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Submission + - Fix your wireless dead spots (thenextweb.com)

climenole writes: "A wireless range extender that promised to be the easiest way to get rid of dead spots or extend your coverage further than it presently travels. With a simple plug it in and forget it operation. :-)"
Government

Submission + - FBI Officials Become Spam Targets (net-security.org)

Orome1 writes: Various government agencies and high ranking government officials have been the target of previous spam attacks. In their attempts to lure victims, criminals continue to explore new avenues to obtain their goal. A new version of the spam e-mail uses the names of FBI officials along with the names of specific units within the FBI. The e-mail alerts the recipient that two "Trunk Boxes" containing a large sum of money were intercepted at an international airport.
Privacy

Submission + - London police asks mobile firms for rioters' info (v3.co.uk)

illiteratehack writes: "In the past governments and agencies have gone to device manufacturers such as Research in Motion for access to its networks, but London's Metropolitan Police has said that it will go to the mobile operators to find out information to pinpoint those involved in the London riots. Mobile operators have said they will comply with police requests for information, however could this be just the catalyst governments want to have greater access to private communications?"
Security

Submission + - The Biggest Hack , But It is No Surprise (readwriteweb.com)

climenole writes: "Anybody involved in the IT and cybersecurity industry knows that every major industry and government agency around the world is under threat of intrusion through Advanced Persistent Threats (APT). Security company McAfee is reporting one of the largest cases of intrusion ever in a campaign the company calls Operation Shady RAT (PDF) that has infiltrated 72 known (and many other unknown) governments and corporations over the last five years. RAT — Remote Access Tool — is a technique that hackers use to gain access to computers and servers that allows it to siphon off data. In Operation Shady RAT,..."

Submission + - Like Democracy, the Web Needs to be Defended, Its (gigaom.com) 1

climenole writes: "Sir Tim Berners-Lee — the man who created the web 20 years ago next month, on his desktop computer in Geneva — says there are threats to the freedom of the web all around us, and that we need to fight them in the same way we fight to protect our freedoms in the real world.

Where are those online threats coming from? Berners-Lee says, “large social-networking sites are walling off information posted by their users from the rest of the Web,” in what appears to be a clear reference to Facebook’s walled-garden approach to sharing things like the email addresses of its users, and he later mentions Facebook specifically as “a silo.”"

Linux

Submission + - Alternative To The "200 Lines Linux Kernel Patch (webupd8.org)

climenole writes: "Phoronix recently published an article regarding a ~200 lines Linux Kernel patch that improves responsiveness under system strain. Well, Lennart Poettering, a RedHat developer replied to Linus Torvalds on a maling list with an alternative to this patch that does the same thing yet all you have to do is run 2 commands and paste 4 lines in your ~/.bashrc file. I know it sounds unbelievable, but apparently someone even ran some tests which prove that Lennart's solution works. Read on!"
Spam

Submission + - Captchabot: Blurring Human and Machine (krebsonsecurity.com)

climenole writes: "A service that automates the solving of reverse-Turing tests

Captchabot charges clients based on how many thousand CAPTCHAs they ask the service solve: $1 buys about 1,000 solved CAPTCHAs. The service claims at least an 80 percent success rate, and customers only pay for CAPTCHAs that are solved correctly.

Okay: But what about the spam now? :-/"

Image

Professor Has Camera Surgically Implanted In the Back of His Head 119

There won't be any cheating in professor Wafaa Bilal's class anymore. The New York University photography professor is having a camera surgically implanted in the back of his head. The camera will take a still picture every minute for one year, and the best shots will be put on display at a new museum in Qatar. Visitors can also watch a live stream of images from the camera which has some NYU administrators and faculty worried about student privacy. "Obviously you don't want students to be under the burden of constant surveillance; it's not a good teaching environment," said Fred Ritchin, associate chairman of the department.
United States

Submission + - 16 of the Dumbest Things Americans Believe (bspcn.com)

climenole writes: "Americans are often misinformed, occasionally downright dumb, and easily misled by juicy-sounding rumors. But while the right wing is taking full advantage of this reality, the Left worries that calling out lies is “rude.”"
Canada

Submission + - Want to eat like a caveman? Try being more polite (vancouversun.com)

climenole writes: ""I just wanted to know if just looking at meat would be enough to provoke an aggressive behaviour," said Kachanoff, a student at McGill University in Montreal. "

Research suggests humans may have evolved to be docile rather than aggressive in the presence of meat. Does the sight of red meat reignite the aggressive ancient hunter in modern man? Canadian researchers now think that it's the opposite: The presence of meat actually calms men down."

The Internet

Submission + - The REAL connection speeds for Internet users (pingdom.com)

climenole writes: "real-world connection speeds for people in the top 50 countries on the Internet.This list of countries ranges from China at number 1 with 420 million Internet users, and Denmark at number 50 with 4.75 million Internet users. We’ve included this ranking within parenthesis next to each country in the charts below for those who want to know.These 50 countries together have more than 1.8 billion Internet users."
Bug

Google Says No More Cash For Trash Web Bugs 88

Trailrunner7 writes "It's bound to happen: you create a cool, forward looking incentive program designed to tap the 'wisdom of the crowd' and help make your products better, only to find out that, in fact, the 'crowd' isn't all that wise — and now wants you to pay cold, hard cash for their tepid ideas. That's the experience that Google appears to have had since announcing that it would extend its bounty program for bugs from its Chromium platform to the various Web applications that the company owns. In an updated blog post this week, the company said it has already committed to some $20,000 in bounties, but also provided some 'clarification' to the terms of the reward program, saying that — in essence — not all bugs are equal and that researchers dumping low priority vulnerabilities shouldn't expect to get much in return. 'The review committee has been somewhat generous this first week,' wrote Google's Security Team in a blog post. 'We've granted a number of awards for bugs of low severity, or that wouldn't normally fall under the conditions we originally described.'"

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