Mar 23 2009

Social Web sites face transparency questions

Properly balancing the interests of various constituencies — and retaining their loyalty, perhaps through improved channels of communications — will prove key to whether the sites can grow into vibrant, moneymaking operations for years to come.

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Mar 23 2009

5 Freeware Photoshop Alternatives and Web-based editing

This morning I thought I’d try and spice this blog up a little by making my own logo and then I realised why I never did it before: this laptop is godd*mn slow! This is why I never got to installing Photoshop, the program I’ve been using for years to create my own stuff.

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Mar 22 2009

10 Best Firefox Addons for Security and Privacy

Security and privacy are some of the major concerns these days while choosing a web browser to use. So much so that all the major players in the “browser wars” are providing or developing a private browsing mode.

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Mar 21 2009

NIN Launches BitTorrent Tracker for New Release

Nine Inch Nails released their new tour sampler NIN/JA on their website a few hours ago. While the regular quality MP3s can be downloaded straight from their server, the band has set up their own BitTorrent tracker for the higher quality ‘lossless’ downloads.

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Mar 21 2009

30 Creative Examples of Illustrations in Web Design

Adding illustrative elements to a web design can take it to a whole new level. In this article, you’ll be able to set your eyes on some of the best examples of websites that have chosen to use illustrated elements as part of the design.

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Mar 21 2009

John Mather On the Building of the James Webb Space Telescope

Nancy Atkinson writes “Why is the James Webb Space Telescope (scheduled to launch in 2013) taking so long to build? Hasn’t it had a huge cost over-run and several delays? Nobel Prize winner John Mather is the Project Scientist for JWST, and he addresses these questions and more in an in-depth interview, one of the few he’s given about this next-generation telescope and successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. Quoting: ‘The hardest thing to build was the mirror, because we needed something that is way bigger than Hubble. But you can’t possibly lift something that big or fit it into a rocket, so you need something that is lighter weight but nonetheless larger, so it has to have the ability to fold up. The mirror is made of light-weight beryllium, and has 18 hexagonal segments. The telescope folds up like a butterfly in its chrysalis and will have to completely undo it self. It’s a rather elaborate process that will take many hours. The telescope is huge, at 6.5 meters (21 feet), so it’s pretty impressive.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 21 2009

Report Links Russian Intelligence Agencies To Cyber Attacks

narramissic writes “A report released Friday by a group of cyber-security experts from greylogic finds it is very likely that the Foreign Military Intelligence agency (the GRU) and Federal Security Service (the FSB) directed cyber attacks on Georgian government servers in July and August of 2008. ‘Following a complex web of connections, the report claims that an Internet service provider connected with the Stopgeorgia.ru web site, which coordinated the Georgian attacks, is located next door to a Russian Ministry of Defense Research Institute called the Center for Research of Military Strength of Foreign Countries, and a few doors down from GRU headquarters.’ But Paul Ferguson, a researcher with Trend Micro who has reviewed the report, says it’s a ‘bit of a stretch’ to conclude that the Georgia attacks were state-sponsored. ‘You can connect dots to infer things, but inferring things does not make them so,’ he said. One other interesting allegation in the report is that a member of the Whackerz Pakistan hacking group, which claimed responsibility for defacing the Indian Eastern Railway Web site on Dec. 24, 2008, is employed by a North American wireless communications company and presents an ‘insider threat’ for his employer.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 20 2009

Google Designer Leaves, Blaming Data-Centrism

Douglas Bowman, Google’s visual design leader, is leaving the company after finding the company’s reliance on detailed Web page performance data too confining.

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Mar 20 2009

Piracy Case Could Change Canadian Web Landscape

meatheadmike writes to tell us that a recent Canadian court case brought against the Canadian Recording Industry Association by isoHunt Web Technologies, Inc, could drastically change the web landscape in Canada. “The question before the British Columbia Supreme Court is if a site such as isoHunt allows people to find a pirated copy of movies such as Watchmen or The Dark Knight, is it breaching Canadian copyright law? ‘It’s a huge can of worms,” said David Fewer, acting director of the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic at the University of Ottawa. ‘I am surprised that this litigation has gone under the radar as much as it has. I do think this is the most important copyright litigation going on right now.'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Mar 20 2009

Wayback Machine Gets Massive 2 Petabyte Upgrade

The Wayback Machine, the digital time capsule that stores 85 billion archived versions of web pages online dating back to 1996, is getting a new 2 petabyte data center.

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