AP – In this Sept. 24, 2010, file photo the National
Cybersecurity & Communications Integration Center (NCCIC) …
By LOLITA C. BALDOR, Associated Press Lolita C. Baldor, Associated Press
–
Sun Dec 5, 5:24 am ET
WASHINGTON – It will take several more years for the government to fully install high-tech systems to block computer intrusions, a drawn-out timeline that enables criminals to become more adept at stealing sensitive data, experts say.
As the Department of Homeland Security moves
methodically to pare down and secure the approximately 2,400 network
connections used every day by millions of federal workers, experts
suggest that technology already may be passing them by.
The department that's responsible for securing government systems
other than military sites is slowly moving all the government's
Internet and e-mail traffic into secure networks that eventually will be
guarded by intrusion detection and prevention programs.
Progress has been slow, however. Officials are trying
to complete complex contracts with network vendors, work out technology
issues and address privacy concerns involving how the monitoring will
affect employees and public citizens.
The WikiLeaks release of more than a quarter-million
sensitive diplomatic documents underscores the massive challenge ahead,
as Homeland Security labors to build protections for all of the other,
potentially more vulnerable U.S. agencies.
"This is a continuing arms race and we're still way behind," said Stewart Baker, former Homeland Security undersecretary for policy.
The WikiLeaks breach affected the government's
classified military network and was as much a personnel gap as a
technological failure. Officials believe the sensitive documents were
stolen from secure Pentagon computer networks by an Army intelligence
analyst.
The changes sought by Homeland Security on the
government's nonmilitary computers would be wider and more systemic than
the immediate improvements ordered recently by the Departments of
Defense and State as a result of the WikiLeaks releases. Those changes
included improving the monitoring of computer usage and making it harder
to move material onto a portable computer flash drive or CD.
"There are very few private sector actors who depend on information security
who think that installing intrusion prevention systems is sufficient
protection against the kinds of attacks that we're seeing," Baker said.
Monday was a day for the history books — if those will even exist in the future.
Amazon.com, one of the nation’s largest booksellers, announced Monday that for the last three months, sales of books for its e-reader, the Kindle, outnumbered sales of hardcover books.
In that time, Amazon said, it sold 143 Kindle books for every 100 hardcover books, including hardcovers for which there is no Kindle edition.
The pace of change is quickening, too, Amazon said. In the last four weeks sales rose to 180 digital books for every 100 hardcover copies. Amazon has 630,000 Kindle books, a small fraction of the millions of books sold on the site.
Book lovers mourning the demise of hardcover books with their heft and their musty smell need a reality check, said Mike Shatzkin, founder and chief executive of the Idea Logical Company, which advises book publishers on digital change. “This was a day that was going to come, a day that had to come,” he said. He predicts that within a decade, fewer than 25 percent of all books sold will be print versions.
The shift at Amazon is “astonishing when you consider that we’ve been selling hardcover books for 15 years, and Kindle books for 33 months,” the chief executive, Jeffrey P. Bezos, said in a statement.
Still, the hardcover book is far from extinct. Industrywide sales are up 22 percent this year, according to the American Publishers Association.
The figures do not include free Kindle books, of which there are 1.8 million originally published before 1923 (they are in the public domain because their copyright has expired). Amazon does not specify how paperback sales compare with e-book sales, but paperback sales are thought to still outnumber e-books.
The big surprise, Mr. Shatzkin said, was that the day came during the first period that the Kindle faced a serious competitive threat. The AppleiPad, which started sales in April, is marketed as a leisure device for reading, and it has its own e-book store. Yet sales of the Kindle also grew each month during the quarter, Amazon said.
Amazon is being helped by an explosion in e-book sales across the board. According to the Association of American Publishers, e-book sales have quadrupled this year through May.
Amazon said its sales exceeded that growth rate. One reason Kindle book sales have held their own is that owners of iPads and other mobile reading devices buy Kindle books, which they can read on computers, iPhones, iPads, BlackBerrys and Android phones. But, except for the free uncopyrighted books, Kindle owners must buy or download content via Amazon. “Every time they sell a Kindle, they lock up a customer,” Mr. Shatzkin said.
Some industry analysts say that many people do not consider the iPad to be a reading device the way the Kindle is, and see a need to own both. Amazon’s latest sales figures are “clearly an indication that the iPad is complementary to the Kindle, not a replacement,” said Youssef H. Squali, managing director at Jefferies & Company in charge of Internet and new media research.
The growth rate of Kindle sales tripled after Amazon lowered the price of the device in late June to $189 from $259, Amazon said. That was moments after Barnes & Noble dropped the price of its Nook e-reader to $199 from $259.
During roughly the same period, Apple sold three million iPads, it said.
Analysts said Amazon’s announcement could assuage investors’ concerns that the iPad threatens Kindle sales. Amazon’s stock price is down about 16 percent in the last three months, in part because of those fears.
“The sentiment’s turned a little more negative on the stock because of iPad issues and concern that Amazon would lose market share in the book segment,” said Aaron Kessler, director of Internet and digital media equity research at ThinkEquity.
Digital tools advance beyond screens that
talk and play videos, connecting readers to authors and online fan
communities.
Emma Teitgen downloaded "The Elements: A Visual Exploration"
on her iPad. The seventh-grader, who lives in Pittsford, N.Y., calls
Theodore Gray's e-book a "breath of fresh air" compared to her chemistry
textbook.
(Doug
Benz / For The Times)
By Alex Pham and David SarnoLos
Angeles Times
July 18, 2010
Emma Teitgen, 12, thought the
chemistry book her teacher recommended would make perfect bedside
reading. Perfect because it might help her fall asleep.
Then she downloaded
"The
Elements: A Visual Exploration" to her iPad. Instead of making her
drowsy, it blossomed in her hands. The 118 chemical elements, from
hydrogen to ununoctium, came alive in vivid images that could be rotated
with a swipe of the finger.
Tapping on link after link, Teitgen was soon engrossed in a world of
atomic weights and crystal structures. Three hours later, the
seventh-grader looked up to see that it was 11 p.m., way past her
bedtime.
"It was like a breath of fresh air
compared to my textbook," said Teitgen, who lives in Pittsford, N.Y. "I
was really amazed by all the things it could do. I just kept clicking so
I could read more."
More than 550 years after Johannes Gutenberg printed 180 copies of the
Bible on paper and vellum, new technologies as revolutionary as the
printing press are changing the concept of a book and what it means to
be literate.
Sound, animation and the ability to connect to the Internet have created
the notion of a living book that can establish an entirely new kind of
relationship with readers.
As electronic reading devices evolve and proliferate, books are
increasingly able to talk to readers, quiz them on their grasp of the
material, play videos to illustrate a point or connect them with a
community of fellow readers.
The same technology allows readers to reach out to authors, provide
instant reaction and even become creative collaborators, influencing
plot developments and the writer's use of dramatic devices.
Digital tools are also making it possible for independent authors to
publish and promote their books, causing an outpouring of written work
on every topic imaginable.
If the upheaval in the music industry over the last decade is any guide,
the closing of more bookstores and a decreasing demand for physical
books will force authors and their publishers to find new ways to profit
from their work.
"There is not a single aspect of book publishing that digital won't
touch," said Carolyn Kroll Reidy, chief executive of Simon &
Schuster. "It is transformational."
"The Master of Rampling Gate," a novella by Anne Rice published in 1991
as a paperback, illustrates some of the possibilities. The work tells
the story of a brother and sister who inherit a remote mansion occupied
by the undead.
The out-of-print title was given new life in March, when it was reissued
in
digital
form by Vook, an Alameda, Calif., start-up that sells titles for the
iPad and iPhone. As a $4.99 application sold through Apple's iTunes
store, "The Master of Rampling Gate" comes with video interviews with
Rice and others. Rice speaks about her inspiration for her works and
about the Gothic genre in which she writes.
Within the text are links to Web pages that elaborate on events and
places in the story -- a description of the Mayfair neighborhood in
London where the protagonists live or a history of the Black Death
plague, which plays a key role in the fourth chapter.
"For me, this is a way to communicate with my readers, establish a
connection with them and build a community around them," Rice said in an
interview.
Vook (the name is a mash-up of "video" and "book") has published more
than two dozen titles, including "Reckless Road," which describes the
early days of heavy metal band Guns N' Roses. "Reckless Road" weaves in
dozens of videos of the L.A. band's early performances and interviews
with band members and groupies.
The videos and other digital features are designed to "project the
emotion of the book without getting in the way of the story," said Brad
Inman, Vook's chief executive and a former real estate columnist for the
San Francisco Examiner. "We want to revive the passion for traditional
narrative. Multimedia could be a catalyst for spawning more reading."
Vook does not disclose information about its finances or its payments to
authors. Its biggest cost, Inman said, is the production of the videos.
Tim O'Reilly, whose O'Reilly Media in Sebastopol, Calif., is at the
forefront of designing and distributing digital books over the Internet
and on mobile devices, said technology has the power to "broaden our
thinking about what a book does."
Owners of
"iBird Explorer," a
digital book produced for the iPhone by field guide publisher Mitch
Waite Group, can play the songs of more than 900 bird species. Using
microphones, it can also capture the chirps and warbles of wild birds
and match them against a database of bird sounds to help the "reader"
identify the species.
In addition to displaying pages from a book, digital e-readers can read
them aloud, opening up a literary trove for the blind and the visually
impaired who have long had only a thin selection of audio and Braille
books to choose from. Devices made by Amazon.com Inc. and Intel Corp.
are able to convert text into speech.
"You now have the ability to make a book talk," said George Kerscher,
head of the Digital Accessible Information System Consortium in Zurich,
Switzerland. Kerscher, who studied computer science at the University of
Montana and is blind, has spent two decades lobbying publishers to make
books more accessible to visually impaired readers.
Digital technology is also transforming reading from a famously solitary
experience into a social one.
The newest generation of readers -- the texting, chatting, YouTubing
kids for whom the term "offline" sounds quaint -- has run circles around
the fusty publishing process, keeping its favorite stories alive online
long after they're done reading the books.
At online fan communities for popular fantasy series like "Harry Potter"
and "Twilight," young enthusiasts collaborate on new story lines
involving monsters, ghosts and secret crushes.
Fans in other forums, blogs and chat rooms weave alternative endings or
side plots for their favorite works. One site,
FanFiction.net, features hundreds
of short stories based on a series of young adult novels by Scott
Westerfeld called "Uglies."
"They're extending the world by creating new characters," Westerfeld
said. "That's what good readers do. They take apart the narrative engine
and, examining the different parts, they ask how things could have been
different."
Authors are pulled into the scene by fans who barrage them with e-mail
to share their reactions, ask how plots came about and glean hints of
what will happen in the next novel.
"There's an ongoing feedback loop with my readers," said Westerfeld, 47,
who splits his time between New York and Australia. He figures he's
logged more than 30,000 e-mails from readers over the years.
"They educate me a lot about the way they are reading. I'm a lot smarter
about it now than when I was locked up in a room writing on my own."
He learned, for example, that writing about conflict can unsettle his
younger readers.
"When two characters in my book have an argument, I get a lot of
e-mail," Westerfeld said. "Adults see it as churn. But kids are far more
affected by it, so I use it only when there is a real need in the story
for conflict."
Now that anyone with an Internet connection -- or even a cellphone --
effectively owns a digital printing press, the distinction between
professional and amateur writers is rapidly blurring. Digital publishing
has uncapped a geyser of creative output from authors who may never
have made it into print or wouldn't have thought to try.
On
Textnovel.com, thousands of
cellphone-toting authors write novels via text message, one or two
sentences at a time. Aspiring writers can sign up on the free site and
begin writing, either from phones or computers. Readers can follow the
stories online or receive a text every time their favorite author adds a
plot twist.
Shannon Rheinbold-Gee tapped out her 85,000-word thriller about teenage
werewolves in just under five weeks using the Textnovel site. The former
middle-school teacher figured she had no chance of getting a
traditional publishing deal.
"I had absolutely no concept of where it was going to go," said
Reinbold-Gee, 37, of Otego, N.Y. As she wrote, "I would just throw
things out and hope something hit the target."
It did. The book, "13 to Life," won Textnovel's first annual contest and
earned its author a three-book contract with the prestigious St.
Martin's Press, including a $10,000 advance. The first installment came
out in paperback in June and will appear in Wal-Mart stores in August.
Reinbold-Gee, who now writes under the name Shannon Delany, frequently
asked readers to help her make decisions about plot and character twists
in "13 to Life." At the end of Chapter 6, she asked which beau her main
character, Jessica, ought to go to the prom with. Fans voted for
Jessica to go stag -- and that's how Reinbold-Gee wrote it.
Textnovel, which is funded by contributions from its own members, is
just one example of how the Internet has become fertile ground for
creative amateurs.
On
Scribd.com, writers and digital
packrats are building a huge swap meet for written works of every
length, many of which once existed on paper.
Visitors can browse digital versions of novels and nonfiction books --
some by established authors, others by complete unknowns -- along with
recipes for spinach calzones and 1950s-era manuals for building
transistor radios, nearly all of which is free.
As in many places online, free content is the rule. Writers who are
intent on making money will have to find creative ways to attract
readers and build an audience.
As the YouTube of books, Scribd provides a virtual printing press for
budding writers and a community of potential readers. The company gets
most of its revenue by selling advertising on the site.
A small portion of the titles on Scribd, roughly 15% of more than 20
million documents, is for sale. The prices, which are set by publishers,
range from $1.99 for "The Dark Dreamweaver," a fantasy novel about an
11-year-old who ventures into a land of dreams, to a $27.99 book
published by O'Reilly Media for designing Web pages. Scribd takes a 20%
cut of those sales.
Trip Adler, a 26-year-old entrepreneur who started developing the site
as a Harvard undergraduate, says it's on the verge of being profitable.
"It's like having a huge library at your fingertips, but with stuff
you'd never think to look at," said Helen Black, a mother of five in
Portland, Ore.
On Scribd, Black found a 1957 tourist map of Bemidji, Minn., where she'd
gone to summer camp as a girl. She read a chunk of the Senate's
healthcare reform bill, a document called "What's in a Can of Red Bull?"
(partial answer: "meat sugar") and the 1894 diary of a woman traveling
east from Oregon by wagon.
The proliferation of amateur content poses a conundrum for publishers,
who must find a way to make a profit in a sprawling marketplace
increasingly filled with free content.
"We've pretty much reached the point where the supply has now shifted to
infinite," said Richard Nash, former head of Soft Skull Press, a small
New York publisher. "So the next question is: How do you make people
want it?"
Part of the answer may be found on
Goodreads.com,
a digital library and social networking site where millions of members
can log in and chat about any book they want, including many that will
never see print.
Lori Hettler of Tobyhanna, Pa., runs one of the largest book clubs on
Goodreads, with nearly 7,000 members chiming in from all over the globe.
Discussions can go on for hundreds of messages, with readers
passionately championing -- or eviscerating -- the club's latest
selection.
A recommendation by Hettler can help little-known authors find an
audience. Her recent picks include M. Clifford's "The Book" and D.H.
Haney's "Banned for Life," both self-published efforts.
"Word of mouth goes a long way," Hettler said. "Once I review a book for
one guy, he usually has someone he would like me to read, and then that
guy has someone he would like me to read. ... It's this wonderful,
endless cycle."
Hettler may be broadening reading horizons, but some people worry that
new technologies will diminish the classic reading experience.
Whereas printed texts often are linear paths paved by the author chapter
by chapter, digital books encourage readers to click here or tap there,
launching them on side journeys before they even reach the bottom of a
page.
Some scholars fear that this is breeding a generation of readers who
won't have the attention span to get through "The Catcher in the Rye,"
let alone "Moby-Dick."
"Reading well is like playing the piano or the violin," said the poet
and critic Dana Gioia, former chairman of the National Endowment for the
Arts. "It is a high-level cognitive ability that requires long-term
practice. I worry that those mechanisms in our culture that used to take
a child and have him or her learn more words and more complex syntax
are breaking down."
But Larry Rosen, a psychology professor at Cal State Dominguez Hills,
said it was a mistake to conclude that young people learned less simply
because "they are flitting around all over the place" as they read.
"Kids are reading and writing more than ever," he said. "Their lives are
all centered around words."
Dr. Gary Small, director of the Center on Aging at UCLA and author of
"iBrain," said Internet use activated more parts of the brain than
reading a book did.
On the other hand, online readers often demonstrate what Small calls
"continuous partial attention" as they click from one link to the next.
The risk is that we become mindless ants following endless crumbs of
digital data.
"People tend to ask whether this is good or bad," he said. "My response
is that the tech train is out of the station, and it's impossible to
stop."
A customer hold the new iPad tablet computer
at its UK launch at an Apple store in central London May 28, 2010.
Credit: Reuters/Luke MacGregor
CHICAGO |
Thu Jul 15, 2010 4:00pm EDT
CHICAGO
(Reuters) - Apple Inc has already sold more than three million of its iPad
tablet computers in just over three months, but there is still more
demand out there, a new survey showed on Thursday.
While 8.4 percent of the 1,000
people surveyed by America's Research Group said they had already bought
an iPad,
another 6.1 percent said they planned to buy the device.
The fact that the number of people planning
to buy is more than 70 percent of those who have already bought is a
good sign for a device that sells for at least $499, said Britt Beemer,
America's Research Group founder. "That shows incredible demand for the
product."
The iPad is
already selling faster than analysts expected. In June, after the device
hit three million sales, Kaufman Bros analyst Shaw Wu said he expected
the company to sell 9.7 million in 2010.
The
iPad
question was among several Beemer asked consumers as part of a wider
survey commissioned by Reuters.
In
other questions, 55.3 percent of those with children at home said they
do not pay them an allowance. That number is low and shows a continuing
decline from previous decades, Beemer said. In the 1970s, the number
would have been about 80 percent and in the 1980s it was about 70
percent, Beemer said.
At the same
time, most parents do not expect their children to have to spend money
on back-to-school items.
Of those
with children, nearly 85 percent said they do not ask their kids to
spend their own money on back-to-school purchases. In comparison, in the
1990s, 38 percent of children spent some of their own money, Beemer
said.
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