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Daily Digest

33.txt We have heard about the God gene and the gay gene
– though each has been met with significant skepticism.
Should Medicare Pay for Genetic Testing? Now comes news of a gene that Swedish researchers are
This may be your last chance to tell the federal gov- touting as a possible biological basis for why some guys
ernment whether Medicare should pay for a cutting- won’t settle down.
edge personalized medicine service. Credit a young researcher at Sweden’s Karolinska
Last year, the FDA announced that a genetic test Institute for discovering a link between a variation in
might help doctors avoid a common catastrophe – giv- the AVPR1A gene – which has been linked to autism
ing their patients an excessive dose of warfarin. Half a and how people interact socially – and a propensity for
million people start taking the anticoagulant drug each men to skip out on women, or to have marital problems
year, and many of them – over 10 percent – wind up if they do tie the knot.
in the hospital with serious internal bleeding because In a photograph on the Karolinska’s website, the
they’ve overdosed. researcher, Hasse Walum, looks a little like rocker Kurt
By checking two genes, doctors may be able to make Cobain.
a better decision about how much warfarin is right for Walum did not report if he carries the tell-tale gene,
each patient. although in a study of 552 sets of twins, all in relation-
In theory, the genetic test could save healthcare ships, Walum found that 40 percent of the men carried
providers a fortune by cutting down on costly emer- the Ramblin’ Man variation of this gene.
gency room visits. But many doctors are not convinced The couples filled out questionnaires that asked ques-
that the tests are necessary; some say that handheld tions such as:
gadgets like the Roche CoaguChek system, which al- I feel anxious when someone gets too close.
low them to constantly monitor their patients’ blood, Have you ever regretted getting married/moving in?
are more useful. Do you kiss your partner?
Of course, in a perfect world, physicians would use Researchers then ran genetic screens of the subjects,
both tools to aid their decisions. The Department of discovering that a line of code at position 334 in the
Health and Human Services wants the public to tell gene had a statistical correlation with the less commit-
them whether the genetic test is worthwhile. To get ted men.
some feedback, the agency has posted a survey on its Women married to men who carry one or two copies
website, and the deadline to respond is tomorrow. of the suspect code were, on average, ”less satisfied with
If Medicare starts paying for the procedure, the bur- their relationship” than were women married to men
geoning field of personalized medicine will turn a ma- who didn’t carry this code, Walum said.
jor corner. Private insurance companies might follow This same gene has also been linked in a different
the government’s lead, and offer reimbursements for study to dictatorial behavior, and the hormone, called
the evaluation. But the biggest benefit of a change to vasopressin, made by this gene has been found to be
the healthcare policy will be massive amounts of data. plentiful in voles that mate for life.
Once a huge cohort of senior citizens has received some But before women rush out to test their men for
pharmacogenetic services, there will be a large body of this genetic variation – or we run DNA screens of John
evidence that individualized treatments are better than McCain and Barrack Obama to see if they have an au-
a one-size-fits-all approach to medicine. tocratic bent hidden in their genes – we need to realize
If you want to weigh in on this tremendously impor- that these tests are very preliminary statistical links.
tant issue, visit the Health and Human Services website No one has physiologically linked this genetic variation
and post a comment. to behavior in a relationship, or to Stalinistic behavior.
Walum is well aware of this, and pointed out that
the effect of the genetic variation is ”modest,” and can-
not be used to predict the future behavior of someone
32.txt in a relationship.
A caveat that makes one wonder why researchers,
Is Lover Boy a Louse? It May Be Genetic institutes, and the media keep trotting out these pre-
liminary associations between genes and profoundly im-

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portant human behaviors like religion and relationship July 11 launch. The problems have varied from slower-
management in this way. than-advertised 3G performance to getting no 3G con-
One reason is that they can be fun, like reading nection at all.
Tarot cards can be fun. These studies can also point sci- Alabama resident Jessica Alena Smith was the first
entists in a possible direction towards where to look for customer angry enough to file a lawsuit, alleging false
serious maladies such as autism, which is what Walum’s advertising on Apple’s part for touting the handset as
work is focusing on. ”twice as fast for half the price” compared to the orig-
”There are, of course, many reasons why a per- inal iPhone. Smith claims in her complaint that the
son might have relationship problems,” Walum told the handset’s network performance is grindingly slow and
BBC. only stays on the 3G network 25 percent of the time.
Indeed, there are. Apple’s public relations department has said recently
that the latest iPhone software update – 2.0.2 – would
improve 3G performance, but very few user reports
have backed the company’s claims.
31.txt Regardless of what’s said about 3G performance,
Apple is continuing to ride the high tide with the iPhone’s
IPhone Users Report Network Outages; Second 3G popularity. Insiders have said the corporation plans to
Lawsuit Emerges produce 40 to 45 million more iPhone 3Gs by next year.
While Apple’s iPhone sales continue to succeed, things
just aren’t looking any better for ATT’s network woes,
and their dysfunctional relationship has given birth to
a second lawsuit.
Several iPhone users on Wednesday morning reported 36.txt
a complete outage of ATT’s data service. Reports have
surfaced in Boston, Chicago, Washington DC and St. Mobile users offered first external SSD
Louis; users have claimed in the Apple support forums Networking company Buffalo Technology has finally
that a call to ATT’s support line confirms the outage. launched its external SSD drives at prices that promise
ATT’s Brad Mays confirmed a ”routing issue” in the to steal a share of the portable market from old-world
Northeast region affecting wireless data and said tech- 2.5-inch hard drives. The capacities of the new Micro-
nicians restored the service by about noon EDT. Station drives are modest by the standards of a spin-
The reports of a network outage work to the ad- ning drive – 32GB, 64GB, and 100GB – but there are
vantage of customer William Gillis, who filed a lawsuit other features to tempt buyers beyond the gigabytes.
late last week alleging Apple and ATT are overwhelm- The first is perhaps size. Weighing around 60 grams,
ing the 3G network with the ”oversold” iPhone 3G. In the aptly-named drives are not much bigger than a
his 18-page complaint, Gillis says the popular handset credit card at 57 x 14 x 89mm, a form factor that looks
is requiring ”too much power,” and straining the net- tiny next to the supplied wrap-around USB 2.0 connec-
work. tor and cable used to attach it to a PC.
Gillis’s hypothesis of 3G networks being strained
coincides with observations made in Wired.com’s re-
cent study conducted on iPhone 3G download speeds
around the world, in which we discovered network per- 35.txt
formance varied greatly based on carriers and coun-
tries. Users reported the fastest 3G download speeds eMusic rattles ISPs over legal downloads
in Europe, which possesses some of the most mature The boss of Apple’s iTunes nearest rival eMusic has
3G networks that have been developed since 2001. By warned that recent deals struck between the music in-
contrast, ATT’s U.S. 3G network is relatively young, dustry and UK internet providers could threaten the
having been introduced in 2004. existence of legal sites. eMusic CEO David Pakman
Before today’s reported outage and Gillis’s lawsuit, told the Financial Times that ISPs could lure customers
femtocell developer Dave Nowicki also theorized that away from well-known digital music sites by offering
in the United States, the iPhone 3G is straining ATT’s their own legal download services.
young 3G network. He explained that ATT installed ”Our concern is that in order to obtain the co-
the 3G cells on preexisting EDGE transmission towers operation of the ISPs, there seems to be a quid pro
– meaning those towers were spaced based on the re- quo,” said Pakman. ”This is qualitatively different
quirements of earlier, 2G technology, which has a longer from licensing another half a dozen digital music busi-
effective range than 3G. nesses.” He claimed that the agreement inked in July
User complaints about the 3G network have been between six UK ISPs, the BPI, and the Motion Pictures
passionate and widespread ever since the iPhone 3G’s

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Ass. of America, to crack down on illegal downloading something else on my computer? Although, one would
would ”penalise the good guys, not the bad guys”. hope that they’d use this automatic update feature to
fix the flaw pointed out above.

34.txt

Google Chrome out for one day, already reasons to


avoid
As we reported yesterday, Google has released the
first beta of their new web browser, Google Chrome.
Within a day of its release, there are already a couple
of points that users should be cautioned of before using
this new browser.
The first, is the popular ”carpet bomb” vulnerabil-
ity that still exists within Chrome, as pointed out on
our forums by our member matessim. This vulnera-
bility allows malicious websites to drive by download
and execute programs on your machine. Our visitors
may remember the uproar that this same vulnerabil-
ity caused for Safari users, and that Apple patched the
carpet-bombing issue with Safari v3.1.2. Chrome is vul-
nerable to this exploit because it is based on the same
engine, WebKit 525.13, and Google did not patch or
update the engine before releasing the software.
The other, and less technical, problem with Chrome
exists in its EULA. More specifically, the point that
would seem to give Google rights to anything you post
on the Internet while using their browser, mostly in
conjunction with the promotion of its services.
”By submitting, posting or displaying the content
you give Google a perpetual, irrevocable, worldwide,
royalty-free, and non-exclusive license to reproduce, adapt,
modify, translate, publish, publicly perform, publicly
display and distribute any content which you submit,
post or display on or through, the services. This license
is for the sole purpose of enabling Google to display, dis-
tribute and promote the services and may be revoked
for certain services as defined in the additional terms
of those services.” Not exactly something you’re used
to seeing in a web browser’s license agreement.
There is also the point that Google reserves the right
to automatically update and install Chrome. Interest-
ing, ”the software which you use may automatically
download and install updates from time to time from
Google. These updates are designed to improve, en-
hance and further develop the services and may take
the form of bug fixes, enhanced functions, new soft-
ware modules and completely new versions. You agree
to receive such updates (and permit Google to deliver
these to you) as part of your use of the services.” ... so
says the EULA.
Now we’re all used to seeing automatic update func-
tions built into software. It seems that almost anything
you install these days has one. However, very few de-
mand that I install their updates. What if I don’t want
to because the new version includes a bug or breaks

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