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SurturZ (54334)

SurturZ
  (email not shown publicly)
http://www.membe ... .au/~synchrotech

nothing to see...

  Internet pedophile ring busted: girl saved 2008-06-19 23:12 SurturZ

Submitted by SurturZ on Thursday June 19, @11:12PM
SurturZ writes "One of the oldest and most sophisticated internet pedophile rings has been busted, and a nine-year-old abuse victim has been rescued. The Australian newspaper details how an international police effort tracked the perpetrator through clues from images of the victim, and cracking into an internet pedophile ring's secured servers. A key piece of evidence was the Myspace page of the perpetrator's wife."
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 [+] submission, internet
Posted by timothy on Wednesday June 18, @04:39PM
from the oh-snap-crispy-apples dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Half the Mac OS X boxes in the world (confirmed on Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and 10.5 Leopard) can be rooted through AppleScript: osascript -e 'tell app "ARDAgent" to do shell script "whoami"'; Works for normal users and admins, provided the normal user wasn't switched to via fast user switching. Secure? I think not." On the other hand, since this exploit seems to require physical access to the machine to be rooted, you might have some other security concerns to deal with at that point, like keeping the intruder from raiding your fridge on his way out.
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 [+] story, it, security, apple, bug, macosx, vbscript
Posted by Soulskill on Thursday March 06, @09:02PM
from the chip-off-the-old-block dept.
Riding with Robots writes "It turns out that one of the Ringed Planet's moons has rings of its own. The robotic spacecraft Cassini at Saturn has discovered that the icy moon Rhea is orbited by an extensive debris field and at least one ring, the first such system found. 'Many years ago we thought Saturn was the only planet with rings,' said one mission scientist. 'Now we may have a moon of Saturn that is a miniature version of its even more elaborately decorated parent.'"
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 [+] story, science, space, cassini, saturn, ring, thatsnomoon, moon
Posted by kdawson on Monday March 03, @08:17PM
from the paid-me-to-do-it dept.
Scott Jaschik writes "At Hunter College, professors are debating the ethics of a course in which an industry group paid for a class to develop a fake student who would write a fake blog to discourage other students from buying knockoff products. The controversy involves both commercial interference with academic freedom and the ethics of 'guerilla marketing.'"
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 [+] story, yro, education, social, astroturf, fakeblog, viralmarketing

  Is Microsoft Office Adware? 2008-02-10 14:07

Posted by Soulskill on Sunday February 10, @02:07PM
from the somebody-tell-lavasoft dept.
An anonymous reader writes "Office may fall under Microsoft's own definition of adware. It links to third-party commercial add-ons, includes up-selling promos, requires cookies for certain functions, and collects technical information. While this is like a normal day on the web, should the commercial office suite be held to a different standard and possibly be considered adware? The article also notes that clicking advertising links in Office will bring up Internet Explorer, regardless of whether or not it is the default browser. We discussed Microsoft's decision to turn Works into adware a few months ago.
Posted by Zonk on Sunday January 06 2008, @07:46PM
from the because-our-airline-tickets-were-too-cheap dept.
Hugh Pickens writes "As many as three American Airlines passenger jets will be outfitted this spring with laser technology intended to protect planes from missile attacks. The tests, which could involve more than 1,000 flights, will determine how the technology holds up under the rigors of flight. The technology is intended to stop attacks by detecting heat from missiles, then responding in a fraction of a second by firing laser beams to jam the missiles' guidance systems. A Rand study in 2005 estimated it would cost about $11 billion to protect every US airliner from shoulder-fired missiles. Over 20 years, the cost to develop, procure and operate anti-missile systems could hit $40 billion."
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 [+] story, hardware, military, lasers, whatcouldpossiblygowrong, politics

  Poll: Favourite Slashdot Poll? 2007-12-12 17:43 SurturZ

Submitted by SurturZ on Wednesday December 12 2007, @05:43PM
SurturZ writes "I think you should have a poll "Best Slashdot Poll?" * What would you like the CIA to declassify? * Best Meme in Slashdot's First 10 Years * Favorite Sci-Fi Ship? * Favourite Poll involving CowboyNeal? etc etc I'm sure you could do a database search to work out the top five most voted for polls to put in the list"
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 [+] submission, polls, humor

  Steampunk Laptop 2007-11-29 03:03 SurturZ

Submitted by SurturZ on Thursday November 29 2007, @03:03AM
SurturZ writes "A steampunk laptop case mod. Need I say more?"
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 [+] submission, toy

  Science: Is SETI Worth It? 2007-11-09 00:13

Posted by CowboyNeal on Friday November 09 2007, @12:13AM
from the lights-are-on-but-no-one's-home dept.
njdube sent in this Space.com story about the money behind SETI that opens, "It's a risky long shot that burns up money and might never, ever pay off. So is searching for intelligent creatures on unseen worlds worth the candle? After all, aren't there better ways to use our monies and technical talents than trying to find something that's only posited to exist: sentient beings in the dark depths of space?"
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 [+] story, science, money, space, falsedichotomy, hellyes, arewealone
Posted by Zonk on Wednesday November 07 2007, @12:15PM
from the wait-wait-no-need-to-fly-off dept.
Rock, Paper, Shotgun comments on the big news from late last night: NCsoft has announced that it has purchased City of Heroes/Villains from Cryptic Studios, the Massive game's original developer. Everyone on the team has been offered a new position with the newly formed NCsoft NorCal studio, and many of them have accepted. As far as the players are concerned, NCsoft only intends for them to see freebies as a result of this deal: "Now back to you, the players. You are the lifeblood of our game. In celebration of our new studio and our exciting plans, and in order to thank you for the fantastic community that you have built, we are pleased to announce the following: All players with City of Heroes retail accounts will now have access to City of Villains, and all City of Villains retail accounts will now have access to City of Heroes. Players that didn't previously have access to "the other side" will find that they do now. Just log in to check it out! After the launch of Issue 11: A Stitch in Time this Fall, we are removing Debt from all characters and giving you a fresh start ... Also after the launch of Issue 11, all Supergroups will receive an additional 20,000 Prestige per Supergroup member."
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 [+] story, games, rpg, cityofheroes, ncsoft, dooooom
Journal by SurturZ on Monday September 24 2007, @08:26PM
At last, W.E.C. Meadows' renowned translation of this classic text on game design, written some time during the fifth century BC in China, is available on the 'net.

General Tso: The Ten Points with the Commentaries
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 [+] journal, classicgames
Posted by Zonk on Sunday September 23 2007, @07:14AM
from the everything-looks-so-vivid dept.
sufijazz writes "A story by Gregory Mone on the Popular Science website talks about trials to use deep brain stimulation to cure chronic depression. It's a deeper exploration of the 'brain pacemaker' discussed here on the site before, and a practical application of research discussed even earlier. Why the pulses affect mood is still unclear, but scientists believe that they may facilitate chemical communication between brain cells, possibly by forcing ions through nerve fibers called axons. In turn, this may trigger the release of mood-regulating chemicals like serotonin and norepinephrine. Similar trials are being conducted in other places. Exact numbers are hard to ascertain, but it's estimated that fewer than 50 patients in North America are walking around with wires in their brain."
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 [+] story, science, biotech, terminalman, wirehead, droud
Posted by CowboyNeal on Friday September 14 2007, @12:19AM
from the buckle-up dept.
serutan writes "Using lasers to drive spaceships has been a subject of interest for many years, but making a photonic engine powerful enough for practical use has been elusive. Dr. Young Bae, a California physicist, has built a demonstration photonic laser thruster that produces enough thrust to micro-maneuver a satellite. This would be useful in high-precision formation flying, such as using a fleet of satellites to form a space telescope with a large virtual aperture. Scaled up, a similar engine could speed a spacecraft to Mars in less than a week."
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 [+] story, science, space, sharks, frickinlasers, gforces,
Journal by SurturZ on Thursday June 21 2007, @10:08PM
Have you ever wondered how many oxcarts it would take to store all your digital data, if you had to transcribe it to paper? I know I have, and thanks to Steve Jackson Games' handy Gigabyte-to-Oxcart calculator, now I know! Try it yourself!
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 [+] journal, humor
Posted by Zonk on Thursday June 14 2007, @05:55PM
from the she-wants-a-bite-of-the-apple dept.
jcgam69 writes "When it was discovered in 2005, some thought Eris should be considered the 10th planet of our solar system. Everyone still considered Pluto a planet then. At first, Eris was thought to be slightly larger. Now — with the help of Eris' moon — Eris is known to be 27% more massive than Pluto. If Pluto had remained a planet to the entire community of astronomers, surely Eris would be considered the 10th planet."
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 [+] story, science, space, nasa, haileris, lectroids