and ephemeral design. Digital Rights Management, Software Security, Copy Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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