Apr
9
2009
georgewilliamherbert writes “Multiple news reports, mailing list posts, blogs, and tweets are pointing out two overnight acts of sabotage in the San Francisco Bay area, with long distance fiber network cables being cut in two locations in the early morning hours. The first cut, around 1:30 AM, affecting landline and cell phone service and 911 calls in the communities of Morgan Hill, Gilroy, and parts of Santa Cruz counties, was on an AT&T fiber alongside Monterey Highway near Blossom Hill Road, in San Jose. A second cut, around 3:30 AM, in San Carlos, affected Sprint fiber and has significantly disrupted services at the 200 Paul datacenter in southern San Francisco. Rumor says that this may be related to a AT&T communications workers contract having just expired — but no evidence has been published yet in the media, and this could be an intentional act of sabotage by someone unrelated to the company’s workers.”

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Comments Off on Multiple Fiber Cuts In San Francisco Area | tags: cell phone, google, network, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
Facebook has baffled everyone from the very beginning, no-one quite estimating how big this social network would become. After reaching 200 million users last week, there is cause for celebration in the Facebook office.
Comments Off on Facebook reaches 200m users; is it too powerful? | tags: facebook, network | posted in technical news
Apr
8
2009
coondoggie writes “Protecting defense departments networks cost taxpayers more than 0 million over the past six months, US Strategic Command officials said yesterday. The motives of those attacking the networks go from just plain vandalism to theft of money or information to espionage. Protecting the networks is a huge challenge for the command, Air Force Gen. Kevin P. Chilton told a cyber security conference in Omaha, Neb., this week. ‘Pay me now or pay me later,’ Davis said. ‘In the last six months, we spent more than 0 million reacting to things on our networks after the fact. It would be nice to spend that money proactively to put things in place so we’d be more active and proactive in posture rather than cleaning up after the fact.'”

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Comments Off on Pentagon Cyber Defense Bill Comes To $100M For 6 Months | tags: google, network, news, security | posted in technical news
Apr
8
2009
At the end of March The Pirate Bay added new functionality to reach out to millions of Facebook users. Just over a week later and the world’s largest social networking site has blocked all links to torrents on the world’s largest and most infamous BitTorrent tracker.
Comments Off on Facebook Blocks All Pirate Bay Links | tags: facebook, network, networking, pirate bay | posted in technical news
Apr
8
2009
TechnoBabble Pro writes “The CAPTCHA idea sounds simple: prevent bots from massively abusing a website (e.g. to get many email or social network accounts, and send spam), by giving users a test which is easy for humans, but impossible for computers. Is there really such a thing as a well-balanced CAPTCHA, easy on human eyes, but tough on bots? TechnoBabble Pro has a piece on 3 CAPTCHA gotchas which show why any puzzle which isn’t a nuisance to legitimate users, won’t be much hindrance to abusers, either. It looks like we need a different approach to stop the bots.”

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Comments Off on Why the CAPTCHA Approach Is Doomed | tags: cap, computers, email, google, network, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
Still having trouble boarding the social media bandwagon? You’re not alone. They’re a rare breed, some might even say an endangered species. But as social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and Twitter continue to build populations surpassing those of many countries, the last of the Web 2.0 holdouts remain proud to be freewheeling free agents.
Comments Off on The Last of the Facebook Holdouts | tags: facebook, myspace, network, networking, twitter, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
Financial social network, Tip’d, is launching a new set of features that is potentially positioning the platform as the web’s heartbeat of social finance. Tip’d 2.0 promises to offer a robust data set comprised of stock quotes, social resources profiling companies featured on Tip’d, and much much more.
Comments Off on How a Social Network Becomes the Heartbeat of Social Finance | tags: network, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
Deep Packet Inspection, or DPI, is at the heart of the debate over Network Neutrality — this relatively new technology threatens to upset the balance of power among consumers, ISPs, and information suppliers. An anonymous reader notes that the Canadian Privacy Commissioner has published a Web site, for Canadians and others, to educate about DPI technology. Online are a number of essays from different interested parties, ranging from DPI company officers to Internet law specialists to security professionals. The articles are open for comments. Here is the CBC’s report on the launch.”

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Comments Off on An Education In Deep Packet Inspection | tags: consumers, google, network, privacy, security, technology, web | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
WayHomer was one of several readers to point out the 40th birthday of an important tool in the formation of the Internet, and a look back at it by the author of the first of many. “Stephen Crocker in the New York Times writes, ‘Today is an important date in the history of the Internet: the 40th anniversary of what is known as the Request for Comments (RFC).’ ‘RFC1 — Host Software’ was published 40 years ago today, establishing a framework for documenting how networking technologies and the Internet itself work. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.”

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Comments Off on Happy 40th Birthday, Internet RFCs | tags: google, network, networking | posted in technical news
Apr
7
2009
An anonymous reader writes “Reacting to allegedly fraudulent election procedures, students are storming the presidency and parliament of the small eastern European country of Moldova. It is reported that they used Twitter to organize. Currently twitter and blogs are being used to spread word of what is happening since all national news websites have been blocked. If the 1989 Romanian revolution was the first to be televised, is this the first to be led by twitter and social networks?” Jamie points out this interesting presentation (from March 2008) by Ethan Zuckerman about the realities of online activism, including how governments try to constrain it.

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Comments Off on Organized Online, Students Storm Gov’t. Buildings In Moldova | tags: google, network, news, twitter, web | posted in technical news