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September 28, 2006
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September 2006
- Music publishers seek to silence guitar tablature sites
- Making music
withFedora Core 5 - Jamendo: Music the way it was meant to be
- Edward Felten debunks DRM
- Introduction to web services
- Ask Shadowman
- More tips & tricks
- RSS how-to: Get your feed on
- Edward Felten defends your freedom to tinker
- Frysk: Debugging in real time
- Red Hat Speaks: Aaron Darcy and the application stack
- Fedora status report
- Tips & tricks
- >> more
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Edward Felten defends your freedom to tinker
Edward Felten is a professor of computer science and public affairs at Princeton University--which means that he takes a keen interest in those areas where technology and public policy intersect.
Right now, Ed is writing a lot about the accuracy of electronic voting. He's most famous, though, for his groundbreaking analysis of the problems around Digital Rights Management (DRM). When Sony put software on their music CDs that hacked their own customers' computers, it was Ed and his team who uncovered the hack and forced Sony to change their tune.
We were happy to have Ed visit the Red Hat office in Westford, Massachuetts, and glad that we can share his talks with you. Check in later (or subscribe to our feed) for more of the conversation.
You can read more about Ed's work at his blog, Freedom to Tinker.
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