Word: files
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...Breaking Windows? Already scrambling to close a security flaw in its latest operating-system release, Microsoft was investigating how some 15% of its Windows 2000 source code was leaked to file-swapping Internet sites, making it potentially vulnerable to hackers and rivals...
...mellifluous morning man on WCBS news radio). Yet his bow tie, wry good nature and weakness for writing up a story in helium-light verse marked him as a Kuralt cousin. He joined the CBS network in 1971 and filled a daily 90-sec. slot called ?The Osgood File? (it?s run on 350 stations) as well as serving, for five years, as a host of the CBS morning show, which for 50 years now has been broadcast live from the Death Valley of Nielsen ratings. ?CBS SM? was the ideal perch for him, his soothing FM voice replacing Kuralt...
Harvard has a mental health problem. Surveys have shown it, Crimson articles have investigated it and undergraduates in need continue to suffer from it. The current system of care is rife with problems—from a lack of centralization and file sharing to a troubling dearth of funds. But it is the first problem that is most pressing; right now, students are prone to get lost between disparate campus organizations providing everything from counseling to medical attention, and many choose to avoid the confusing web of institutions altogether. The College’s mental health task force, created last...
...solution might be an electronic file sharing system. The mental health task force is investigating this possibility. If this can be instituted legally and efficiently, it should be put in place as soon as possible. And even if a computer centralized database is unfeasible, the bureau and UHS should both keep treatment records for all students who signed the release. Constant communication is also essential to update the files each organization keeps...
...real shift in the way people are thinking about the distribution of intellectual property, and it’s the right kind of shift. The way to make people stop illegally acquiring songs is to balance out the cost of that practice with the cost of obtaining the files legally. The recording industry has sought to do this by driving up the expected cost of downloading music from peer-to-peer networks through lawsuits, essentially scaring people into shaping up. But this task is daunting (or even impossible) both because of the sheer volume of music traded illegally...