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Legal battle over 4Chan nickname

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 21 November 2012 | 23.58

20 November 2012 Last updated at 06:04 ET

Chris Poole, founder of the image-sharing site 4Chan, has clashed with a US start-up over using the word "moot".

The row has blown up because Mr Poole has been known online by his online alias of Moot since 2003.

Oregon-based Moot.it said it chose the name because it plans to set up discussion forums for businesses and online communities.

Mr Poole has sent a legal letter to Moot.it saying its use of the name will cause confusion.

The alias "Moot" had become part of Mr Poole's "protectable right of publicity" said his lawyer in the letter, which was published on the Betabeat website.

The letter said confusion was "unavoidable" as there was a "strong association" among many internet users with Moot aka Chris Poole and discussion on 4Chan.

The 4Chan bulletin board on which people share images and post comments has a reputation for being raucous and anarchic - the Anonymous hacktivism group emerged from one of its forums.

Given that Moot.it had yet to launch, the letter "respectfully suggests" the company pick a name that cannot be confused with Mr Poole's online identity.

If Moot.it stuck with the name through to its launch and start to use the name as a trademark, Mr Poole would investigate "all options" available to him, it said.

Lawyers acting for Moot.it told Betabeat that it refuses to give up the right to use the name. Any further letters from Mr Poole and his legal team would be met with a lawsuit for malicious prosecution, they warned in comments given to Betabeat.


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Wii U update 'bricking' warning

20 November 2012 Last updated at 08:00 ET

Owners of Nintendo's new Wii U console have been facing lengthy waits to make full use of it because they need to install a large firmware update.

The software - which adds features including access to the Miiverse social network - is about one gigabyte large, and must be downloaded via the net.

There are reports that some machines became "bricked" - or unusable - because the update was interrupted.

Nintendo has warned users not to "power off your system" during the process.

The Japanese games company has acknowledged that the data required "an hour or more" to download and install.

The Wii U launched in the US on Sunday.

Frozen consoles

Los Angeles Times business reporter Ben Fritz was one of the first to report problems with his newly purchased console after trying to cancel the update.

"Wii U has stopped functioning before I managed to play a single game. I tried to stop an interminable software update and now... nothing," he tweeted.

"On a related note, anybody in the market for a big black paperweight?"

He added that several other users had messaged him to say they were facing a similar problem.

Nintendo's Wii U

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BBC Click's Marc Cieslak previews Nintendo's latest home console

Users have also reported on Nintendo's own tech forums "bricking" the machine after unplugging it during the update, while others said they were having had trouble downloading the code in the first place.

Any frozen machines should be covered by the company's standard 12-month warranty.

'Buyer beware'

The games console does not launch in Europe until 30 November and 8 December in Japan, providing Nintendo an opportunity to add the software to the machines before they go on sale in other territories - although a spokeswoman was not able to confirm if this would be the case.

In the meantime, early purchasers in the US face the prospect of another significant update next month when the firm adds its TVii service - offering access to pay-to-view television shows and films - which was not ready as planned for last week's release.

One tech expert said the problems with the Wii U were only to be expected.

"Anybody who is an early-adopter has to understand there will be a degree of pain and inconvenience when buying a console - not least because bugs will be discovered and fixed as tens of thousands of people start using the new machine," said Chris Green, technology analyst at Davies Murphy Group.

"People shouldn't be put off by the initial update file size - it's not that big when compared to doing a full firmware update on an iPad, for example.

"And I'm afraid it's a case of buyer beware to those who try to cancel the update part way through - that would mess up any hardware."


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4G tests reveal patchy coverage

20 November 2012 Last updated at 09:23 ET By Jane Wakefield Technology reporter

The first large-scale test of EE's new 4G network has indicated less than half of Manchester city centre is able to take advantage of its high speeds.

Data collected by mobile coverage firm RootMetrics and shared exclusively with the BBC reveals just 40.2% of its test locations had access to the 4G network.

Outside the city centre there was no 4G coverage, according to the tests.

RootMetrics also found 4G provided much faster speeds indoors, something EE's rivals had questioned when it launched.

Quick song

In test locations that had access 4G, users were getting speeds averaging 17Mbps (megabits per second), according to the survey.

Across all test locations, including those where 4G was unavailable, EE averaged download speeds of 7.6Mbps.

That is still double the average speed of the next fastest operator in the area - Vodafone - which recorded average download speeds of 3.1Mbps in previous tests.

It means that, for example, downloading a song would take less than 15-25 seconds compared with the minute or so it would take on a typical 3G network.

The survey also found:

  • 31% of tests were achieving speeds of more than 10Mbps
  • 9% achieved speeds of 6-10Mbps
  • 18% speeds of 3-6Mbps
  • 23% speeds of 1.5-3Mbps.

That left 19% achieving speeds of less than 1.5Mbps, which actually compares favourably with EE's rivals.

In previous tests, 46% of all the tests for other mobile operators performed at these low speeds, according to RootMetrics.

Continue reading the main story

At a press event recently Three's chief executive David Dyson surprised some by revealing that the firm was not focused on 4G.

Instead it is concentrating on upgrading its network using a 3G/4G hybrid technology called DC-HSPA, which can offers speeds of up to 20Mbps.

Mr Dyson revealed that, despite past insistence that Three needs new spectrum urgently because it is running out of space, its network is actually running at just 17% capacity.

While Everything Everywhere's slick transformation to EE has grabbed media attention, there will definitely be no such marketing make-overs at Three.

The name was more about performance than technology, he said, even after it acquired 4G spectrum.

While the patchy coverage may frustrate users, it mirrored rollouts in the US, where deployments had typically launched with 30% to 60% coverage, said RootMetric's chief executive Bill Moore.

"Although EE's 4G service is much faster than any network currently available in the UK, our testing shows that 4G connections are not consistent even within a nominated area," he said.

"Customers need to be aware of this as there will be an expectation of blistering fast mobile internet speeds whenever they use their phones," said Mr Moore.

EE told the BBC the rollout was "ongoing".

"Every day we expand coverage," said a spokesman.

EE has currently deployed 4G in 11 UK cities, with a plan to increase this to 16 by the end of the year.

Indoor coverage

When EE's network launched, rivals questioned whether the spectrum band that it was using - 1800MHz - would provide good indoor coverage.

But the results suggest that it is not significantly worse - 93% of tests conducted indoors were successful, compared with 97% of outdoor tests.

The survey suggests that 4G has actually offered an uplift to typical indoor speeds.

In fact, RootMetrics found that indoor download speed was higher than its download speeds outdoors - averaging 9.7Mbps versus 8.6Mbps. The caveat to this is that the test did not separate 4G coverage from 3G.

"You would never get the indoor speeds we have seen without 4G. The figures are far in excess of what 3G is capable of on average," said Mr Moore.

Both coverage and speed tests were conducted in Manchester during November using off-the-shelf Samsung Galaxy S3's.

The firm will be testing more 4G services in other cities around the UK and the findings will be published on its website.


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Rural broadband gets EU approval

20 November 2012 Last updated at 10:13 ET

The UK's plans to roll out broadband to rural areas has received EU approval.

Such approval was needed because the project is partially state-aided.

The green light means councils can now begin laying cables that will bring super-fast speeds to rural areas although many are yet to choose a network provider.

Culture secretary Maria Miller intervened last week after several months of delays in Europe.

"Finally getting the green light from Brussels will mean a huge boost for the British economy," she said.

"Today's announcement means that we can crack on with delivering broadband plans, boosting growth and jobs around the country," she added.

Slow start

The government has pledged to connect everyone to speeds of at least 2Mbps by 2015.

It has set aside £530m to help fund rural roll-outs. Councils must also contribute funding as will the provider they choose to lay the networks.

Some believe the government faces an uphill job to hit its 2015 target.

Just a handful of councils have chosen a provider to roll out fast broadband. The bidding process has been open to all but, so far, BT has won in every case.

The first to start superfast broadband projects will be Wales and Surrey. Projects in Cumbria, Rutland, Hereford and Gloucestershire are expected to follow shortly.

The rest are expected to complete their procurements by summer 2013, according to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.


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Autonomy 'misled HP on finances'

21 November 2012 Last updated at 05:42 ET
HP chief executive Meg Whitman

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HP chief executive Meg Whitman: "We uncovered a whole host of very concerning accounting improprieties"

Computer maker Hewlett Packard has asked US and UK authorities to investigate alleged misrepresentations of Autonomy's finances before HP took over the UK software group last year.

HP said Autonomy appeared to have "inflated" the value of the company prior to the takeover as part of a "wilful effort to mislead".

This led to a $5bn (£3.1bn) charge in its latest quarterly accounts.

The former management team of Autonomy "flatly rejected" the allegations.

Three former senior members of staff, including former chief executive Mike Lynch, said they were "shocked" to see the statement.

"HP's due diligence review was intensive," Autonomy's former chief executive, chief financial officer and chief operating officer said, referring to the process of investigating a firm prior to purchase.

"It took 10 years to build Autonomy's industry-leading technology and it is sad to see how it has been mismanaged since its acquisition by HP," the statement from the former management team said.

During a conference call following the announcement, HP chief executive Meg Whitman said: "We did a whole host of due diligence but when you're lied to, it's hard to find.

"[Autonomy] was smaller and less profitable that we had thought," she said, adding that HP's investigations suggested that the UK firm had misstated its revenues and growth rate.

Taking into account recent falls in HP's share value and lower-than-anticipated returns from the merger, the total one-off charge recorded in HP's accounts for the three months to the end of October was $8.8bn, pushing the company to a $6.85bn net loss.

'Questionable accounting'
Continue reading the main story

HP's allegations... are shocking if true - not least because for years Autonomy was regarded as that rarest and most precious of British companies, a global hi-tech success"

End Quote

Mike Lynch told BBC News that the HP allegations were just a way of distracting attention from poor results.

"It's managed the company very badly," he said. "It lost around half the staff before I left and the whole of the management team, and the value of the company has now fallen and they've been forced to write it off."

"Today is the day they're announcing the worst results in the 70 year history of the business and I think there's a little bit of distraction going on here."

HP said during its conference call that "a very senior person" from Autonomy had come forward "with specific details [of accounting misrepresentations]". That person was still at the company, it said.

Ms Whitman said HP had discovered a number of irregularities, including hardware sales that had been reported as software revenues, which inflated both overall revenues and profit margins.

She said margins of between 40% and 45% had been reported, whereas HP now believed them to be between 20% and 28%.

As well as referring the matter to the regulatory authorities, the company would be "aggressively pursuing individuals responsible for this wrongdoing", she added.

This would involve trying to recover money for HP shareholders.

HP shares closed 12% lower in New York.

Mike Lynch

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Mike Lynch, former CEO of Autonomy: "We flatly reject [the claim]...HP managed the company very badly"

Deloitte, the accountancy firm which audited Autonomy's accounts, said it could not comment on the allegations due to client confidentiality, but would cooperate with any investigations.

Criticism

HP completed the takeover of Autonomy for $12bn in October last year.

Autonomy was founded by Mike Lynch in 1996 and grew to become one of the largest software companies in the UK.

Mr Lynch is a non-executive director of the BBC, which said in a statement that it had spoken to him about the allegations and had not asked him to step down from his role.

A spokeswoman said the BBC noted that Autonomy had denied the allegations, adding: "We will continue to monitor the situation as it develops and will take any further action, should it become necessary."

Autonomy gained a listing on the US Nasdaq exchange in May 2000, at the height of the technology boom, and was listed in London six months later.

The firm has often been cited as an example of how academic research can be turned into a profitable business, although it has attracted criticism from the City, particularly when, in October 2010, it warned there had been unexpected volatility in its customers' "purchasing behaviour" and lowered its full-year forecasts.

HP's decision to buy the company was part of the US firm's long-term plan to move away from making computers into the more profitable software business.


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UK start-up programme launch set

21 November 2012 Last updated at 06:48 ET By Dave Lee Technology reporter, BBC News

A major new programme to support fledgling technology start-ups in the UK is to be launched in the 2013.

Cloud hosting firm Rackspace is to offer £12,000 of hosting and mentoring for start-ups on the programme.

The launch comes as the government continued efforts to encourage successful UK start-ups to float on the stock exchange.

A survey of more than 50,000 entrepreneurs ranked London as the seventh best city to launch a start-up.

The report, by telecoms firm Telefonica, concluded that the UK's offering was "no Silicon Valley" - due mainly to a lack of investment and what is perceived as a risk-averse investment culture.

But Rackspace, whose start-up programme has aided more than 850 US start-ups in their early stages, said they felt the timing was right to launch its push in the UK.

Speaking at Google's Campus building in east London, technology blogger and Rackspace "evangelist" Robert Scoble drew parallels between London today and the early days of California's famous Silicon Valley.

"If you go downstairs [at Google Campus] you can see dozens of start-ups working at tiny little tables," he told the BBC.

"This feels a lot about how I saw Instagram for the first time - two guys sitting at a table coding like mad, two years later they're worth a billion dollars. It has that feel to it."

Rackspace is one of the world's largest cloud hosting firms - second only to Amazon.

The cloud, as it is known, is a term given to storing data on servers in a variety of locations - rather than on a local machine.

Cloud hosting gives small companies flexibility when starting out. Rather than pay for the rental of dedicated servers, which can be expensive, it means start-ups can just pay for what they need.

'Next Facebook'

In September, the government announced plans to loosen regulations surrounding companies that wanted to float on the stock market.

The move, which was backed by several of the country's largest investment firms, would provide a "new route" to an initial public offering (IPO), universities minister David Willetts said.

A successful British IPO would be seen as a major success for the government's Tech City initiative - an organisation designed to promote the interests of UK-based start-ups globally.

Companies tipped to be likely IPO candidates in the new year include Mind Candy - creators of children's social network Moshi Monsters - and online loans company Wonga.

Mr Scoble said the key to a successful flotation was in the timing - and that chasing the "next Facebook" may not be the right move.

"Some of it is luck," he told the BBC.

"Some of it is about being at the right market window at the right time. Right now it's a really tough market window.

"In Silicon Valley the venture capitalists are telling me they're moving investment away from consumer and into enterprise because they're seeing that the consumer markets are too risky.

"They're investing less in consumer kinds of things - they're trying to get the kids to focus on the enterprise market."


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Countries list net name protests

21 November 2012 Last updated at 07:05 ET

More than 250 "early" objections to proposed new internet address endings have been filed by a panel representing about 50 of the world's governments.

The list includes references to groups of people or locations including .roma, .islam, .patagonia, .africa and .zulu.

There are also concerns about proposed suffixes covering broad sectors such as .casino, .charity, .health, .insurance and .search.

The list was submitted ahead of a planned rollout next year.

The panel - known as the Government Advisory Committee (Gac) - has published its "early warning" list on the web to give applicants a chance to address its concerns or choose to withdraw their submission and reclaim 80% of their $185,000 (£116,300) application fee.

Gac will then decide in April which of the suffixes warrant formal complaints if it still has outstanding concerns, at a meeting in Beijing.

Each warning on the list makes reference to the country which filed the objection. A suffix was only added to the register if no other members of Gac objected to its inclusion.

Anti anti-virus

The organisations and suffixes referred to on the list included:

  • Amazon for its applications for .app, .book, .movie, .game and .mail among others.
  • Google for .search, .cloud and .gmbh (a reference to a type of limited German company).
  • Johnson & Johnson for .baby.
  • L'Oreal for .beauty, .hair, .makeup, .salon and .skin.
  • The Weather Channel for .weather.
  • Symantec for .antivirus.
  • eHow publisher, Demand Media, for .army, .airforce, .engineer and .green.

Despite the large number of objections, Icann (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) - the internet name regulator in charge of the rollout - has indicated that it still believed it would be able to release the first suffixes for use by May 2013.

The organisation does not have to comply with the governments' wishes, but must provide "well-reasoned arguments" if it decides to deny any rejection request.

Competition concerns

A range of reasons were given for the early warnings.

France raised concerns about seven organisations that had applied for .hotel or .hotels on the grounds that it believed that if the suffix was introduced it should be reserved for hotel businesses.

"The guarantee of a clear information of the customer on hotel accommodation services is the best way to promote the tourism industry," it said. "Behind the term hotel as a generic denomination, any customer in the world must have the guarantee that will be directly connected to a hotel."

It is feasible that some of the applicants might be able to give this guarantee, allowing the ultimate owner of the suffix to profit by charging individual businesses to register their hotel websites.

But other issues may be harder to resolve.

For example, Australia objected to Amazon's application for the Japanese-language suffix meaning "fashion" on the grounds it might give the firm an unfair advantage.

"Restricting common generic strings for the exclusive use of a single entity could have unintended consequences, including a negative impact on competition," the country's government wrote.

Religions and reputations

An objection by the United Arab Emirates to Asia Green IT System's application for .islam may also be impossible to reconcile.

"It is unacceptable for a private entity to have control over religious terms such as Islam without significant support and affiliation with the community it's targeting," it said.

"The application lacks any sort of protection to ensure that the use of the domain names registered under the applied for new gTLD (generic top-level domain) are in line with Islam principles, pillars, views, beliefs and law."

Other problems stemmed from more commercial concerns.

For example. Samoa is opposed to three applications for the suffix .website on the grounds that it is too similar to the .ws suffix it already controls, which provides the South Pacific country with revenue.

Corporate reputations emerged as another sticking point.

Australia has challenged applications for .gripe, .sucks and .wtf on the basis they had "overtly negative or critical connotations" which might force businesses to feel they had to pay to register their brands alongside the suffix to prevent anyone else from doing so.

The only address that the UK filed an objection to was .rugby.

It objected to two applicants which it said did "not represent the global community of rugby players, supporters and stakeholders".

The UK suggested the proposals be rejected in favour of a third submission for the suffix from the International Rugby Board.


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Protests after China tweet arrest

21 November 2012 Last updated at 07:55 ET

Hundreds of web users have signed a petition demanding the release of a Beijing man accused of criticising China's authorities on Twitter.

Zhai Xiaobing, who is being linked to Twitter name @Stariver, was stopped by police days before the new Chinese leaders were confirmed on 15 November.

In a tweet, the account compared the Communist Party 18th National Congress to horror film Final Destination.

In it, characters at first escape death but still end up dying one by one.

The tweet, posted on 4 November, read, as translated from Chinese: "#SpoilerTweet# #EnterAtYourPeril# Final Destination 6 to arrive soon.

"The Great Hall of the People suddenly collapses, only seven of more than 2,000 people inside survive.

"Later, one-by-one the survivors die in strange ways. Is it the game of God, or the Devil venting his wrath?

"What does the mysterious number 18 have to do with opening the gate to Hell? A shocking global premiere on 8 November!"

All the numbers mentioned in the tweet make reference to the leadership handover - the 18th Congress began at Beijing's Great Hall of the People on 8 November, and the new leadership consists of seven members, one of whom is the newly appointed Communist Party chief Xi Jinping.

Continue reading the main story

The story is significant on a whole other level because he used Twitter and not Sina"

End Quote Duncan Clark BDA China

According to the Wall Street Journal, the Miyun detention centre has confirmed Mr Zhai was there, having been arrested because "he wrote a micro-blog post containing false information on the internet".

'Significant case'

Chinese authorities closely monitor domestic social-media sites, including the Twitter equivalent, micro-blog Sina Weibo.

One analyst said that Mr Zhai's arrest was significant because it had happened after a post on Twitter - which is officially blocked in China - and not on Weibo.

"It did surprise me at first - it's a white-collar guy that seemed to have a misfortune to be arrested and made an example of, as there were many posts on Weibo worse than his," Duncan Clark, chairman of consultancy BDA China, told the BBC.

"But the story is significant on a whole other level because he used Twitter and not Sina."

Some 35 million people access Twitter from inside China, using a proxy or VPN (virtual private network) that allows users to penetrate the country's "great firewall".

Although the authorities are unable to censor content posted on Twitter, they monitor what Chinese users write.

"In China, domestic sites have to hand over the IP address of a user when demanded to do so by the authorities, but with a foreign site there's no such jurisdiction - so the Chinese government must have used other means to identify this person," said Mr Clark.

It is not clear how Mr Zhai was identified.

Chinese authorities have arrested people for their Twitter posts before.

In 2010, human rights activist Cheng Jianping was sentenced to a year in a labour camp after repeating a Twitter comment urging nationalist protesters to smash Japan's pavilion at the Shanghai Expo.

At the time, China and Japan were embroiled in a diplomatic row over a group of uninhabited, but disputed, islands in the East China Sea.

Groups of young Chinese were demonstrating against Japan, publicly smashing Japanese products.


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Google attacks UN net conference

21 November 2012 Last updated at 09:49 ET

Google has warned that a forthcoming UN-organised conference threatens the "free and open internet".

Government representatives are set to agree a new information and communications treaty in December.

It has been claimed some countries will try to wrest oversight of the net's technical specifications and domain name system from US bodies to an international organisation.

However, the UN has said there would be consensus before any change was agreed.

Google has asked web users to add their name to an online petition to support its view.

"The [UN agency] International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is bringing together regulators from around the world to renegotiate a decades-old communications treaty," it wrote on its Take Action site.

"Some proposals could permit governments to censor legitimate speech - or even allow them to cut off internet access.

"Other proposals would require services like YouTube, Facebook, and Skype to pay new tolls in order to reach people across borders. This could limit access to information - particularly in emerging markets."

Google added that it was concerned that "only governments have a voice at the ITU" and not companies or others who had a stake in the net, concluding that the World Conference on International Telecommunications (Wcit) was "the wrong place" to make decisions about the internet's future.

However, the ITU has said that each country could invite whoever it likes to be part of its delegation at the meeting.

Leaked documents

The ITU has said a new treaty was needed to ensure "the free flow of information around the world, promoting affordable and equitable access for all and laying the foundation for ongoing innovation and market growth".

It added that the growth of the internet and adoption of mobile phones meant the existing agreement - signed in 1998 - needed to be updated.

The agency is not openly publishing each government's proposals ahead of the conference, however a site called Wcitleaks, run by researchers at George Mason University, has revealed some of the details.

Most recently these included a proposal from Russia suggesting that the US should have less control over the internet's operation.

"Member states shall have equal rights to manage the internet, including in regard to the allotment, assignment and reclamation of internet numbering, naming, addressing and identification resources and to support for the operation and development of basic internet infrastructure," it said in a document submitted on 17 November.

This would mark a shift from the current set-up in which such matters are looked after by non-profit bodies which are officially under the remit of the US Department of Commerce, but in effect operate at arm's length from the US government.

The Russia Today news service had previously reported that China and India backed the Kremlin's view that the ITU could take over these functions.

However, the US's ambassador to the conference, Terry Kramer, has already signalled he would not support this saying the existing institutions had "functioned effectively and will continue to ensure the health and growth of the internet".

Tolled traffic

Parts of the US tech industry have also been concerned by remarks by the ITU's secretary general, Dr Hamadoun Toure, that the meeting should "address the current disconnect between sources of revenue and sources of costs, and to decide upon the most appropriate way to do so".

Dr Toure said that the new treaty should be designed to help encourage broadband rollout and investment, later adding that telecom companies had the "right to a return on [the] investment" needed to avoid congestion.

But Google is not alone in fearing some countries will suggest the best way to do this will be to introduce "tolls" in which popular sites have to pay developing nations money if they send a lot of traffic through their data networks.

"Many countries are used to getting revenue from telephone calls, and those telephone calls have gone away in favour of various internet-based video services which don't produce revenue for them," Gary Shapiro, president of the US's Consumer Electronics Association, told the BBC.

"So they are looking to recover it and they are trying to put a charge on incoming internet access. So if you have a website which is very popular worldwide you would have to pay to get access to them - we think that is wrong.

"We think the value of the internet is that it is available to everyone for free without international barriers."

Unanimous decisions

The ITU is hosting the conference to draw up the treaty between 3 to 14 December in Dubai.

Dr Toure has signalled that if there were any serious disagreements he would try to avoid putting an issue to a majority vote.

"We never vote because voting means winners and losers and you can't afford that," he told the BBC in July.

"Whatever one single country does not accept will not pass."

But experts warn this poses a risk that participants leave some issues unresolved.

"In the worst case there's a danger you could see a splintering of the internet," said Prof Alan Woodward, from the department of computing, University of Surrey.

"Some countries including Russia already restrict which sites can be accessed, but if people start going off and doing their own things in term of naming conventions and net addresses you could end up with different parts of the internet being unable to send traffic to each other.

"It would be the online equivalent of not being able to make a telephone call from one nation to another."


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US 'hacked office of Sarkozy'

21 November 2012 Last updated at 10:36 ET

A French news magazine has accused the US government of hacking into the office of Nicolas Sarkozy in the final weeks of his presidency of France.

L'Express said a cyber war agency whose job it is to detect and prevent hacking had found a "powerful worm" in the computers of the Elysee Palace.

The palace has since confirmed a big cyber attack did take place.

The US embassy in Paris "categorically denied" the US had been involved in any cyber attack on the French government.

US Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, for her part, refused to confirm or deny the allegation, telling L'Express the US had no more important partner nor greater ally than France.

'Via Facebook'

The malware the French authorities are said to have discovered is called Flame.

Hugely sophisticated, it can collect files on a machine, take screen shots, and even activate the microphone on a computer to record conversations.

According to L'Express, even the computer of Mr Sarkozy's chief of staff, Xavier Musca, was hacked.

The worm was probably introduced to the Elysee network through Facebook, L'Express says.

It was found in the system shortly after the second round vote of the presidential election on 6 May, and it took agents three days to clean it out, L'Express reports.

In May, Russian security firm Kaspersky Labs told BBC News it believed that Flame had been in operation since August 2010, collecting data in countries like Israel and Iran.

The company said it believed the malware was state-sponsored but it could not be sure of its exact origins.

Previously, targeted malware such as Stuxnet was used against nuclear infrastructure in Iran.


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