243 posts categorized "Internet"

01/10/2013

The Big Internet Museum: Milestones and Memes

Thebiginternetmuseum-1

If you were given the opportunity to curate a historical museum about the Internet, what would you include? Now's your chance to add to the collection of The Big Internet Museum, a virtual hall exhibiting the milestones and memes of the 43-year history of the World Wide Web. The online museum project was created by Dutch advertising pros Dani Polak, Joep Drummen and Joeri Bakker.

BLOG: Top 10 Social Networking Sites

The collection begins precisely on October 29 1969, the day when former NASA researcher, Robert William Taylor, launched the ARPAnet operational network for the Pentagon's Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). The network is widely recognized as the precursor of what we now know as the Internet.

The exhibit concludes with South Korean megastar Psy, whose 2012 song "Gangnam Syle" became the first video to tally one billion views on YouTube.

As you can imagine, the space between those two bookends spans all that is significant and silly about the network platform that, for better or worse, has redefined our lives. America Online (AOL), Internet Relay Chat (IRC), .GIFs, chat lingo, Hyper Text markup Language (HTML), Flash, Google, Facebook -- even Double Rainbow guy -- get equal billing in this gallery. But that's only a smattering of the collection.

BLOG: Thin, Flexible PaperTab To Redefine The Tablet

Take a tour here and decide for yourself if each icon is deserving or not. The public is able to vote on whether each "piece" belongs in the museum or not. Or better yet, submit your own idea.

via Gizmag

Credit: The Big Internet Museum




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01/07/2013

Gangsta Search Yo' Results With Gizoogle

Gizoogle-622

Google's search results are way too vanilla for an OG like yourself. You need a search engine with a little gansta funk in it. Fo' shizzle my nizzle, here's one that's "realer than Real Deal Holyfield": Gizoogle.

What's Gizoogle you ask? Though not affiliated with Google in any way, it's just like its more straight-laced cousin, with one noticable difference: it translates all search results into gangstalicious slang popularized by Snoop Dogg.

Not hip to Snoop's linguistic flair on his "Doggy Fizzle Televizzle" show on MTV? No worries, just log on and get schooled. But before you do, Gizoogle has a few words of warning.

DNEWS NUGGET: Snoop Dogg is Now A Lion

"This website is only intended for mature audiences farmiliar with the slanguage used by Snoop Dogg, and anybody under the age of 13 should not visit this website without adult supervision," the website states.

For example, let's type in the most non-gangsta thing we can think of. How about the "Lawrence Welk Show." Here's what Gizoogle's "Wikipizzle" page spits out:

"Da Lawrence Welk Show be a American televised musical variety sheezy hosted by bangin' band leader Lawrence Welk. Da series aired locally up in Los Angelez fo' four muthaf****n' years (1951-55), then nationally fo' another 27 1/2 muthaf****n' years (1955-1971) via the ABC network..."

According to the website, "Gizoogle was originally created by John Beatty, who started the site in 2005 as a joke after inspiration from a friend's constant use of the slang on America Online's Instant Messenger service" and also by Snoop's" show on MTV.

Over the years Gizoogle has encountered some glitches, ungergone address changes and been on and off line. However, now it's been restored to its former glory.

NEWS: This Is Your Brain On Freestyle Rap

"The slanguage used in our algorithm has been quoted from Snoop Dogg himself and is commonly used in movies, conversations and music he has written," states the website. "These words are based on slang and can not be interpreted in any other way other than how they are quoted. There are no racist words used in the algorithm."

Sure, Gizoogle isn't sheets-and-burning-crosses racist, but it does wander into the ironic "hipster racism" territory, a topic that's been hotly discussed in recent years. Regardless, this is probably a questions for Yo, Is This Racist?

via Wired

Credit: Gizoogle




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01/03/2013

Foreign Policy Group Gets Hacker Happy New Year

Blaster-virus

Hackers said a big Happy New Year to the Council on Foreign Relations, using the organization's own website to attack unsuspecting visitors.

The CFR is a non-partisan policy group, known mostly for publishing Foreign Affairs, an influential journal on the subject. The group's website was infected with malware that uses a "watering hole" attack -– waiting for users to visit the site before downloading the malware to their machines. The malware involved allows a hacker to execute code remotely on the target computer.

Top Twitter Takedown Tweets: Photos

Ziv Mador, director of security research at Trustwave, an IT security firm, told Disovery News that it isn't clear yet what the malware does. "We're still working on it," he said. "It's a pretty complex piece of malware."

The malware only works on Internet Explorer 8 or earlier versions. The hackers altered the HTML code on the CFR's website itself and were able to remotely execute a program on any computer that accessesed the site. The malware was hidden in several pieces and stored in areas that the web page needed to go to in order to retrieve stored content such as text and pictures. "The javascript is hidden in a file on the system that is usually used for a completely different purpose," he said.

Malware Secretly Attaches Stolen Data to Photos

Microsoft is reportedly working on a permanent fix, and issued a security advisory on Dec. 29. In the meantime there is an automatic work-around here. The simplest way to protect oneself is to disable Javascript and Flash, according to Microsoft, but sometimes turning those two features on an off for different sites can be inconvenient. Users of Internet Explorer 9 and later aren't vulnerable.

While the particular attack on the CFR website used a previously unknown vulnerability in Internet Explorer, the "watering hole" attack is nothing new: a local government site in Maryland and a bank in Boston were hit by one called VOHO in July, which infected targeted computers with code that sent information such as keystrokes back to a server.

Via Threatpost

Photo: An image of the Blaster virus code. Credit: Wikimedia Commons




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12/27/2012

Cyber Attack on Iran a False Alarm

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On Tuesday of this week, the Iranian Students' News Agency (in Farsi) reported that a "Stuxnet-like" computer virus had appeared again, this time infecting systems an Iranian power plant instead of a nucelar power facility. The story also said the attack was repelled. Western news outlets, such as the Associated Press, picked up the story.

Ali Akbar Akhavan, head of Iran’s Passive Defense Organization, said he was misquoted, and only said that the country was ready to confront such attacks. The ISNA later published a story (in Farsi) saying that no attack had occurred. The incident raises the question of just how concerned others should be about that kind of attack. (Full disclosure: I ran both Farsi stories through Google translate).

ANALYSIS: How Do You Hack Into a Phone?

Stuxnet is a piece of malware discovered in the summer of 2010. It attacks industrial control systems built by Siemens, called supervisory control and data acquisition (SCADA). Most of the infected computers were in Iran.

While this latest attack appears to be a false alarm, it isn’t as if Iranian officials are being needlessly paranoid. Iran has weathered other cyberattacks, such as one earlier this month from a virus named Batchwiper that simply wipes data.

Back in April, another data-destroying virus called Wiper attacked Iranian businesses. Viruses similar to Stuxnet, such as Duqu, which performs reconnaissance, have appeared in the wild.

The original Stuxnet attack is widely believed to have been created by either Israel or the United States. It attacked centrifuges used to purify uranium, causing them to malfunction and fail. Iran maintains that its nuclear program is geared to power plants, while the United States and Israel insist the Islamic state is bent on producing nuclear weapons.

The Iranian government has been more pubic about its capabilities in cyber-defense, and there has been open cyber-warfare in a few cases, such as in the 2008 conflict between Russia and Georgia, in which Georgia accused Russia of targeted attacks on government computer systems.

ANALYSIS: Silent Circle Promises Spy-Proof Calls

In the United States, the big concern is terrorism. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta warned of a "cyber pearl harbor" as recently as October.

But there's some question as to what a terrorist might do in the first place. If some malicious group found a way to disable a power plant, it isn't clear that anyone would think it wasn't a "normal" outage, and one that would likely be fixed relatively quickly.

The story does show that even rumors can spread fast. As any chess player knows, sometimes the threat of an attack is as powerful as the attack itself.

Credit: Wikimedia Commons



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Gun Links Gone from Medal of Honor: DNews Nugget

Dnews-nuggets-278x225Gun Links Gone from Medal of Honor: Video game publisher EA has removed all links to gun shops from its popular war-based game, Medal of Honor. Oddly enough, the pressure to take down the links came from the National Rifle Association. A week after the shootings in Newtown, Conn., NRA vice president Wayne LaPierre spoke at a press conference, saying, "There exists in this country, sadly, a callous, corrupt and corrupting shadow industry that sells and stows violence against its own people."

Vice President Joe Biden is heading up a panel to that will examine, among other things, possible links between children's exposure to video games and violence. via BBC News

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12/26/2012

2012: Science Fiction Dreams That Came True

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As a longtime reader of science fiction, it's always interesting to see how the visions of writers eventually become real. Take Arthur C. Clarke's letter to Wireless World in 1945, which details the geostationary communications satellite network everyone uses today. The satellites are in what is called the "Clarke Orbit." And Isaac Asimov wrote frequently about humanoid robots, which are becoming more common in research labs -- although we have yet to see R. Daneel Olivaw from Asimov's Robot series.

So inspired by these writers and others, I decided to take a look at 2012 and the futuristic technologies that are materializing before our eyes.

ANALYSIS: Robot Prostitutes, the Future of Sex Tourism

Bionic Limbs
The term "cyborg" was coined in 1960 by Manfred E. Clynes and Nathan S. Kline, in an article they wrote for the journal Astronautics. Since then bionic limbs have been a trope in many pieces of fiction -– The Six Million Dollar Man of the 1970s, the Borg of the Star Trek franchise, and even Darth Vader. In 2012 for the first time, a paralyzed woman was able to control a robotic limb and feed herself directly with her brain. Continuing work with primates demonstrated that it's possible to make the brain-computer interface efficient enough to design more realistic movement into the limbs. The bionic limbs so far don't look anything like their fictional counterparts, as they are still connected via external electrodes to the skull. But that dream seems to be a lot closer than it was even a decade ago.

Quantum Teleportation and Communication
While it's not possible -- yet -- to "beam" an object around as in Star Trek, new records for zapping photons instantly from one place to another were set this year. Quantum teleportation has been done in the lab for some time, but the distances were on the order of a few yards. In 2012 the new record was 89 miles. In addition to teleporting, scientists built the first quantum Internet. It's only a beginning, but teleporting photons for miles would enable communications that can't be hacked or eavesdropped.

Genetic Disease Prevented
Genetic engineering for "better" humans is a theme that's appeared repeatedly ever since Aldous Huxley's Brave New World in 1931 -- although at that point nobody knew what DNA really was. Later, films such as Gattaca and novels such as Beggars in Spain explore the implications of widely available genetic alterations. In 2012, we saw a proof-of-concept for mitochondrial diseases. About one in 200 people are born with a disorder of the mitochondria, the energy factories of cells. For the first time scientists were able to transfer the nuclear DNA of one human egg cell to another. Two groups independently found a way to transplant nuclei between human egg cells, leaving behind the mitochondrial DNA, which is passed from mother to child. The finding means that mitochondrial disorders could be cured before a child is born. Such techniques won't cure something like Down's syndrome, which involves nuclear DNA. But it shows that some manipulation of the human genome is not only possible, but happening. 

ANALYSIS: Ray Bradbury's Visions

The Universal Translator
Most of the time when intrepid explorers in fiction meet aliens, they always seem to speak perfect English. Doctor Who's TARDIS generates a field that allows travelers to be understood, while the crew of the Enterprise never seem to need a dictionary. Kim Stanley Robonson's Mars Trilogy features one, but he didn't think it would appear until late in the 21st century (the novels were written in the 1990s). While they won't let you talk to aliens, in the last year several speech-to-speech translators have managed to reach real consumer devices -- and even one type that uses your own voice. Most of the apps require an internet connection, though some, such as Jibbigo, can store their dictionaries locally. (If they ever add Klingon I'm taking it to the next ComicCon).

Head-mounted Computer Glasses
Readers of Charles Stross' novel Accelerando would have eagerly anticipated Google Glasses -- the Internet giant's foray into augmented reality. In the novel, "venture altruist" Manfred Macx carries his data and his memories in a pair of glasses connected to the Internet. Google Glasses allow the wearer to access data, the Internet and capture life via a head-mounted digital camera. Memories will have to wait.

Private Space Flight
In many science fiction stories, space travel is private. In Ridley's Scott latest movie, Prometheus, the Weyland Corporation funds an expedition to follow a star map to the distant moon LV-223. In real life, Elon Musk's SpaceX launched the first of a dozen planned missions to the International Space Station. The Dragon capsule is designed to resupply the ISS, but Musk, who made his fortune as founder of PayPal, has bigger plans: a colony on Mars. Is 2013 going to be the year human spaceflight becomes an enterprise like railroads? We won't know that for a while, but SpaceX is a heck of a start.

This list isn't comprehensive, and it isn't meant to be the last word on anything; readers, if you think there's something I missed, please sound off in the comments!

Credit: Colin Anderson/Blend Images/Corbis




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12/24/2012

#LASTPRINTISSUE: Newsweek Pushed into New Era

Newsweek
Seeing a steep drop in readers of its print edition, Newsweek has been pushed into an all-digital format. Credit: Getty

Content provided by AFP

Almost 80 years after first going to print, the final Newsweek magazine hit newsstands Monday featuring an ironic hashtag as a symbol of its Twitter-era transition to an all-digital format.

The second-largest news weekly magazine in the United States has been grappling with a steep drop in print advertising revenue, steadily declining circulation and the migration of readers to free news online.

During a fierce decades-long rivalry with fellow American coffee-table staple Time magazine, Newsweek pushed the envelope with bold and often controversial covers.

NUGGET: Newsweek Dropping Print Edition

Its first issue, on Feb. 17, 1933, featured seven photos from that week's news printed on the front, including Adolf Hitler snapped in Berlin as he declared: "the German nation must be built up from the ground anew."

For its final cover, dated Dec. 31, editor Tina Brown used an aerial archive shot of the magazine's New York headquarters as the backdrop for her message, #LASTPRINTISSUE -- the word print emblazoned in red ink.

"Bitter sweet! Wish us luck!" Brown tweeted.

The Washington Post sold Newsweek to California billionaire Sidney Harman for one dollar in 2010, ahead of a deal with Internet conglomerate IAC to merge the magazine with the news and opinion website The Daily Beast.

ANALYSIS: Is Animated Tiger Woods Incident the Future of Journalism?

Memorable Newsweek covers in recent years have included a December 2003 edition with a bedraggled, long-bearded Saddam Hussein pictured below the headline: "We got him."

In 2011, a computer-generated image of the late Princess Diana alongside Kate Middleton, the photogenic young lady who was about to marry her son Prince William, caused quite a stir.

In May, after Barack Obama came out in favor of same-sex marriage, he was adorned with a rainbow halo and the accompanying headline: "The First Gay President."

The "#MuslimRage" cover in September, which sought to spark a conversation about anti-American violence sweeping the Muslim world, saw thousands take to Twitter to mock the premise with both real and imagined gripes.

Announcing the demise of Newsweek's print magazine in October, Brown, also editor-in-chief of The Daily Beast, said the all-digital version would be targeted at today's "highly mobile, opinion-leading audience."

She cited research showing that 39 percent of Americans get their news online and said Newsweek had reached "a tipping point at which we can most efficiently and effectively reach our readers in all-digital format."

12/21/2012

Gangnam Style Shatters Guinness World Record

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YouTube has crowned a new king. South Korean rapper Psy and his smash hit "Gangnam Style" has broken a Guinness world record to become the first ever video to reach a billion views.

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A tongue-in-cheek statement on the wealthy socialites living it up in the Gangnam district of central Seoul -- the South Korean capital -- the song and video touched off a global pop culture phenomenon, spawning a signature dance, parodies and a fascination with all things "Gangnam Style."

In fact, the Collins Dictionary even added "Gangnam Style" as on of the phrases of the year.

To say the song has catapulted Psy to international stardom is an understatement. Prior to the July 15th release of "Gangnam Style," the 34-year-old Korean pop star had released five studio albums, but none with the Western crossover appeal of his worldwide hit.

On his skyrocket to fame -- which is still blasting into orbit -- Psy has performed alongside Madonna, made a cameo on Saturday Night Live and now holds the title of Most Popular Video in the history of YouTube.

PHOTOS: Sexiest Tech and Techiest Sex of 2012

Upon it's release, "Gangnam Style" was a little slow out of the gates. That is until the song and video made the rounds on Reddit and Robbie Williams gave it a shout out on his blog. Around July 28, "Gangnam Style" blew up and in late November it surpassed Justin Bieber's "Baby" as the most-watched video of all time.

via The Guardian

Credit: YouTube screengrab




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12/19/2012

A Twist on CAPTCHA

Minteye
When a site shows those jumbled characters and asks users to prove they are human, some people can't read the distorted letters, get frustrated and leave the site. A startup called MintEye says it has an alternative to the jumbled characters called CAPTCHA, which stands for Completely Automated Public Turing test to tell Computers and Humans Apart.

Instead of showing the squished and elongated letter, MintEye displays its CAPTCHA as a distorted image with text that can be "fixed" with a slider on the bottom. The user moves the slider until the image looks right, and then the software tells the website she's moved it far enough.

Microsoft's Tablet: No Depth Below The Surface

The MintEye CAPTCHA was invented by Shayke Inbar, one of the company's founders. Inbar has dyslexia and found it hard to do the standard CAPTCHA tests.

The MintEye software makes using CAPTCHA less frustrating for some people and it might also be a bit more secure in one respect: computers can be programmed to recognize distorted letters. MintEye would be less vulnerable to that kind of attack. 

Even so, it is possible to write software that would detect when the slider is at the right point by checking for straight lines in the image, though that kind of software is harder to write.

MintEye isn't just about security, though. It's also about advertising. The images MintEye uses could be ads, and that's where the company makes its money. Some CAPTCHA systems already have ads; MintEye says that because the user is deciphering the image of whatever it is being sold, the brand recognition will be stronger.

Via Technology Review, MintEye

Credit: MintEye




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12/11/2012

5 Breakthroughs For Gadgets In 2012

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Innovation in the gadget business rarely comes in great leaps forward. Most of the time, somebody will take an existing idea and implement it at a cheaper cost, at a larger scale or in a new context, and that change is enough to shake up our sense of what technology can do.

And that's exactly what these five breakthroughs have done for me this year.

1. "Retina displays" grow up, and out. Two years after Apple's iPhone 4 introduced a display so sharp that you could no longer distinguish its constituent pixels, "Retina displays" started showing up in the Cupertino company's other gadgets (and many competing smartphones). On this spring's iPad, the results were amazing, instantly making the old model's screen look bad.

But on Apple's laptops, Retina displays have jacked up prices substantially. And on flat-panel TVs, ultra-high-resolution "4K" and "8K" resolution suffers from the fact that at typical couch-viewing distance, even mere HD resolution can exceed our visual acuity.

2. Cheaper smartphone service. This year, the cost of keeping a new smartphone finally started ratcheting down in a big way. The prepaid carrier Cricket Wireless slashed the monthly bill for an iPhone to $55, then its competitor Virgin Mobile beat even that with a $30 deal.

Among the four major carriers, Verizon Wireless may have hiked its rates but T-Mobile has gone in the other direction with "value" plans that subtract the usual subsidy of a cheaper phone price, meaning you save more over time. And next year, that carrier will make that its standard.

3. Affordable gigabit broadband. While most Americans are stuck with the same one or two broadband Internet providers as ever, a lucky few can now sign up for breathtakingly faster connections at prices no higher than a low-end cable bill: Sonic.net charges just $70 for gigabit (1 billion bits per second) service in parts of the Bay Area, a price matched by Google's gigabit-fiber service in Kansas City.

Sure, most of us can't use those speeds. But imagine what the arrival of gigabit access for under $100 would do to your own ISP's pricing... or don't, if you'd rather not depress yourself.

4. Smarter shared transportation. Near-ubiquitous wireless-data service and cheap GPS sensors are making it easier and cheaper to get around cities without having to own your own ride. Among the most interesting such options: car2go, which broke out of its Austin test market this year with a launch in Washington this spring, followed by expansion to Miami, Portland, San Diego and Seattle. It allows you to rent a Smart fortwo at a cheap, per-minute rate and then park it on the street for free -- in effect, making it a longer-distance complement to bicycle-sharing services like D.C.'s Capital Bikeshare.

I'm equally fascinated by startups that make better use of transportation we've already paid for, such as the Uber sedan-ride service. But when these involve privately-owned conveyances -- for instance, Lyft's carpooling -- they can run into legal hangups.

5. The Internet winning in Washington. One of the tech business's most promising developments didn't involve software code or circuit boards. But the way Internet users rebelled at the offensive overreach of the Stop Online Piracy Act, which would have broken the Net's basic routing system and allowed copyright holders to unplug the finances of allegedly infrinting websites pretty much at will, mattered anyway.

"SOPA" had the backing of some of Washington's most entrenched interests, but individual citizens who didn't want to see technology criminalized overcame all of it. That's good news for continued innovation, both next year and over the next decade.

Credit: Corbis Image



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