May 12 2009

Poster on Chinese forum leaks next-gen iPhone specs

A poster on an Chinese Apple site claims to have played with Apple’s next-gen iPhone, and he spills the beans on the specs – More RAM, faster processor, 3.2 Megapixel camera with autofocus and more


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May 6 2009

Canadians released from quarantine in China – CTV.ca


CBC.ca

Canadians released from quarantine in China
CTV.ca
A group of Canadian students who had been held in quarantine in China have been released two days early, after being cleared as free of the H1N1 virus.
Quarantined Canadian students in China released Ottawa Citizen
Canadian students held in China over H1N1 flu fears released London Free Press
The Canadian Press – Peterborough Examiner – United Press International – Calgary Herald
all 288 news articles
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May 1 2009

Iranians Outwit Censors With Falun Gong Software

Hugh Pickens writes “The NY Times reports that since last year more than 400,000 Iranians began surfing the uncensored Web using software created for the Falun Gong, a spiritual movement that has been suppressed by the Chinese government since 1999. More than 20 countries now use increasingly sophisticated blocking and filtering systems for Internet content, according to Reporters Without Borders, including Iran, China, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Syria. The creators of the software seized upon by Iranians are members of the Global Internet Freedom Consortium, based largely in the United States and closely affiliated with Falun Gong. Interestingly enough, the United States government and the Voice of America have financed some of the circumvention technology efforts, and a coalition is organizing to push for more Congressional financing of anti-filtering efforts, bringing together dissidents of Vietnam, Iran, the Uighur minority of China, Tibet, Myanmar, Cuba, Cambodia, Laos, as well as the Falun Gong, to lobby Congress for the financing. ‘What is our leverage toward a country like Iran? Very little,’ said Michael Horowitz, a fellow at the Hudson Institute. ‘Suppose we have the capacity to make it possible for the president of the United States at will to communicate with hundreds of thousands of Iranians at no risk or limited risk? It just changes the world.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Apr 30 2009

"Miraculous" Stem Cell Progress Reported In China

destinyland writes “In China’s Guangdong Province there’s been “almost miraculous” progress in actually using stem cells to treat diseases such as brain injury, cerebral palsy, ataxia and other optic nerve damage, lower limb ischemia, autism, spinal muscular atrophy, and multiple sclerosis. One Chinese biotech company, Beike, is now building a 21,500 square foot stem cell storage facility and hiring professors from American universities such as Stanford. Two California families even flew their children to China for a cerebral palsy treatment that isn’t available in the US. The founder of Beike is so enthusiastic, he says his company is exploring the concept of using stem cells to extend longevity beyond 120 years.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


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Apr 25 2009

First Android/ARM Netbook To Cost $250, Maker Says

ericatcw writes “There was a flurry of excitement earlier this week when the first Google Android netbook, the Skytone Alpha 680, was spotted by Slashdotters. Now, Computerworld has scored an exclusive interview with Skytone’s co-founder. Among many tidbits, he reveals that the Alpha 680 builds upon the success of last year’s 0 Alpha 400, which shipped 100,000 units, mostly in Europe under names such as Elonex OneT; that the new Alpha 680 will weigh 1.5 pounds, 25% less than the first Eee 701 netbook; that its ARM11 chip (basically the same as the one used in the iPhone) can handle YouTube video; and that he hopes to have Chinese manufacturing partners producing the 0 Alpha 680 within 3 months.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apr 24 2009

Hundreds of Thousands of Chinese Black-Hats

An anonymous reader sends us to Popular Science for a long article on the loose, uncoordinated bands of patriotic Chinese hackers that seem to be responsible for much of the cyber-trouble emerging from that nation. QUoting: “For years, the U.S. intelligence community worried that China’s government was attacking our cyber-infrastructure. Now one man has discovered it’s more than that: it’s hundreds of thousands of everyday Chinese civilians. … Jack Linchuan Qiu, a communications professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong [says:] ‘Chinese hackerism is not the American “hacktivism” that wants social change. It’s actually very close to the state. The Chinese distinction between the private and public domains is very small.’ … According to [James Andrew Lewis, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies], ‘The government at a minimum tolerates them. Sometimes it encourages them. And sometimes it tasks them and controls them.’ In the end, he says, ‘it’s easy for the government to turn on and hard to turn off.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apr 23 2009

Chinese Hackers Targetting NYPD Computers

Mike writes “A network of hackers, most based in China, have been making up to 70,000 attempts a day to break into the NYPD’s computer system, the city’s Commissioner, Raymond Kelly, revealed Wednesday. Kelly suggested that ‘perhaps it is because of the NYPD’s reach into the international arena’ that they are being targeted for computer hacking ‘in much the way the Pentagon has been.’ The hackers are apparently using a botnet to make up to 5,000 attempts a day at various unsecured portals into the NYPD’s files. China’s foreign ministry spokesman Qin Gang denied involvement in computer espionage. ‘Some people outside of China are bent on fabricating lies of so-called Chinese computer spies,’ he said last month. The obvious question is, why are the Chinese so interested in the NYPD computer network?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apr 14 2009

China Denies Role In US Grid Hacks

Slatterz writes “The Chinese government is denying any involvement in the reported infiltration of US electric grid systems. Xinhua news agency quoted Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Jiang Yu as saying that any sort of involvement from China in the incident “doesn’t exist at all.” The denial follows a report in the Wall Street Journal which claimed that agents from China and Russia along with several other countries had infiltrated the computer systems charged with managing electricity in the US and left behind software payloads which could be used to control or disable electric grids in the US.” Bruce Schneier is skeptical about the whole story.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Apr 9 2009

Put NSA in Charge of CyberSecurity Or the Power Grid Gets It

They’re baaaack. Those impish Chinese government cyber-saboteurs we last saw posing as 20-foot high trees to trigger the 2003 northeast power outage are back in an all new adventure, this time in the pages of the Wall Street Journal.

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Apr 1 2009

Google offers China one million free songs

Chinese music-lovers will be offered more than one million songs for free after Google launched a free music download site in China this week in a bid to tackle the internet piracy menace in China.

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