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Free For All - How Linux and the Free Software Movement Undercut the High Tech Titans,
Peter Wayner

1. Acknowledgments

2. Version Information

3. Battle

3.1 Sleeping In
3.2 Suits Against Hackers

4. Lists

4.1 Free Doesn't Mean Freeloading

5. Image

6. College

6.1 Speaking in Tongues
6.2 Cash Versus Sharing

7. Quicksand

7.1 Breaking the Bond
7.2 In for a Penny, in for a Pound
7.3 AT&T Notices the Damage

8. Outsider

8.1 A Hobby Begets a Project that Begets a Movement
8.2 A Different Kind of Trial

9. Growth

9.1 The Establishment Begins to Notice
9.2 Making it Easy to Use

10. Freedom

10.1 Free Beer
10.2 Copyleft
10.3 The GNU Virus
10.4 Is the Free Software Foundation Anti-Freedom?
10.5 The Evolution of BSD
10.6 The Price of Total Freedom
10.7 The Synthesis of "Open Source"

11. Source

11.1 The Bishop of the Free Marketplace
11.2 They Put a Giant Arrow on the Problem
11.3 How Free Software Can Be a Bazaar or a Cathedral
11.4 Open Source and Lightbulbs
11.5 The Source and the Language that We Speak

12. People

12.1 Icons
12.2 Flames

13. Politics

14. Charity

14.1 Charitable Open Source Organizations
14.2 Gifts as a Cultural Imperative

15. Love

16. Corporations

16.1 Fat Cats and Alley Cats
16.2 The Return of the Hardware Kings

17. Money

17.1 Cygnus--One Company that Grew Rich on Free Software
17.2 How the GPL Built Cygnus's Monopoly
17.3 Snitchware
17.4 Bounties for Quicker Typer-Uppers

18. Fork

18.1 Forks and the Threat of Disunity
18.2 BSD's Garden of Forking Paths
18.3 Flames, Fights, and the Birth of OpenBSD
18.4 Temporary Forks
18.5 A Fork, a Split, and a Reunion

19. Core

19.1 Debian's Core Team
19.2 Apache's Corporate Core

20. T-Shirts

20.1 World Domination Pretty Soon?

21. New

21.1 Shareware Is Not Open Source and Open Source Isn't Free
21.2 Would You License a Car from These Guys?
21.3 Other Professions Were Open from the Start
21.4 Copyright, Tool of Dictators

22. Nations

23. Wealth

23.1 Wealth and Poverty

24. Future

25. Glossary

26. Bibliography

27. Other works by Peter Wayner

Endnotes

Endnotes

Metadata

SiSU Metadata, document information

Manifest

SiSU Manifest, alternative outputs etc.

Free For All - How Linux and the Free Software Movement Undercut the High Tech Titans,
Peter Wayner

27. Other works by Peter Wayner

Disappearing Cryptography, Information Hiding: Steganography & Watermarking
Translucent Databases

Disappearing Cryptography, Information Hiding: Steganography & Watermarking

Disappearing Cryptography, Information Hiding: Steganography & Watermarking, 2nd ed. by Peter Wayner ISBN 1-55860-769-2 $44.95

To order, visit: ‹http://www.wayner.org/books/discrypt2/

Disappearing Cryptography, Second Edition describes how to take words, sounds, or images and hide them in digital data so they look like other words, sounds, or images. When used properly, this powerful technique makes it almost impossible to trace the author and the recipient of a message. Conversations can be submerged in the flow of information through the Internet so that no one can know if a conversation exists at all.

This full revision of the best-selling first edition describes a number of different techniques to hide information. These include encryption, making data incomprehensible; steganography, embedding information into video, audio, or graphics files; watermarking, hiding data in the noise of image or sound files; mimicry, "dressing up" data and making it appear to be other data, and more.

The second edition also includes an expanded discussion on hiding information with spread-spectrum algorithms, shuffling tricks, and synthetic worlds. Each chapter is divided into sections, first providing an introduction and high-level summary for those who want to understand the concepts without wading through technical explanations, and then presenting greater detail for those who want to write their own programs. To encourage exploration, the author's Web site www.wayner.org/books/discrypt2/ contains implementations for hiding information in lists, sentences, and images.

"Disappearing Cryptography is a witty and entertaining look at the world of information hiding. Peter Wayner provides an intuitive perspective of the many techniques, applications, and research directions in the area of steganography. The sheer breadth of topics is outstanding and makes this book truly unique. A must read for those who would like to begin learning about information hiding." --Deepa Kundur, University of Toronto

"An excellent introduction for private individuals, businesses, and governments who need to under- stand the complex technologies and their effects on protecting privacy, intellectual property and other interests." - David Banisar, Research Fellow, Harvard Information Infrastructure Project, & Deputy Director, Privacy International.

Translucent Databases

Translucent Databases, a new book by Peter Wayner, comes with more than two dozen examples in Java and SQL code. The book comes with a royalty-free license to use the code for your own projects in any way you wish.

  • Do you have personal information in your database?
  • Do you keep les on your customers, your employees, or anyone else?
  • Do you need to worry about European laws restricting the information you keep?
  • Do you keep copies of credit card numbers, social security numbers, or other informa- tion that might be useful to identity thieves or insurance fraudsters?
  • Do you deal with medical records or personal secrets?
  • Most database administrators spend some of each day worrying about the information they keep. Some spend all of their time. Caring for information can be a dangerous responsibility.

    This new book, Translucent Databases, describes a different attitude toward protecting the information. Most databases provide elaborate control mechanisms for letting the right people in to see the right records. These tools are well designed and thoroughly tested, but they can only provide so much support. If someone breaks into the operating system itself, all of the data on the hard disk is unveiled. If a clerk, a supervisor, or a system administrator decides to turn traitor, there's nothing anyone can do.

    Translucent databases provide better, deeper protection by scrambling the data with encryption algorithms. The solutions use the minimal amount of encryption to ensure that the database is still functional. In the best applications, the personal and sensitive information is protected but the database still delivers the information.

    Order today at ‹http://www.wayner.org/books/td/




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    Available at Amazon.com
    Free For All at Amazon.com
    This book is Copyright © 2000 by Peter Wayner.
    See http://www.wayner.org/books/ffa/
    p3@wayner.org