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Twitter

Developer Loses Single-Letter Twitter Handle Through Extortion 448

Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Naoki Hiroshima, creator of Cocoyon and a developer for Echofon, writes at Medium that he had a rare one-letter Twitter username — @N — and had been offered as much as $50,000 for its purchase. 'People have tried to steal it. Password reset instructions are a regular sight in my email inbox,' writes Hiroshima. 'As of today, I no longer control @N. I was extorted into giving it up.' Hiroshima writes that a hacker used social engineering with Paypal to get the last four digits of his credit card number over the phone then used that information to gain control of his GoDaddy account. 'Most websites use email as a method of verification. If your email account is compromised, an attacker can easily reset your password on many other websites. By taking control of my domain name at GoDaddy, my attacker was able to control my email.' Hiroshima received a message from his extortionist. 'Your GoDaddy domains are in my possession, one fake purchase and they can be repossessed by godaddy and never seen again. I see you run quite a few nice websites so I have left those alone for now, all data on the sites has remained intact. Would you be willing to compromise? access to @N for about 5 minutes while I swap the handle in exchange for your godaddy, and help securing your data?' Hiroshima writes that it''s hard to decide what's more shocking, the fact that PayPal gave the attacker the last four digits of his credit card number over the phone, or that GoDaddy accepted it as verification. Hiroshima has two takeaways from his experience: Avoid custom domains for your login email address and don't let companies such as PayPal and GoDaddy store your credit card information."

Submission + - Open-Source AMD & NVIDIA Drivers Now Support OpenGL 3.3 (phoronix.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Four years after OpenGL 3.3 was ratified the open-source AMD Radeon and open-source NVIDIA (Nouveau) drivers now have OpenGL 3.3 support in Mesa. The support currently covers the NV50/NVC0 Nouveau drivers (GeForce 8 series and newer) and RadeonSI (Radeon HD 7000 series and newer) while work is still ongoing to bring OpenGL 3.3 to older AMD GPUs. These drivers along with the open-source Intel driver also have some level of OpenGL 4 support but their performance still lags behind the proprietary graphics drivers.

Submission + - Laser-focused fiber optics researcher wins $481K Japan Prize (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: A pioneering researcher in the field of semiconductor lasers for enabling high capacity, long-distance fiber networks like those that provide the Internet's physical foundation has won the 2014 Japan Prize in the field of electronics, information and communication. Yasuharu Suematsu, an 81-year-old honorary professor of Tokyo Institute of Technology, was recognized along with C. David Allis, who won the Japan Prize in the life science field for his genetic research. The annual prize http://www.japanprize.jp/en/ — which in the past has gone to tech luminaries like Vint Cerf and Tim Berners-Lee, includes a gold medal, a certificate of recognition and cash award of about $481,000.
Education

US Forces Coursera To Ban Students From Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria 306

An anonymous reader writes "Coursera is an online website that offers free courses from many of the world's top universities. Now, all students from Syria, Sudan, Iran and Cuba will no longer be able to access Coursera. The official blog provides more info regarding the ban: 'Until now the interpretation of export control regulations as they relate to MOOCs has been unclear and Coursera has been operating under the interpretation that MOOCs would not be restricted. We recently received information that has led to the understanding that the services offered on Coursera are not in compliance with the law as it stands ... United States export control regulations prohibit U.S. businesses, such as MOOC providers like Coursera, from offering services to users in sanctioned countries, including Cuba, Iran, Sudan, and Syria. Under the law, certain aspects of Coursera's course offerings are considered services and are therefore subject to restrictions in sanctioned countries, with the exception of Syria.'"
Oracle

Oracle Broadens Legal Fight Against Third-party Solaris Support Providers 142

angry tapir writes "Oracle is continuing its legal battle against third-party software support providers it alleges are performing such services in a manner that violates its intellectual property. Last week, Oracle sued StratisCom, a Georgia company that offers customers support for Oracle's Solaris OS, claiming it had 'misappropriated and distributed copyright, proprietary software code, along with the login credentials necessary to download this code from Oracle's password-protected websites.'"
The Military

U.S. Border Patrol Drone Goes Down, Rest of Fleet Grounded 138

coondoggie writes "The U.S. Customs and Border Protection service said today it has grounded its nine remaining unmanned aircraft after one of them was forced to ditch in the Pacific Ocean. The unmanned aircraft had an unknown mechanical failure while on patrol off the southern California coast. The crew determined that it wouldn't make it back to Sierra Vista, Arizona, 'and put the aircraft down in the water.' The drone cost about $12 million. 'The Predator B, also known as the MQ-9 Reaper in the U.S. Air Force, can fly as many as 27 hours and reach an altitude of 50,000 feet (15,240 meters), according to the website of Poway, California-based General Atomics. It has a wingspan of 66 feet (20 meters) and can carry more than 3,000 pounds (1,361 kilograms) of cameras, weapons or other payload, according to the company.'"
Earth

Device Mines Precious Phosphorus From Sewage 96

ckwu writes "Scientists predict that the scarcity of phosphorus will increase over the next few decades as the growing demand for agricultural fertilizer depletes geologic reserves of the element. Meanwhile, phosphates released from wastewater into natural waterways can cause harmful algal blooms and low-oxygen conditions that can threaten to kill fish. Now a team of researchers has designed a system that could help solve both of these problems. It captures phosphorus from sewage waste and delivers clean water using a combined osmosis-distillation process. The system improves upon current methods by reducing the amounts of chemicals needed to precipitate a phosphorus mineral from the wastewater, thus bringing down the cost of the recovery process."
Patents

Video The Public Patent Foundation Fights for Freedom From Bad Patents (Video) 36

The Public Patent Foundations Fights for Patent Freedom (Video) The PUBPAT website's About page says, "The Public Patent Foundation at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law ('PUBPAT') is a not-for-profit legal services organization whose mission is to protect freedom in the patent system." Today's interviewee, Daniel B. Ravicher, is the group's Executive Director and founder. Eben Moglen is on the Board of Directors, and PUBPAT's goals have been aligned with the FSF since PUBPAT started. The most publicized PUBPAT success so far was, in conjunction with the ACLU, getting patents on naturally-occurring genes overturned. Go, PUBPAT!

Submission + - Department of Justice Announces New Disclosure Agreement With Tech Companies

rjmarvin writes: Major tech companies like Apple, Facebook, Google, LinkedIn, Microsoft and Yahoo that until now were bound a gag order from saying anything about NSA data collection, can now publicly disclose http://sdt.bz/67646 the number of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) requests they receive for customer data in a given year...eventually. The catch is that they have to wait two years after a new data request to reveal the information publicly to give law enforcement agencies the time to act. U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder made a joint statement http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/... with intelligence director James Clapper about the deal, and in response the tech companies have withdrawn their FISA lawsuits.
Transportation

Tesla's Having Issues Charging In the Cold 476

cartechboy writes "It's winter, and apparently meteorologists have just discovered the term Polar Vortex, as that seems to be the only thing they can talk about these days. But seriously, it's cold, and apparently the darling child of the automotive industry, the new Tesla Model S electric car, is having issues charging in the cold weather. It's being reported that the charging cables that come with the car are unable to provide a charge when the temperature dips below zero. As you can imagine, this is an issue in a country like Norway where the Model S is one of the most popular cars. In fact, it seems this issue has already left one Model S owner stranded with a dead battery nearly 100 miles from the nearest charging station. Other owners are reporting issues charging. Tesla's European sales chief Peter Bardenfleth-Hansen apologized for he inconvenience owners are facing, and said it's 'trying hard to resolve' the issue. Apparently the issues are simply down to the differences in the Norwegian network as Norway uses a slightly different charging adapter than other countries in Europe."

Submission + - Google Chrome Now Lets You Play With LEGO In The Browser 1

kc123 writes: From TechCrunch — "This is a pretty obvious movie tie-in, but it’s still pretty cool: Google has partnered with LEGO to build an app that lets you play with LEGOs right in the browser. Using WebGL and other modern web technologies, a Google team in Australia first developed this application as an experiment in 2012 and now Google is opening it up to everybody."

Submission + - Google Launches Chrome Apps For Android And iOS

An anonymous reader writes: Google today launched Chrome apps for Android and iOS. The company is offering an early developer preview of a toolchain based on Apache Cordova, an open-source mobile development framework for building native mobile apps using HTML, CSS and JavaScript. Developers can use the tool to wrap their Chrome app with a native application shell that enables them to distribute it via Google Play and Apple’s App Store.

Submission + - How to stop the next Snowden

An anonymous reader writes: Researchers from Websense Labs have posted a write-up with example source code and queries that show organizations how they can leverage application telemetry reports to detect USB-based data theft attacks such as the recent Korean Credit Bureau breach, who had over 105.8 Million customers social security numbers, credit cards and billing info stolen by an IT consultant who used a USB drive to siphon off data over an 11-month period. Other examples included the LA Times reporting that Edward Snowden used a USB drive to steal classified documents from the NSA. Best part? You can implement this detection on your network for free.

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