Mar
20
2009
pnorth writes “A defunct payment gateway has exposed as many as 19,000 credit card numbers of US and UK consumers in a major worldwide breach. The data, held in Google cache, includes credit card numbers, CVVs, expiry dates, names and addresses. The credit card numbers are for accounts held with Visa, Mastercard, American Express, Solo, Switch, Delta and Maestro/Cirrus. Within the address bars of the cached pages are URLs of e-commerce sites that have become victims of the breach. They include clothing, science, health, sports and photo imaging stores. The cause appears to be a known issue with the Google search engine, in which the pages of defunct web sites containing sensitive directories remain cached and available to anyone.”

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Comments Off on Breach Exposes 19,000 Active US, UK Credit Cards | tags: consumers, google, web | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
jeroen8 writes “A Dutch guy was able to build his own solar panel in his garage which is three times less expensive than mass produced solar panels currently available on European market. He bought his solar cells on eBay and created his own solar panel. His cost price is only 1.20 Euro per Watt Peak (Wp). This makes you wonder if we are not paying too much for mass-produced solar panels, which should in theory be a lot less expensive than something you create in your garage.”

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Comments Off on Building Your Own Solar Panel In the Garage | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
mask.of.sanity writes “Australia’s secretive Internet filter blacklist held by its communications watchdog has been leaked, revealing the government has understated the amount of banned Web pages by more than 1000. Multiple legitimate businesses and Web sites have been banned including two bus companies, online poker sites, multiple Wikipedia entries, Google and Yahoo group pages, a dental surgery and a tour operator. Betfair, a billion-dollar business blocked by the blacklist, CEO Andrew Twaits was furious the government has potentially annexed tens of millions of dollars in revenue after its Betfair.com gambling site was blacklisted. The blacklists were reportedly leaked by a Web filter operator to wikileaks which has published the full list of banned URLs. Outraged privacy advocates say the government has effectively lied about the amount of URLs included in the blacklists, totalling more than 2300, and the type of content which it would ban. The leak follows a series attacks on the watchdog in which irate users successfully lobbied for web sites to be banned, only to be threatened with an ,000 fine for publishing the link contained in the PR response. It was also revealed the watchdog can ban Web sites at a whim, with no accountability.”

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Comments Off on Australia’s Vast, Scattershot Censorship Blacklist Revealed | tags: google, privacy, web, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Just-released Chrome 2.0 Beta features a faster Javascript engine that could be reason enough to upgrade. Google also updated the WebKit rendering platform which enables full-page zoom and three other features that will find its audience. The question is: Will this “major” new version, once it comes out of beta, fall on deaf ears?
Comments Off on Review: Chrome 2.0 beta is speedy, falls behind in features | tags: google, web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
think_nix writes “The local.se is reporting that, for around 200,000 USD, tickets for eager space tourists looking for that outer space adventure will be purchasable from the Sweden’s Ice Hotel in Kiruna. The flights are planned to be run by Virgin Galactic, also allowing flights to be taken from New Mexico. The article further states that already around 300 tickets have been purchased.”

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Comments Off on Tickets On Sale In Sweden For Space Tourism, Starting In 2012 | tags: google | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Beezlebub33 writes “A new petition has been filed under the GSNO (Generic Names Supporting Organization) of ICANN to create a new constituency the CyberSafety Constituency. Existing constituencies include ‘Commercial and Business,’ ‘gTLD,’ ‘Registrars,’ ‘Non-commercial,’ etc. The new proposed one on CyberSafety is in the ‘interest of balancing free speech and anonymity with the values of protection and safety in developing Internet policy within ICANN.’ If that doesn’t raise red flags all by itself, consider that the person submitting it is Cheryl B. Preston. She’s listed in the petition with the organization Brigham Young University, but she’s part of CP80. She’s suggested limiting content on port 80 to the ‘right’ things, and other stuff can go on other ports, so it can be appropriately filtered by the authorities. Guess who gets to decide what goes on which ports?”

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Comments Off on CP80’s Cheryl Preston Suggests "CyberSecurity" Group At ICANN | tags: google, security | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Google AdSense is a simple and low-risk way for publishers to quickly monetize their content. The pay-per-click ad system has created an opportunity for anyone to instantly have advertising on their website, without the hassle of having to actively sell ad space.
Comments Off on 100% Google AdSense: Tools, Tips and Resources | tags: google, web | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
newtley writes “TechDirt’s Mike Masnick writes that the Warner Music Choruss licensing scheme amounts to a Bait-And-Switch operation. Not so, says Jim Griffin, the man charged to put it together. Masnick’s story is ‘factually incorrect in every respect,’ he states. But Griffin ‘refused to name a single factual mistake,’ Masnick says, noting, ‘He fails to address the key problems that we outlined: 1. Why is this program even needed when plenty of musicians are coming up with business models that work today and don’t need a new mandatory license (er… ‘covenant not to sue’) plan? 2. Why do we need a new bureaucracy and won’t that divert funds? 3. Will the industry continue to try to shut down file sharing sites? 4. Will the industry continue to push a 3 strikes plan?'”

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Comments Off on TechDirt’s Masnick Responds To Warner’s Jim Griffin On Choruss | tags: google, program | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
mellowdonkey writes “Last year’s CanSecWest hacking contest winner, Charlie Miller, does it again this year in the 2009 Pwn2Own contest. Charlie was the first to compromise Safari this year to win a brand spankin new Macbook. Nils, the other winner, was able to use three separate zero day exploits to whack IE8, Firefox, and Safari as well. Full detail and pictures are available from the sponsor, TippingPoint, who acquired all of the exploits through their Zero Day Initiative program.”

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Comments Off on First Pwn2Own 2009 Contest Winners Emerge | tags: google, Mac, program | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
Bob the Super Hamste writes “CNN is reporting that the page recovery.gov is not as transparent as it claims to be. The examples pointed out are: 1. The user is greeted by a large pie chart that show the breakdown of money spent by 2 categories, state government distributions and local government distributions. 2. Finding projects involves a complicated search, information on projects is not actually hosted on recovery.gov 3. The format of the information available is of poor quality (the article specifically mentions a PDF document that was created from a scanned sideways copy of roadwork projects from New York state). Given that this site was meant to make the spending of the new stimulus money more transparent to the citizens of the Unites States of America it seems oddly opaque. CNN does seem to praise the ability for government agencies to be able to exchange HTML based information between systems, which for government I would call a massive accomplishment. I tried to find information for my state and searched for Minnesota. I got 4 matches, 2 of which were generic ones: one was the Minnesota state certification that is required for a state to receive funds and one that lays out public transportation spending for all states of which Minnesota gets ,093,115.”

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Comments Off on Recovery.gov Not Very Transparent | tags: google, news | posted in technical news