08th Feb2012

Think Before You Tweet: Why Two Teenagers Were Refused Entry To The U.S.

by iSpit

Two teenagers were refused entry to the United States after a series of tweets were taken somewhat out of context. Another reminder to think before you tweet.

Amid the funny wigs and the undue pomp in the traditional British courtroom, it seems that our distant American cousins fail to share our often-poor taste in humour.

When one teenager tweeted his friend claiming that he was going to “destroy America”, it appears that U.S. authorities took the public message somewhat too seriously.

At least the other teenager did not respond by joking about “diggin’ Marilyn Monroe up”. Oh, wait.

To their surprise, however, when they arrived at L.A. International, they were not only detained and questioned at length by U.S. authorities, but were swiftly — after a night in the cells, naturally — plonked back on a plane back to England, and barred from entering the United States again.

One U.S. Homeland Security agent allegedly told the hapless teenager: “You’ve really f***ed up with that tweet, boy.” At least on this side of the pond, one can bet that Her Majesty’s finest would not be so rude.

The famous quote goes: “England and America are two countries separated by a common language.” In this case, it could not be closer to the truth.

Just as something classified as “sick” can describe both a good, and a rather vomitous situation in English slang, so can the word “destroy”. And “crumpet”, come to think of it.

The two teenagers will not be allowed to return to the United States without prior authorisation from the U.S. Embassy in London.

It’s not the first time a Twitter user has fallen foul of the law, however. In 2010, Paul Chambers fell foul of Section 127 of the UK’s Communications Act 2003, which describes how one tweet was of “indecent, obscene, or menacing character”. He only threatened to blow up an airport in a fit of anger.

But little did the authorities realise was the scale of the reaction by the wider Twitterverse, including some high-profile users. In amidst a hashtag revolution, over 5,000 users had taken to make joke-’threats’ of their own.

When reporters asked whether the local police force would prosecute the lot of them, they reportedly replied with a rather succinct: “No.”

It just goes to show that even seemingly innocent descriptors can be taken wholly out of context. Anyone who has been through the U.S. border will know it is wise not to make any smart cracks, witty remarks, or frankly show any emotion for that matter.

It nevertheless serves as a reminder to think very carefully before you tweet.

02nd Feb2012

40,000+ Email Addresses And Passwords Discovered On Phishing Site

by iSpit

Over 40,000 Hotmail and MSN email addresses, along with passwords, have been discovered on a phishing Web site. Read about the incident here.

You know those spam emails that ask you to provide your username/password credentials for your bank, email, Facebook, or otherwise? Well, one user on Reddit decided to take a closer look at the Web site of a link included within one of those emails, and what they ultimately found was a text file filled with ~47,000 email addresses and passwords belonging to Hotmail and MSN users.

Though it’s unclear as to if these were successfully-phished email addresses or email addresses being used solely to send out phishing emails, the individual on Reddit wrote a script in Python to test the validity of the addresses and found that ~85% out of ~2000 were accessible via the passwords accompanying them. Many of those accounts show inbox activity as well.

In the end, the Redditor reported their find to Microsoft (since Hotmail/MSN are Microsoft services). To quote:

Just finished talking to Microsoft. They have the list. The server hosting the files has been down for at least 2 hours, I don’t know if it’ll ever come back. Guys at Microsoft were extremely nice, and it also felt like I had actually done something.

If you’re a Hotmail or MSN user and you suspect you may be a victim of phishing, it wouldn’t hurt to go ahead and change your password. Overall, this is most likely nothing to be alarmed about; however, these types of lists are far more common than readily meets the eye. With a little bit ofadvanced Google search querying, it’s fairly easy to dig up these lists residing in wide-open directories on phishing Web sites.

Last of note, if you’re curious to see if an email/username of yours has been discovered within any type of list like this that’s gone public, check out pwnedlist.com. They’re a reputable site that currently houses almost 5 MILLION email addresses and usernames in their database that you can check for (assuming you trust they won’t store your email address once you enter it to search for). Needless to say, if an email address or username of yours is confirmed there, you might want to change all associated passwords for that email address/username.

02nd Feb2012

Identity Theft In 7 Easy Steps

by iSpit

Herbert Thompson seems like just another smart academic software developer who loves formulas and geeking out. But he’s also stolen the identities of several casual acquaintances. In fact in one case he gained access to a bank account in seven shockingly simple steps. And he used no special programming tricks, just common sense.

Thompson stole identities as an experiment back in 2008 to show the public how easy it is to get access to personal data and banking information. He proved it only requires some simple surfing for freely available personal data and cobbling it together in powerfully creative ways.  Thompson began his experiments by first receiving permission from people he barely knew to try to break into their bank accounts. What the following steps show is how vulnerable we all are to security breach.

The victim:
He knew her name was Kim, where she was from, where she worked and roughly her age. He also knew the name of her bank and her username although as Thompson says, this was easy to guess—it was her first initial and last name. (Note: Change your username to something a bit less obvious.)

Seven Steps:
1)    Google search. He googles her. Finds a blog and a resume. (Thompson called her blog a “goldmine.”) He gets information about grandparents, pets, hometown. Most important he gets her college email address and current gmail address.
2)    Next stop: Password recovery feature on her bank’s web site. He attempts to reset her bank password. But the bank sends a reset link to her email, which he does not have access to. So he needs to get access to her gmail.
3)    Gmail access. He attempts to reset her gmail password but gmail sends this to her college email address. Gmail tells you this address’  domain (at least it did in 2008 when Thompson conducted the experiments) so he knew he had to get access to that specific address.
4)    College email account page. Thompson clicks the “forgot password” link on this page and winds up facing a few questions. Home address, home zip code and home country? No problem, Thompson has it all from her resume. The same resume found from the simple google search done earlier. Then came a stumbling block: the college wanted her birthday. But he only had a rough idea of her age, no actual birth date.
5)    State traffic court web site. Apparently you can search for violations and court appearances by name! And such records include a birth date. (Facebook also makes this piece of data very easy to get even if people do not note their birth year…remember Thompson knew roughly how old Kim was.) But he had no luck with the Department of Motor Vehicles.
6)    Thompson goes back to the blog and does a search for “birthday.” He gets a date but no year.
7)    Finally, Thompson attempts the college reset password again. He fills in her birth date, and simply guesses the year. He gets it wrong. But the site gives him five chances, and tells him which field has the error. So he continues to guess. He gets access in under five guesses. He changes her college password. This gives him access to her gmail password reset email. Google requires some personal information which he is able to get easily from her blog (e.g., father’s middle name.) Thompson changes the gmail password and that gives him access to the bank account reset password email. Here again he is asked for personal information but nothing that he could not glean from Kim’s blog (e.g., pet name and phone number.) He resets the bank password and bingo, has immediate access to all her records and money.

From Thompson:

Needless to say, Kim was disturbed. Her whole digital identity sat precariously on the foundation of her college e-mail account; once I had access to it, the rest of the security defenses fell like a row of dominoes. What’s striking about Kim’s case is how common it is. For many of us, the abundance of personal information we put online combined with the popular model of sending a password reset e-mail has our online security resting unsteadily on the shoulders of one or two e-mail accounts.

Yes in this case the personal information came from her blog but it could have easily come from a Facebook page or other online community pages.

Thompson provides sage advice on Scientific American:

Go and do a self-check. Try to reset you passwords and see what questions are asked to verify your identity. Some questions are better than others. Date of birth, for example, is bad. In addition to the DMV, there is a wealth of public records available online where folks can track down when you were born. Most account reset features give you a choice of questions or methods to use. Go for questions that ask about obscure things that you won’t forget (or can at least look up), like your favorite frequent flyer number. Avoid questions that are easy to guess, such as which state you opened your bank account in.

It’s also critical to remember that once you put data online, it’s almost impossible to delete it later. The more you blog about yourself, the more details you put in your social networking profiles, the more information about you is being archived, copied, backed up and analyzed almost immediately. Think first, post later.

20th Jan2012

I Am Not A Rapper x DJ Nastee Naj Presents: #ClassicFriday Vol. 13 #ClassicOneHitWonders

by iSpit

FOR #CLASSICFRIDAY VOL. 13 #CLASSICONEHITWONDERS –> CLICK HERE

 

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Some one-hit wonders are the result of novelty songs during fads. Examples include Rick Dees’ “Disco Duck“, related to the disco craze of the 1970s; C. W. McCall‘s “Convoy“, related to the CB radio craze of the 1970s (though McCall has had at least one other top-40 hit); and Buckner & Garcia’s “Pac-Man Fever“, related to the 1980s-era arcade game Pac-Man.

Some artists, such as the Big Bopper, had their careers cut short by death (in the Big Bopper‘s case, in a fatal plane crash that also killed two other musicians), while others, such as New Radicals and The La’s, broke up immediately after their one hit. In the 1960s and early 1970s, session bands such as Edison Lighthouse or Alive N Kickin’ producing just a single 45 record were common. More commonly, however, one-hit wonders are serious-minded musicians who struggled to continue their success after their popularity waned.

Because one-hit wonders are popular for only a brief time, their hits often have nostalgic value and are featured on era-centric compilations and soundtracks to period films. One-hit wonders are normal in any era of pop music, but are most common during reigns of entire genres that do not last for more than a few years, such as disco, new wave and grunge.

Though the term is sometimes used in a derogatory manner, some fans often have a great passion for these songs and the artists who created them. Some one-hit wonder artists have embraced this following openly, while others distance themselves from their hit in an attempt to craft successful songs with different sounds, or embark on new careers as songwriters (such as Linda Perry of 4 Non Blondes and Gregg Alexander of New Radicals), or even game show hosts (such as Chuck Woolery of The Avant-Garde). One-hit artists who possess a significant legacy of music outside of the singles world (e.g. Buffy Sainte-Marie with Illuminations) may however distance themselves severely from their hit single (“Mister Can’t You See“) as they are likely to feel their hit in no way represents what they stand for.

12th Jan2012

Firm Turns Shipping Pallets Into Transitional Homes For Refugees

by iSpit

Every year over 21 million shipping pallets end up in a landfill. Used worldwide to ship goods of all kinds in mass quantities, a Brooklyn-based design firm looked past the intended use of a pallet and saw a versatile, recyclable, sustainable and inexpensive building material that could be used to address another issue: improving housing quality for refugees.

The inspiration behind I-Beam design firm’s Pallet House Project came from a mind-boggling statistic that 84 percent of the world’s refugees could be housed with a year’s worth of repurposed American pallets.

A pallet is the perfect material to provide a better standard of living — they are readily available in most countries and they can be used first to carry aid to displaced people in the form of clothing, food and medical supplies (to name but a few) and then recycled into shelters.

The average refugee stays in a refugee camp for seven years, and the Pallet House (a 250 square-foot structure composed of 100 reused pallets),  is a sturdier alternative to the tent shelters most common in refugee camps. Additionally, it can be easily converted from a temporary or emergency shelter to a permanent residence with the addition of more sturdy construction materials found in the area.

The houses are easy to assemble: once the pallets arrive, it only takes four to five people to nail together the house, and it can be built in less than a week. At first, when more standard construction materials are less available, the structures can be put together with the help of temporary supplies like tarps to keep the inside dry until materials from the surrounding area can make a more solid roof.

As time passes, pallets can be fitted with add-ons like insulation or plywood for the interiors(this can all be done prior to shipping as well), and stucco and plaster or roofing tiles for the exterior, if/when the materials become available. Due to the flexibility of the design, each occupant can build a shelter that fits their specific needs.

Though the Pallet House was originally conceived as a temporary transitional shelter for refugees making their way back to Kosovo, and has since been used to house people uprooted by natural disasters, famines and wars,  I-Beam has widened the scope of the Pallet House to include a much bigger population by using the module as a pre-fab solution to affordable housing everywhere.

An estimated one billion people live in substandard housing, and I-Beam believes that the Pallet House could help to provide better conditions for people in need around the world.

The Pallet House has already turned many heads for its innovative take on temporary housing, and it took home the Architecture for Humanity Award in 1999. I-Beam has built Pallet structures in New York, Indiana, and the Architecture Triennial in Milan and have been active recently in Haiti and Pakistan.

05th Jan2012

IAmNotADictionary Phrase Of The Day: PCSS (Post Christmas Stress Syndrome)

by iSpit

Warning: PCSS, or Post Christmas Stress Syndrome is a common affliction that affects scores of people during the month of January. Untreated, this malady seriously impairs one’s ability to cope with several post holiday tasks, including:

  • Removing, packing and storing of Christmas decorations
  • Labouring with clothing that has mysteriously shrunk
  • Facing the bottom line of your credit card statement
  • No longer being able to ignore past due notices (the red ones)

Fortunately, this disorder can be easily remedied with self administered therapy… STOP BUYING SH*T AND PAY YOUR BILLS!!!

If followed accurately, results can be apparent in as little as 24 hours. Side effects may include a reality check, missing luxury items and the ability to cope with no longer being a victim of hallmark’s holiday gestapo.

 

20th Dec2011

Second Neti-Pot Death From Amoeba Prompts Tap-Water Warning

by iSpit

Washing noses with neti pots or squeeze bottles has become increasingly popular as a home remedy for colds, allergies and sinus trouble. But it’s not such a great remedy if it kills you.

Now that two people have died from infection with brain-eating amoebas after using neti pots, doctors are warning: do not put tap water up your nose.

“Drinking water is good to drink, very safe to drink, but not to push up your nose,” says Raoult Ratard, state epidemiologist for the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals. Two residents of his state have died after using neti pots this year, the first known deaths associated with neti pots. “The first one could have been a fluke,” Ratard told Shots. But now that we have a second one, the only explanation is the use of the neti pot.”

The first death came in June, when a 20-year-old man died of encephalitis caused by infection with Naegleria fowleri. That amoeba is common in rivers and lakes, but only very rarely causes brain infections. Back in August, we reported on several deaths in children who had been jumping or diving in fresh water. But since adults are less likely to be doing cannonballs, they’re also less likely to be infected.

Then in October, a 51-year-old Louisiana woman died of encephalitis. The doctor thought to ask if she used a neti pot. Both her brain tissue and her home‘s tap water tested positive for the microbe. Ratard says: “They found the amoeba, the lady was using a neti pot, and had no contact whatsoever with surface water.”

Thus the new warning from Louisiana: If using a neti pot or other nasal irrigation device, use distilled or filtered water. Keeping the device clean is crucial, too, Ratard says. A neti pot, which looks like a small genie lamp, can be safely washed in a dishwasher, but squeeze bottles and other devices need to be scrubbed. All need to dry between uses. “If you let them dry completely, the amoebas are not going to survive long,” Ratard says.

A quick survey of neti pots and squeeze bottles finds that the instructions recommend using boiled, distilled or filtered water. But like so many simple hygiene instructions, it’s one that’s easy to let slide. The prospect of death by brain-eating amoeba, rare though it is, should provide enough motivation to follow the rules.

20th Dec2011

The Smartphonification Of The Global Population: Power To The People

by iSpit

Smartphones are entering every level of society on a global level, and the ability they give to the people to control the message at world events is unparalleled in world history.

This year has seen one event after another unfold throughout the world, culminating recently with the Occupy movement all over the U. S. All of these events have one thing in common, the use of smartphones in the hands of the affected population to show what is happening, to the chagrin of the authorities. The smartphone is becoming the most important invention impacting society in world history.

The horrendous account of the recent abuse of authority at UC Davisdetailed magnificently by ZDNet colleague Zack Whittaker, was a prime example of what the smartphone brings to regular people. The ability to not only get the message out to the world in near real-time, but more importantly to keep the message from being controlled by the authorities, is game-changing for society.

One of the first objectives by organizations taking control over sectors of the population is to take over the communication infrastructure. This serves to keep the affected population under control and in the dark about events, and more importantly allows the authorities to control all messages about the action. As Zack so aptly put it, it gives them total spin over the information about events.

The smartphonification of the population-at-large puts an end to the ability of the authorities to enact abusive actions against the populace, without having to answer to the world’s stage. Eyewitness accounts, or citizen journalism as some prefer to call it, insure that the world sees things as they really happen, without any spin to make it appear less heinous nor as a deserved reaction to criminal acts. There are too many smartphones with cameras, and mobile connectivity to global social networks that guarantees that abusive actions by authorities, no matter where they occur, will be seen by the world for exactly what they are.

We are already seeing a shift from abusive governments back to the people, and in large part due to the prevalence of the smartphone. This will continue going forward as the technology reaches new areas, and more people have their voice. It is a watershed moment in world history, thanks to those little gadgets in the pockets of many. Communication is a powerful weapon, and it is now in the hands of regular people. To quote a wise man, “spin no longer works.”

15th Dec2011

Mystery Kidney Disease In Central America

by iSpit

A mysterious epidemic is sweeping Central America – it’s the second biggest cause of death among men in El Salvador, and in Nicaragua it’s a bigger killer of men than HIV and diabetes combined. It’s unexplained but the latest theory is that the victims are literally working themselves to death.

In the western lowlands of Nicaragua, in a region of vast sugar cane fields, sits the tiny community of La Isla.

The small houses are a patchwork of concrete and wood. Pieces of cloth serve as doors.

Maudiel Martinez emerges from his house to greet me. He’s pale, and his cheekbones protrude from his face. He hunches over like an old man – but he is only 19 years old.

“The way this sickness is – you see me now, but in a month I could be gone. It can take you down all of a sudden,” he says.

Maudiel’s kidneys are failing. They do not perform the essential function of filtering waste from his body – he’s being poisoned from the inside.

When he got ill two years ago, he was already familiar with this disease and how it might end. “I thought about my father and grandfather,” he says. Both died of the same condition. Three of his brothers have it too.

All of them worked in the sugar cane fields.

Map showing rise in kidney deaths

Kidney disease has killed so many men here that locals now call their community not simply La Isla – which means “The Island” – but La Isla de las Viudas – “The Island of the Widows.” (You can see a slideshow from Nicaragua at PRI’s The World).

Continue reading the main story

“Start Quote

It is wasting away our populations”

Maria Isabel Rodriguez El Salvador health minister

The epidemic extends far beyond Nicaragua. It’s prevalent along the Pacific coast of Central America – across six countries.

“It is important that the chronic kidney disease (CKD) afflicting thousands of rural workers in Central America be recognised as what it is – a major epidemic with a tremendous population impact,” says Victor Penchaszadeh, a clinical epidemiologist at Columbia University in the US, and consultant to the Pan-American Health Organization on chronic diseases in Latin America.

El Salvador‘s health minister recently called on the international community for help. She said the epidemic is “wasting away our populations”.

Heat stress

At a health clinic in El Salvador, in the farming region of Bajo Lempa, Dr Carlos Orantes recently found that a quarter of the men in his area suffered from it.

Continue reading the main story

What is chronic kidney disease?

A CKD patient in Bajo Lempa in El Salvador

Chronic kidney disease, or CKD, is permanent or long-lasting kidney damage.

CKD is often without any symptoms in the early stages, so many people don’t know they have it until the later stages, when symptoms include anaemia (with weakness/breathlessness), bone disease, nausea and vomiting. Final-stage CKD patients may die without dialysis or a kidney transplant.

In the developed world, the primary causes of CKD are diabetes and high blood pressure, which are becoming more common as a result of increasing obesity, lack of exercise, and high salt intake.

In the developing world, the main causes are chronic infections like HIV, viral hepatitis, malaria, and tuberculosis.

Dr Charles Tomson, President, UK Renal Association

What’s more, he says, most of the men who are ill show no signs of high blood pressure or diabetes – the most common causes of CKD elsewhere in the world.

“Most of the men we studied have CKD from unknown causes,” he says.

What the men in his area have in common is they all work in farming. So Dr Orantes thinks a major cause of their kidney damage is the toxic chemicals – pesticides and herbicides – that are routinely used here in agriculture.

“These chemicals are banned in the United States, Europe and Canada, and they’re used here, without any protection, and in large amounts that are very concerning,” he says.

But he’s not ready to rule out other possible causes. For instance, the overuse of painkillers can damage the kidneys, and so can drinking too much alcohol. Both are major problems here, he says.

In Nicaragua, the disease has become a political issue.

In 2006, the World Bank gave a loan to Nicaragua‘s largest sugar company to build an ethanol plant. Plantation workers filed a complaint, saying the company’s working conditions and use of chemicals were fuelling the epidemic. They said the loan violated the bank’s own standards for worker safety and environmental practices.

In response, the bank agreed to fund a study to try to identify the cause of the epidemic.

“The evidence points us most strongly to a hypothesis that heat stress might be a cause of this disease,” says Daniel Brooks of Boston University, who is leading the research.

His team has found it’s not just sugar cane workers who are falling ill. Miners and port workers also suffer high rates of kidney disease, yet they’re not exposed to farm chemicals. What these men have in common, he says, is they all work long hours in extreme heat.

Nicaraguan sugar cane workers leaving the fields Nicaraguan sugar cane workers leaving the fields

“Day after day of hard manual labour in hot conditions – without sufficient replacement of fluids – could lead to effects on the kidney that are not obvious at first but over time accumulate to the point that it enters into a diseased state,” says Mr Brooks.

“This has never been so far shown to cause chronic kidney disease, so we would be talking about a new mechanism that has not so far been described in the scientific literature.”

But Mr Brooks says a new preliminary study bolsters this hypothesis. His team tested blood and urine from sugar cane workers who perform different jobs. The scientists found more evidence of kidney damage in the workers who have more strenuous jobs outside.

Professor Aurora Aragon of Nicaragua‘s National University in Leon says this explanation makes sense. She’s long suspected that part of the problem is the way sugar cane workers are paid – receiving more money the more sugar cane they cut.

“This way of working forces people to do more than they are able to do, and this is not good for their health,” she says.

No alternative

“Working in the field made us feel dizzy and nauseous,” says Jose Donald Cortez who cut sugar cane for 18 years. “We often had fevers.”

Cortez now has kidney disease and heads an organisation of sugar cane workers in Nicaragua who are ill. He’s convinced that something on the sugar plantations is causing the sickness.

Whatever it is, he says, those who are ill need treatment with dialysis – which can keep them alive when their kidneys fail. But few can get it because dialysis is extremely expensive and rarely available.

Hydration drink given to workers in Ingenio San Antonio, Nicaragua   A hydration drink being given to workers in the fields of Ingenio San Antonio, Nicaragua

“If you ask the ministry of health they say they don’t have the money. If you ask the sugar company if they are responsible, they say ‘No’.”

For their part, the sugar cane companies say they’re not convinced that farm chemicals or working conditions on their plantations are to blame for the epidemic. Still, they say, they are trying to protect their workers’ health.

One conglomerate that owns several sugar plantations in Central America - the Pellas Group – says it’s started giving workers an hour-long lunch break and now employs staff to make sure the men drink water. The company also routinely tests its workers’ kidney function.

Company spokesman Ariel Granera says if a worker is found to have kidney disease, he is let go – out of concern, says Mr Granera, for his well-being.

But the sick workers who have been dismissed say what they receive from the companies and from social security isn’t enough to live on – and when they lose their jobs, they lose the right to be treated at company clinics.

In La Isla, and many other villages like it, the men often take jobs with contractors who do not check for kidney disease.

Everyone fears that working in the sugar cane fields is a big risk, but there are no other jobs around.

“There is no alternative,” says one woman, who recently lost her father. “No other way to support a family.”

07th Dec2011

Google-Backed Robot Overlords Take Over Supervision Of Human Workers

by iSpit

We think robots will work for us? Think again. It might be more likely we’ll be working for the robot. Among all the job takeovers robots will make in the next 15 years (by 2025 robots will take over nearly half of all U.S. jobs) get ready to have them as our supervisors. Because it’s already begun.

 

A new supervising service called Humanoid launched today, backed by funding from Google Ventures. Humanoid will rent out armies of humans (they have 20,000 workers already signed up to start) for $4.99 per hour to develop software, supervised by an algorithm.

 

Humanoid sprung from another startup, SpeakerText, which uses Mechanical Turk crowdsourcing and automation to transcribe videos. The founders realized that for every $1 they spent on crowdsourcing, they spent $2 to clean up common human errors. This is the downfall of crowdsourcing, which uses an anonymous, widely distributed workforce. Even hiring cheap intern labor did not help solve the failing business model.

 

So the founders of SpeakerText wrote up code for a management tool to oversee its transcribers. This then provided the foundation for Humanoid.

 

The first part of the supervision is actually human-based. Human workers review each other’s work. Then the supervising bot analyzes the accuracy of completed tasks and indicators of fatigue. And the system is flexible, providing more attention to new workers, and less as they gain experience. If someone is continually failing the bot boss passes the task on to a more competent worker.

 

Quality assurance is a widespread problem among crowdsourcing outlets like Mechanical Turk as well as remote staffing outlets like oDesk or Elance. Humanoid plans to solve this with its automated supervision. While it’s keeping SpeakerText within its offerings, its main focus will be software development.

 

[via TechCrunch]

07th Dec2011

Is Facebook Building Non-User Profiles?

by iSpit

Ireland‘s Data Protection Commissioner filed a lawsuit against Facebook in August claiming that the social network is creating “extensive profiles”of non-users with information gleaned from the profiles of its 800 million users.

“Facebook Ireland is gathering excessive amounts of information about data subjects without notice or consent by the data subject,” the filing reads.

Facebook categorically denies the claim.

“The allegations are false,” Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes told FoxNews.com. “We enable you to send emails to your friends, inviting them to Facebook. We keep the invitee’s email address and name to let you know when they join the service. This practice is common among almost all services that involve invitations — from document sharing to event planning.”

This is not the first time such an allegation has occurred. In 2007, consumer watch groups claimed Beacon was collecting and storing non-member user data as well. Facebook also denied that those transgressions were happening.

And it’s likely there is not anything to the latest claim, either.

But as Facebook grows larger and people store more and more information on its servers about themselves and their friends, this will continue to be an issue for Mark Zuckerberg and the company.

21st Nov2011

Lethal Weapon 1 (Full Movie)

by iSpit

Directed by Richard Donner. Starring Mel Gibson, Danny Glover, Gary Busey

A veteran cop, Murtough, is partnered with a young homicidal cop, Riggs. Both having one thing in common, hating working in pairs. Now they must learn to work with one and other to stop a gang of drug smugglers.

Director: 

Richard Donner

Writer: 

Shane Black

08th Nov2011

Dining Etiquette Do’s and Don’ts

by iSpit

Like most gentlemanly pursuits with their origins in a past era, fine dining has its own set of conventions some men have never entirely managed to adopt. Dining etiquette extends to more than just which fork goes where – sitting at a table and sharing a meal is a social, personal experience, and everything a man does in that context is a reflection on his character. No matter how well your evening has gone, a serious enough faux pas may be the only thing your dining partners remember about you, so avoiding these mistakes, and acting refined and urbane, is crucial to how you’re perceived.

Do- Maintain good posture.
The way you carry yourself at the table projects an immediate image of your personality, just as significant as what you say and do. Keep your back straight, make eye contact and don’t spend the entire meal hunching forward toward your food. Keeping your forearms against the table is acceptable, but propping your elbows on top of it is not. When using a knife and fork, keep your arms close to your sides instead of pointing straight out from your body.

Don’t- Reach across the table
You can safely ask for someone else to pass anything that you’re considering reaching for. Reaching over anybody’s food, even if it’s only your own, is considered crass.

Do- Know your utensils
You don’t have to memorize the silverware for every possible dining experience, as it’s usually enough to know that you work your way in toward the plate from the outermost utensils. Unfold your napkin on your lap once you’re seated, then treat it almost like it’s decorative; using the napkin sparingly and as it’s intended is OK, but shaking it out like laundry or using it like a silverware dishtowel is not. Also, if you need to remove yourself from the table, leave your napkin on the seat as putting it on your plate indicates you’re finished.

Don’t- Answer your phone at the table
It’s even reasonable to suggest turning your phone off entirely, but if you absolutely have to receive pressing calls, at least turn off your ringtone and then excuse yourself to return those calls discreetly.

Do- Order manageable food
Ordering food that involves constant use of your hands is typically a mistake. Avoid high-maintenance food like spaghetti, and if you’re dining in a more casual setting, beware anything notoriously messy (wings or unusually greasy food, for example).

Don’t- Leave work on the table
If this is a business dinner, any paperwork you have to discuss can be safely left under your chair until the meal is over. Having work out during the meal clutters the table, and is only advisable if you’re specifically asked for it.

Don’t- Haggle over the check
In dinner party scenarios or business dinners, the host is expected to deal with the bill. If you’re in a situation wherein you feel obligated to pay, an easy alternative is for you to excuse yourself from the table and settle the check before it’s presented. This prevents any payment discussions before they start and also shows you’re magnanimous. Otherwise, if you’re in a mixed-group setting with no clear host, expect to divide the check evenly, regardless of what you’ve ordered.

Do- Follow your host’s lead
As a general catch-all rule for anything you’re not sure about, you can safely do something if your host has already opened that metaphorical door. You can remove your suit jacket if your host does, but you might appear too casual if you’re the only man at the table who does so. If your host offers you a cigar, the choice is up to you, but brazenly lighting a cigar on your own initiative runs the risk of being hugely offensive.

Don’t- Talk with your mouth full
This may seem obvious, but it’s one of the most common complaints about men with poor dining manners, and it is absolutely never OK. Granted, dining is a social experience, but whatever you have to say, no matter how timely or important, can wait until you’ve swallowed your food.

Do- Dress appropriately
If the event calls for black tie attire, it’s your obligation to wear a tuxedo and bowtie, even if you have to rent one for the occasion. Business casual, for its part, never means “casual.” If you’re not certain about what you’re supposed to wear, overdress — don’t underdress. In any formal setting, regardless of how well you think you pull it off, jeans are never OK.

Do- Drink responsibly
Always exercise caution when alcohol is involved. Sharing and appreciating a drink is civilized; drinking too much is not. Even if you’re absolutely certain you can hold your liquor, drinking more than the rest of your company sends an undesirable message to anybody at the table who doesn’t.

27th Oct2011

The Pc Era Vs The Mobile Era: Where Are We?

by iSpit

Few subjects get people riled up like that of the “post-PC era”that Steve Jobs called the era ushered in by the iPad. Too many folks are in no hurry to give up real computers for the slate or gadgets of other forms, and they get downright testy if you tell them they must. I agree that PCs, or computers if you will, are not going away any time soon. I do find a better term for what we are experiencing is the mobile era, and we are already firmly in it.

It is not so much the form of the device that makes up the post-PC era. It is the way we use them, and where they get used that is knocking the old tethered PC from the shopping lists of millions. The draw is picking up a gadget and doing stuff, and that is a common practice that is already beginning to replace the standard computer away from the workplace.

The mobile era began years ago in the workplace. Many folks had no computer at home, they only used one as part of their job. That experience wasn’t a really good one, as folks equated the computer with work. The phrase “my computer is down” was far too common, and that involved bringing in the IT people whose agenda seemed to be far different than that of most workers. Computers were largely things that occasionally stopped working, and then you were stuck until some expert found time to get them working again.

It was also in the workplace where email became the standard method of communication, and when companies started handing out phones for doing email the mobile era was born. So many workers ended up with those clunky blue BlackBerrys in hand. This exposed millions to the benefits of mobile email, although largely locked down by the job like those computers.

Smartphones started to appear that allowed folks to do personal email, and the mobile era began to grow. There were a lot of folks carrying Palm Treos and the like, and no matter what reasoning went into the purchase decision it was the ability to do email anywhere like those Crackberries that drove sales. People were getting exposed to the ability to stay in touch via email, and they liked it. The personalization of email ushered in the true mobile era.

The iPhone came along and exposed millions to this personalization of email, and spurred a big expansion of the mobile web. It elevated the phone to a multi-purpose mobile device, and folks discovered they liked that.

The growth of Facebook played a big role in the growth of the mobile era, as millions of Facebook users discovered the easiest way to interact with the popular service was not on a computer, but on the phone. It quickly knocked email usage to the curb, especially for young users growing up in the Facebook era. Along with standard phone text messaging, communicating with friends over Facebook became a standard form of communication, and largely from phones.

This mobile communication grew so prevalent that many non-techies mostly stopped using a computer at home. They used the phone to keep in touch with the social network, and that worked just fine. The mindset of breaking away from a tethered PC, even a laptop, was changing for millions.

The appearance of the iPad was the perfect storm of ubiquitous connectivity to the web, via Wi-Fi or 3G, and this mobile communication. The larger screen of the tablet handled this communication just fine, and did other things more computer-like, too. Millions buying the tablet embraced this utility through lots of apps that appeared overnight.

It wasn’t just the apps, as iPad owners discovered the web browsing experience was just as good as on the computer for pretty much everything they did on the web. While computer usage had fallen in many households, getting on the web to do something was often the only thing still done regularly. The tablet changed that for many, who could now do everything they wanted on the mobile tablet.

The mobile era truly began with the iPad, and it isn’t slowing down. It is growing at a staggering rate, as folks getting exposed to the mobile experience are realizing that it is all they need. It’s not happening for all users, especially techies who are familiar with doing things on a computer that can’t easily be done on the tablet. But there are far more of those people who still view the computer as a complicated thing, and these are more than happy to leave them behind.

As capable mobile devices get cheaper, this shift from computer to mobile will escalate rapidly. The cheap price point of the Kindle Fire ($199) is low enough that even those reluctant to try them will do so in increasing numbers. The key to adopting mobile devices as a home computing source is hands-on exposure, and that is about to take off.

This shift to mobile devices has one surprising aspect. While many of these consumers have a PC or a laptop at home, the comparison of using the mobile device to the real computer is reinforcing the mindset that once again PCs are for work. The tablet and phone do all they need, so they begin to view the computer as a work thing as folks did years ago. Mobile wins again in many homes.

I don’t believe computers are going away anytime soon, but I do believe the mobile era is here to stay. More consumers are entering the mobile world every day, and discovering they can leave the evil computer behind. This speeds adoption of mobile technology in general, as users can forget the computer (or PC) for long periods. That makes for happy users, and they see the gadgetry as the reason behind it. That’s why once most users go mobile, they won’t go back to the PC.

The tablet space is growing, although how fast is open to interpretation. The iPad is no longer standing alone, but sales indicate it is the product in the driver’s seat in the tablet space. There is no question that being first to market gave it a primary role in exposing millions to the mobile era, and many of those consumers will not go back to the way things were.

20th Oct2011

Food Remedies for Back Pain

by iSpit

Whether one suffers from mild discomfort or chronic pain, the nutritional remedies presented below may help for back pains of all kinds.

Cabbage: Remove leaves from stem and steam for about ten minutes, or until limp. Massage a bit of olive oil into the skin of the painful area and place warm leaves (be careful that they are not too hot, becuase they will burn the skin) onto the area. Cover with a towel and let sit. Repeat process one hour later with new leaves.

Tart Red Cherries: Instead of taking aspirin or Ibuprofen for back pain, try eating about twenty tart red cherries. They have anti-inflammatory capabilities that are comparable to the most common over-the-counter pain relievers, according to university studies.

Pineapple: Pineapple conatins bromelain, which is an inflammation fighter and pain reducer. Eating pineapple will heap ease aching and stiff back muscles.

Nuts and Seeds: Nuts and seeds are full of protein and essential fatty acids that are converted to prostaglandins. Prostaglandins are anti-inflammatory and will help reduce swelling and pain. Almonds and walnuts have the added benefit of being very high in magnesium, which helps maintain muscle tone and may help strengthen the muscles of the back.

Garlic: One of the most versatile foods, garlic does wonders for inflammation and pain. A well-documented anti-inflammatory, garlic will reduce swelling and pain. A traditional remedy for back pain is as follows: consume three cloves of fresh garlic every morning. If you are bothered by “garlic breath”, see the section for Bad Breath for remedies.

Rosemary: This common cooking spice can be very beneficial for back pain. It is known to ease pain wherever it is applied. To make a great massage oil, steep rosemary leaves in olive oil for two to three weeks. Use on painful areas as a massage oil to help reduce pain.

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