Version: 2008

April 14, 2006 10:00 AM PDT

This week in Vista

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Pirates, typo squatters and tech thieves, beware. There's a new sheriff in town.

With that in mind, Windows Vista plans to offer you spiffy new graphics, as long as you're not a pirate. With the new operating system, Microsoft is offering plenty of new graphics tricks, including translucent windows, animated flips between open programs, and "live icons" that show a graphical representation of the file in question.

But before Vista will display its showiest side, known as Aero, it will run a check to make sure the software was properly purchased. The move is the latest salvo in Microsoft's broad attack on those who use unauthorized copies of its operating system. In the fall of 2004, Microsoft began testing the Windows Genuine Advantage program, designed to verify that a particular copy of Windows is legitimate.

Microsoft is also releasing a new tool that aims to take some of the annoyance--and risk--out of mistyping a URL when browsing Web sites. The company's Cybersecurity and Systems Management group released a prototype of Strider URL Tracer with Typo-Patrol version last week. The tool is designed to seek out and block mistyped versions of domain names--www.frod.com instead of www.ford.com, for example.

Typo squatters are companies that exploit slips of the fingers by registering for mistyped versions of popular URLs. Some typo domains are parking lots for pay-per-click and syndicated advertising, according to a Microsoft research paper published alongside the tool. The group's researchers found that a mere six services have a presence on between 40 percent and 70 percent of active typo domains.

Feel like you need more protection when you are surfing the Web--especially in public? An entrepreneur has rigged portable computers with a security measure that car owners have relied on for decades.

Randy Green has reconfigured Apple Computer's MacBook Pro so the computer's remote control can activate his security system. Coffee-shop computer users who get up for another latte can hit a button on their remotes and they will hear the classic car-alarm chirp that tells them their systems are armed.

See more CNET content tagged:
Microsoft Windows Vista, Apple Computer, Microsoft Corp., security, operating system

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Bout time type squatters were shut down
by thenet411 April 14, 2006 11:39 AM PDT
Send those losers to the showers. Type squatting will not be tolerated!
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Okay, but wheres the new technology?
by treleung April 14, 2006 11:54 AM PDT
Microsoft has been pulling these tricks for years, in one form or another, how is this different? This article doesn't explain what would keep crackers from buying one license, and then cracking aero, and shipping it out to the willing downloaders. Unless some amazing new anti-hacking technique was established here, this is nothing special, and it'll be cracked or hacked within days of the release. Sure the first hacked versions of Vista won't have Aero, but I can garauntee you hacked versions will be shipping with it pre-installed very soon after. (not that I support any of that, of course.)
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This week in Vista? ZIP-NADA
by Llib Setag April 17, 2006 1:00 PM PDT
VISTA IS VAPORWARE UNTIL MICROSLOTH FINALLY CAN GET THEIR ACT TOGETHER...

Vaporware promises wrapped up in PR Spin & C-NOT ad revenues.
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