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Businesses

Facebook Mafiosi Go To the Mattresses vs. Zynga 102

sympleko writes "Zynga has the lion's share of traffic in Facebook applications, and Mafia Wars is one of their most popular social games. Collapsing under the weight of over 26 million users, Zynga has been scrambling to thwart hard-core gamers who reverse-engineer URLs or script the game to optimize their enjoyment. Many of the workarounds have annoyed users who were accustomed to various game features, and even worse, the hastily-deployed changes have resulted in many players losing access to the game, in-game prizes, or statistics. Fed up with a software company seemingly bent on discouraging people from enjoying their product, a number of tagged players have organized a boycott of all Zynga games. The first 24-hour boycott on Sunday 12/13 resulted in an 11% decline in Daily Active Users, and an emergency thread on Zynga's forums (from which most of the flames were deleted). The current boycott, extending Wednesday through Sunday is being supported by a 428K strong Facebook group. At issue is the social contract between software companies and their devoted user base, as well as the nefarious tactics Zynga has used to raise cash."
Censorship

Chinese Subvert Censorship With a Popular Pun 272

Anonymusing writes "In spoken Chinese, 'grass-mud horse' sounds virtually identical to an obscenity (hint: it begins with "mother-") — and as a cartoon character, it has become an amazing phenomenon. Meant as a subversive attack on censors, the alpaca-like mythical creature has led to a cuddly stuffed animal — selling over 180,000 in a few weeks — and a wildly popular YouTube video with children's voices singing words that are either completely benign or incredibly offensive, depending on how you listen." Update: 03/13 09:29 GMT by T : Since this story was set up, the originally linked video seems to have been pulled. Searching YouTube reveals that there are some alternatives available, at least for now.
Earth

Earth May Harbor a Shadow Biosphere of Alien Life 267

An anonymous reader sends us to Cosmos Magazine for a speculative article arguing that a 'shadow biosphere' may exist on Earth, unrelated to life as we know it. If such non-carbon-based life were found here at home, it would alter the odds for how common life is elsewhere in the universe, astrobiologists say. "The tools and experiments researchers use to look for new forms of life — such as those on missions to Mars — would not detect biochemistries different from our own, making it easy for scientists to miss alien life, even if [it] was under their noses. ... Scientists are looking in places where life isn't expected — for example, in areas of extreme heat, cold, salt, radiation, dryness, or contaminated streams and rivers. [One researcher] is particularly interested in places that are heavily contaminated with arsenic, which, he suggests, might support forms of life that use arsenic the way life as we know it uses phosphorus."

Comment Re:It's fairly simple... (Score 1) 178

I'm not saying be paranoid , I'm saying if you are not to some extent you may have to deal with only 1 of the 100 users who use the Remote Access Option going haywire and/or just misplacing some data about you're clients and then your company is in 4 feet of cow dung and everyone will be pointing at first the finger to your manager and then to you. No paranoid , just very very uptight will do it.

Comment Re:It's fairly simple... (Score 1) 178

Naa, a user should only have remote access on one condition: emergency action ( for high availability). If you're company can afford remote access just for fun and is not a decision based on critical resource availability, then this conversation is futile since : why in the hell would you want a policy for VPN if you allow people connecting anytime they want to?Remote access should only be used in case of dire need.

Comment Re:It's fairly simple... (Score 1) 178

It's fairly simple, you make him a user on the laptop ( no bloody admin rights, everything should be encrypted on his laptop, he should be a admin or have special rights at work for him to be allowed to connect, only not in working hours) , you install a software(proprietary) that recognizes a PCMCIA card that is emitted to the user specifically( it's user acount&certificate. The card is pin protected. For him to connect he should be calling HD and request permission, gives the reason and specifies hours needed to work.

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