Apr
12
2009
Comments Off on Rioting follows state of emergency in Thai capital – The Associated Press | tags: 3G, cap, google, news, tv, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
AP chair Dean Singleton kicked off the week by telling newspaper executives that the AP is “mad as hell.” Singleton’s tough talk about those who “walk off with our work” fueled speculation that search engines (Google) or news aggregators (The Huffington Post) are now in the AP’s crosshairs.
Comments Off on Associated Press chairman "mad as hell" at new media | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
How powerful is Google when it comes to parceling out traffic to news sites? If you are talking about Google News, the answer is that it is not quite as powerful as you might think.
Comments Off on Does Google Really Control The News? | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Negative Gamer is running a story discussing the need felt by the major game developers to create the next huge blockbuster, which often leads to innovation and change for their own sake rather than simply focusing on what makes a game fun. Quoting: “There seems to be this invisible pressure to create something that is highly ‘intuitive’ and incorporates the highest level of innovation that we have ever seen. The problem is that the newest ideas put into games are either gimmicky, terrible in execution, or blatantly ripping off another title. On the other hand there are series that feel the need to completely revamp a game that played perfectly fine before into something completely new that falls flat on its face. … There’s a critical problem with popular, mainstream video games that isn’t as large with other mediums; they are expensive to make and require a lot of time and effort put in to create something masterful. With that, games must take cautious paths. I fully understand the risks, but adding unneeded material to certain games is not justifiable.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Perils of Pointless Innovation In Games | tags: developer, games, google | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Simmons writes with news of research that demonstrated vulnerabilities in Skype and Google Voice that would have allowed attackers to eavesdrop on calls or place unauthorized calls of their own. “The attacks on Google Voice and Skype use different techniques, but essentially they both work because neither service requires a password to access its voicemail system. For the Skype attack to work, the victim would have to be tricked into visiting a malicious Web site within 30 minutes of being logged into Skype. In the Google Voice attack (PDF), the hacker would first need to know the victim’s phone number, but Secure Science has devised a way to figure this out using Google Voice’s Short Message Service (SMS). Google patched the bugs that enabled Secure Science’s attack last week and has now added a password requirement to its voicemail system, the company said in a statement. … The Skype flaws have not yet been patched, according to James.” Reader EricTheGreen contributes related news that eBay may sell Skype back to its original founders.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Eavesdropping On Google Voice and Skype | tags: email, google, news, Phone, web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
CurtMonash writes “Twitter was hit Saturday by a worm that caused victims’ accounts to tweet favorably about the StalkDaily website. Infection occurred when one went to the profile page of a compromised account, and was largely spread by the kind of follower spam more commonly used by multi-level marketers. Apparently the worm was an XSS attack, exploiting a vulnerability created in a recent Twitter update that introduced support for OAuth, and it was created by the 17-year-old owner of the StalkDaily website. More information can be found in the comment thread to a Network World post I put up detailing the attack, or in the post itself. By evening, Twitter claimed to have closed the security hole.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Twitter Gets Slammed By the StalkDaily XSS Worm | tags: google, network, news, security, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Comments Off on Christians around the world celebrate Easter Sunday – CBC.ca | tags: 3G, google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Comments Off on Thai Protesters Flout State of Emergency – New York Times | tags: google, news | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Comments Off on Search continues for missing Ontario girl – CTV.ca | tags: google, news, tv | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “Doug Feaver has an interesting story in the Washington Post ‘in defense of the anonymous, unmoderated, often appallingly inaccurate, sometimes profane, frequently off point and occasionally racist reader comments that washingtonpost.com allows to be published at the end of articles and blogs.’ Feaver says that during his seven-year tenure as editor and executive editor of washingtonpost.com he kept un-moderated comments off the site, but now, four years after retiring, he says he has come to think that online comments are a terrific addition to the conversation, and that journalists need to take them seriously. ‘The subjects that have generated the most vitriol during my tenure in this role are race and immigration,’ writes Feaver. ‘But I am heartened by the fact that such comments do not go unchallenged by readers. In fact, comment strings are often self-correcting and provide informative exchanges.’ Feaver says that comments are also a pretty good political survey. ‘The first day it became clear that a federal bailout of Wall Street was a real prospect, the comments on the main story were almost 100 percent negative. It was a great predictor of how folks feel, well out in front of the polls. We journalists need to pay attention to what our readers say, even if we don’t like it. There are things to learn.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on In Defense of the Anonymous Commenter | tags: google, news | posted in technical news