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Medicine

US Life Expectancy May Have Peaked 1053

Hugh Pickens writes "Live Science reports that although life expectancy in the United States has risen to an all-time high of 77.9 years in 2007 up from 77.7 in 2006, gains in life expectancy may be pretty much over, as some groups — particularly people in rural locations are already stagnating or slipping in contrast to all other industrialized nations. Hardest hit are regions in the Deep South, along the Mississippi River, in Appalachia and also the southern part of the Midwest reaching into Texas. The culprits — largely preventable with better diet and access to medical services — are diabetes, cancers and heart disease caused by smoking, high blood pressure and obesity. What the new analysis reveals is the reality of two Americas, one on par with most of Europe and parts of Asia, and another no different than a third-world nation with the United States placing 41st on the 2008 CIA World Factbook list, behind Bosnia but still edging out Albania. 'Beginning in the early 1980s and continuing through 1999 those who were already disadvantaged did not benefit from the gains in life expectancy experienced by the advantaged, and some became even worse off,' says a report published in PLoS Medicine by a team led by Harvard's Majid Ezzati, adding that 'study results are troubling because an oft-stated aim of the US health system is the improvement of the health of "all people, and especially those at greater risk of health disparities.'"
Space

Submission + - US Report: NASA Can't Track Deadly Asteroids (spacefellowship.com) 1

xp65 writes: "A new U.S. government report says the U.S. space agency does not have enough money to find asteroids that could destroy life on Earth. The National Academy of Sciences said Wednesday that Congress has yet to give NASA the money it needs to build telescopes to track the potentially deadly space objects. Congress passed a law in 2005 ordering NASA to find 90 percent of asteroids bigger than 140 kilometers by 2020. The academy report says NASA cannot meet this goal under its existing budget."
Security

Submission + - Voting Machine Attacks are Practical

An anonymous reader writes: Every time a bunch of academics show vulnerabilities in electronic voting machines the critics complain that the attacks aren't realistic, that attackers won't have access to source code, or design documents, or be able to manipulate the hardware, etc. So this time a bunch of computer scientists from UCSD, Michigan and Princeton offer a rebuttal. They completely 0wn the AVC Advantage using no access to source code or design documents and deliver a complete working attack in a plug in cartridge that could be used by anyone with a few private minutes with the machine. Moreover, they came up with some cool tricks to do this on a machine protected against traditional code injection attacks (the AVC processor will only execute instructions from ROM). Paper from this weeks USENIX EVT here.
Media

Submission + - Mursoch's Gamble: We'll Charge For All Our Sites (businessspectator.com.au)

Oracle Goddess writes: "In what appears to be a carefully planned suicide, Rupert Murdoch announced that his media giant News Corporation Ltd intends to charge for all its news websites in a bid to lift revenues, as the transition towards online media permanently changes the advertising landscape. "The digital revolution has opened many new and inexpensive methods of distribution, but it has not made content free. Accordingly we intend to charge for all our news websites," Murdoch said. Is this the last desperate move of a media mogul who is desperately out of touch with reality?"
Security

Submission + - Weaponizing The Apple iPod Touch 1

ancientribe writes: It turns out the Apple iPod Touch makes a handy hacking tool as well as a music/movie player and browsing device: a security expert and author was able to easily convert the device into a stealthy attack platform. After "jail-breaking" the iPod Touch, Thomas Wilhelm outfitted the device with the popular Metasploit hacking software as well as various password-cracking and Web app hacking applications. The main attraction for using the iPod Touch for attacking is it's portable and doesn't arouse suspicion while a hacker sniffs traffic and hacks passwords with it.
http://darkreading.com/security/attacks/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=219100135
Social Networks

Submission + - ESPN Bans Employees from Facebook and Twitter

Mordok-DestroyerOfWo writes: The hammer just came down, tweeps: ESPN memo prohibiting tweeting info unless it serves ESPN," Bucher wrote, capping it with a choice of words that conjures memories of a certain Twilight Zone cookbook. "Kinda figured this was coming." And then Bucher acknowledged the distinct possibility that he has stepped into a pile of, um, trouble. "I'm probably violating some sort of policy just by telling you," Bucher wrote. "In any case, stay tuned."
Idle

Submission + - Britain wants to ban airbrushed images (nymag.com)

dougrun writes: "Britain is continuing its battle against Photoshop. Liberal Democrats are in an uproar over recent Oil of Olay ads featuring Twiggy with glowing, almost perfect skin. Amazing for a woman of her age. But then photos of the model shopping at Marks & Spencer surfaced, and she looked — dare we say it — her own age, with actual wrinkles and jowls, making the image in the ad seem downright silly. Lawmakers are getting their brows furrowed worrying over what effect this could have on young girls."
Privacy

Submission + - Pirate Bay's IPREDator not a place to hide (itnews.com.au)

schliz writes: The Pirate Bay's new IPREDator anonymity service could be insufficiently secure for several use cases — for example, political activism in countries like Iran. The service uses PPTP, which has several known vulnerabilities, and according to IPREDator co-founder Peter Sunde, "can probably be broken by someone that can eavesdrop on the traffic".

The service was announced as a political statement in April and entered beta testing last week.

NASA

Submission + - SPAM: NASA and Goodyear build tire that won't go flat 3

coondoggie writes: "Flat tires can be a serious problem whether you are tooling down the interstate or crunching across a foreign planet. In developing what could be the next cool technology for those of us here on earth, NASA and Goodyear have developed an airless tire let large, long-range vehicles transport heavy loads across the surface of the moon. The "Spring Tire" has inside 800 load bearing springs and is designed to carry much heavier vehicles over much greater distances than the wire mesh tire previously used on the Apollo Lunar Roving Vehicle (LRV). According to Goodyear, NASA requires tires that can handle vehicles that will weigh ten-times what Apollo required. [spam URL stripped]"
Link to Original Source
Space

Submission + - Solar Cycle Linked to Global Climate (spacefellowship.com) 2

Matt_dk writes: "Establishing a key link between the solar cycle and global climate, new research led by the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) shows that maximum solar activity and its aftermath have impacts on Earth that resemble La Niña and El Niño events in the tropical Pacific Ocean. The research may pave the way toward better predictions of temperature and precipitation patterns at certain times during the Sun's cycle, which lasts approximately 11 years."
Education

Submission + - What's In an Educational Game? (wonderville.ca)

Anonymous Coward writes: "I work at a non profit who's mandate is to increasing science literacy and awareness. One of the methods that we've started exploring is in making free online educational games. Our targeted demographics for the games are kids aged between 8-12, however there is no reason the games could not also appeal to a broader age range. What would you look for in an educational game? Does length and depth of game play matter to you or would you rather play a trivial game with subconscious educational value?"

Comment Re:Idealism blows when the rubber meets the road (Score 2, Interesting) 149

I'm complaining about IT overreach in power. As it stands now, one over-zealous IT guy at the top is preventing the librarians from taking any steps toward rectifying misuse of technology. For example, it would help us out tremendously to switch the computers that are in unsupervised corners of the library to authenticated log-in use only (like WiFi) and allow free public access in areas that can be surveyed by library workers at all times. We want to protect the safety of our real patrons while still welcoming the general public to surf safely on the web for free. The idealistic jerk at the top is preventing us from changing anything.

Comment Idealism blows when the rubber meets the road (Score 2, Informative) 149

I am almost finished with my undergrad at a large public university. I worked in several of the branch libraries during my years here, including a full-time stint this summer. The computers in our library allow anyone to use one application: IE7. We have no time limit on computer usage or have any web filtering. The problems that arise from misuse of these computers from non-university community members are astounding. In just one branch library here this year alone, several incidents have been reported of non-university people masturbating to Internet porn. All incidents were reported to staff by young female co-eds, who were visibly traumatized by the experience. These kinds of folks have also brought along other problems for us to deal with: drug use and selling, theft of personal property, theft of library materials (including computer peripherals), etc etc.

With incidents like these in mind, don't let idealism confound your tech policies. Think of the people who are going to interact with the public that are using university technology. It is maddening to have your hands tied by some lofty IT person's idealistic vision of free data access for all when you're trying to deal with serious breaches of public safety.

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