You can use a terminal command to save generated previews of documents. [Read more]![]()
CNET News
Tag Archives: documents
Tip: Generate preview images for a collection of documents
MIT Files Court Papers “Partially” Opposing Release Of Documents About Aaron Swartz Investigation
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is “partially” opposing a request by the estate of Aaron Swartz for the release of documents related to the investigation that led to Swartz arrest and prosecution in federal court. In court papers filed today, MIT counsel states that its opposition stems from two factors: its concerns about people in the MIT community named in the documents and the security of its computer networks. MIT has previously stated that it would release the documents with redactions of names and other information. MIT President L. Rafael Reif said in email to the MIT community earlier this month: On Friday, the lawyers for Aaron Swartz’s estate filed a legal request with the Boston federal court where the Swartz case would have gone to trial. They demanded that the court release to the public information related to the case, including many MIT documents. Some of these documents contain information about vulnerabilities in MIT’s network. Some contain the names of individual MIT employees involved. In fact, the lawyers’ request argues that those names cannot be excluded (”redacted”) from the documents and urges that they be released in the public domain and delivered to Congress. The paper filed today reiterate this position, basing it on threats already made to MIT staff and three separate hacking incidents at the university. The information includes “email, the names, job titles, departments, telephone numbers, email addresses, business addresses, and other identifying information of many members of the MIT community.” Swartz has become a symbol in the Internet community since his suicide. His supporters have led to debate about the role MIT played in Swartz prosecution and the vigilance of the U.S. Attorney General in the case. MIT claims it is fully cooperating in the investigation that has come since Swartz suicide.
TechCrunch
Apple may face fines over documents in privacy lawsuit
Judge notes dramatic increase in document discovery as a result of court’s review, suggesting sanctions may be in order. [Read more]![]()
CNET News
Aaron Swartz’s Estate Seeks Release of Documents
theodp writes “The Boston Globe reports that the estate of Aaron Swartz filed a motion in federal court in Boston Friday to allow the release of documents in the case that has generated national controversy over the U.S. attorney’s aggressive pursuit of a stiff sentence. The Court filing (PDF) suggests that the U.S. attorney’s office is still up for jerking Aaron around a little posthumously, seeking what his lawyers termed overbroad redactions, including names and titles that are already publicly known. Swartz’s family also seeks the return of his seized property (PDF). Last week, Swartz’s girlfriend accused MIT of dragging its feet on investigating his suicide. Meanwhile, Slate’s Justin Peters asks if the Justice Department learned anything from the Aaron Swartz case, noting that Matthew Keys, who faces 25 years in prison for crimes that include aiding-and-abetting the display of humorously false content, could replace Swartz as the poster boy for prosecutorial overreach.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft’s SkyDrive now stores 1B documents
Microsoft today announced its cloud storage service now has one billion documents stored and said it has added new features to quickly save documents and get a link to share with others.
Computerworld News
The Valley’s “No Hire” Years Come To Light In Damning New Documents
Confidential Police Documents Found In Confetti At Macy’s Parade
cstacy writes “The Nassau County (New York) Police Department is ‘very concerned’ about reports that shreds of police documents (with social security numbers, phone numbers, addresses, license plate numbers, incident reports, and more) rained down as confetti in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. The documents also unveiled the identities of undercover officers, including their SSNs and bank information, according to WPIX-TV. Macy’s has no idea how this happened, as they use commercial, colored confetti, not shredded paper.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Leaked AT&T training documents reveal anti-piracy plan
A leaked batch of AT&T training documents reveal an anti-piracy plan in the books, which includes sending warning notices to flagged accounts. In what seems to be a completely draconian measure, any subscriber who’s account is flagged multiple times for copyright infringement will have access to frequently-visited websites (Facebook? YouTube?) blocked until they complete an
DocTrackr Secures $2M From Atlas, Polaris, To Help Secure Your Documents Via The Cloud
Sharing a document online has never been easier, but maintaining control over that document once it’s left home, so to speak, is something different altogether. In the enterprise, that potential loss of control — who can view it, edit it or even print it — is a big deal. Therefore, making it easy for businesses to track and, if necessary, reign in those documents, especially once they enter the cloud, would seem like a startup opportunity too good to miss.
To that end, docTrackr, which does just that, opens its doors today, along with announcing a $ 2 million seed round, led by Fred Destin and Chris Lynch’s Atlas Venture, and Polaris Venture Partners.
TechCrunch
Apple closing statement brings most damning documents yet vs Samsung
Apple asks court to punish Samsung for releasing documents in iPhone suit
Apple will ask a federal court to sanction Samsung Electronics for releasing documents that were not allowed as evidence in the companies' dueling patent-infringement suits.
Computerworld News
Samsung 11.8 inch tablet revealed in court documents
Court filings in the Samsung vs. Apple patent battle show that the Korean manufacturer appears to be working on an extra-large tablet with a Retina display and LTE connectivity.
[Read more]
CNET News
The Surprises In the Latest Apple V. Samsung Court Documents
Nerdfest writes ” The lawyers behind the upcoming Apple v. Samsung trial have been hard at work filing docket after docket as their court battle looms closer, and many of those dockets have just been released to the public. We’re now seeing a lot of previously secret information about the early days of iPhone and iPad R&D, and what’s happened behind closed doors at both Apple and Samsung. Surprises include the iPhone design being ‘inspired’ by Sony product ideas, and that Samsung was warned that it was copying Apple.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Court tells Apple, Samsung most documents in patent case must be public
Apple and Samsung Electronics won't be able to keep certain pieces of information from the public during their high-profile jury trial that begins on Monday, a judge in California said Friday. But what will be public and what won't still isn't known.
Computerworld News
Apple looked to Sony for iPhone design inspiration, court documents show
Apple looked in part to Sony for inspiration in designing its first iPhone, even having an internal designer produce "Sony-like" mock-ups of cell phones that carried the name of the Japanese electronics company, according to internal Apple documents submitted to a California court.
Computerworld News
What do declassified ‘UFO’ documents say about alien life?
Doo.net Lands Series A Funding To Organise Documents, Automatically For The People
[tc_5min code="517397013"]
Paper continues to be a problem inside organisations. we just can’t seem to get rid it despite all these computers. And organising it is annoying. Doo.net hopes to solve the problem by organising documents with a cloud-based service.
It’s now launched its public beta on OS X and announced a Series A round which takes the companies total funding to $ 10m. Plus, an app for the Windows 8 Store is close to final approval and mobile apps for iOS and Android. A Google Docs integration, will come in the next few weeks.
TechCrunch
Infosys employees had concerns about visa use, documents show
An Infosys employee, whose lawsuit against the company triggered a federal investigation into visa fraud, has released some of the evidence in defense of his case.
Computerworld News
US Ordered To Hand Over Megaupload Documents
An anonymous reader writes “A judge in New Zealand has ordered the U.S. government to hand over evidence seized in the Megaupload raid so Kim Dotcom and his co-defendants can use it to prepare a defense for an extradition hearing. The judge wrote, ‘Actions by and on behalf of the requesting State have deprived Mr. Dotcom and his associates of access to records and information. … United States is attempting to utilize concepts from the civil copyright context as a basis for the application of criminal copyright liability [which] necessitates a consideration of principles such as the dual use of technology and what they be described as significant non-infringing uses.’ Once the defense attorneys have gathered and presented their evidence, the judge must decide whether the U.S. can make a reasonable case against Dotcom.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Activision/Bungie legal documents oust potential PS4, Xbox 720 dates
If you’re curious about when the next-generation Microsoft and Sony consoles will be coming out, well lucky for you someone decided to read through page after page of boring legal jargon to find the Activision and Bungie may have ousted potential launch date windows for each platform. Activision and Bungie have firmed up plans to
Former Intel employee pleads guilty to stealing documents
A former Intel employee has pleaded guilty to stealing confidential documents from the company, according to court records.
Computerworld News
Before move to AMD, Intel engineer stole documents
A former Intel engineer pleads guilty to stealing documents just before he left Intel and took a job at rival AMD.
[Read more]
CNET News
FCC Documents Show Sony Chromebook, Potentially Running On ARM
Google’s Chromebooks haven’t exactly made a splash, but apparently not everyone has been scared off. Sony seems to think there’s gold in them thar laptops, and they’re making their own. For now it’s known as the VCC111 (probably shorthand for “Vaio Chromebook Computer, series one, 11-inch display”), according to documents and pictures from FCC testing.
The understated look continues with these Vaio Chromebooks, even as far as what appears to be a matte black unbranded shell. A white version is also shown in the test setup photos. But the most interesting thing is the processor, which is listed simply as T25, and may in fact be Nvidia’s Tegra 2 chip by that name. An ARM laptop? Hey, if Microsoft can do it, why not Google and Sony?
TechCrunch
Heartland Institute Document Leaker Comes Forward, Maintains Documents Are Real
The Bad Astronomer writes “Last week, an anonymous source leaked several internal documents from the Heartland Institute, a non-profit think tank known for anti-global-warming rhetoric. The leaker has come forward: Peter Gleick, scientist and journalist. In his admission, he cites his own breach of ethics, but also maintains that all the documents are real. This includes the potentially embarrassing ’2012 Climate Strategy’ document stating that Heartland wants to ‘dissuade teachers from teaching science.’ Heartland still claims this document is a forgery, but there is no solid evidence either way.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
In a statement filed by former Palm head Edward Colligan, new evidence has come to light about the prevalence of no-hire agreements. Colligan, while staffing up his company, approached Apple employees to work at Palm.
Heartland Institute Threatens To Sue Anyone Who Comments On Leaked Documents
Layzej writes “Bloggers around the world have been commenting on recently leaked Heartland Institute documents that reveal their internal strategies to discredit climate science. These posters are now under threat of legal action. According to the Heartland Institute ‘the individuals who have commented so far on these documents did not wait for Heartland to confirm or deny the authenticity of the documents. We believe their actions constitute civil and possibly criminal offenses for which we plan to pursue charges and collect payment for damages’”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Slashdot