Monday, April 29, 2013
Friday, April 26, 2013
Much Ado About a Fake Tweet - NYTimes.com
Much Ado About a Fake Tweet - NYTimes.com
A tweet from a hacked Associated Press Twitter account sent United States stocks tumbling.
Patrick Chappatte is an editorial cartoonist for the International Herald Tribune. View more of his work, visit his Web site or follow him on Twitter.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Wall Street Jumps After Recovery From Twitter-Led Drop - NYTimes.com
Wall Street Jumps After Recovery From Twitter-Led Drop - NYTimes.com: United States stocks climbed on Tuesday in a broad rally, recovering from sharp declines set off by a bogus Associated Press Twitter post about explosions at the White House.
A false post by hackers about two explosions at the White House that supposedly injured President Obama provoked a steep drop in stocks, before they quickly recovered minutes later.
A false post by hackers about two explosions at the White House that supposedly injured President Obama provoked a steep drop in stocks, before they quickly recovered minutes later.
Thursday, April 18, 2013
How to Sever Ties to Social Networks and Other Web Sites - NYTimes.com
How to Sever Ties to Social Networks and Other Web Sites - NYTimes.com
First you’re smitten by a social network or Web service and can’t stop spending time on it. Then it starts asking how you’re feeling, what you like, where you are, with whom, and why you don’t share as much anymore.
Pretty soon, you’re ready to call it quits.
But trying to end your relationship with some prominent online services can be like breaking up with an overly attached romantic partner — they make it pretty hard to say goodbye.
And with good reason — more users are beneficial to a company’s bottom line, which often depends on generating revenue by selling you targeted advertisements. Possibly no social network understands this better than Facebook, whose chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, proudly announced last October that his site had surpassed one billion active users.
“Their business model is about getting users to create content,” said Jeremiah Owyang, an industry analyst with the Altimeter Group. “It’s users who are creating content, liking things, and, ultimately, a brand sees this and comes to deploy advertising dollars. The product is us.”
First you’re smitten by a social network or Web service and can’t stop spending time on it. Then it starts asking how you’re feeling, what you like, where you are, with whom, and why you don’t share as much anymore.
Pretty soon, you’re ready to call it quits.
But trying to end your relationship with some prominent online services can be like breaking up with an overly attached romantic partner — they make it pretty hard to say goodbye.
And with good reason — more users are beneficial to a company’s bottom line, which often depends on generating revenue by selling you targeted advertisements. Possibly no social network understands this better than Facebook, whose chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, proudly announced last October that his site had surpassed one billion active users.
“Their business model is about getting users to create content,” said Jeremiah Owyang, an industry analyst with the Altimeter Group. “It’s users who are creating content, liking things, and, ultimately, a brand sees this and comes to deploy advertising dollars. The product is us.”
A 'Whom Do You Hang With?' Map Of America : Krulwich Wonders... : NPR
A 'Whom Do You Hang With?' Map Of America : Krulwich Wonders... : NPR: Look at the center of this map, at the little red dot that marks Kansas City. Technically, Kansas City is at the edge of Missouri, but here on this map it's in the upper middle section of a bigger space with strong blue borders. We don't have a name for this bigger space yet, but soon we will.
Friday, April 12, 2013
Cybersecurity - A View From the Front - NYTimes.com
Cybersecurity - A View From the Front - NYTimes.com: At the same time, Estonia is also remembered as the first publicly known target of politically motivated cyberattacks in April 2007, which inundated the Web sites of Parliament, banks, ministries, television stations and other organizations.
Disruptive as the attacks were, they were by today’s standards primitive, consisting of “distributed denial of service” attacks (DDoS), which essentially overload servers with signals from hijacked, hacker-controlled PCs. Six years later, as computing power and IT dependency have increased hugely, cyberattacks are far more sophisticated and our vulnerabilities are far greater.
Disruptive as the attacks were, they were by today’s standards primitive, consisting of “distributed denial of service” attacks (DDoS), which essentially overload servers with signals from hijacked, hacker-controlled PCs. Six years later, as computing power and IT dependency have increased hugely, cyberattacks are far more sophisticated and our vulnerabilities are far greater.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Rally Demands Anti-Blasphemy Laws in Bangladesh - NYTimes.com
Rally Demands Anti-Blasphemy Laws in Bangladesh - NYTimes.com
The giant rally in Dhaka took place amid heightened security in the capital and elsewhere in the country after Hifazat-e-Islam members singled out bloggers who they said were atheists.
The bloggers, who deny they are atheists, are seeking capital punishment for those found guilty of war crimes during the nation’s 1971 war of independence against Pakistan. They also want a ban on Jamaat-e-Islami, the country’s largest Islamic party, for campaigning against Bangladesh’s independence more than four decades ago. The party is an important partner of the main opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, which is led by former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia.
Pro-Palestinian Hackers Attack Israeli Sites - NYTimes.com
Pro-Palestinian Hackers Attack Israeli Sites - NYTimes.com
Officials said only minor disruptions had resulted from what a loose international coalition of pro-Palestinian groups threatened would be “a massive cyberassault” against Israel.
Officials said only minor disruptions had resulted from what a loose international coalition of pro-Palestinian groups threatened would be “a massive cyberassault” against Israel.
Daybees Aspires to Be the Google of Event Search Sites - NYTimes.com
Daybees Aspires to Be the Google of Event Search Sites - NYTimes.com
Daybees lets people fine-tune searches for things to do, using keywords, location or time and date. |
Monday, April 1, 2013
French Scientist Invites Public Into Research Realm - NYTimes.com
French Scientist Invites Public Into Research Realm - NYTimes.com: “It’s crowdsourcing, but instead of crowdsourcing in a way that the owner is very passive, we want to engage them in proposing ideas and suggesting hypotheses,” he said. “It’s making them part of the research community rather than exploiting them as just data providers.”
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