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diff --git a/wired/old/published/Webmonkey/Monkey_Bites/2007/02.05.06/Wed/else b/wired/old/published/Webmonkey/Monkey_Bites/2007/02.05.06/Wed/else new file mode 100644 index 0000000..90eee08 --- /dev/null +++ b/wired/old/published/Webmonkey/Monkey_Bites/2007/02.05.06/Wed/else @@ -0,0 +1,17 @@ +<img width="200" height="135" border="0" src="http://blog.wired.com/tableofmalcontents/images/pans.jpg" title="Pans" alt="Pans" style="margin: 0px 0px 5px 5px; float: right;" />Elsewhere on Wired: + +* Cult of Mac's Leander Kahney [asks][1]: EMusic Sells DRM-Free Music, Why Doesn't Steve Jobs? Indeed. + +[1]: http://blog.wired.com/cultofmac/2007/02/emusic_sells_dr.html "EMusic Sells DRM-Free Music, Why Doesn't Steve Jobs?" + +* Listening Post also has some follow up on Jobs' anti-DRM rant with some tasty quotes from the RIAA, who apparently [think Jobs wants to license Fairplay][2]. The thing is, Jobs writes the exact opposite in his letter. It just goes to show you that even the fabled reality distortion field of Steve Jobs is no match for the reality distortion field of the RIAA. All your rights are belong to us. + +[2]: http://blog.wired.com/music/2007/02/riaa_response_t.html "RIAA Response to Steve Jobs' Thoughts on Music?" + +* 27B Stroke 6's Ryan Singel is at the RSA security conference where [Javascript vulnerabilities are all the rage][3]. Isn't that why everyone stopped using Javascript the first time around -- because it was too easy to exploit? Just because it got a shiny new acronym doesn't mean it's easier to write secure code. + +[3]: http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/02/web_20_as_a_sto.html "Web 2.0 As A Story To Be Destroyed by Hackers" + +* If you haven't seen Guillermo del Toro's amazing movie *Pan's Labyrinth*, don't follow this link, it gives away the ending (and much more), but Table of Malcontent's Annalee Newitz has an [interesting analysis][4] of the film. More importantly, if you haven't seen it yet hurry up and do so before it disappears from theaters. + +[4]: http://blog.wired.com/tableofmalcontents/2007/02/pans_labyrinth_.html "Pan's Labyrinth – Can Fantasies Rescue Us from Fascism?"
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