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Submission + - Google's 'Cookie Choices' Lets Europeans Know How They're Being Tracked (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Google has launched a new site, CookieChoices.org, to help visitors of European sites learn more about the digital breadcrumbs they leave behind through cookies. The site, which includes code that publishers can use to incorporate notifications into their own sites and apps, is meant to address European laws that require that digital publishers give visitors to their sites and apps information about their use of cookies and other data. The notifications could take the form of pop-up alerts or a bar at the top of the screen, ostensibly to give details like the visitor's browsing history or profile information.

Submission + - What (not) to wear on an IT job interview: 6 real-life examples

Esther Schindler writes: For a lot of slashdot denizens, the fashion choice for a job interview is, "What's clean?"

But still: Some of us give more thought to it than that. We know that how we dress conveys something, even if it's "proof that I'm a techie who is above such things." And — among women more than men, I think — some of us care about that image. And want to look pretty. (I do.)

So, in this article, with the help of a few brave volunteers, we examine how that dress or suit really comes across to the people who might ask, "When can you start?" You see six real-world people in real-world outfits, and hear what our esteemed judges think is the best choice for that IT job interview. Plus, you can vote on the outfits you think are best for each individual, and compare your opinion to those of the fashionistas and hiring managers. It's IT meets career meets fashion police – practical and, I hope, also fun.

Submission + - No, Bitcoin Miners Aren't Crashing The GPU Market (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: In the early days of bitcoin, a lot of miners used specialized GPU rigs to crunch through the math needed to create more bitcoin. As the calculations grew more difficult, many miners moved to specialized ASICS — and the rumor spread that the shift was having an impact on the overall GPU market. But the extent has been greatly exaggerated.

Submission + - Where Should You Open Source Your DNA? (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: GitHub has become a sort of default repository to upload and open-source information, even info that isn't code, like music or proposed legislation. A few people have even open sourced their own DNA on the platform. But if you really want information on your genetic code to be useful to scientists and researchers, there are probably better places to do it.

Submission + - Intel Putting Cameras In Tablets And PCs That Can Analyze Your Mood (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Intel's RealSense 3D cameras, coming tablets and PCs in the next year or so, can do a number of interesting things, like putting a fake background behind you in a video chat or making kids' books more interactive and fun. But one creepy-sounding feature is that they can analyze your mood based on your facial expression. No word yet on how exactly your computer will react to your anger or sadness.

Submission + - Foxconn CEO Blames Past Worker Suicides On Breakups, Family Disputes (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Four years after a string of suicides brought unwanted attention to his company, Foxconn Technology Group's CEO said none of the deaths had to do with poor working conditions at its factories. 'It wasn't because the workers were tired,' Terry Gou said on Wednesday at the company's annual shareholders' meeting. 'Some of it was because the work is monotonous, but 90 percent of it had to do with personal relationships or because of family disputes.'

Submission + - Governments Turn To Mobile Malware for Monitoring (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: The Citizen Lab, part of the Munk School of Global Affairs at the University of Toronto, and Kaspersky Lab both published analyses on Tuesday of a surveillance product called Remote Control System (RCS) from Hacking Team in Italy. Over time, the cost of the spying toolkits has fallen and they are now within reach of nearly all governments, the Citizen Lab said in its writeup. Kaspersky Lab found 64 RCS command-and-control servers in the U.S., the most of any country, followed by 49 in Kazakhstan, 35 in Ecuador and 24 in the U.K. Other countries with double-digit numbers of control servers included Canada, China and Colombia.

Submission + - Why Software Builds Fail (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: A group of researchers from Google, the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology and the University of Nebraska undertook a study of over 26 million builds by 18,000 Google engineers from November 2012 through July 2013 to better understand what causes software builds to fail and, by extension, to improve developer productivity. And, while Google isn't representative of every developer everywhere, there are a few findings that stand out: Build frequency and developer (in)experience don't affect failure rates, most build errors are dependency-related, and C++ generates more build errors than Java (but they’re easier to fix).

Submission + - New Software Makes Privacy Policies Understandable (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: A browser add-on, dubbed 'Privacy Icons', from Disconnect and TRUSTe analyzes websites' privacy policies, and breaks them down into nine categories, including location tracking, do-not-track browser request compliance and data retention policies. The pay-what-you-want software is available now for recent versions of Chrome, Firefox and Opera.

Submission + - Prisoners Freed After Cops Struggle With New Records Software (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Police in Dallas are scrambling after difficulties using a new records management system caused more than 20 jail inmates, including a number of people charged with violent crimes, to be set free. The prisoners were able to get out of jail because police officers struggling to learn the new system didn't file cases on them within three days, as required by law.

Submission + - ICANN CEO Wants To Make Progress On US Split At London Meeting (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé hopes to make progress on preparations to take over running the world's central DNS servers from the U.S. government's National Telecommunications and Information Agency when the organization meets in London next week. 'I think this is a meeting where the ICANN community has to deal with the fact, the good fact, that its relationship with the U.S. government, which characterized its birth, its existence and growth, has now run its course,' Chehadé said.

Submission + - Overeager Compilers Can Open Security Holes In Your Code (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: Creators of compilers are in an arms race to improve performance. But according to a presentantation at this week's annual USENIX conference, those performance boosts can undermine your code's security. For instance, a compiler might find a subroutine that checks a huge bound of memory beyond what's allocated to the program, decide it's an error, and eliminate it from the compiled machine code — even though it's a necessary defense against buffer overflow attacks.

Submission + - US Marshals Accidentally Reveal Potential Bidders For Gov't-Seized Bitcoin (itworld.com)

jfruh writes: When the U.S. government shut down the Silk Road marketplace, they seized its assets, including roughly $18 million in bitcoin, and despite the government's ambivalence about the cryptocurrency, they plan to auction the bitcoin off to the highest bidder, as they do with most criminal assets. Ironically, considering many bitcoin users' intense desire for privacy, the U.S. Marshall service accidentally revealed the complete list of potential bidders by sending a message to everyone on the list and putting their addresses in the CC field instead of the BCC field.

Submission + - Judge: $324M Settlement In Silicon Valley Tech Worker Case Not Enough (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: A proposed $324.5 million settlement of claims that Silicon Valley companies including Google and Apple suppressed worker wages by agreeing not to hire each others' employees may not be high enough, a judge signaled on Thursday. Judge Lucy Koh didn't say whether she would approve the settlement, but she did say in court that she was worried about whether that amount was fair to the roughly 64,000 technology workers represented in the case. Throughout Thursday's hearing, she questioned not just the amount but the logic behind the settlement as presented by lawyers for both the plaintiffs and the defendants.

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